2/16/2009 12:44:21 PM
i hope when i go on jeopardy, sweet georgia brown is an answer
2/16/2009 3:42:40 PM
http://www.coyoteblog.com/coyote_blog/2009/02/getting-it-exactly-backwards.html
2/16/2009 4:48:37 PM
Looks like the stock market is already reacting to St. Barry's plan.http://www.iht.com/articles/2009/02/17/business/18marketsA.php
2/17/2009 7:38:26 PM
The plan was a foregone conclusion as of the start of last week, so any market moves based on it would have happened then.More bad news from banks around the world have sent global stocks tumbling. Every major index is down this week, not just the Dow.
2/17/2009 7:42:41 PM
How is this going to help the country? It isn't creating new jobs, it's just giving people who already have jobs something else to do. If anything this will draw more Hispanics into America to work in road construction. A friend of my family lost his job with Caterpillar. He has an economics degree and was in their marketing department. He's not interested in working in road construction. We are an educated society where a large part of the work force doesn't do intense labor. The store managers of Circuit City and all of the other retail stores that have gone out of buisness aren't certified welders who are going to weld bridges. They were talking to an engineer on the news who claimed that building a bridge in one city was going to create something like 138 new jobs, but once again he is another person who will be invovled in the public works programs that already has a job.
2/17/2009 8:02:31 PM
It intrigues me that the University System is still requiring budget cuts, and the State just got 6 billion from the stimulus. Basically Oblinger said they have no choice but to cut jobs to meet the required budget cut. I wonder how do they determine who to let go. I heard from someone that works there that they go by age and years of service, so I would assume that less than a year, and older people, especially ones close to retirement let let go first? Either way no one that works for the State in any agency or system should have to face a pink slip.
2/17/2009 9:12:55 PM
not all faculty/staff are 100% state-fundedi would suspect that the non-state-funded employees would be the first to go... grants and donations aren't quite coming in as fluid as some programs need, so they'll have to cut accordinglythere's also chance of restructuring org charts and then the redundancies might be trimmedalso, for anyone interested, here is the link to the chancellor's most recent statement on the budgethttp://ncsu.edu/about-nc-state/chancellor/speeches-and-writings/budget-update-feb16/index.php[Edited on February 17, 2009 at 9:33 PM. Reason : link]
2/17/2009 9:30:45 PM
I would have thought the opposite - that people getting paid by the State would be let go ahead of people getting paid by grant money since that State doesn't pay them. But it does make sense now that I think about it more.
2/17/2009 9:42:05 PM
And now, the President has introduced a $50B homeowner rescue bill.http://money.cnn.com/2009/02/17/news/economy/foreclosure_preview/index.htm?postversion=2009021717$700B$787B+$50B$1.5TIn one year. Jesus.]
2/18/2009 7:58:57 AM
At least it not being spend on war and can practically help the average American.
2/18/2009 8:35:11 AM
So far, the war in Iraq has cost around 1/3 of that to put it in perspective. I was opposed to the Iraq war from the start, but I think the comparison is relevant.That the money will help people, in the long run, is debatable.]
2/18/2009 9:36:03 AM
Congress is talking about a second stimulus bill already.Holy mother of God when will this madness stop?!
2/18/2009 10:07:38 AM
2/18/2009 10:13:39 AM
So my current 30 yr fixed is at 4.875. Think I'll be able to get a lower rate under the mortgage modification plan?
2/18/2009 12:32:52 PM
damn i should have waited, i bought in july and got 5.75
2/18/2009 12:56:20 PM
2/18/2009 2:24:31 PM
Well, either the government volunteers to stop borrowing or the government will run out of lenders, forcing the federal reserve to start printing money to keep interest rates down, causing inflation. As inflation sets in, causing the dollar to slide, foreign holders of U.S. debt, perceiving a negative return on their U.S. investments, will start to sell in search of a better return elsewhere, forcing the printing of exponentially more money until a currency crisis sets in and the dollar becomes unconvertible, leaving America a far poorer nation than when it all started.But that is a long way from here. The U.S. Treasury would need to borrow trillions more to exhaust America's lenders. But, what it will do, is divert capital away from America's businesses and individuals, exascerbating the already deep recession. [Edited on February 18, 2009 at 2:55 PM. Reason : .,.]
2/18/2009 2:53:14 PM
I don't think this trillion is the back-breaking straw on the 58 trillion sized pile.
2/18/2009 2:56:50 PM
2/18/2009 3:06:27 PM
2/18/2009 3:42:09 PM
2/18/2009 3:44:37 PM
the communism is not funny
2/18/2009 3:50:46 PM
not crazy at all. He's dead on about the sneaky healthcare shit.
2/18/2009 3:52:17 PM
2/18/2009 4:00:06 PM
^^ you don't think claiming that Obama is a pathological liar that is trying to trick people in to making the US communist isn't crazy?This is essentially the same thing salisburyboy use to say, except replace Obama with the Jews (although according to old salisburyboy, the blacks were being manipulated to do the Jews' bidding).ON a side note, where are you getting these ideas from? I don't think Fox News would push them, so that leaves either Ann Coulter or Rush Limbaugh, but Coulter hasn't been in the spotlight for a while now.[Edited on February 18, 2009 at 4:05 PM. Reason : ][Edited on February 18, 2009 at 4:05 PM. Reason : ]
2/18/2009 4:04:56 PM
2/18/2009 4:16:26 PM
I think we're at the point where this is all just funny numbers and Trillion dollar plans will become more common place.
2/18/2009 4:19:14 PM
^^ huh?Where did I remotely indicate I don't think politicians will be politicians?Obama is no where close to a communist, and is not secretly trying to become Hugo Chavez.And Rahm Emanuel didn't mean what most people take that statement to mean. It's unfortunate for him though that he chose those words.[Edited on February 18, 2009 at 4:21 PM. Reason : ]
2/18/2009 4:20:53 PM
2/18/2009 4:31:33 PM
2/18/2009 4:34:36 PM
So pushing for a laundry list of Democratic projects in a so-called "stimulus" bill, threatening dire consequences if it's not done right now!one!11!, then immediately bending your transparency pledge in a rush to sign it is acting as a paragon of transparency.Okay...
2/18/2009 4:38:41 PM
^ Do you honestly expect any president that's trying to hock a piece of legislation to say "I really, really would like this now, but honestly, it can wait a few months, whenever you have time I guess"?And if you define transparency relative to the past presidents, the Obama admin has represented a paragon of transparency.I understand needing to keep pressure on our leaders to do the right things, but your angles of attack don't really help in finding any better solutions.The stimulus bill is based on bad data and untested hypotheses, but i've yet to see an analysis and/or data that points in another direction that's based on anything better. This is practically the nature of economics.
2/18/2009 4:47:42 PM
2/18/2009 4:50:09 PM
2/18/2009 4:58:05 PM
2/18/2009 5:09:00 PM
2/18/2009 5:33:20 PM
^ Nationalization by the FDIC would have still incurred massive debt for the government, near what we're spending on the stimulus i imagine (although I haven't seen any calculations of this value). I don't see how that's materially different than just bailing them out, with conditions.
2/18/2009 5:40:00 PM
The difference is the moral hazard that we create when we bail them out.
2/18/2009 5:47:06 PM
Not to mention the clearing out from the market of irresponsible players, leaving room for the more responsible players to fill the void.
2/18/2009 5:49:41 PM
In terms of moral hazards, bailing out banks are the least of our government's worries... by a LOT.This doesn't excuse it, but it means I don't feel bad for dismissing it, if it turns out okay.[Edited on February 18, 2009 at 5:50 PM. Reason : ]
2/18/2009 5:49:55 PM
2/18/2009 5:54:18 PM
THis may be too pedantic, but I was thinking things like the Trail of Tears, slavery, jim crow laws, tuskegee experiments, Iran-Contra and its ilk, Panama Canal, and various other sundry affairs our governments been involved with.I'm not convinced the non-existence of Fannie/Freddie would have prevented this. From what I understand, the investors' computer models based on data up to the late 90s had sub-prime loans classed to be fairly reliable. And using this data, the predicted more sub-prime loans would continue to be reliable. But they didn't factor in that the previous sub-prime loans weren't made willy-nilly and sometimes dishonestly, the way many of the "toxic" loans we now are having problems with were made. These models would have still existed sans freddie/fannie, and at some point after the "Enron Loophole" was opened, some investment banker would have reached the same wrong conclusions that were reached anyway, causing the liquidity crisis when all the bad loans grossly underperformed.[Edited on February 18, 2009 at 6:09 PM. Reason : ]
2/18/2009 6:05:32 PM
Neal Boortz's stimulus package/what he would do if he were President today:
2/18/2009 6:09:02 PM
2/18/2009 6:09:29 PM
^^ he should have left out the Fair Tax thing if he wants to be taken seriously. I stopped reading his list after that.[Edited on February 18, 2009 at 6:10 PM. Reason : ]
2/18/2009 6:09:57 PM
without getting into a whole fair tax pissing contest, would the fair tax not put more money in the pockets of the middle class immediately? money that would be spent?the other points are fair.
2/18/2009 6:13:13 PM
like a teenager with a brand new credit cardWhere does this spending end? Holy shit. Throwing good money after bad money. It doesn't work. We are extremely fucked. And apparently this bipartisan bullshit he was spewing during his campaign was smoke up your asses. Hey Obama, keep the change.[Edited on February 18, 2009 at 6:35 PM. Reason : .]
2/18/2009 6:29:18 PM
We gotta pump some money into the economy to get it moving again. Otherwise we risk a deflationary spiral leading to a full-on depression.
2/18/2009 6:52:53 PM
→
2/18/2009 6:57:40 PM