http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20110616/ap_on_bi_ge/eu_greece_financial_crisis
6/16/2011 8:21:28 AM
6/16/2011 10:14:34 AM
6/16/2011 10:28:10 AM
6/16/2011 5:29:28 PM
6/16/2011 5:41:51 PM
I'll take that as an admission that you didn't and apparently won't make an actual debatable argument.You are absolutely a slave to the idea that humans and their economic interactions can be modeled away given enough information. You believe that you can absolutely control an economy such that there is no waste or imperfections of any sort.I believe that this is impossible.[Edited on June 16, 2011 at 5:48 PM. Reason : .]
6/16/2011 5:46:48 PM
Nice strawman, where did I say that? Better yet, where did that theory that I'm "parroting" come from?
6/16/2011 6:05:14 PM
6/16/2011 6:05:28 PM
He did the whole umbrella/rain thing in the Treatise if that's what you're talking about.
6/16/2011 6:10:09 PM
I saw it quoted through Davidson in explicating the new Keynesian position. Not really important; only will need to dig it back out if he calls my bluff.
6/16/2011 6:15:20 PM
Oh fucking come on Kris, it's the very cornerstone of what you are arguing, that a command economy will work better than capitalism given enough information. Don't try to play "I didn't state that argument in those exact words down to the comma and period" again like you always do when you don't make arguments or when they fail or you get owned again.
6/16/2011 6:41:39 PM
Look at the level of pathetic dribble you've reduced yourself to. Why are you always such a fucking waste of time, Chance? Are you really this incapable?
6/16/2011 6:42:49 PM
Let's see. You accuse Kris of being slavishly devoted to the "Chicago/Keynesian/Big Government school" (still lolling about that). Then I say "lol what?" surprised that you clumped together Keynesians and Chicago school economists. You reply, saying:
6/16/2011 6:45:13 PM
Look, you've made arguments that rely on a completely different value system so it's simply impossible to have a discussion. These type of arguments:
6/16/2011 6:50:48 PM
6/16/2011 7:05:45 PM
6/16/2011 7:17:12 PM
Are you done?
6/16/2011 7:33:37 PM
Haha man. It's hilarious to see how immature a man in his thirties can act
6/16/2011 7:45:58 PM
For fucks sake dude, you're trying to tell me my fantastic life is a mirage by capitalist conspirators? Well I applaud them for fooling me this hard.I can't help it if you don't choose to deal with a skeptic. I'd urge you to go back to the drawing board and try again.
6/16/2011 7:53:09 PM
6/16/2011 9:10:05 PM
6/16/2011 9:44:06 PM
Your comments have been riddled with factual inaccuracies, sheer historical ignorance, and on top of it, a complete unwillingness to listen or learn. You cleave to old misconceptions and even though you know you don't know you spend hours on here arguing and wasting everybody's time. I could probably train a chimpanzee to do your job
6/16/2011 10:00:50 PM
6/16/2011 10:14:41 PM
6/16/2011 10:16:52 PM
Do you like proving my points?
6/16/2011 10:32:21 PM
I gave you a very well written explanation and you simply insulted my ability to argue and generally got into a meaningless squabble.
6/16/2011 10:42:24 PM
Whoa whoa whoa...well written? Kris, it's a fact you're a terrible communicator so you should know better than that.
6/17/2011 6:29:24 AM
I've never had trouble understanding Kris; he always provides more detail when pressed. I'm not clear on the level of hand-holding you're demanding here, but it's clear you're not trying to understand. Oh well.
6/17/2011 6:32:46 AM
Kris I asked you what causes governments to get better at solving economic issues...your answer"the legislative process between the two is similar".that isn't disputablebut you'll do just that.
6/17/2011 4:27:47 PM
6/17/2011 6:49:59 PM
6/17/2011 7:13:51 PM
6/22/2011 10:42:25 AM
6/22/2011 11:23:20 AM
6/22/2011 11:36:45 AM
There was undoubtedly fraud that went on at the highest levels of banking and rating agencies, but it's undisputed at this point that the Federal Reserve played a major role in fueling the bubble. The government literally invented the process of "packaging the good with the bad," and private banks (especially with the repeal of Glass-Steagall) wanted to get in on it too.Where did the private banks get all this cash to gamble with, though? The Fed discount window...and they're still fucking doing it. Nothing has changed. Zero percent interest rates mean primary dealers can call up the Fed, borrow money for free, and go play craps with it. The bailouts only empowered the banks, it did nothing for the average person. Now JP Morgan, Goldman Sachs, and the rest of the primary dealers understand that they are above the law. There is no limit to what they are allowed to do. The is no limit to what the Fed can do. The banking elite has run amuck and there's about 5 politicians in Washington that are even willing to talk about it.When the government causes these problems through the creation of an unaccountable central bank, the FDIC, the fractional reserve system, etc, there are two camps: the endless regulation camp, and the camp that actually wants to deal with (and eliminate) the evil institutions that are the foundation for the whole system.Bernanke should be in jail. The CEOs of these banks should be in jail. They know exactly what they're doing, and they don't give a shit. Of course, this is the United States, so we'll be imprisoning the people that tell the truth and giving record bonuses to the people fleecing the public.[Edited on June 22, 2011 at 11:56 AM. Reason : ]
6/22/2011 11:44:17 AM
I've asked this of others on here before and been told some pretty unfeaseble stuff, but I'm curious:So what's the alternative to Federal Deposit Insurance? I know you think you're going to stop all banks from making foolish choices, but humans are foolish and are going to fuck up. Absent of perfect information in a market, a lay customer of a bank can't be expected to choose the safest bank (that's like asking fast food customers to be able to say whether or not there's rat shit in the kitchen when the kitchen can't be seen). So...if a bank goes belly-up, what happens to the average joe, $25-30,000 a year schlubs that had their money in there? "Sucks to be you, have fun in bankruptcy court"? "Should have insured your deposits yourself with all that money you don't have"?I'm sure there's some utopian perfect market rational self interest answer I'm forgetting and the real problem is that whenever things go wrong it is UNIVERSALLY TRUE that it's the fault of things not being anarchistic enough.[Edited on June 22, 2011 at 5:38 PM. Reason : x]
6/22/2011 5:37:13 PM
The alternative is a full reserve banking system where banks can't create money and charge you a fee to use it. I guess your point is that people are too dumb to shop around or diversify, and that's probably true right now. I don't think people have to be that dumb, and if there were more of an incentive to shop around and make sure that your bank was secure and well managed (and not just a function of whatever bank is closest or provides the highest rate of interest on savings), people would be more likely to do that.The broader point is that people are more likely to be lazy and stupid under a system that rewards laziness and stupidity. Right now, all the banks are practically the same. Some might offer a slightly better percent return here or there, but keeping more than a 6 months worth of living expenses in the bank is an all around losing proposition in an inflationary environment like this. You'd be better off buying bags of sugar with your savings than letting it sit there.
6/22/2011 6:20:00 PM
6/22/2011 7:55:14 PM
6/22/2011 8:36:31 PM
6/22/2011 9:48:09 PM
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6/22/2011 11:29:08 PM
I know you don't agree with it, but I believe that a distributed body at least has a chance of taking advantage of man's greatest strength, learning. People will learn what behavior tends to loose them money. It is far harder for a politician to figure out exactly which ones of their several hundred votes in Congress lost them the election.
6/23/2011 2:37:09 AM
6/23/2011 6:45:57 AM
6/23/2011 10:02:45 AM
There is. It is called learning, either through ourselves (I lost money that way) or through others (I know or heard about someone that lost money that way).
6/23/2011 10:48:10 AM
6/23/2011 12:45:50 PM
It's not just that their wages declined, it's that they've had major inflation, which is the same as having your wages diminished. This is what I mean when I say we export inflation. China is the manufacturing powerhouse of the world - the value of their money should be going up. Instead, U.S. and Chinese leaders are intent on maintaining a certain level of trade, so rather than allow true floating exchange rates, we have a currency peg. It's great for us. It's terrible for China.
6/23/2011 1:04:58 PM
6/23/2011 1:38:44 PM
I disagree with both of you. I think China has been amazingly successful how to invest in thier own economy over the past decades and it will continue to pay dividends. I think they have done a great job at leveraging aspects of privatization and socialization to meet thier place in the developmental process.
6/23/2011 1:47:28 PM