loose lips...Now everyone knows about it. OPSEC bro![]()
Racist! I resent that comment.
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BTW it's "you're a Norseman. "
Now you're just making shit up to suit your own purposes. What 30% on capital gains? America's 400 largest incomes paid <18% federal taxes in 2009, on incomes averaging $260M+... "Giving people jobs"? You just hit on the problem, in a backhanded sort of way- that's precisely what they're *not* doing ATM
What double digit wage increases for unions? Cite examples, don't just talk trash.
Pensions take up too much of the corporate budget? Well, duh! That's what happens when everything gets outsourced and offshored- the workforce shrinks, fewer people contribute to the pension fund to keep it afloat.
Redistribution of income? That's a feature of all modern economies, at least ones that continue to function, and has been since the last great financial catastrophe. It's not that it's desirable, but rather necessary. Failure to do so effectively is what's put us in the same situation all over again.
Just let me say something . I am 59 and my wife has put in 38 years at her job. Were small town . and Its a small company . My wife is allowed to take out half her money on loan . Her sister took out more than that on hardship. You don't know nothing about me .
Further more as far as being disgraceful. The way you adderess others on the internet. Were your not standing in a Mans face is disgraceful and cowardice. Your a norsman by virtue of your barbarism online . Which sugjest in real life your a mouthy coward.
If you disagree with what I say thats fine . But you adderess me and only me. You know how things work in your little world you do not know how it works in ever one elses world. If you think everthing works the same for everone and all things are equal . You have to get a grasp on reality. This world isn't fair . I am sorry you can only get a small percentage of your 401k on hardship only . Maybe you should be closer to the people who sign the checks and do the paper work.
As for the rest of what got your ass bound up try some prune juice, I am not far off on what I say and there good reason that it has to be generalized. As it is am just a nut case shouting off mouth . Harmless. If it was anything more than things change and everthing moves faster.
Now you're just making shit up to suit your own purposes. What 30% on capital gains? America's 400 largest incomes paid <18% federal taxes in 2009, on incomes averaging $260M+... "Giving people jobs"? You just hit on the problem, in a backhanded sort of way- that's precisely what they're *not* doing ATM
What double digit wage increases for unions? Cite examples, don't just talk trash.
Pensions take up too much of the corporate budget? Well, duh! That's what happens when everything gets outsourced and offshored- the workforce shrinks, fewer people contribute to the pension fund to keep it afloat.
Redistribution of income? That's a feature of all modern economies, at least ones that continue to function, and has been since the last great financial catastrophe. It's not that it's desirable, but rather necessary. Failure to do so effectively is what's put us in the same situation all over again.
Gotta have it. Oldest economics lesson in history and conservatives act like it's news. Amazing really.
But Libs act like you should not have to work for it. equally stupid.
A read what you wrote . Banks and all this shit what banks. A bank doesn't hold anything . We borrowed our own money and pay ourselves the interest, Thats OK in my books . As for amounts you can take out . No where did I say she took it all out . Nowere . Your babbling like your drunk. My wife is a manager( warehouse) my wifes sister manages the Production planet. My son has my wifes old job in the bindery . My next door neighbor works in the bindery . My sons cousin works in the Bindry . 2 other women work in the offices that are married to mywifes side cousins, I could go on and on . You know nothing of how this company manages its business or its retirement plan.
But Libs act like you should not have to work for it. equally stupid.
Now you're making shit up, too. I've never offered that. People should work, when there's work available to them. Which is the problem we have right now- work is not universally available, and we both know it.
One of the big problems in a serious recession (I'm being nice) is that people who have jobs hold on for dear life, for obvious reasons. This greatly reduces churn in the employment market, further reducing opportunities for people who are unemployed.
A nominal, normal rate of unemployment seems to be 5%, a fair % of which is transient and voluntary in good times. There's churn, people end up taking turns being unemployed. That's not the way it is now- people unlucky enough to become unemployed stay that way a lot longer, on average. This, of course, serves to widen the gap between haves and have nots in no small way. Lots of people who got pounded in the tech bust just got pounded again, just as they were getting their heads above water...
I don't know how much larger one could have made the so-called "stimulus." But just as in 2003 it failed to produce lasting prosperity or turn around the economy because the Ponzi Economic "pull forward" on demand (via increased credit) had hit the wall.
That's the ultimate failure of all of these so-called "economists." They simply disregard debt - on purpose.
This is idiotic, and worse, it's intentionally misleading. Anyone with half a brain knows that debt has to be repaid, and that if you have an economic system with $100 in currency and yet permit someone to loan what part of it they have at interest it is inevitable that the interest will ultimately consume all of the $100!
The answer to that is usually "emit more currency!" Yet this leads to a second conundrum - one can only emit more credit or currency (both spend the same) at a rate that matches growth in output, lest you get inflation. Inflation means that you really didn't accomplish anything, as while there are more units of currency (and/or credit) available in the economy each one purchases fewer goods or services.
The only way to prevent this from happening is to accept periodic recessions in which both borrowers and lenders who take and make the weakest loans fail and go bankrupt.
That causes the credit and debt (remember, credit and debt are the counter-balancing entries on both sides of the balance sheet) to be removed - and balance restored.
Recessions are particularly hard on creditors that loaned capital unsecured, as they take actual uncompensated losses. Those who loaned capital in a secured fashion get the collateral, which may adjust in price downward to it's actual value, but it doesn't go to zero. The unsecured lender, on the other hand, is faced with a complete loss.
The feedback mechanism (losses suck!) cause lenders to increase the price of capital - that is, the interest they demand. This in turn causes people to be more adverse to taking out credit for anything other than productive purposes - that is, to speculate or consume.
Through this natural set of feedback mechanisms (known as economic pain by those who experience it) the market works to restore balance - and protect the monetary system as a whole.
Government interference with this process always introduces undesirable distortions. By picking winners and losers government causes misallocation of capital - that is, it subsidizes losing behavior. By preventing fools from suffering their economic fate, government suppresses rates of interest charged for capital, which inevitably leads to negative real rates and thus speculative asset bubbles (after all, if you're going to get paid to borrow, you will borrow as much as you possibly can!)
But far worse is the refusal to recognize that absolutely nothing the government does produces anything. That is, government can redistribute a unit of currency (or credit) from Joe to Jane, but government in doing so does not and will not cause more units of currency in terms of output to be produced on a sustainable basis.
Hard mathematical truth why we things will get worse and worse.
http://market-ticker.denninger.net/...nsanity,-And-The-Hard-Mathematical-Truth.html
Except
I bought my car with cash. Its payed off and I bought it at 28k miles. I save big on insurance for it every month. At the time the stock market was fine. I think I made the right choice putting that money in a car vs the stock market.
