No politician has convinced me yet that the world will fall apart if we don't pony up the money to bail out this gov't screw-up.This goes to a couple of core libertarian values: Limited government and personal responsibility.Every elected politician in Washington, vested with the responsibility of preventing tax-payers from trillion dollar bailouts, should resign. These banks used the gov't to avoid responsibility. This unholy alliance is evidence of the libertarian principle that gov't should not give anyone preferences. Bankers and gov't created this mess. Our economy is big enough to absorb this problem. We currently do not have $700 billion worth of bad mortgages. They want this money just in case. That's ridiculous! Those in gov't allowed this to happen, why should we trust them to fix it? They will form a bail-out that helps their pals in Washington and Wall Street. Bush and the other politicians on both sides created this mess- and now want to quickly brush the whole thing under the carpet using our money as the broom. This situation is also an excellent example of why the two-party system should be forced to open up to more political parties. The dems and repubs created this mess and do not deserve a monopoly of political power.
9/24/2008 9:22:30 PM
signed.I am so fucking irate right now I can't even stand myself.OMFGLessons learned: LYING IS OK IF EVERYONE ELSE IS DOING IT.Next time I'm tempted to take advantage of government money I'm gonna rape the ever loving shit out of it
9/24/2008 9:24:20 PM
how is it bush's fault?The Dems voted for the deregulation that led to all of this shit
9/24/2008 9:32:28 PM
oh whoops....I didn't mean to sign the part about it being Bush's fault specifically. It's everyone in congresses fault. Bush is the less to blame seeing as how he wasn't the one who signed the major deregulation bill. That was Clinton.]]
9/24/2008 9:34:36 PM
9/24/2008 9:35:54 PM
this problem start in 2002 under current president term.
9/24/2008 9:39:07 PM
^^Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act^wrong
9/24/2008 9:41:05 PM
wall street. investemtn banker bets 30/1 on borrow monetary. i right. you need do research. GLBA had no to do with if. this start in 2002.[Edited on September 24, 2008 at 9:44 PM. Reason : .]
9/24/2008 9:42:52 PM
gramm?wasnt there some guy in the mccain campaign with that last name? same person by chance?
9/24/2008 9:44:55 PM
^^It had a lot more to do with it than the current administration.Learn how to speak fucking English you dip shit[Edited on September 24, 2008 at 9:49 PM. Reason : ]
9/24/2008 9:48:51 PM
I still haven't heard exactly why people believe the repeal of Glass-Steagall was the root of the credit crisis.If anything, the repeal of Glass-Steagall helped the credit crisis. Without it, Bear Stearns would not have been acquired by JPM. Morgan Stanley and Merrill Lynch (pending agreements) would not have been able to be absorbed by Wachovia and BofA. It is the diversified financial companies, those retail banks with I-banking arms like BofA, JPM ect, that are weathering the storm.[Edited on September 24, 2008 at 10:03 PM. Reason : .]
9/24/2008 9:55:24 PM
why mad man? you want excuse for republican. republican in office for 8 years . so if they fault. republican have more rule than democrants in gov for 12 years. you wrong man. deruegulation if republican philosophy. Mccain want less gov. Bush have less regulaiton. you confused. is everybody fault more republican.[Edited on September 24, 2008 at 9:58 PM. Reason : .]
9/24/2008 9:56:20 PM
9/24/2008 9:59:20 PM
We had republicans in charge of the White House and Congress since '94. They did nothing to prevent this from happening. Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae had Clinton cronies at the helm, and stole millions by cooking the books. And Bush sat back for 8 years and did nothing to bring this to the forefront. Liberals bullied the gov't into encouraging banks to give loans to people who had no business getting them. And the Republicans, in charge of the gov't, sat weak-kneed and spineless to stop them.
9/24/2008 10:03:28 PM
NCLBNO CEO LEFT BEHIND!!!
9/24/2008 10:05:07 PM
own house is American dream. people need to have home.
9/24/2008 10:05:26 PM
Yes. It's congresses fault. And ultimately OUR fault for voting for jackasses to fill those spots. That's me taking my personal responsibility.
9/24/2008 10:05:48 PM
To be honest, this isn't surprising at all that this happened.The people who are in office, need money to get into office. People in NYC (and across the country) that are in the banking and hedge fund industries are the ones that support their candidacies.Why bite the hand that feeds you?(not advocating for it, just saying why it's not surprising)
9/24/2008 10:06:30 PM
9/24/2008 10:07:30 PM
9/24/2008 10:09:03 PM
Elizabeth Dole's Office: 202.224.6342 / http://dole.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=ContactInformation.ContactFormRichard Burr: (202) 224-3154 / http://burr.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=Contact.HomeOh, and this is a good line too, from the bill itself:
9/24/2008 10:09:08 PM
Would anybody like to speculate what will happen without a bailout?
9/24/2008 10:14:28 PM
eonomy fix itself. institution fail all time. would take a down. get up soon in time.
9/24/2008 10:15:58 PM
^^ Paulson and Bernanke's used the D word in a meeting with the joint houses of congress. The thing is, this bill is so nebulous and unstructured, and gives such sweeping and undefined powers to the SoT with no oversight, that it is anybody's guess what'll happen with the bailout. So far, none of the government's moves to shore up the industry have worked, there is no guarantee here other than we'll be starting whatever comes next $700B in the hole.
9/24/2008 10:18:53 PM
^^ Well, now that the market expects it, I imagine every week that passes without any word of a plan will be worth 500 points or so on Wall Street. Without any sort of a plan to relieve the banks of their toxic paper, the financial system as we know it would finally seize up completely. Banks would stop lending to each other, the dollar would crumble to shambles, gold and oil would skyrocket (for a brief period until the reality of a global slowdown set in) and you'd see runs on banks as bad news and fear set in.Make no mistake, something has to be done to get the credit markets working again. But trusting 700 billion to a plan cooked up by 1 guy (and a small group of advisors) with no oversight, no input by the brightest financial minds in the country, and this fake urgency to get it done (which is to save the GOP from a crushing defeat in a few weeks) is a horrible way to go about it.
9/24/2008 10:21:13 PM
^ good my friend. you correct. but where it does end? if you help some other want help. let some fall nationalize others smaller.America dollar deflation alot if 700 if pass. future intrest rate could make worse. national credit average below for rest of world.[Edited on September 24, 2008 at 10:25 PM. Reason : .]
9/24/2008 10:24:05 PM
Buying up these securities may rid the banks of bad debt in the short term, but in the long term the Federal Government owns large quantities of bad debt with no means of valuing it. The banks themselves don't know how to value what they own. Even with that off their books, that doesn't restore faith in the financial system.
9/24/2008 10:25:25 PM
You guys just don't understand how this all works. This is a great opportunity for the government. They aren't simply giving the money away they are buying 700b worth of securities that are rock bottom shit value right now and nobody will buy them. In ten years when things are back to normal the value will be back to normal and the government will profit big time assuming they take the responsibility of fixing the way these companies attack people and help americans redo their mortgages/avoid foreclosure.
9/24/2008 10:25:59 PM
God, I hope some people go to jail over this shithttp://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601109&sid=ah839IWTLP9s&In this whole fiasco, any one "check" on the system would have probably prevented the problem. These guys at Moody's and S&P were at the root of the issue. Thinking about it now, it's a bit unfathomable that so much of these obscure investments that are taking down the economy...were rated by FOR PROFIT companies.If anything going forward, rating agencies are what should be nationalized or heavily scrutinized by the SEC as the "monkey wrench" thrown into any hair brained scheme these suits on Wall Street cook up to get rich beyond imagination off of.
9/24/2008 10:28:17 PM
9/24/2008 10:30:42 PM
Why do you think these securities are at rock bottom? Because there is no value behind them. They're based on inflated housing prices and a debt culture that could not be sustained. If they were good long term debt options the banks could sell them off.So you're advocating putting the American Taxpayer $700B further in debt to buy questionable securities in a scatter-shot attempt to shore up a flawed industry that may not even succeed.And that still doesn't address the amount of power being given to Paulson.
9/24/2008 10:31:56 PM
Anyone know if there's anything in the bailout that says shit about the CEOs of the companies and their severance packages?
9/24/2008 10:32:53 PM
9/24/2008 10:34:30 PM
9/24/2008 10:44:19 PM
9/24/2008 10:45:46 PM
9/24/2008 11:07:30 PM
http://nowallstreetbailout.com/Also, to echo JCASHFAN above: write your damned Congresscritters. Don't just sit around bitching uselessly on an internet message board.(Yes, they likely won't listen, but they need to know that some people actually are paying attention and don't like this bailout...)
9/24/2008 11:21:58 PM
9/24/2008 11:55:43 PM
9/25/2008 12:00:07 AM
9/25/2008 12:48:46 AM
There is bipartisan hate for this bailout. Bush, mccain, and obama are out of step with the people.
9/25/2008 12:53:52 AM
9/25/2008 5:23:57 AM
Playing devil’s advocate…
9/25/2008 6:52:35 AM
^ That is actually pretty well put. My two biggest bones of contention are the ideas that this will turn into a profit or that it'll even work. While possible, the current economic situation is part of a paradigm shift away, at least for a while, from cheap energy and likely a permanent shift away from cheap resources coupled with falling real wages as we begin to compete globally. The idea that the kind of disposable income that existed (thanks to the double internet / housing bubble) during the last 10 years will return is pretty unlikely. This is not to say we're going to enter a new dark age, just that our future purchases are going to wind up being more energy and resource efficient.Look, it isn't to say that something shouldn't be done, but this current plan seems haphazard at best. Again, this is some scary shit to read in legislation:
9/25/2008 7:23:27 AM
Is there any way this bailout does not actually happen?
9/25/2008 9:27:07 AM
9/25/2008 9:29:34 AM
^^^^^ Ron Paul Rulez!
9/25/2008 9:36:54 AM
signed, to the topic not above post[Edited on September 25, 2008 at 9:37 AM. Reason : .]
9/25/2008 9:36:56 AM
An email I got from Ron Paul, I think the beginning is hilarious
9/25/2008 9:48:08 AM
It's hard to blame democrats too much. Expanding gov't is their thing. But the republicans really tork me off. They sat there and ridiculed, ignored and marginalized Ron Paul- a man who has been trying to show the Fed for the farce that it is. We should be running Bernanke and Paulson out on a rail. We should be hauling Jamie Gorelick and Raines up on charges for some major prison time. We should be pressuring both Obama and McCain to purge from their campaign staffs anyone who made a penny profit off this crisis.This Bail-out is a big shake-down.
9/25/2008 10:34:05 AM