the message board for Dubai English speaking community
Like I said, the banks did not give out houses in the name of equity. I'm laughing at that statement.
I did read the story, and it isn't a valid example because it is only relevant in the context of guys drinking at a bar, not in the wider social context.
I guess they are entitled to poor quality schools, poor roads
Misery Called Life wrote:shafique wrote:Those that made money out of the whole affair are the mortgage originators, the salesmen, the ones selling them off etc etc. The ones who lost out are those losing their homes and the taxpayers who have had to bail out the banks etc.
Be fair Shafique (fat chance),
So why would you loose out on your home? So long as you can pay your loans nobody's evicting you right?
How sensationalist indeed!!! Evil bankers kicking you out of your home...BooHooo
Misery Called Life wrote:shafique wrote:Why a capitalist or right winger supports this is a curious question, don't you think? Surely you should oppose bail outs and allow the banks go bust?
Why is his stand relevant to the argument?
Misery Called Life wrote:shafique wrote:Under the Republicans - the AIG bailout channelled a lot of money to Goldman Sachs - did you approve of that?
Be fair Shafique (fat chance),
You seem to have conveniently forgotten the bit where the Republicans did indeed let Lehman Brothers fail.
Misery Called Life wrote: So what then are you advocating Shafique? AIG gets bailed out but then through selective profiling, commitments with certain banks should have been written-down? Or that AIG shouldn't have been bailed out?
Hence, you'll note that it was eh that introduced the 'it happened under the Democrats' argument when asked about the bailouts.
shafique wrote:You need to look up the term strawman - and then also read the fact that I'm not asking you about your views on the Democrats - but on the bailouts.
Cheers,
Shafique
event horizon wrote:Like I said, the banks did not give out houses in the name of equity. I'm laughing at that statement.
God are you stupid. What was explained is that the mortgage companies/banks weren't regulated by the Democrats in the name of equity.
As MCL explained above. Perhaps you should go back and re-read the posts in this thread because you're clearly clueless as to what's going on here?I did read the story, and it isn't a valid example because it is only relevant in the context of guys drinking at a bar, not in the wider social context.I guess they are entitled to poor quality schools, poor roads
Yes, teachers and garbage collectors drive on different roads than the rich. Everyone knows that.
Bora Bora wrote:EH, you don't seem to get who the protesters are angry at. It's not about any one particular party - its about the government as a whole and big business. It's about ALL the politicians - the way they have been running, or should I say ruining, government. If the government was rated as a business and how it was run it would get a big, fat F!!!! (As in FAIL)
event horizon wrote:shafique wrote:If you believed in Capitalism, these banks should be allowed to go under if they can't exist without tax-payer bailouts.
And it was the Democrats who largely supported the bailouts. So the protesters' anger is misdirected. It should be with the Democrats more than Republicans.
shafique wrote:As for my question about the bailouts - I didn't mention Republicans or Democrats. The crisis hit before Obama took office and IIRC the first bailouts were agreed before he came to power - AIG for example.
AIG's bailout was the one I highlighted where the money flowed through to Goldman Sachs - to their clients and to the bank itself. Didn't this take place under Bush? (Correct me if I'm recalling wrongly - can't be arsed to look it up)
As for Japan - yes, it is still suffering. US isn't out of the woods yet - it could get worse than Japan.. we'll see.
However the question was on the principle of bailouts - why should the tax payers be forced to bail out banks for dodgy lending etc? As a right-wing capitalist, shouldn't you advocate companies going bust?
CBC wrote:Duff Conacher, founding director of Democracy Watch, a non-profit citizen advocacy organization based in Ottawa, is watching the Occupy Canada movement with great interest, saying it has a potential for change if done the right way.
“Peaceful demonstrations where lots of people come out and express their concerns are always a good thing in a democracy, but they’re better if the demonstrators have specific demands that they want action on," Conacher said in an interview from his Toronto home.
"It is easy to be an activist. It’s not very easy to be an effectivist and actually effect change. You have to do your research, find out problems and the actual solutions, and activate that in strategic ways.
"Specific demands are more likely to corner decision makers and policymakers and force a response: 'Yes or no. are you going to do this?'”
Specifically, Democracy Watch suggests that ralliers should support the 15 key measures endorsed for the past decade by 140 citizen groups across Canada rather than 'reinventing the wheel."
The measures include:
The creation of civilian watchdog agencies to oversee corporate activity in each economic sector.
Increased financial and legal penalties for corporate illegality.
Expanded protection for whistleblower employees.
A requirement that corporations must legally represent not only the interests of shareholders, but also those of their employees, customers, and society and the environment at large.
"The government is reviewing the Bank Act and other financial institution laws over the next year, so the window of opportunity is open now," notes Conacher.
shafique wrote:Those that made money out of the whole affair are the mortgage originators, the salesmen, the ones selling them off etc etc. The ones who lost out are those losing their homes and the taxpayers who have had to bail out the banks etc.
MCL - read my quote again. I'm not saying that those who can't afford to pay back the mortgages secured on (in many cases, over valued) houses should not be evicted. I'm stating that they are the ones who are losing out, comparing them with those involved in giving them the mortgages who made money out of the transactions. The guys gullible enough to buy the CDOs are being bailed out - not the guy being evicted.
shafique wrote:Why a capitalist or right winger supports this is a curious question, don't you think? Surely you should oppose bail outs and allow the banks go bust?
shafique wrote:Hank Paulson didn't work for Lehmans. I didn't ask about Lehmans, I asked about the AIG bailout and the fact the money went to GS.
shafique wrote:I wouldn't have allowed AIG to get to the situation where a small group in London bet the whole firm away by issuing risky products that they didn't understand.
Misery Called Life wrote:The government is obligated to insure me in case of default, because it's clearly a failure of the government regulatory agencies. But those who took out loans were under no such obligation. So why do they deserve protection?
Between 2004–2006 the share of subprime mortgages relative to total originations ranged from 18%–21%, versus less than 10% in 2001–2003 and during 2007.[22][23] In the third quarter of 2007, subprime ARMs making up only 6.8% of USA mortgages outstanding also accounted for 43% of the foreclosures which began during that quarter.[24] By October 2007, approximately 16% of subprime adjustable rate mortgages (ARM) were either 90-days delinquent or the lender had begun foreclosure proceedings, roughly triple the rate of 2005.[25] By January 2008, the delinquency rate had risen to 21%[26] and by May 2008 it was 25%.
Bora Bora wrote:@RC
The movie I spoke of in an earlier (To Big to Fail) post ran again last night and will probably air a few more times before the end of the month. I recorded it as I will watch it again (and again?) as there is so much info in. Trust me, you won't be bored and it has a great cast.
Bora Bora wrote:EH get the book "Too Big to Fail" or watch the movie. It examines how the BANKS and GOVERNMENT caused the collapse. Very enlightening.
Taken from Amazon:A brilliantly reported true-life thriller that goes behind the scenes of the financial crisis on Wall Street and in Washington.
In one of the most gripping financial narratives in decades, Andrew Ross Sorkin-a New York Times columnist and one of the country's most respected financial reporters-delivers the first definitive blow- by-blow account of the epochal economic crisis that brought the world to the brink. Through unprecedented access to the players involved, he re-creates all the drama and turmoil of these turbulent days, revealing never-before-disclosed details and recounting how, motivated as often by ego and greed as by fear and self-preservation, the most powerful men and women in finance and politics decided the fate of the world's economy.
Bora Bora wrote:Statement: I want the government to pay for my education.
Reporter: Why should they?
Answer: Because. (Sounds like a 5 year old.)
Red Chief wrote:Bora Bora wrote:Statement: I want the government to pay for my education.
Reporter: Why should they?
Answer: Because. (Sounds like a 5 year old.)
I have never been asked such a question. I hope it will never happen with my son but the reply is evident. Probably he cannot pay for tuition fees and living expenses far away from his own small town or vilage somewhere in Visconsine or Montana. Who can at the age of 17? Nobody except wealthy parents.
On the other hand, during study in my uni with the strickest entrance exams in the former USSR, I recognized that fraction of smart boys distributed equally on full range of society as there were only 10% of Moscovites in the Uni, which is located in Moscow too (Moscow is much wealthier city than the rest of Russia with better schools and another fascilities for preparation to any uni).
I assume you have another reply. Education is a business, not right. So pay and take. Such most of my mates would have been out of the bar. Is it what government whants to achive?
Berrin wrote:Bora Bora wrote:EH get the book "Too Big to Fail" or watch the movie. It examines how the BANKS and GOVERNMENT caused the collapse. Very enlightening.
Taken from Amazon:A brilliantly reported true-life thriller that goes behind the scenes of the financial crisis on Wall Street and in Washington.
In one of the most gripping financial narratives in decades, Andrew Ross Sorkin-a New York Times columnist and one of the country's most respected financial reporters-delivers the first definitive blow- by-blow account of the epochal economic crisis that brought the world to the brink. Through unprecedented access to the players involved, he re-creates all the drama and turmoil of these turbulent days, revealing never-before-disclosed details and recounting how, motivated as often by ego and greed as by fear and self-preservation, the most powerful men and women in finance and politics decided the fate of the world's economy.
To understand how 2008 financial crisis built up, you should really be watching the documentary called "inside job"
http://www.sonyclassics.com/insidejob/
.