A forum for cigar lovers.
kuzi16:food for thought from al jazeera blogs.... thats not a bit biased at alli should retort with links from FOX news... but thats not the point here.... this is exactly the problem with the bailouts... if there were no bailouts then the government wouldnt have the hand in the pot of the companies they helped. since the government has so much money invested in the company, they have a ton of influence on those companies. this is why i am against the bailouts. the government doesnt "own" the company directly, but in a way it does. Same with GM. those companies have to bow down to the government and do what they are told because if they dont their money is gone. no free man, or men, should ever have to bow down to any government to continue to run their business. the question here is not if the government has a say in what the company does with the money the government gave them. the answer is simple to that one. As a major investor in the company, the government can influence them. any other investor can and does. the real question was if it was constitutional for the government to invest in the private company to begin with. this isnt really a question of regulation being presented. it becomes a question of regulation if the government is telling companies that didnt take money from the bail outs what to do. but no... not gods work.
laker1963:Or you could just go back to trusting these wonderful, business leaders who put the country in the tank in the first place. Worked well the first time out, and I am sure we can all trust that these fine people have learned a lesson and wouldn't let that happen again... right
laker1963:You are always comenting on the information sources you have used being poo pooed, or ignored. I presented an article from Al Jazzera, and you make a comment about the source. Whether YOU like them or NOT...Al Jazzera in an International Accredited News source. Just because they say some things which make YOU uncomfortable does NOT make them untrustworthy, or biased, anymore then ANY American News source when they are speaking about things such as the Middle East. This seems like a case of you (the pot) calling Al Jazzera(the kettle) black. Can't have it both ways.
laker1963:As for companies having to function as the government dictates... when have you heard the company's who have accepted bailout money complaining about this? I have NOT. Although I don't see any difference with the situation these companies find themselves in regardless of whether the money to keep them functioning comes from the Banks or the Government. If you lend somebody money you have an obligation to ensure that the money was lent wisely, bank do this as part of Due Process. what is the difference here? The government had better ensure they get certain guidelines or regulations in place to ensure the money they gave as bailout money wasn't just pissed away like the original money.
kuzi16: the question here is not if the government has a say in what the company does with the money the government gave them. the answer is simple to that one. As a major investor in the company, the government can influence them. any other investor can and does.
laker1963: Otherwise they would have to answer to people like yourself who would be screaming blue murder about the imcompetance of giving away money so irresponsibly, and rightfully so too.
laker1963: I also disagree that the question about the constitutionality of this program is the real question. The REAL question is should the money have been given to a bunch of people who thru their own methods, almost destroyed the US economy and at the same time had HUGE negative effects on the economies of many other countries in the world, WITHOUT demanding some rules and regulations. The REAL question is What makes anybody think that the same people who ruined the economy are competant enough to fix it?
kuzi16:Every housing-related measure taken by Washington has made the standards for homeownership looser than they would be in a free market. Government has stepped in to override private companies’ aversion to undue risk. Regulators criticized banks for turning down too many mortgage applications. FNMA and FHLMC were created to encourage the issuance of mortgages that would not be prudent in a free market. The FDIC anesthetizes depositors against risks taken with their funds. And the entire Federal Reserve exists to pump paper money into the economy, and to keep interest rates artificially low--often below the rate of inflation--so that more lending occurs. Yet when this house of cards collapsed, it is capitalism that was denounced, and more government power that was demanded.
laker1963: When you see articles like the one I linked where they are or have handed out undeserved BONUS money when this whole situation is still so far from being resolved, it just reinforces idea's the system is only broke for people with no money. The Elite's and people who think like them, don't seem to think there is a problem at all anymore.
laker1963: Time to get back to business as usual. Problem is that business as usual is what caused this whole mess.
laker1963: So YES maybe it IS time for some well thought regulation of businesses in the US.
laker1963: Or you could just go back to trusting these wonderful, business leaders who put the country in the tank in the first place.
laker1963: Worked well the first time out, and I am sure we can all trust that these fine people have learned a lesson and wouldn't let that happen again... right
bbc020: laker1963:Or you could just go back to trusting these wonderful, business leaders who put the country in the tank in the first place. Worked well the first time out, and I am sure we can all trust that these fine people have learned a lesson and wouldn't let that happen again... rightI still like the idea of these guys taking care of them.
kuzi16: laker1963:You are always comenting on the information sources you have used being poo pooed, or ignored. I presented an article from Al Jazzera, and you make a comment about the source. Whether YOU like them or NOT...Al Jazzera in an International Accredited News source. Just because they say some things which make YOU uncomfortable does NOT make them untrustworthy, or biased, anymore then ANY American News source when they are speaking about things such as the Middle East. This seems like a case of you (the pot) calling Al Jazzera(the kettle) black. Can't have it both ways. Whether YOU like them or NOT... FOX is an International Accredited News source. Just because they say some things which make YOU uncomfortable does NOT make them untrustworthy, or biased, anymore then ANY American News source when they are speaking about things such as the Middle East. please keep this paragraph in mind next time a FOX news source is being used. Personally i dont use fox news. just not me. they dont make uncomfortable at all actually. they have their opinions, i have mine. I do not agree with them. but not everyone agrees. much like fox news, you cant call Al Jazzera unbiased.this is the exact point i was trying ti make in other thread. laker1963:As for companies having to function as the government dictates... when have you heard the company's who have accepted bailout money complaining about this? I have NOT. Although I don't see any difference with the situation these companies find themselves in regardless of whether the money to keep them functioning comes from the Banks or the Government. If you lend somebody money you have an obligation to ensure that the money was lent wisely, bank do this as part of Due Process. what is the difference here? The government had better ensure they get certain guidelines or regulations in place to ensure the money they gave as bailout money wasn't just pissed away like the original money. i did say this: kuzi16: the question here is not if the government has a say in what the company does with the money the government gave them. the answer is simple to that one. As a major investor in the company, the government can influence them. any other investor can and does. so when you say this: laker1963: Otherwise they would have to answer to people like yourself who would be screaming blue murder about the imcompetance of giving away money so irresponsibly, and rightfully so too. you seem to have missed what i said. ... or the point of it at least. the government did invest. they should, being a major investor, dictate how the money is used. however, the question should not be can the government dictate policy to corporations it invests in but rater is it constitutional that the government invests in them in the first place. these are not unrelated questions and ideas. laker1963: I also disagree that the question about the constitutionality of this program is the real question. The REAL question is should the money have been given to a bunch of people who thru their own methods, almost destroyed the US economy and at the same time had HUGE negative effects on the economies of many other countries in the world, WITHOUT demanding some rules and regulations. The REAL question is What makes anybody think that the same people who ruined the economy are competant enough to fix it? interesting... I know that i edited since the post you quoted but when i said this kuzi16:Every housing-related measure taken by Washington has made the standards for homeownership looser than they would be in a free market. Government has stepped in to override private companies’ aversion to undue risk. Regulators criticized banks for turning down too many mortgage applications. FNMA and FHLMC were created to encourage the issuance of mortgages that would not be prudent in a free market. The FDIC anesthetizes depositors against risks taken with their funds. And the entire Federal Reserve exists to pump paper money into the economy, and to keep interest rates artificially low--often below the rate of inflation--so that more lending occurs. Yet when this house of cards collapsed, it is capitalism that was denounced, and more government power that was demanded. i was claiming that the government itself had a large hand in bringing down the banking industry. why would i want to give them back regulatory power? laker1963: When you see articles like the one I linked where they are or have handed out undeserved BONUS money when this whole situation is still so far from being resolved, it just reinforces idea's the system is only broke for people with no money. The Elite's and people who think like them, don't seem to think there is a problem at all anymore. undeserved bonus...i guess that depends on the qualifications of bonus. if the qualification was "bring the world back from the edge of economic failure" then it isnt deserved. if the qualification for bonus was "pay back the government and get this bank on the road to solvency" then maybe it is deserved. iduno. i didnt make the criteria or dole out the bonus. laker1963: Time to get back to business as usual. Problem is that business as usual is what caused this whole mess. if "business as usual" is "government slowly taking over an regulating more and more of the way anybody does anything via regulation and attempting to micromanage an impossibly complex economy" then you are right. laker1963: So YES maybe it IS time for some well thought regulation of businesses in the US. as long as that regulation ONLY consists of keeping that business from violating the rights of the individual. laker1963: Or you could just go back to trusting these wonderful, business leaders who put the country in the tank in the first place. it wasnt just buisnesses that caused the economic crisis. and like ive said before (and for some reason nobody seems to read) IF THE BUSINESS VIOLATED THE RIGHTS OF THE PEOPLE THEY SHOULD BE PUNISHED. this means that if it is found that they actually made false promises or intentionally went out of their way to make bad loans then they should be punished because this is theft or fraud. however, regulating beyond that is not what the country needs. regulating how much money people can make will not fix this. punishing people for wrong doings = good. micromanaging an economy = bad. laker1963: Worked well the first time out, and I am sure we can all trust that these fine people have learned a lesson and wouldn't let that happen again... right if the lesson was taught correctly (by not bailing these guys out) maybe it wouldnt be as likely to happen again.
PuroFreak:Laker, you really contradict yourself when you say "If you lend somebody money you have an obligation to ensure that the money was lent wisely, bank do this as part of Due Process," and use that as a way for government to keep businesses from pissing away money on bad investments, when it was the government telling banks the HAD to make bad investments and bad loans that caused so much of our economic downfall... So the government can tell banks NOT to make wise investments and give out bad loans and that is good regulation, but when it makes an investment has to do the exact opposite? How are both of those good things?
PuroFreak:Then you obviously know nothing about government regulation of banks in the U.S. in the last 20 years. Banks HAVE been forced to give loans to people that couldn't afford them in the first place by the government. The links to laws have been posted time and time again. If you choose to ignore them that is your right, but it doesn't mean that it isn't true. The reason I have a problem with the government investing instead of private investors is because THE GOVERNMENT HAS NO MONEY. What they took from us they already spent. Now they are spending my grand children's money. The reason they have no money is because they pissed it all away and we, the American People, can't do anything about it.
mustluvcigars: bbc020: laker1963:Or you could just go back to trusting these wonderful, business leaders who put the country in the tank in the first place. Worked well the first time out, and I am sure we can all trust that these fine people have learned a lesson and wouldn't let that happen again... rightI still like the idea of these guys taking care of them. bbc020 for President!!
brsmith21:I've heard the first step is admitting that you have a problem. Thankfully, I don't have a problem. I'll just smoke more.
laker1963: Problem is I have never said that Fox News was NOT an acredited news source. I have read comments to that effect here many times but have not made them myself.
laker1963: but changed the subject matter to something altogether different.
laker1963:We seem to agree that companies are responsible to the people who have money invested in them. If that source happens to be the Government however, you have a major problem with that, and I don't. The private sector was NOT attempting to pour vast amounts of money into the broken system and that left only the government to do it.
laker1963: Why then is that bad, or should the private sector be looked upon in a more favorable light then the government? The private sector was sitting on their money and NOT investing. something had to be done... what would you propose, other then letting the system collapse.
laker1963: What would you have done to get it going again?
laker1963:Does the constitution speak about financial systems and how they function at all Kuzi?
laker1963: That is just one of those pattented arguements that can be used in any instance. That is not the function of the constitution
laker1963:As for the rest of my comments they are now intermixed with your since edited post and no longer speak to what I was speaking to considering they are now inserted and answered to portions of your post which didn't even exist when I first wrote them, so I will NOT bother to try and sort out anything said past your first post which I quoted in my first response.
laker1963:I have only heard you and Kuzi blaming the government for the banks and their loose lending policies.
laker1963:The arguement that the banks were FORCED to make bad investents is just silly. But that is just my opinion.