Other than global warming, there isn't a better example of how the facts on the ground don't match the political discourse than the continued debate over the bailouts, specially the TARP money paid to banks in 2008. It shows that most people aren't interested in the facts, and only cares about who has the best one liners and screams the loudest. Here are some facts, first from 2010 data,http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/10_41/b4198029649845.htm
10/5/2011 5:36:59 PM
there are three kinds of lies:1) lies2) damned lies3) statistics.guess which one you just used?
10/5/2011 5:43:12 PM
Fannie, Freddie Narrow Losses, But Want More Government Aid
10/5/2011 5:43:19 PM
10/5/2011 5:46:29 PM
bullshit. you are using narrow statistics in area to completely ignore the entire effect of the bailouts. If the only argument against the bailouts ever made were "we will lose money", then you'd be right. but that WASN'T the only argument ever made. thus the reason you are lying through statisticsand then, you can't help but forgive me for pointing this out: the article claims that TARP offered 250billion in expenses? Too bad Wikipedia lists about 300billion plus in expenses. It seems even your own proffered source can't even get the god damned numbers straight. [Edited on October 5, 2011 at 6:05 PM. Reason : ]
10/5/2011 6:01:26 PM
It is also ignoring all the interest payments and penalties paid by healthy banks that didn't want the tarp money. The former CEO of BB&T spoke on campus on Tuesday and said that TARP cost his bank almost a billion dollars. It is akin to proclaiming that Social Security is profitable for the Government because of all the payroll tax it brings it.
10/5/2011 6:06:51 PM
Guys really, please stop. I'm about to go the gym, laughing this hard is bad for me right now. If the best you've got is "bu bu but Wikipedia says.......!!!!!" and "we didn't mean what we actually said when we said it" (2008 wasn't that long ago guys, my memory isn't that bad) then I've already won. Hell, even Herman Cain agrees with me!!!!
10/5/2011 6:12:49 PM
looks like we're not the ones ignoring facts in this thread. do you have anything to counter the Wikipedia number? or is wiki just lying?do you have anything to counter LS's point that some of the "claimed gains" are due to banks that didn't need the money in the first place and didn't want it?[Edited on October 5, 2011 at 6:26 PM. Reason : ]
10/5/2011 6:26:03 PM
10/5/2011 7:09:53 PM
It doesn't matter what the short term economics of it are...unless of course all you care about it winning the next election and kicking the can down the road.It's called moral hazard, and it's what has allowed failed banks/car companies/you-name-it to continue with stupid behavior that would otherwise land them in bankruptcy. Nothing was made better just because a few people got to keep their jobs for the time being.
10/5/2011 7:34:18 PM
^ gets it
10/5/2011 9:12:45 PM
^^^Some of the TARP was used to prop up the auto industry, and Chrysler ended up being a major money-loser.
10/5/2011 9:23:34 PM
Public tax money should never be used to bail out, prop up, subsidize, or help private industry. Period. Both sides should never have done this crap. If a company is run well, it should succeed, if its run poorly and is corrupt then it should fail. If the management is doing anything illegal, then they should be held accountable. Thats how the system should work.
10/5/2011 10:09:10 PM
Shrike argues like the students who debate one another in the quiet study area outside of my office during lunch.I have to stop what I'm doing to go out there and tell them they can't bring their Subway in there.Then I end up having some of them in my class and they make a B.
10/6/2011 12:59:33 AM
What's all this then? The real trash is on the fed balance sheet, transferred from the banks to the fed for face value. Anyone want to guess if these assets are worth par? It's trillions and it's not worth face. Are the bailouts still net positive?
10/6/2011 8:28:35 AM
We don't talk about the Federal Reserve, bro. The Federal Reserve has nothing to do with it, the banks just get the money from...uhh......anyway, we just need more regulations on the banks. Having an unaccountable private central bank is perfectly fine and sustainable.
10/6/2011 10:11:43 AM
10/6/2011 11:56:01 AM
10/6/2011 12:08:54 PM
Nothing on the 3 trillion + assets on the Fed balance sheet? Seems like these assets move 10% from par and the loss is equal to the the entire stated 250b#? I'd look in to it. I'm sure these assets were put on at reasonable prices, if they were why was the fed needed? So to sum it up. Take stuff worth .30 to .60 cents on the dollar, trade it to the fed for 1.00 worth of freshly minted tbills. Now on your balance sheet you don't have toxic debt you have squeaky clean t bills. Get Timmy G to tell the dumb as a bag of hammers American people everything is fine. Repeat as desired
10/6/2011 12:16:30 PM
10/6/2011 12:25:43 PM
It's not semantics, you just don't know what you're talking about.
10/6/2011 12:39:11 PM
^^ No, a moral hazard is something that seems good for humanity but runs the risk of being immoral in the future. If a behavior is bad for humanity it is not a moral hazard, it is immoral, as in no realm (short term or long term) could it seem to have been good for humanity.
10/6/2011 12:57:28 PM
You don't think even the economists rather strict definition of "moral hazard" can be applied to all those things I mentioned? Healthy or uninsured individuals who ignore the consequences of having 40 million uninsured (like, i dunno, overuse of the ER and exploding health care costs for example) isn't a moral hazard? Pushing for the death penalty, even in cases where the accused may be innocent, because every single person involved in our legal system is removed from the actual consequences of their actions isn't a moral hazard? Bankers who engage in illegal or corrupt activities, because the possible gains far outweigh the personal consequences, isn't a moral hazard? Denying gays the right to marriage or teaching creationism in schools don't carry long term human consequences that are ignored by the politicians pushing for those things? This isn't hard.
10/6/2011 1:01:02 PM
So instead of recognizing your gross mistake over taxpayer losses bailing out the private sector, you want to argue semantics? Yes, some of those things you listed do involve moral hazard and some of them are down-right evil by themselves regardless of any perverse incentives they create.
10/6/2011 2:56:02 PM
Im generally a small govt, free market kind of guy, let them fail, etc. And I have disagreed with pretty much anything Shrike has said. However, as someone who worked(s) in investment banking, specifically with banks, TARP was a necessary evil. Yes it sucked and its bullshit we had to do it, but the overall effect on the economy of having numerous "too big to fail" banks actually failing might have caused a depression. Shit, look at the after effects of Lehman failing, and that was just one IB. History will look back upon TARP as an overwhelming success.[Edited on October 6, 2011 at 4:13 PM. Reason : .]
10/6/2011 4:12:28 PM
The former CEO of BB&T spoke here on campus on Tuesday and according to him his bank saw the crash coming and built up a huge war-chest of capital to quickly replace their bankrupt competitors, only to be slapped down when those competitors were bailed out and then themselves slapped with TARP money they had to deal with.
10/6/2011 4:43:08 PM
10/6/2011 4:52:13 PM
For fucks sake shrike, stop making an ass out of yourself.
10/6/2011 4:52:39 PM
Ah, another enlightening post brought to you by Chance. When was the last time you posted anything of any substance in any thread on this forum?
10/6/2011 4:54:17 PM
Holy shit...you didn't know the definition of moral hazard, so you just made up your own so you could bitch about things you found to be immoral?The whole fucking financial industry took ridiculous risks because the GOVERNMENT ACTIVELY ENCOURAGED IT. It's been doing it for the last 70+ years, but it started getting bad under Clinton. If it weren't for government intervention, these banks would have found these loans to be far too risky to risk their own capital, and we simply would have had less people owning homes with a relatively stable economy.
10/6/2011 6:13:53 PM
10/6/2011 6:27:21 PM
10/7/2011 8:01:02 PM
Yeah the guy who can't read is saying I "lost my credibility" because people would rather change the subject than debate the actual points in the OP. I'm still waiting for someone to explain how a $20B profit was a waste of tax payer money.
10/8/2011 9:01:30 AM
who the fuck changed the topic? YOU DID. not to mention changing the very definition of the phrase "moral hazard" to suit your own ends and then complaining that other people were "arguing semantics". Do you know what moral hazard is yet? Of course not.
10/8/2011 12:23:29 PM
You apparently skipped the post where I showed how all those things I mentioned were moral hazards, by any definition, but that's besides the point. You're still retarded, can't read, and can't tell the difference between "committed" and "spent", a distinction your Wikipedia article (best source evaaaaaaar) clearly makes. We actually spent $245B on the banks, have already received $255B back, and the Treasury estimates that number will increase to $265B. Those numbers come straight from the Treasury and are indisputable facts. However, I already know you have a problem with facts when they don't fit your world view (global warming), so I'm sure you'll just respond with something completely stupid like "and that's if we don't include the car makers, who are, essentially, banks, themselves." http://www.treasury.gov/press-center/press-releases/Pages/tg1281.aspxHell, even AIG is paying back their TARP money. You have absolutely no ground to stand on whatsoever. You can argue the ethics behind it, you can get pissed that if had to be done in the first place (I certainly am), but you simply can't dispute that the cold hard math of it all worked out strongly in the American tax payer's favor. The more you do, the dumber you look.
10/8/2011 1:04:33 PM
10/8/2011 1:25:04 PM
Ok, so now not only are car companies banks, insurance companies are too? Are colleges and hospitals banks too? Are you a bank? Am I bank? What are we even arguing again? Oh yeah, math, and you keep saying 2+2=5 (or 205+40=285, or about 300, or whatever the next number you come with will be) Also, your fuck:words count ratio keeps going up,
10/8/2011 1:35:50 PM
10/8/2011 1:48:18 PM
Taking your cues from Palin/Bachman and just doubling down on your stupidity eh? I'm not sure how you can call it "leaving out others" when I only mentioned "banks" in the OP, and both links I posted specifically dealt with the banks, but whatever, I expected this from you. Let's see if I can get you to dig your hole any deeper.Yeah, AIG was part of the bailouts, but they aren't a bank and their part in the mortgage crisis was specifically "insuring" the bad securities that the banks were buying. They received bailouts from TARP, the Fed, and directly from the Treasury totaling ~$180B. However, just like the banks, that is also turning into a positive investment for the tax payer. http://www.treasury.gov/press-center/press-releases/Pages/tg1281.aspx
10/8/2011 8:15:06 PM
10/8/2011 9:24:40 PM
aaronburro's got nothin. I haven't seen him do anything he complains about in the last post. It's called a hypocrite.Shrike wins.
10/9/2011 1:29:35 PM
man shrike got owned hard in this thread
10/9/2011 5:30:11 PM
aaronburro pwnt, go home.
10/9/2011 9:43:09 PM
This was a cartoon created in 1912, one year before the creation of the Federal Reserve.One day, you will need to embrace reality: the Federal Reserve is a creation of the private banks, for the benefit of private banks, meant to protect the banking cartel from losses. This is not something that was intended to "curb the effects of the business cycle". The central banking system is an intentional scheme to funnel wealth from the people to the power elite.[Edited on October 14, 2011 at 7:14 PM. Reason : ]
10/14/2011 7:12:25 PM
10/15/2011 1:00:59 AM
not only that, but he has completely gone full retard saying that "we will make money on the toxic assets we took off the banks' books". you know, the assets that made them insolvent in the first place
10/17/2011 11:22:41 PM
10/18/2011 12:10:01 PM
Yet again you are mixing bailout related losses with revenues that had nothing to do with it. Might as well include the trillion dollars collected by the IRS from income taxes in your win column too. Per your pdf, bailing out fannie and freddie lost the treasury $73 billion, a sum which presumes dividend payments to the treasury through 2021 but ignores all interest paid by the treasury to borrow the money. The same goes for every other category, assuming everyone that has promised to pay the Treasury will pay, ignoring that so far they have not paid and in fact have consumed even more money, as is shown in the FY 2012 table from your own pdf which shows an overall $28 billion loss just for that year. It also excludes a shit-load of liability upon the government to bail them out next time and in perpetuity after that.
10/18/2011 5:04:55 PM
Why do you keep saying "you"? "I" am not saying anything. I'm simply posting data directly from the treasury that absolutely destroys the argument, from a pure mathematical perspective, that the bailouts were bad. You say they are excluding things. Well I could easily say that you're excluding the fact that had the bailouts not occurred, the overall loss to the American tax payer would have been fair greater than a few billion dollars. And guess what? I have exactly as much evidence to support my view as you have to support yours (actually, I have WAY more evidence supporting my view than you do, but what's the point in arguing with someone who denies fact rooted in basic math).[Edited on October 18, 2011 at 5:32 PM. Reason : :]
10/18/2011 5:25:36 PM
10/18/2011 6:54:54 PM