Wrong. Do you buffoons have any concept of what an asset a house can be? Do you even realize what home ownership means to so many, especially low-income Americans? I guess Habitat for Humanity and their ilk can just fuck off, right?http://www.habitat.org/intl/na/218.aspxBush is an asshole for wanting Americans to own their own homes?! Is that all you've got?
1/23/2008 12:36:10 AM
Obviously in his zeal to get as many people owning homes as possible, he forgot the part of the plan where 6 years later the economy doesn't come crashing down.
1/23/2008 12:39:53 AM
^ Yeah, with all Bush's power--I mean, he's certainly rendered the Democrats in Congress impotent--he also controls the minds of individuals. Apparently, Bush has the ability to cloud their understanding of. . .ADJUSTABLE RATE MORTGAGEs!!!1 [Edited on January 23, 2008 at 1:01 AM. Reason : .]
1/23/2008 1:01:05 AM
ok how did they not know that the interest rates were lowered to get the poor people loansbut would eventually get increased beyond what they could paydont tell me they didnt see that comming.i think it is a planned destruction of the US economy because they realize we must dramatically rearrange our economy inorder to keep up with chinathe only way to do that is if the # of poor people increasethey tried to do it by sneaking illegal mexian in, but that gig is upnow they have to turn a huge % of american into lower class citizensits real simple we are in direct competition with china now, and we are quickly going banckrupt, we have to make a quick change and natural change will take too long
1/23/2008 1:03:38 AM
Damn, that's a whole lot of stupid in one post.I distinctly remember liberals complaining about unfair loan practices and qualification requirements that locked minorities out of homeownership. Now liberals are claiming that those same companies preyed on minorities with teaser interest rates and excessive subprime loans, qualifying minorities and others who had no business buying a house. Make up your mind, you hypocritical bastards.[Edited on January 23, 2008 at 1:16 AM. Reason : 2]
1/23/2008 1:15:29 AM
That was minorities claiming that. I honestly don't recall any politicians that said that.
1/23/2008 1:19:08 AM
Enabling subprime loans helped poor people, therefore it was good economic policy.Providing welfare helped poor people, therefore it was good economic policy.Protectionism helped poor people, therefore it was good economic policy.Giving away free malt liquor helped poor people, therefore it was good economic policy.[Edited on January 23, 2008 at 1:31 AM. Reason : .]
1/23/2008 1:29:39 AM
^^ That's because you don't know what you're talking about--you never have. Hillary Clinton on affordable housing:
1/23/2008 1:31:28 AM
Well apparently these are policies that Bush and other Republicans supported as well so placing blame with just 1 party would be unfair.
1/23/2008 1:33:01 AM
1/23/2008 1:41:07 AM
Fed's Action Stems Sell-Off in World Markets
1/23/2008 6:24:03 AM
If by "gains" you mean still losing over 100 points at close then yes. They gained. Good to know those rose-tinted glasses are a nice fit.
1/23/2008 6:40:52 AM
^^This is like popping a vicodin when you're in pain because of metastatic cancer.
1/23/2008 8:36:01 AM
Recession FAQ form WSJhttp://online.wsj.com/article/SB120078173684203245.html?mod=hps_us_inside_today
1/23/2008 9:24:54 AM
so if between 45 and 81, the recessions came from raising interest rates to fight inflation, wouldnt lowering the interest rates make inflation go higher?
1/23/2008 9:28:40 AM
^ Bingo. So when things get back to "normal" we actually end up paying higher prices. Welcome to stagflation. But Bush's Fed wants to make sure the fat cats are taken care of now as well as then.
1/23/2008 9:39:28 AM
inflation has been pretty mild thus far.That said, it could jump with these new rate cuts.
1/23/2008 12:06:54 PM
1/23/2008 2:41:18 PM
Haha. Go take a look at today's stock chart. It yells PPT.
1/23/2008 3:28:59 PM
^^ I borrowed the sell-off and buyup thing from billionaire Warren Buffett. Sorry, professor, but I'll take his wisdom over yours any day.And the Monoploy Man you referred to is nothing like what I was referring to--and you know it. Obviously, I was referring to the stereotypical image that many hold of a white man in a suit and vest lighting his cigar with hundred dollar bills while he watches the ticker tape machine. Please try not to be purposely obtuse. BTW:Major Averages Close Higher After Substantial Turnaroundhttp://www.tradingmarkets.com/.site/news/Market%20Analysis/1019301/
1/23/2008 4:53:37 PM
CBO sees U.S. economy avoiding recessionWed Jan 23, 2008 2:21pm EST
1/23/2008 11:37:49 PM
This is pretty interesting. From the Philadelphia Fed, it talks about the economy and if it is increasing or decreasing on a state-by-state level.Blue is good, red is bad. The darker color means more good or more bad.http://bp0.blogger.com/_pMscxxELHEg/R5e7jGQ3PxI/AAAAAAAABg0/g13emuhncTg/s1600-h/PhillyFed3month.jpg[Edited on January 24, 2008 at 10:17 AM. Reason : /]
1/24/2008 10:17:09 AM
1/24/2008 12:20:51 PM
1/24/2008 1:34:30 PM
1/25/2008 12:49:23 PM
Yeah, the sky is falling, Chicken Littles. NC state revenues remain $125M ahead at fiscal year's midpoint
1/25/2008 12:53:56 PM
^To be sure North Carolina's economy has been doing well and I am still unsure about whether the state will suffer a recession. Though our fundamentals are strong, we are so hooked up to the banking industry and tech. Obviosuly, banking is suffering and my guess is that tech can't withstand a full blown recession.However, on our side is that Bank of America and Wachovia are not guilty of the same kind of bad behvavior as Citi. BofA in particular I think is strong and could emerge from all of this as an even larger player.IBM is also one of the strongest tech type companies out there, though I am not sure if you can still call IBM solidly tech these days. So, North Carolina has a firmer foundation. On the other hand a recession likely started in California back in Oct and is begining in Florida and Nevada now and will come on in New York shortly. Depending on how this whole things works out the economy on average could experience a hard recession but NC is hit only mildly.
1/25/2008 1:21:37 PM
^ Keep accentuating the negative, professor. CBO sees U.S. economy avoiding recessionWed Jan 23, 2008 2:21pm ESThttp://www.reuters.com/article/latestCrisis/idUSN23615899
1/25/2008 1:25:06 PM
Well, if the Republicans and Democrats put the guns away and came to a bipartisan agreement for the first time in maybe three years in just a couple days on giving me $600, the economy must be in fantastic shape. (The CBO has often skewed results since Clinton politicized its reporting of numbers in the mid-1990s, fyi. Asking the CBO if the economy is good is like asking a Republican or Democrat if the other party are good or bad for America. You should expect a biased answer.)[Edited on January 25, 2008 at 1:36 PM. Reason : .]
1/25/2008 1:27:36 PM
^ Do you actually think I don't know that? I used the CBO because it is supposedly nonpartisan. Some of you will bitch about anything.
1/25/2008 1:37:29 PM
1/26/2008 4:34:32 PM
^^ Let me state for the record that absolutely none of kwsmith2's posts strike me as overwhelmingly positive or negative. Rather, they are in my view thoughtful, rational, and realistic assessments of the state of the economy. Not surprising of course considering he teaches this particular subject. Good for me too since I know next to nothing about this particular issue.In short, stop being a prick b/c he's not agreeing with you. It is possible for you to be wrong, and it is possible that people say a recession is coming because a fucking recession is in fact coming.
1/29/2008 12:20:50 PM
^ This is not about me--or him.
1/29/2008 1:00:10 PM
This is one of those cases hooksaw where I get the sense you've already decided to take a position and are simply posting any and all evidence that even modestly supports it. Anyone that diagrees with you either is a "debbie-downer," is playing partisan politics, or is out to get you.There is plenty of evidence to suggest a recession is coming. Just fucking admit it.
1/30/2008 6:58:34 AM
haha, that'll happen when salisburyboy marries a jewess
1/30/2008 8:11:03 AM
^^ and ^ Ignoring facts does not mean that those facts cease to exist. The fact is that many top economists are predicting the U.S. economy will NOT go into recession--deal with it.You can't harangue "evil Bush" on Iraq anymore, so now it's the economy. Whatever. ^ That's a cheap and stupid fucking shot and you know it. Is that the best you could come up with, boy? If you've got nothing, go with the old salisburyboy comparison, right? GG.
1/30/2008 11:15:32 AM
I think I'll move to Australia.
1/30/2008 12:47:55 PM
1/30/2008 1:57:49 PM
1/30/2008 4:19:47 PM
Hooksaw is a member of the Titanic's band.
1/30/2008 5:03:50 PM
1/30/2008 5:12:45 PM
Jan job report doesn't t look goodhttp://www.cnbc.com/id/22948805
2/1/2008 9:12:17 AM
2/1/2008 10:11:11 AM
If you are referring to Black Monday, we had record volume on that day. Now, it is true that a lot of sell orders could not be processed because of the huge backlog thats true. But trading didn't freeze on the NYSE.Now I think there were some issue on the NASDAQ because back then I don't think the NASDAQ had specialists. I think it was just peer-to-peer trading.
2/1/2008 12:44:22 PM
Fears of U.S. recession exaggerated even with 17,000 job losses: CIBC
2/2/2008 4:05:35 PM
Will you guys stop arguing month to month with regards to economic trends.The US economy isn't impressive because we're maintaining unsustainable trade deficits and printing vasts amount of money- the outcome of which you nor anyone else on the planet can predict properly right now but never in the history of global trade has led to anything 'positive.'All you're doing is copying news organizations in analyzing essentially nothing.Economic trends are measured in year-to-year analysis, not monthly quotes.
2/2/2008 4:15:05 PM
Predictions =/= Analyses of actual numbersWeather predictions =/= Actual weather And so on.
2/2/2008 5:05:23 PM
I was just about to toss in a global warming daily temp watch comparison.
2/2/2008 7:38:33 PM
I have seen a number of economists back off of recession calls in recent weeks but I remain concerned. There are still significant downside risks to US growth.I think not enough people are acknowleding the effect of credit and solvency problems in the US financial system. Credit is blood for the economy and we still have serious credit problems. Not least of which is that the value of the most important source of collateral in the economy, housing, is declining.Moreover, structured finance has not lived up to what we had hoped. I believe that structured finance was a big part of the global growth story of the last five years. I am not sure how we keep things going without it.Hopefully, I am wrong but I see the makings of a large recession. My hope is that swift action by the Fed has averted the worst. However, the risks as I see them are significantly to the downside for growth.
2/3/2008 6:10:38 PM
^ Hey, if you want to talk economic slowdown in the United States, we can. Obviously, such has happened, and I think we'll see a continuation of the slowing down in various indices from Q1 '08 through possibly Q2 or Q3 '08.My short list of problems with some of the naysayers here and elsewhere is as follows: 1. Some organizations and individuals are trying to change the generally accepted definition of "recession," which is two quarters or more of flat or negative growth in the GDP. It is neither helpful nor accurate to start screaming the R-word like a flap-jawed idiot every time U.S. markets correct or the economy slows a bit.2. If the GDP continues to grow--even if it grows just a little--the U.S. economy is not in a recession. Deal with it.3. Much of the howling about the current state of the U.S. economy--particularly by some here--is simply schadenfreude. Some want to blame Bush for it all--even though presidents do not control the economy. I understand that presidents get the credit and the blame (though Bush hasn't received much credit for things that have gone well), but the finger-pointing in question has little to do with reality and more to do with the pleasure derived from pinning the blame on Bush.
2/4/2008 12:40:27 AM