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-   -   Bye Bye Banks and Wall Street (http://74.208.121.111/LoT/showthread.php?t=8568)

PanTheMan 09-29-2008 10:06 PM

Well... Bush needed the icing on his cluterf*ck of a presidency.

Mission Accomplished!

innerSpaceman 09-29-2008 10:13 PM

Geebus, Goonie, stop exaggerating my position. I'm not sitting back and laughing.

I'm not even that much less concerned than most. I just don't favor the bailout plan because I don't think it would work. The current version is soundly unfair, but I also think the concept is tragically flawed.


So I think we're screwed either way. And I know I'm not coming out of this unscathed, and I'm not "laughing" at folks who will be coming out of this far worse ... or not coming out of this at all.

BarTopDancer 09-29-2008 10:16 PM

The government should take money from the golden parachutes of the CEOs and Presidents of the failed businesses to get their bailout money. While I don0t' support a cap on what a person can earn, I do have a huge problem with someone getting 11 million dollars for a weeks worth of work. I also have a huge problem for someone getting millions for running a company into the ground. Why do they get so much money and their employees get what they can from unemployment.

Alex 09-29-2008 10:35 PM

I'd have a comment on that $11 million statement but that really could get me in trouble (but part of my response: when the money was offered to him, they didn't know it would only be 10 days).

As for taking the golden parachutes, that isn't as much money as you may think. Using 2005 numbers, if you took 100% of the annual pay of each of the top five executives at every Fortune 500 company, you'd have collected $14 billion (and realistically you'd only get a small fraction of that). Yes, a lot of money at the individual level but collectively just a large drop in the bucket.

I'm not defending executive compensation, it is definitely way out of proportion. But while any attempt to cap or regulate may appeal to a sense of fairness or punishment it doesn't really impact the financials.

Ghoulish Delight 09-29-2008 10:45 PM

I don't particularly care what the cost is. If the cost is high, the cost is high. I'm more concerned that it be spent intelligently, and not just funneled right back to the people who mishandled it thus far, reinforcing the belief (no longer belief but proven fact) that the federal government will prop them up if they get unlucky.

scaeagles 09-30-2008 07:19 AM

Why I can't stand Barney Frank and Chris Dodd.

I realize politics will be played, but something tells me Pelosi isn't going to be talking about this while blaming republicans.

Quote:

Five years ago, Barney Frank vouched for the "soundness" of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and said "I do not see" any "possibility of serious financial losses to the treasury."
Quote:

Earlier this year, Senator Christopher Dodd praised Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac for "riding to the rescue" when other financial institutions were cutting back on mortgage loans. He too said that they "need to do more"
to help subprime borrowers get better loans.
Quote:

In other words, Congressman Frank and Senator Dodd wanted the government to push financial institutions to lend to people they would not lend to otherwise, because of the risk of default.
And Frank and Dodd are are leading the effort to fix this? Puke.

innerSpaceman 09-30-2008 07:40 AM

Don't get me wrong ... I think politicians, the fed, treasury and the streeters saw this coming five, ten, even 20 years ago. But a comment made five years ago about the soundness of the lax and deregulatory financial environment is quite different than one made earlier this year.


If John McCain hadn't said the economy is basically sound just a few weeks ago .... :p

Morrigoon 09-30-2008 09:14 AM

To that end, iSm, I agree with you. I think the bailout plan in its current form is pretty ill-conceived.

It seemed from your posts that you were against any sort of action, and that you wanted to let the chips fall where they may, which I'd ordinarily agree with, except that the current problem has grown to such a proportion that it quite seriously endangers the entire economy and not just the people directly involved. To that end, I'd rather see some people get some help they may not deserve, than see innocent parties get taken down in a bad economy they had nothing to do with creating.

But I also think that a solid part of this package would be trying to re-set people's loans back to what they were at before the FED started raising interest rates like mad. Heaven forbid the government admit it was overly aggressive about that and acknowledge their own part in the mess.

Not saying that ARMs don't have a right to adjust, of course they do, but if you wanna undo this mess with the government purchasing fewer troubled loans, that's one thing that would help. Yes there could be major repercussions from a massive interest rate re-set, but these are extenuating circumstances, and the alternative is to let the homes be foreclosed upon and have the government purchase them as per the bailout plan.

scaeagles 09-30-2008 09:19 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by innerSpaceman (Post 243041)
Don't get me wrong ... I think politicians, the fed, treasury and the streeters saw this coming five, ten, even 20 years ago. But a comment made five years ago about the soundness of the lax and deregulatory financial environment is quite different than one made earlier this year.

So you then think Dodd is an idiot for what he said earlier this year?

Kevy Baby 09-30-2008 09:44 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by PanTheMan (Post 243008)
Well... Bush needed the icing on his cluterf*ck of a presidency.

I by no means am defending Bush, but what culpability does the Democratically-controlled Congress hold in this?

Quote:

Originally Posted by BarTopDancer (Post 243011)
The government should take money from the golden parachutes of the CEOs and Presidents of the failed businesses to get their bailout money.

Something I was thinking about on the drive in this morning: can anything LEGALLY be done to limit the golden parachute payouts? Are these considered employment contracts? If so, CAn they be restricted?

I am NOT saying that I want these people to get the money regardless, just a legal ramification I was wondering about.


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