1/30/2010 8:37:51 PM
COD: MW3
1/30/2010 8:49:24 PM
Yeah, it's pretty outrageous. I mean, how dare they not buy (and hold) our worthless debt? Don't they know that we can't maintain our luxurious American lifestyle unless their citizens work their ass off for 2 dollars an hour?
1/30/2010 9:09:47 PM
1/30/2010 11:31:00 PM
1/31/2010 5:11:13 PM
Yeah, it's pretty outrageous. I mean, how dare they not buy (and hold) our worthless debt? Don't they know that we can't maintain our luxurious American lifestyle unless their citizens work their ass off for 2 dollars an hour?Also, I believe the United States has already done this to Cuba...(economic warfare)
1/31/2010 6:17:15 PM
Yeah, it's pretty outrageous. I mean, how dare they not buy (and hold) our worthless debt? Don't they know that we can't maintain our luxurious American lifestyle unless their citizens work their ass off for 2 dollars an hour?^ The only harm Cuba faces from America is a lack of tourism, which any self respecting socialist paradise would not want anyway.
1/31/2010 7:55:38 PM
^^We also also did it already to Russia.
1/31/2010 8:06:41 PM
1/31/2010 9:27:17 PM
yeah that whole pinko government thing probably has a little bit to do with that.
1/31/2010 9:35:45 PM
it's not like our economic embargo has hurt them at all, whatsoever. btw, did you ever stop to ask why they still have that pinko gov't? it couldn't possibly be due to said gov't having a great scapegoat for all of that country's problems, could it? naaaaaaah]
1/31/2010 10:04:36 PM
^ Quite true. But the question of moral culpability is not obvious. In effect, one child taunted another by refusing to talk to them, and that child as an attempted response shot himself in the foot. While this outcome may have been foreseeable, it still does not reach the level of blame. We did not do this to Cuba, Cubans did this to themselves, sort of a sixty year temper-tantrum.That said, it is not like the embargo was unjust. The Cuban regime was suspected of killing more than a few American citizens in their military takeover, not to mention violating the human rights of millions of American citizens. So a political response was necessary, it just should have stopped at seizing Cuba's foreign assets, as embargoes are a curtailment of the rights of Americans, not Cubans. [Edited on February 1, 2010 at 9:31 AM. Reason : .,.]
2/1/2010 9:26:02 AM
If we are concerned at all about the citizens of Cuba, we'd end the embargo. No questions asked. There's absolutely no reason to continue that policy.
2/1/2010 9:28:32 AM
^ agreed with that.
2/1/2010 9:34:28 AM
2/3/2010 12:06:02 AM
So did buying a house, until until it wasn't anymore. I seriously doubt the American people would tolerate the loss of their currency, so when a debt crises arises a few decades from now I believe the government will repudiate its debt to the cheers of libertarians everywhere.
2/3/2010 3:42:06 AM
There will be a lot of clamoring and cheering in basements across the land
2/3/2010 4:00:15 AM
2/3/2010 9:28:09 AM
2/3/2010 10:38:50 AM
Yes, China benefits from subsidizing our economy in a way, but it's really not a good deal for them. Peter Schiff uses the analogy of a group of people getting stuck on an island. They have to divide up the work in order to survive. Of the group, there's a bunch of Asians, and one American. One guy is a hunter, another guy grows food, one person builds the huts, etc. So they all have jobs. And the American's job is to eat. He just sits there, the rest of the people do the work, then they bring whatever they've worked for to the American to consume. You could say that the Asians are benefiting, because they're employed. They'd benefit even more if they kicked the American off the island, though, because then maybe they could enjoy the fruits of their labor, and they could do a little consumption of their own.
2/3/2010 10:52:47 AM
Yet I don't think Peter Schiff's analogy works well. The Americans aren't just simply consuming goods for free, we're exchanging resources (capital, processes, technology, etc.) for those goods. This is a mutually beneficial arrangement because they are getting the resources required to develop their economies. Also, for the sheer amount that these Asian nations are producing, there is no way that their own economies can absorb all those goods and services. Whether or not those fruits are being enjoyed equally on the Asian side or this arrangement is healthy in the long run is a different debate, but this is by no means an unequal relationship.Don't understate employment either: high unemployment ensures social stability and a dramatic improvement of the quality of life for these nations. I think they would all agree that they are thoroughly enjoying the fruits of their labor. Japan was burned to the ground back at the end of the 1940s. The ROK was a backwards, third world country in the late 1960s. The PRC had nearly ceased to function as a state let alone cohesive society at the end of the Cultural Revolution. The first two nations now enjoy industrialized nations' standards of living, and the Chinese are catching up as well. Heck, if anything, they are holding back the best of their products for their own domestic consumption first.
2/3/2010 11:37:59 AM
2/3/2010 12:34:15 PM
My bad. Meant 'high employment'... When I was writing it, I was thinking "high employment" and "low unemployment" at the same time... [Edited on February 3, 2010 at 1:15 PM. Reason : ]
2/3/2010 1:14:43 PM
While true, cause and effect are being misunderstood. The Chinese exchange rate policy does not boost export demand directly, as the mechanism requires them to print money and use it to buy dollar denominated debt instruments. The increased boost to demand is no different than if the Chinese took those same printing press dollars to fund the government, slashing taxes. As such, the Chinese are funneling their new money through us, but only because it builds dollar reserves, which they want for very good reasons. But the effect is the same, increased demand, and significant domestic inflation (30+%).
2/3/2010 5:15:45 PM
2/3/2010 7:10:45 PM