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| | #36 |
| Senior Member Join Date: May 2006 Location: What's left of NW Indiana
Posts: 1,072
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I agree that a correction in the housing market is underway, but I'm not confident that we're going to see things normalize any time soon. Houses across America jumped in value by what, 40% in the past few years? Its pretty hard to issue a 40% correction across the American housing market without inducing a great depression, as the typical American homeowner is heavily leveraged by their home mortgage. As we've discussed already in the thread that touched on equity theft, housing market corrections take place in two ways: a) subtle declines in bid prices, and b) drastic reductions in home values when they're repossessed and sold at a loss. Market forces can apply small changes in value across a wide swath of houses via the first mechanism. The second mechanism performs dramatic resets in housing values on an individual house by house basis. What this means (to me at least) is that small and barely significant corrections can effect the wide market very quickly, while significant, dramatic price resetting corrections effect one home at a time on a drastic scale. This means that corrections effecting the whole market in a dramatic way will never be swift, and corrective forces that government finds "tolerable" will take forever to be effective. Betting my own money on the housing market, I'm betting that the federal reserve won't have the guts to cripple billions of Americans financially, and that monetary policy will loosen again before the housing market experiences a true and complete correction. I think that the American homeowner is so leveraged that the Federal Reserve will never even consider pulling the rug out from under them, as this would destroy the American economy. Unfortunately, it looks as if overpriced housing is here to stay. |
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| | #37 |
| Senior Member Join Date: May 2006 Location: Manassas, VA
Posts: 693
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At least in my area (Northern Virgina), there's a lot of consternation with folks being upside-down on their mortgages if they bought within the past couple of years......prices have fallen considerably (I read about someone whose home had lost $200K in value....) I've also seen for-sale signs (that a year ago MIGHT stay up for a month) staying-up for over 6 months.....in some cases just taken down until the sellers won't have to take a loss when they do sell. |
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| | #38 |
| Senior Member Join Date: May 2006 Location: What's left of NW Indiana
Posts: 1,072
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Spiff touched on an interesting point when he mentioned the Middle Class worker, though he never followed through on it: In our current economy, Corporate America has waged all-out war on the Middle Class, with the ultimate goal (whether intentional or not) to be one of class destruction. Instead of having 3 classes of society in America (wealthy, middle class, impoverished), the frequency distribution of wealth in America is changing, so that the Middle Class is being eroded, and the majority of them that are being shifted downward; Some are shifted out of the middle class end up being shifted to impoverished status, rather than to wealthy status. That is a sign of an unhealthy economy. In many respects, America is on the path to becoming a country of "haves" and "have-nots." Not that anyone really notices this -- Joe Sixpack and I have been trained to believe that our standard of living is better than that of our parents' and grandparents' generation, because we have two cars, cellular phones, iPods, and flatscreen HDTV with a cable hookup. In reality, the typcial "middle class" American family now has two working parents rather than one, is heavily laden with debt, and lives from check to check. Sure, we have bought more "stuff" to fill our houses than our parents or grandparents ever dreamed of. Part of the reason that we do this is because our actual needs have been met (food, shelter, etc.) and Americans have been trained to indulge desires (HDTV, iPod, DVR, etc.) rather than to fill actual needs. Consumerism is rampant, and the cost of this can easily be measured by the number of families that have two working parents and children that are raised by Day Care workers. People who are well versed in statistics will quote low unemployment figures, though the figures can be misleading if not interpreted properly. Following NAFTA, good manufacturing jobs were exported out of the USA. Americans found new jobs, but a lot of the time they ended up finding jobs that didn't pay as well as their old jobs. Ross Perot was right -- we all heard "the great sucking sound." Following the grant of MFN (most favored nation) trading status to China, there was a second exodus of jobs from North America. More jobs left the USA, and even the jobs that had been exported from the USA via NAFTA ended up being exported from Mexico to China. Even the Mexicans complained about the lack of jobs. So now they emigrate to the USA to take "jobs that nobody wants." [sic] What's the result? Unemployment figures are low, but that statistic fails to account for the fact that people who lost good jobs in manufacturing had to take an inferior job to remain employed. A very interesting argument took shape as the Immigration Bill was being debated in the Senate a few weeks ago. One American Senator from the East Cost (I can't remember who he was), was astute enough to make the following observation: American companies argue that they need immigrant visas to be issued to that they can hire technically skilled computer workers because "American's aren't adequately trained to perform these sorts of technical jobs. [sic]" At the same time, Corporate America argues that Mexican immigrant labor needs to be allowed into America because, "They are willing to do the jobs that Americans' don't want. [sic]" So there you have it -- Corporate America speaks out of both sides of their mouth, telling American government that we need immigrant work force because American workers aren't educated enough to perform skilled technical jobs, and American workers aren't willing to perform manual labor. If that were the case, and we let in the immigrants to perform both skilled and unskilled labor, what kinds of jobs would be left for Americans? The truth of the matter is that Corporate America doesn't want to pay Americans a suitable wage to work in America. Corporate America wants to pay third-world workers to come to America and work for peanuts. If you let them get away with it, the result will be a GREAT economy for Corporate Ameria and a HORRIBLE economy for the American working class. Sorry that these posts always turn out to be so long. |
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| | #39 | |
| Senior Member Join Date: May 2006 Location: What's left of NW Indiana
Posts: 1,072
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When the bid prices for houses become so low that the people who own the houses become upside-down, the house goes off the market because the seller would rather not sell than sell at a loss. That kind of decision typically leads to one of two outcomes: a) The Homeowner can make payments. In that case, the homeowner remains saddled with debt on an overvalued house for the duration of the mortgage. The house could end up being an anchor around their neck for the rest of their lives. In this case, the home's value is not altered by a corrective force on the housing market. If the house does not sell or get refinanced, its not in the market. b) The Homeowner cannot make payments. In that case, the homeowner holds onto the house, it gets repo'd, and they lose all of their equity. In this case the homeowner would have been better off selling the house at a loss if they could have extracted some equity from the transaction. If they have no equity to salvage, its in their best interest to draw out the process as long as they can so that the the bank takes the hit. The end result is that the house sells at a lower market price during a sherriff's sale. for any market corrective force to be corrective, it has to effect houses that are actually involved in transactions within the market. If a seller would rather pull the house from the market than sell it at a loss, and he can afford to hold the property, then the corrective force has had zero effect on that house. That's why I considered the lowering of bid prices to be a weaker force on the market as a whole -- because many people can afford to reject a low bid. This makes the corrective process take a LONG, LONG time. In contrast, the correction that's provided by repossession and sherriff's sales is very potent, but it only effects a few houses at a time. The interesting statistic to watch for this sort of thing is the foreclosure rate. Around here its tripled in the past year. Not a good sign. | |
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| | #40 |
| Senior Member Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 724
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Bob, you speak about Corporate America as if it is an entity, with a concieved plan of war it is activley pursuing. That is rediculous. There is no such entity, it is a complete figment. What you observe is natural movement of the market place in response to conditions we as a society allow to occur. We allow monopolization of education in this country (funny how those afraid of monopolies in business embrace the monopoly of education), by those that are ill equipped to perform it, and we end up with poorly educated population that cannot or will not perform the tasks that need to be done. So we end up importing much of our labor. I don't "blame" Corporate America for this. The desire for the import of low skilled low wage immigrant labor is shared as much by the left as it is by the right. The left sees in this immigrant labor force future voters, all they need to do is villify the right and persuade the immigrant population (with the help of mass media) to vote for them. They'll gladly exchange sovereignty for votes. Business, while it is not an entity, will definitely pursue reduced labor costs, why wouldn't it? Business too will exchange soveriegnty for cheap labor. Which is more insidious? I don't know. But as the left incites racial hatred and division and angst and strife I lean toward finding it the more repulsive. The lesson to be learned by anyone considering all of these points is not to be reliant on Coporate America for your job or career stability. Rely on your own abilities. Remain vital, look for the opportunities and take them. If you don't, don't blame someone else for doing it. Entreprenuerialship is the best hedge against unemplyment. Opportunity exists everywhere, all one has to do is look for it. I don't see the shifts in manufacturing to other markets as a cause of alarm. I think business in America can efectivley compete with business anywhere, no matter the differences in labor costs. But it does take people that want to work, that are willing to change the way they approach business. In my job I work with assisting business' to improve their maintenance practices and as a result reduce their cost per unit to produce their products (mostly aggregates; rock, sand & gravel). There is harldy a company I cannot go into and not find money laying all over the place, all they need to do is pick it up. It's a challenge getting people to acceot that the way they've been doing things forever is not the best way to do it, that there are better ways. But for those progressive enough to accept that and work with us, the results are incredible. And I just work on the maintenance end of business. There are just as many or more gains to be made in the manufacturing process and supply chain areas. American business can drive the costs down to competitive levels. And that's what they'll have to do to survive. Adapt and overcome, or go away. As time goes on people working to help business in western societies to improve efficiency and drive costs down will be more and more valuable and in demand. Someone holding on to a low skilled job in manufacturing, hoping they make it to retirement before the place closes, well, it's not a good place to be right now. But can you really blame someone, or a faceless non-entity like Coporate America for that? We put the politicians in place that set the playing field. Let's look at ourselves. |
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| | #41 |
| Member Join Date: Jun 2006
Posts: 66
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The national debt is unrelated to personal debt. The American way seems to have become Buy Now, Pay Later. Our government does this and to many of our citizens this practice is quite normal therefore they see little problem with it. We are absolutely hemoraging resources. We have a war that will cost over a trillion dollars (that's if it were to end today. Medical and equipment will be the two biggest items requiring financial resources in the future.) and we have a major budget deficit in addition to the war. They couldn't include the cost of the war in the defense budget because it would become VERY unpopular once people saw the true cost of this war. I'm not sure how the government can continue to consider funding of this war as an emergency. Should be interesting to see what they put in the Defense budget for this war. Our government is borrowing money at an alarming rate, and as fast as its citizens. The federal government has borrowed more money in the past five years than in the previous 230+ years combined. A lot of irresponsible behavior going on and those of us that live within our means will be hardest hit when the bill comes due. |
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| | #42 |
| Member Join Date: Jun 2006
Posts: 66
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"you speak about Corporate America as if it is an entity" It is. They have the same rights as any citizen in this country. In a court of law a corporation has every legal standing as that of a real live person. And why wouldn't a corporation look after it's own best interests? |
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| | #43 | |
| Senior Member Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 724
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| | #44 |
| Member Join Date: Jun 2006
Posts: 66
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Technically correct. But don't we have ample evidence of corporations within the same industry trying to influence government for their own collective good? Credit card companies got bankruptcy laws. Oil companies helped shape our current energy policy. Health insurance companies certainly don't want a universal health care system. K Street isn't representing the blue collar American. They are representing Corporate America. |
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| | #45 |
| Senior Member Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 724
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Of course. That is called freedom of speech. We are free to lobby our elected representatives to legislate for our benefit. What we do not allow business to do is to conspire to that end, or any end. Communications between business are strictly regulated by the Sherman Act. The oil companies have been investigated numerous times for violation of this and have never been found guilty. The most recent time being just this year. There certainly is no entity called Corporate America that has conspired and carried out a war against the workers of America to drive them down into a subclass. There are only markets acting with natural forces within a system of our making. Last edited by hasserl; 07-09-2007 at 10:22 PM. |
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| | #46 |
| Member Join Date: Jun 2006
Posts: 66
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We are free and so is the corporate entity. You and I are living, breathing life forms. How a corporation came to be given the same rights and privileges as a living, breathing, walking human I don't know. Corporate interests are opposite that of consumer interests. Consumers want choice and low cost. Corporations want complete market share and high profits. It's difficult to defend corporate America when CEO's and board members are making obscene piles of money. I know they can justify it to themselves and their peers, but their $400 million compensation package doesn't mean much to the average blue collar joe, especially when that corporation claims it can not afford to help pay for employee's health insurance. I guess the climate these days favors the entrepreneur over the worker bee. |
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| | #47 | |
| Senior Member Join Date: May 2006 Location: What's left of NW Indiana
Posts: 1,072
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The majority of the CEOs that are at the helm of Fortune 500 companies have MBAs that were earned from Harvard, Duke, or Wharton. Each of these schools share a large degree of commonality in their curriculum. The fact that the boards that govern Corporate America hand-pick people with these educational backgrounds is not at all a coincidence. So my first point in support of the "Corporate America is an entity" hypothesis is the commonality in education among the educated people who are chosen to function as the "Corporate America" CEOs. The Second argument would be that of the interlocking directorate. If you gather the annual reports and the Form 10-K for the Fortune 500 companies, you will find that most members who sit on the board of directors of a Fortune 500 company hold seats on the boards of more than one Fortune 500 company. The directorship of the Fortune 500 is comprised of a rather elite interwoven group of business people, each of whom has influence on corporate policy on more than one Fortune 500 company. In addition to having CEOs that are hand-selected by an interwoven directorate, Corporate America routinely holds professional conclaves where CEOs and BOD members of the largest companies (both domestic and international) meet to further their own cooperative agenda. Sure, Corporate America may not exist as a singular entity, but to deny the existence of organization among Corporate America is an exercise in denial. These are all facts that are in common knowledge, and they are facts that are not under dispute. As a stockholder and investor in "Corporate America" I am not naive enough to say that Corporate America does not favor a shared master plan. Anyone who takes a moment to review any of the federal laws that have been passed in recent years could come to the rather obvious conclusion that the bills submitted before Congress and the Senate were not penned by the politicians who introduced them -- they were penned by Corporate America, and introduced by their paid lackeys in government. To say that Corporate America does not exist, or that it is not following a master plan seems to be equivalent to the ostrich sticking his head into the sand. Personally, I don't believe that corporations in America are only following the same path through an economic minefield solely as a matter of coincidence. On a bigger scale, world corporate leaders regularly meet in Davos, Switzerland under military guard to put forth their global agenda. The fact that the meetings take place is no secret -- the meetings are regularly covered by CNBC. The contents of the meetings are highly secretive though. Keeping an open eye on corporate behavior and the trend toward globalization of the markets, its not at all difficult to infer what's taking place at those meetings: exchange of national sovereignty for corporate profit. The blueprints for the global war on national sovereignty and the war on American worker have been in print for decades. The oldest writing I have heard of that favored this master plan was proffered by the Fabian Society, a pro-communist think tank. (Coincidentally, the Fabian Society was the first proponent of a graduated income tax as a gradual method of implementing their communist goals.) I have to admit, I first encountered the "corporate america agenda" concept by reading some of the whacked-out "conspiracy theorist" writings back in the 1970s. Different authors will cite influences by the Bilderberg Group, the Trilateral Commission, or the Council on Foreign Relations. These "conspiracy theorist" writings predicted everything that's happened "by accident" and by "market forces" in the past 30 years. Granted, this could all be coincidence, and the predictive validity of these writings may be no more valid than retrospective interpretation of the prophecies of Nostrodamus. If the concept of the New World Order (coincidentally I heard President Bush use that term on TV yesterday!) or the conspiracy theorist writings seem too radical, read the writings of the American statesmen Zbigniew Brezenski or Henry Kissinger. They tell the same story, as seen through the eyes of men who at the time were US National Security Advisors to Presidents Carter and Nixon, respectively. Perhaps their writings are more valid. Alternatively, consider the political agenda of these groups that were formed 30+ years ago using as a frame of reference the political actions exhibited by their founders since the groups were formed. The founding members of the Trilateral Commission were Council on Foreign Relations members David Rockefeller, Alan Greenspan, Paul Volcker and Zbignew Brezenski. Each of these men could easily be called the fathers of modern globalism. Going one step further, consider some of the current corporate members of the Council on Foreign Relations; the membership roster reads like the Who's Who of Corporate America. Some of the current corporate members include: Alcoa, AIG, Bank of America, Bloomberg, Boeing, BP. Chevron, Citigroup, ExxonMobil, Ford, GE, Goldman Sachs, Halliburton, IBM, JPMorgan Chase, Lockheed-Martin, McGraw-Hill, Merck, Merrill Lynch, News Corp, Shell Oil, Time Warner, and Toyota. Your point about being educated and self-reliant is excellent advice. I followed that advice, and by researching these companies and their objectives, I invested long ago in companies that were poised to profit from the NWO agenda. I set aside my first paychecks when I was a young buck, and continued to invest regularly. Things went well, and I was lucky enough to become independent by the time I turned 30. Now my full time job is to read and to continue to educate myself. I honestly can't say with any degree of certainty whether or not the conspiracy theories are true -- I can only say that I profited by reading the propaganda. For the record, I don't believe that fluoridated water is a communist conspiracy to poison us, that crop circles are messages from aliens, or that the Amish secretly control the world traffic in narcotics. Make no mistake about it -- the trend toward globalization is nothing short of a purposeful all-out economic war on the American worker. Wealth can neither be created nor destroyed, it can only be transferred. For the globalist agenda to work, someone has to give up so that others may gain. It should come as no surprise then that the global agenda is to eliminate the asymmetric distribution of wealth in the world that is imposed by "artificial" national boundaries, so that corporations can gain an incremental profit off of the life of every human being. To accomplish this task, the first step is to pick the low-hanging fruit: the standard of living for Middle Class America will be eroded in order to raise the status of people in Central Europe, Eastern Europe, Asia, China and eventually Africa. One thing that may seem truly ironic about me talking about this is that I've profited immensely by from exactly the same agenda that I'm warning others about now. Market globalization and the exchange of national sovereignty for corporate profits are coming at us like a freight train, and there's nothing that we can do as individuals to stop it. All that we can do is educate ourselves so that we can understand the game well enough to try to exploit it so that it works in our favor. Last edited by bob p; 07-10-2007 at 03:45 AM. | |
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| | #48 | ||
| Senior Member Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 724
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| | #49 |
| Member Join Date: Jun 2006
Posts: 66
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Great post Bob. "Wealth can neither be created nor destroyed, it can only be transferred." Many people hold on to the notion that through hard work and a little bit of luck they too can become a Rockefeller or DuPont. This in part explains their anti-populist stance. Should they strike it rich they don't want to have to share any of it. These are the neauvo riche. Comfortable, but their wealth isn't likely to extended beyond a few generations. They don't realize that we're all just fighting over table scraps. However, those that have true wealth, and by extension power, have rigged the system to their advantage. They are several steps and years ahead of the average person. Their advantage is insurmountable. All that can happen to negatively influence their wealth would be a series of misjudgements and/or unforseen circumstances. The old money society is not interested in transferring any of their wealth outside their class. Free markets are amoral in theory only. There exists an elite class of people, as you asserted, that possess a multi-generational sense of entitlement. Anyone can join the neauvo riche society. But you have to be born or married into old money. And old money calls the shots on this planet. |
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| | #50 | |
| Member Join Date: Jun 2006 Location: High atop the Barnett Shale
Posts: 100
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AAAaaaugghh!!!! Stop confusing me with the facts! | |
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| | #51 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Jul 2006 Location: A little town in Texas!
Posts: 228
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[QUOTE=hasserl;26235]Dude, you're living in one of the best economies of all time. Bush inherited a failing economy from the previous administration. QUOTE] That’s about the most insane thing I've read here yet. The economy wasn't doing badly when Clinton was President. It was a hell of allot cheaper to live back in the 90's. Clinton wasn't perfect but 100 times better of a president than Bush could even wish to be! I would rather have a skirt chaser for pres than a warmonger that looks out for his corporate bedfellows. BTW, who flew Bin Laden family out of America right after 9-11? Shows whom he's looking out for! Since Bush got in office the greed started running rampant in corporate America due to the fact that the corporations had him in their pockets as well as other politicians in his administration. He pulled so much federal funding away from the states on top of that causing state tax increases when federal dollars should have been paying for the increases. Why do you think we get taxed so damn much up the ass for anyway on the purchases we make daily? Why the hell are so many Americans pissed off these days? So many folks are suffering these hi living costs that some are forced to work up to three jobs just to make ends meet. And don't tell me its these folks not getting good education, I know folks with bachelors that are getting kicked in the ass because good jobs are going out of the country when they should be keeping them here. You call that the best economy of all? You may need to re-educate yourself on economies bro. My two cents worth. |
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| | #52 |
| Senior Member Join Date: May 2006 Location: Manassas, VA
Posts: 693
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2% unemployment in northern VA. 4% nationwide.
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| | #53 |
| Member Join Date: Jun 2006
Posts: 66
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The state of the economy depends on your perspective. Possibly your station in this society. if you are a small business, or especially are large coporation, then the economy looks pretty good. These types of people would thrive in most economies, it's in their nature to see the world in business terms. Musicians relate to the world from an artistic perspective. Workers filter the world from a workers POV. Statistics can be brought forth to support any claim. Currently, it seems to me that the worker class is taking a pretty good beating. How many 50 year old men do you think can retrain for a high tech job? Who would hire a retrained 50 year old when you could get some kid right out of college for half the cost? It's a transitional period for the work force and some folks are just going to get chewed up and spat out. And it isn't because they're lazy, stupid or unwilling. The credit card companies wrote their bankruptcy bill, got it through congress and signed into law (I'm sure there was no presidential signing statement on that bill). Would a relatively small constiuentcy of modest funds have been able to get their bill passed and signed into law? Freedom of speech sure, but not free. So credit lenders abandoned their conservative standards (remember how hard it use to be to get a credit card?) and engaged in predatory lending habits. Then, when they are making all-time record profits, they get a law on the books so that anyone that files bankruptcy can potentially become an endentured servent. Over 80% of the bankruptcy filings are due to one of three conditions: catastrohic illness, divorce or death of a parent/spouse. As for the other 20%, can't speak to their reasons, but I'm only concerned about the families that have a legitimate reason for filing bankruptcy. Despite what the pundits and ad campaigns may dictate, these people are not bums, careless or shifty. I'd say the pharmacuticals and credit lenders got a pretty sweet deal. So, depending on the circle you travel in, your station or lot in life, the class you associate with, the economy is anywhere from poor to outstanding. As for me, I hope for the best, but expect the worst. Consumer debt is at a all time high, savings at an all time low. Anyone else see the perfect storm brewing? I know the folks with an eye for business sure do. |
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| | #54 | |
| Member Join Date: Jun 2006 Location: High atop the Barnett Shale
Posts: 100
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So what? My choice is to re-educate, re-train, do whatever it takes to survive. Whining is not part of the plan. Neither is bitching, kvetching, complaining, or (fill in the blank). A business owner would be insane to pay more to get a job done based on the age of the worker. If I want more money I must either do the jobs that get paid more or become the business owner. The only other alternative is socialism/communism. And that hasn't worked out too well in eastern Europe, China, or Cuba, has it? As for who the laws favor, refer to the golden rule: "He who has the gold makes the rules". So if I want to get in on making the rules I need to get more gold. That requires effort on my part. I may not make it in my lifetime, but my son will have it better than I did because of my efforts. It may be, ultimately, an exercise in futility but complaining about a marketplace that changed and left me behind is the very definition of futility. | |
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| | #55 |
| Member Join Date: Jun 2006
Posts: 66
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Wasn't complaining. Simply stating that "He who has the gold makes the rules" is changing the rules that the last few generations grew up under. As for age, I think you entirely discount the value of life experience and work experience. From personal experience, I have found that my older workers do not require anywhere near the amount of attention or resources that the 20 something crowd requires. This older group of workers know the job needs to be done, and just get it done. The 20 somethings have their heads in the clouds half the time. Generally, as a group, older workers have a superior work ethic compared to the younger work group. You're experience may differ, I can only speak of the thirty five people I have managed for the past ten years. Again, some classes are doing better than others. The traditional blue coller class is in the midst of a correction. Sorry if you felt this was a complaint. |
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| | #56 | |
| Senior Member Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 724
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[QUOTE=Slobrain;26575] Quote:
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/econo...lman_1-11.html "ECONOMIC FORECAST January 11, 2001 How serious is the U.S. economic slowdown? The nation's top economists look to the financial future." Bush hadn't even taken office yet. If you would get away from the partisan propaganda you must be hooked on and into the real world you might see some of these things. I never said it was the best economy, I said it was ONE of the best, which it is. There are always hard times for some people, and there are always people having to make transitions. This is nothing new. And whatever the causes are they were put into motion long before Bush took office and are the result of both Republicans and Democrats efforts. Again, you'd be wise to get away from the partisan politics and the hatred that is clouding your thinking. Stop listening to NPR, or Air America, stop reading Mother Jones or Huffington Post or whatever it is where you are getting all the crap you are getting. The truth is most American's are sick and tired of the partisan bullshit from both sides. Both Dem's and Rep's suck and are deserving of our contempt. You think Bush's approval ratings are low, look at the Congress' ratings, even lower. When you make judgments about issues and public statements about them please stop offering up regurgitated leftists talking points, they suck. Seriously think about the issue and offer up intelligent observations, not the twisted partisan Democrat logic you've posted here. | |
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| | #57 |
| Senior Member Join Date: May 2006 Location: What's left of NW Indiana
Posts: 1,072
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| | #58 | |
| Senior Member Join Date: May 2006 Location: What's left of NW Indiana
Posts: 1,072
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| | #59 | ||
| Senior Member Join Date: May 2006 Location: What's left of NW Indiana
Posts: 1,072
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It is well established that @hasserl was right -- the economy was headed downhill when the Presidency was passed from Clinton to "Little Bush." To anyone with even the most rudimentary appreciation of basic macro-economics, MONEY SUPPLY is a primary factor in determining the acceleration vs. deceleration of inflation in our economy. Money supply in the USA is something that is controlled by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, not by the U.S. Treasurer, and not by any U.S. President. To wit, any US President has less actual impact on the underlying US economy than most people care to admit; There are two reasons for this: a) The Legislative Branch, not the Executive Branch, holds the Federal purse strings. At most, the President has the power to veto a bill that has minimal legislative strength. By himself, he cannot enact any legislation. b) The purse strings of the average American are largely controlled by the Federal Reserve System, through their ability to control interest rates that they charge to banks that borrow from the Federal Reserve. These prices that banks pay to borrow money are then passed along to the end-user in the form of increased or decreased interest rates. Whether or not people are inclined to borrow money is determined primarily by how expensive money is to borrow. I really wish that people would exhibit a more complete understanding of economics by not blaming whatever American president they don't like for America's troubles. To do that shows that someone is either ignorant of how the world really works, or they're being disingenuous for the purpose of furthering a political agenda. But then maybe this is just a problem where people who have short attention spans (or have already made up their minds) tend to shy away from reading long posts that discuss complex concepts. In regard to the claim that large corporations are becoming stronger as a result of actions that are solely attributable to the Bush II administration, that's another fallacy. As has previously been noted, the most recent significant trade laws that have had a profound effect on American workers were enacted during the Bush I administration (NAFTA) and the Clinton administration (most favored nation trade status for China). The reason that we're seeing the effects during the Bush II administration is because the time constants for these types of economic events are longer than the term of a 4 year presidency! Just for reference, this isn't a Democratic vs. Republican issue. People who still believe that our fate is being determined by Democrats or Republicans, and that one is better than the other, are living in a delusional state. The Democrat and Republican parties are two faces of the same monster. Just for grins, I'd like someone to name an American President in the past 40 years who has not been a member of the business groups that I had mentioned previously. | ||
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| | #60 |
| Senior Member Join Date: May 2006 Location: What's left of NW Indiana
Posts: 1,072
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Tired of paying so much for gas? Live off of the grid. This fellow uses solar panels to create hydrogen that fuels his pickup truck: http://www.post-trib.com/news/467110,willoughby.article |
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| | #61 | |
| Senior Member Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 729
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| | #62 |
| Senior Member Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 729
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Oh, and what are your thoughts on the bail out by our govt for the irresponsible mis management and big time party that the banks and mortgage companies were having until the bubble burst. How about the govt come bail me out, i'm in debt up to my ass. What? None for me, oh that's right I am supposed to be responsible in my financial affairs only corporate America can run amuck and have their asses saved by their good ol bud bush... He wanted to push through a bill for 700 billion with no strings attached until we the people raised hell and said no fuckin way will those mega salaried bastards keep getting their stock options and bonuses and huge salaries and we foot the bill for them to screw up again and retire in tahiti, but wait, your wonderful bush was all for it...... It's really a joke to hear the neocons rant on and on about what good that moron has done. If you are a giant company getting tax breaks and special treatment from DC then yeah, he's a great Prez. BUSH IS AN IDIOT PLAIN AND SIMPLE- A ROBOT OR PUPPET FOR BIG MONEY CORP//// Yall have a nice day now ya hear-------- |
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| | #63 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Jul 2006 Location: A little town in Texas!
Posts: 228
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Wow, forgot about this post since I have been really busy trying to be a responsible American...paying my share of taxes while working loooong hours to do so... Let me retort to Bob and the rest, I know the President cannot be totally responsible for the economy, but when the Lobbyist, special interest groups and just plain old cronyism going on in Washington you wind up with a shit economy due to this kind of curruption! Like I said before, when Clinton was in office, things were better. At least we didn't have so many corrupt Dems as opposed to the Repubs that are getting paid by the above groups and only looking out for themselves. Thus, we wind up with a sub prime mess and a failing economy due to greed on many levels because of the current administration. Let’s also not forget who in Washington passed de-regulation of certain groups as well. What did Bush say, lets de-regulate and let the economy run wild, everyone will prosper. Yeah right like Wall Street and Big Oil... The American people got raped financially by the current administrations corruptness and it’s pretty darn clear now. And you have seen the biggest transfer in wealth in American history while a big majority of people trying to retire will now have to work till they drop. What a damn shame… The American way right? The worst thing about this is we are F#*ked because of these greedy bastards. Who knows how long it will take any President or Presidents to get us out of this mess??? SLO |
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