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Topic: Let's talk about the problem...
no photo
Sat 07/16/11 11:35 PM

One other thing...

I do not like the disrespect and attempts at ridicule. Keep it out of this thread or bugger off and play elsewhere.



mightymoe's photo
Sat 07/16/11 11:39 PM


One other thing...

I do not like the disrespect and attempts at ridicule. Keep it out of this thread or bugger off and play elsewhere.





lol...no kidding, huh...

laugh laugh laugh laugh laugh laugh

Kleisto's photo
Sat 07/16/11 11:47 PM
Edited by Kleisto on Sat 07/16/11 11:48 PM


What about the idea of sharing the fruits of labor?

Should we be required to do such a thing? The fruits, of course, in capitalism is profit.


No, the fruits of each person's labor belongs to that person. If I can't keep the fruits of my labor, why should I continue to work hard? Why should I try to better myself, if my wealth will just be given to my neighbor who chooses to not work so hard?


This describes the problem with income taxes right here. The government has no right to money we earned, none. They effectively mooch off of the working class.

ArtGurl's photo
Sat 07/16/11 11:50 PM
Edited by ArtGurl on Sat 07/16/11 11:51 PM

The housing bubble had regulations, and the overwhelmingly vast majority of loans that actually followed the regulations were not the ones that initially defaulted causing the collapse. Now, it's been a while since I looked at the numbers, so they may have changed in the past couple years. But the collapse itself did not begin from loans following the regs. Greed and the quick profit regardless of the consequences... no accountability. That was the problem.

Some loan officers, and many if not most mortgage brokers, knowingly offered unqualified citizens a mortgage that they would never be able to afford. So, because they recognized this very high probability for default, they began selling those bad loans to hedge fund managers who again sold the bad loans on the market. All the while making money hand over fist. The loans went into default... as expected, the shareholders went belly up, the undisciplined banks went belly up, and the merchants walked away with incredible profits and no accountability.

That was the problem. There was no vested interest in the success of the loans to begin with by those who were setting them up.



Very true ... and irresponsible.

But wouldn't it have made more sense to invest the $800+Billion in bailout dollars in the families ... how would things look different if instead of bailing out Freddie and Fanny ... they bailed out the families.

Families would still be in their homes ... Freddie and Fannie would have stayed in business because people would have been able to pay their mortgages...

Call me simplistic ... but it makes sense to me ...

no photo
Sat 07/16/11 11:53 PM

Very true ... and irresponsible.

But wouldn't it have made more sense to invest the $800+Billion in bailout dollars in the families ... how would things look different if instead of bailing out Freddie and Fanny ... they bailed out the families.

Families would still be in their homes ... Freddie and Fannie would have stayed in business because people would have been able to pay their mortgages...

Call me simplistic ... but it makes sense to me ...


See how easy it is to come up with a simple and humane solution to these problems? Do you know why Freddy and Fanny were kept afloat, but the home owners were screwed? The government created Freddy and Fanny and treat them like babies. Close down Freddy and Fanny and start over, no reason to keep around two organizations that nearly bankrupted the country.

no photo
Sun 07/17/11 12:02 AM



What about the idea of sharing the fruits of labor?

Should we be required to do such a thing? The fruits, of course, in capitalism is profit.


No, the fruits of each person's labor belongs to that person. If I can't keep the fruits of my labor, why should I continue to work hard? Why should I try to better myself, if my wealth will just be given to my neighbor who chooses to not work so hard?


This describes the problem with income taxes right here. The government has no right to money we earned, none. They effectively mooch off of the working class.


But the 16th amendment says they can! laugh

(it was sold to the American people by saying it would only apply to the rich) laugh laugh laugh laugh laugh

ArtGurl's photo
Sun 07/17/11 12:05 AM


Very true ... and irresponsible.

But wouldn't it have made more sense to invest the $800+Billion in bailout dollars in the families ... how would things look different if instead of bailing out Freddie and Fanny ... they bailed out the families.

Families would still be in their homes ... Freddie and Fannie would have stayed in business because people would have been able to pay their mortgages...

Call me simplistic ... but it makes sense to me ...


See how easy it is to come up with a simple and humane solution to these problems? Do you know why Freddy and Fanny were kept afloat, but the home owners were screwed? The government created Freddy and Fanny and treat them like babies. Close down Freddy and Fanny and start over, no reason to keep around two organizations that nearly bankrupted the country.



Governments seem to enjoy overly complicating things don't they? I guess it justifies their existence...

creativesoul's photo
Sun 07/17/11 12:28 AM
Finally...

Great job, as always Artsy. You beat me to it, sorta. bigsmile

--

Fairy Tales and lies.

I'll get to you later, until then...


KerryO's photo
Sun 07/17/11 04:50 AM


Considering your arguments toward morality and fairness ... do you advocate sweatshops? Child labor? Forced labor just shy of slavery? Does it sit well with your moral compass that people work 16 hours a day for $.50 which really doesn't pay for them to eat healthily?


Absolutely I support sweatshops, don't you?


http://www.citizeneconomists.com/blogs/2008/08/14/outsourcing-the-good-side-of-asian-sweatshops/
It’s a painful fact that boycotting goods made by sweatshop labor only hurts the workers, not the factory owners. In 1993, a U.S. boycott forced Bangladeshi factories to quit utilizing child labor. According to Oxfam, most of those displaced children were forced into worse positions, including prostitution—when their first choice had been to sew clothing for Wal-Mart shoppers.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JqtS3sFVy7s


http://www.lewrockwell.com/dilorenzo/dilorenzo113.html
In a forthcoming article in the Journal of Labor Research Ben Powell and David Skarbek present the results of a survey of "sweatshops" in eleven Third World countries. In nine of the eleven countries, "sweatshop" wages in foreign factories located there were higher than the average. In Honduras, where almost half the working population lives on $2/day, "sweatshops" pay $13.10/day. "Sweatshop" wages are more than double the national average in Cambodia, Haiti, Nicaragua, and Honduras. The implication of this for all those naïve college students (and faculty) who have been duped into becoming anti-sweatshop protesters is that they should support and encourage more direct foreign investment in the Third World if they are at all concerned about the economic wellbeing of the people there.


Let's be honest, "sweatshops" really are good for growing economies. People who work in sweatshops are actually far better off than their neighbors who don't. The statistics show that.

So yes, I support sweatshops, it's the moral position.


So why don't you stop being so immoral and go work in one yourself?

Your position is like that of Jeb Bush's saying he was a 'self-mnade' man when he ran for Governor in Florida-- yours and his political theories come straight from the tale of the Emperor's Clothes.


-Kerry O.

KerryO's photo
Sun 07/17/11 05:03 AM



Very true ... and irresponsible.

But wouldn't it have made more sense to invest the $800+Billion in bailout dollars in the families ... how would things look different if instead of bailing out Freddie and Fanny ... they bailed out the families.

Families would still be in their homes ... Freddie and Fannie would have stayed in business because people would have been able to pay their mortgages...

Call me simplistic ... but it makes sense to me ...


See how easy it is to come up with a simple and humane solution to these problems? Do you know why Freddy and Fanny were kept afloat, but the home owners were screwed? The government created Freddy and Fanny and treat them like babies. Close down Freddy and Fanny and start over, no reason to keep around two organizations that nearly bankrupted the country.



Governments seem to enjoy overly complicating things don't they? I guess it justifies their existence...



But you're ignoring history-- the same people who had the biggest hands in creating (and profiting from) this mess were the people who pretty much bought the bovernment and forced it to get out of the business of regulating the very activity that caused it.

Do some research-- you'll find that one of the biggest problems in the foreclosure mess has been caused by 'house flippers' walking away from loans on properties that are no 'under water'. You'll find that what these rich folks did was perfectly legal, because they got the bankruptcy laws changed to favor themselves back in the early 2000s.

-Kerry O.

jrbogie's photo
Sun 07/17/11 05:14 AM



What about the idea of sharing the fruits of labor?

Should we be required to do such a thing? The fruits, of course, in capitalism is profit.


No, the fruits of each person's labor belongs to that person. If I can't keep the fruits of my labor, why should I continue to work hard? Why should I try to better myself, if my wealth will just be given to my neighbor who chooses to not work so hard?


This describes the problem with income taxes right here. The government has no right to money we earned, none. They effectively mooch off of the working class.


well, our government has no RIGHTS to anything but 'we the people' did give them the POWER to levy taxes against our income.

jrbogie's photo
Sun 07/17/11 05:29 AM


The housing bubble had regulations, and the overwhelmingly vast majority of loans that actually followed the regulations were not the ones that initially defaulted causing the collapse. Now, it's been a while since I looked at the numbers, so they may have changed in the past couple years. But the collapse itself did not begin from loans following the regs. Greed and the quick profit regardless of the consequences... no accountability. That was the problem.

Some loan officers, and many if not most mortgage brokers, knowingly offered unqualified citizens a mortgage that they would never be able to afford. So, because they recognized this very high probability for default, they began selling those bad loans to hedge fund managers who again sold the bad loans on the market. All the while making money hand over fist. The loans went into default... as expected, the shareholders went belly up, the undisciplined banks went belly up, and the merchants walked away with incredible profits and no accountability.

That was the problem. There was no vested interest in the success of the loans to begin with by those who were setting them up.



Very true ... and irresponsible.

But wouldn't it have made more sense to invest the $800+Billion in bailout dollars in the families ... how would things look different if instead of bailing out Freddie and Fanny ... they bailed out the families.

Families would still be in their homes ... Freddie and Fannie would have stayed in business because people would have been able to pay their mortgages...

Call me simplistic ... but it makes sense to me ...


actually, no, as i see it anyway. bailing out families so irresponsible as to get themselves in such a fix, most families weren't so stupid, would have two negative effects. one, it would do nothing to save the mortgage banking system that those of us still need who did NOT succumb to the greed of a 'cheap home' that we could not afford in the first place; and two, it would have fostered the same risky behavior in the future. when people see the government as their savior from stupidity they become as guilty as the financial institutions for risking it all knowing they are 'too big for the government to allow them to fail.'

KerryO's photo
Sun 07/17/11 08:52 AM



The housing bubble had regulations, and the overwhelmingly vast majority of loans that actually followed the regulations were not the ones that initially defaulted causing the collapse. Now, it's been a while since I looked at the numbers, so they may have changed in the past couple years. But the collapse itself did not begin from loans following the regs. Greed and the quick profit regardless of the consequences... no accountability. That was the problem.

Some loan officers, and many if not most mortgage brokers, knowingly offered unqualified citizens a mortgage that they would never be able to afford. So, because they recognized this very high probability for default, they began selling those bad loans to hedge fund managers who again sold the bad loans on the market. All the while making money hand over fist. The loans went into default... as expected, the shareholders went belly up, the undisciplined banks went belly up, and the merchants walked away with incredible profits and no accountability.

That was the problem. There was no vested interest in the success of the loans to begin with by those who were setting them up.



Very true ... and irresponsible.

But wouldn't it have made more sense to invest the $800+Billion in bailout dollars in the families ... how would things look different if instead of bailing out Freddie and Fanny ... they bailed out the families.

Families would still be in their homes ... Freddie and Fannie would have stayed in business because people would have been able to pay their mortgages...

Call me simplistic ... but it makes sense to me ...


actually, no, as i see it anyway. bailing out families so irresponsible as to get themselves in such a fix, most families weren't so stupid, would have two negative effects. one, it would do nothing to save the mortgage banking system that those of us still need who did NOT succumb to the greed of a 'cheap home' that we could not afford in the first place; and two, it would have fostered the same risky behavior in the future. when people see the government as their savior from stupidity they become as guilty as the financial institutions for risking it all knowing they are 'too big for the government to allow them to fail.'


In many cases, these were unsophisticated people who were being lied to be 'experts', who told them 'Don't worry about the reset rate, property values will keep growing really fast, you'll be making more money and you'll be able to finance in 2 years at a lower rate'.

If you're going to be fair, how about commenting on the rich people who bought into the same scheme hoping to get even richer without risk or effort, but who just 'turned in the keys' when they couldn't make the payments from the cash flow on their speculation properties and there was no one with the means to pay the rents they would have needed to do so? These were the same kind of people who are fond of saying 'My word is my bond' in better times, but who caved into the same 'let the government clean up the mess' when their investments cratered.

See, it's always easier to pick on people who are not those you wish to emulate-- and it's easier to look the other way when they are. Face it-- in this country, money can buy a lot of repentance, And cheaply, too.

-Kerry O.

no photo
Sun 07/17/11 08:54 AM
Edited by Spidercmb on Sun 07/17/11 09:04 AM

KerryO said...

So why don't you stop being so immoral and go work in one yourself?

Your position is like that of Jeb Bush's saying he was a 'self-mnade' man when he ran for Governor in Florida-- yours and his political theories come straight from the tale of the Emperor's Clothes.


Such pathetic attempts at logic are committed in these forums. It's sad. sad

I never said it was "moral" to work in a sweatshop, I said it's moral to build and run them there. It is a very great boon to 3rd world citizen who gets to work in a sweatshop. Sweatshops are moral in 3rd world countries, because it offers the citizens a better alternative than their country can allow. It also creates more jobs than the country already has. It also gives the employees job experience that will come in very useful as the economy grows.

Maybe the reason you don't believe in what Jeb Bush has said is because you are incapable of understanding what he said? I'm not saying that you have a mental deficiency, but rather an emotional one. You are clearly intelligent, but you allow your emotions to blind your reason. You should calm down and look at the facts rationally. I didn't always believe sweatshops were good, I educated myself. If someone says something you don't agree with, you don't have to lash out at them from pure emotion, you can research the subject and come to an informed decision.

no photo
Sun 07/17/11 09:03 AM
KerryO and jrbogie,

You are both ignoring the actual problem with the housing crisis. It wasn't "evil lenders" and it wasn't "evil house flippers" and it wasn't "irresponsible home buyers", it was the Government.

http://www.forbes.com/2008/07/18/fannie-freddie-regulation-oped-cx_yb_0718brook.html

ArtGurl's photo
Sun 07/17/11 09:34 AM


Do some research-- you'll find that one of the biggest problems in the foreclosure mess has been caused by 'house flippers' walking away from loans on properties that are no 'under water'. You'll find that what these rich folks did was perfectly legal, because they got the bankruptcy laws changed to favor themselves back in the early 2000s.

-Kerry O.



The problem is more complex than house flippers ... in fact, that is not cited as the big 'cause' in anything I've read. I have done some research thank you.

And who said anything about 'illegal' ...


ArtGurl's photo
Sun 07/17/11 09:44 AM

actually, no, as i see it anyway. bailing out families so irresponsible as to get themselves in such a fix, most families weren't so stupid, would have two negative effects. one, it would do nothing to save the mortgage banking system that those of us still need who did NOT succumb to the greed of a 'cheap home' that we could not afford in the first place; and two, it would have fostered the same risky behavior in the future. when people see the government as their savior from stupidity they become as guilty as the financial institutions for risking it all knowing they are 'too big for the government to allow them to fail.'



It is easy to speculate what might have happened but it didn't, so we'll never know ...

I wonder how many of those 'stupid families' ended up living in a tent. It is still a devastating time for a lot of people.


no photo
Sun 07/17/11 09:46 AM
Edited by artlo on Sun 07/17/11 09:53 AM


The traditional way is to borrow it from the bank. this is a good thing because it increases the money supply without necessarily being inflationary.


Great idea! The Government can take all the small business owners take home pay and small business owners can just get loans to make the difference. And that sounds fair and reasonable to you? How do they pay off the loans when the Democrats are constantly demanding their every last dime?
You see, Businesses pay off their bank loans out of their revenues. They even get a tax deduction on the interest. No different whether it is a small business or a huge corpration. If the owners have looted the business treasury for the sake of life-style spending, then they are likely to face high personal income taxes. If they have left more money in their business, they are likely to face much lower lifestyle taxes. This is a good way to keep their money away from the Government.
QUOTE:

I am afraid that this is simply not true. Unless you are fortunate enough to Invest in an IPO, the shares you are trading are already in circulation, like trading baseball cards.the fleer bubble gum company doesn't get any money from it. The only financial benefit to the company is the higher value of the shares that it itself holds. That's the way the stock market works.


And how is that not positive to the economy? It is good for individuals who should be saving money, and that is a good thing, but the American economy is 70% consumer driven. Money in savings and not spent is unavailable to the aggregate demand that feeds the economy. The point here was to debunk the common myth that by investing in the stock market, people are sending money to the companies. You were just wrong about that.

QUOTE:

Those dollars largely go to American Corporations who manufacture their goods overseas. Creates jobs, but not in America. The point of this was to demonstrate that These dollars do not create jobs in America. You left that part out


We have the second highest corporate income tax rate in the industrialized world. If we dropped it, many of the the companies that have left would come back. If we stopped allowing the leftists to make deals with their biggest contributors (the unions), so that they can institute union only shops, we would bring in even more. They are in business to make a profit, not create jobs for a specific group of people. You guys think that businesses should be run as charities, it would be much more funny if it weren't so naive and dangerous to the economy. Unfortunately, the current administration sees things like you do.
this is a complex paragraph. You are raising issues that weren't a part of the original exchange, but we can talk about this, too.
1) There is a vast difference between published corporate income tax rates and taxes actually paid. the figure I have heard is around 13%
2) I hardly think the contributions from unions (which comprise under 9% of the private work force) even begin to compare with contributions from contributors like the Koch Brothers.
3) Workers are also in business to make a living. Not to make business owners richer. Workers do not volunteer to take jobs as unpaid volunteers. History has shown us that when top income rates are high and Unionization rates are high, everybody gets richer. I have read where you think sweatshops are a good thing. Good for poor workers in countries that have failed to manage their economies for the good of their populace. Certainly good for exploiters. I personally don't want to see America gets to the point where sweatshops would be considered a great thing for American workers. However, I applaud your altruism for the workers of foreign countries.

There are plenty of US companies that still have a powerful presence in the USA. There are also plenty of foreign companies who have a growing presence in the USA.
It is true that there are American companies that that wield great power in America Koch Industries, for instance. That really isn't the question. It is also true that as American wages more closely approach third world wages, some few employers are finding it more cost effective to operate in America.
Just because you and CreativeSoul are ignorant of that fact doesn't mean that our economy should be trashed.
Keep 'em coming.







creativesoul's photo
Sun 07/17/11 01:48 PM
Money is God.

creativesoul's photo
Sun 07/17/11 01:52 PM
My mind is waxed...

We have an individual who scoffs at anything that can be remotely attached to communism in his mind, yet claims that the working conditions in communist China are moral.

We now base what is moral upon comparison to nothing.

Slavery is moral. Mother goose grim supports this. Slave wages are better than no wages.

That sums it up nicely.

Let the reader decide.

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