8/1/2009 10:50:29 PM
This seems like good legislation.The relationship between executives and their boards are ridiculously incestuous. The SEC already regulates this arena. As far as I can tell from a scan of the article, they're just changing rules-- not expanding power.
8/1/2009 11:14:24 PM
barney frank needs to be tarred and featheredalthough he might get off on that
8/2/2009 2:21:08 PM
Yeah, this is dumb, unconstitutional, and just all around un-American. I'm fine with making sure shareholders have more say, since a large chunk of shareholder power is held by institutions (mutual funds, pensions, etc) that are actually run by people who have a clue. The only real problem with many of the compensation packages is that they reward short term performance too much, or use the wrong metric for deciding bonuses. If you give the CEO 10 million extra bucks for raising the stock price 10% in a year, then yeah, you're going to encourage them to make some dumb decisions as far as the long term prosperity of the company is concerned.
8/2/2009 2:46:47 PM
So you've said it was dumb and un-American and then went on to agree with the premise of the bill?I'd be in favor of letting companies fail when they've failed, but what we've learned time and time again is those on Wall Street are collectively a ton smarter than those in DC and those attempting to regulate them, getting into a position where they are "too big to fail".Ideally, there has to be some other way to keep a too big to fail situation from happening, rendering this legislation pointless.Having said that a large majority of these investment houses doling out huge bonuses have done so because of 1) Bailouts by the taxpayer2) A ceasing of mark to market rules that would render many of them instantly insolventI'm a fan of putting a tight leash on big bonuses during this recessionary period because these companies are able to give them out thanks to the generosity of the American taxpayer and the craftiness of the Goldman Sachs conglomerate having all the right people in all the right places.
8/2/2009 3:05:36 PM
^ umm, where did I agree with the premise that Congress should be allowed to cap/control the amount a privately employed person is paid?[Edited on August 2, 2009 at 3:10 PM. Reason : or control, so some fucktard doesn't argue with me on semantics]
8/2/2009 3:09:35 PM
Right here
8/2/2009 3:14:30 PM
Dude, you need to learn some reading comprehension.
8/2/2009 3:16:07 PM
Do you know what "premise" means? They are wanting to limit compensation because it has gone out of control on the back of risky betting. Then you agreed that CEOs are incentivized to make risky bets.Don't be an idiot.[Edited on August 2, 2009 at 3:25 PM. Reason : .]
8/2/2009 3:24:51 PM
You're arguing semantics with me. I was attacking the idea of congress regulating private compensation.Troll trolll troll your Fail Boat, gently down the stream....[Edited on August 2, 2009 at 3:43 PM. Reason : .]
8/2/2009 3:43:16 PM
What about we take care of the issue by NOT bailing out companies that take these "risky" gambles that end up going south bankrupting the company.If I take a risk buying a $200k house then lose by 6-figure job; the only "bailout" i will be getting is my ass to the homeless shelter.
8/2/2009 4:13:43 PM
So the rules are good ideas, but Congress shouldn't do it?Because... they just shouldn't?This isn't even a gray area when it comes to the Constitution, either. Interstate commerce clause ftw.
8/2/2009 4:34:36 PM
are you comparing buying a 200k house to the dealings of a multinational corporation?[Edited on August 2, 2009 at 4:37 PM. Reason : ]
8/2/2009 4:37:20 PM
8/2/2009 5:04:18 PM
Yes. Interstate Commerce clause surely means you can set prices. do you even believe half of the bullshit you spew?
8/2/2009 10:29:58 PM
Nixon enacted wage/price controls it to combat inflation.So did FDR. Truman got permission from Congress to do it, but backed down, IIRC. I'm fairly certain Wilson did it during WWI, too.
8/2/2009 11:24:19 PM
^Nixon abandoned conservative theory and it came back to bite him:
8/3/2009 1:01:06 AM
I didn't say it was a good thing. Only that it's allowed and that there is precedent.
8/3/2009 1:07:32 AM
8/3/2009 6:48:51 AM
8/3/2009 7:20:13 AM
How dare you talk ill of FDR
8/3/2009 7:29:28 AM
8/3/2009 10:31:17 AM
8/3/2009 10:44:01 AM
8/3/2009 7:08:16 PM
8/3/2009 8:37:04 PM
8/3/2009 10:48:33 PM
Congress has NO right to bail out any company from bankruptcy...even if it means a lot of votes for the politicians doing the bailing (with our tax money)
8/3/2009 11:34:15 PM