Go repubs!
holy fuck i would never have thought i would have ever say that.
holy fuck i would never have thought i would have ever say that.
Blackbelts are just whitebelts who have never quit.
-535Hurricane2k9 wrote:
Fuck it's down 500 again
Same, I'm happy it hasn't gone through. It's like, you need to let this shit happen. It's better in the long run.m3thod wrote:
Go repubs!
holy fuck i would never have thought i would have ever say that.
Eh ... not on their own no, but you must admit that the rep votes was as good as sure votes before the vote started, atleast that's what most of us thought ...Kmarion wrote:
They couldn't have blocked it on their own.. even if they had the whole of the GOP blocking it.. which they didn't.Varegg wrote:
A little surpriced that the republicans blocked this ....
Yes, but if the markets crash, well... 1929Locoloki wrote:
this will halt inflation.... right?
PureFodder wrote:
I've been hearing word that it may be better for the average American if the bailout fails.{M5}Sniper3 wrote:
It would be worse if this passed.Hurricane2k9 wrote:
I don't think this bodes well.
We are still in for a rough time though.
http://tpmcafe.talkingpointsmemo.com/20 … /#comments
He got that pretty damn right. There is a necessary correction happening in the pricing of homes. The speculators and investors that used homes to rack-up massive profits from 2000-2005 - need to have their bubble burst. Plain and simple. Any attempt to stall the fall of these massive increases that occurred (like in Calif. and Fl.) will only stall any recovery. Some people who made a lot money speculating need to loose a lot of money.$8 trillion housing bubble. (It was remarkable how many so-called experts somehow could not see the housing bubble as it grew to ever more dangerous levels. It is even more remarkable that many of these experts still don't recognize the bubble even as its collapse sinks the economy and the financial system.) The decline in housing prices to date has already cost the economy $4 trillion to $5 trillion in housing equity. This would be expected to lead to a decline in annual consumption on the order of $160 billion to $300 billion.
The line is actually blurred nicely. The repubs loyal to Bush (Remember he supported it) still voted for it. The more conservative ones didn't. They actually listened to the majority of their constituents.Varegg wrote:
Eh ... not on their own no, but you must admit that the rep votes was as good as sure votes before the vote started, atleast that's what most of us thought ...Kmarion wrote:
They couldn't have blocked it on their own.. even if they had the whole of the GOP blocking it.. which they didn't.Varegg wrote:
A little surpriced that the republicans blocked this ....
Do you guys have any idea what is going to happen if the bill isn't passed in the very near furure? Have you ever heard of the Great Depression? This is a repeat from those days.Mek-Stizzle wrote:
Same, I'm happy it hasn't gone through. It's like, you need to let this shit happen. It's better in the long run.m3thod wrote:
Go repubs!
holy fuck i would never have thought i would have ever say that.
Last edited by CameronPoe (2008-09-29 11:59:32)
Ive heard of it, sucks to be a white collar worker ehhPierre wrote:
Do you guys have any idea what is going to happen if the bill isn't passed in the very near furure? Have you ever heard of the Great Depression? This is a repeat from those days.Mek-Stizzle wrote:
Same, I'm happy it hasn't gone through. It's like, you need to let this shit happen. It's better in the long run.m3thod wrote:
Go repubs!
holy fuck i would never have thought i would have ever say that.
It's now in the hands of the senate to rearrange the bill and send it back to the house, that may very well take some time ... maybe not on this side of the election ...Pierre wrote:
Do you guys have any idea what is going to happen if the bill isn't passed in the very near furure? Have you ever heard of the Great Depression? This is a repeat from those days.Mek-Stizzle wrote:
Same, I'm happy it hasn't gone through. It's like, you need to let this shit happen. It's better in the long run.m3thod wrote:
Go repubs!
holy fuck i would never have thought i would have ever say that.
Have you ever heard that the Fed. might have actually caused the great depression? And, factually it contracted the money supply during that period prior to recovery. Did you ever hear the one about Americans being put to back to work (on a New Deal) and working itself out of the depression and the Fed. getting in-line and expanding the money supply where it counts most - when spent on work.Pierre wrote:
Do you guys have any idea what is going to happen if the bill isn't passed in the very near furure? Have you ever heard of the Great Depression? This is a repeat from those days.Mek-Stizzle wrote:
Same, I'm happy it hasn't gone through. It's like, you need to let this shit happen. It's better in the long run.m3thod wrote:
Go repubs!
holy fuck i would never have thought i would have ever say that.
everytime this happens they find some schmuck in the crowd and slap it up on their homepageHurricane2k9 wrote:
lol, the front page of CNN.com is an epic facepalm
Hurricane2k9 wrote:
lol, the front page of CNN.com is an epic facepalm
I thought building war machines for world war brought us outtopal63 wrote:
Have you ever heard that the Fed. might have actually caused the great depression? And, factually it contracted the money supply during that period prior to recovery. Did you ever hear the one about Americans being put to back to work (on a New Deal) and working itself out of the depression and the Fed. getting in-line and expanding the money supply where it counts most - when spent on work.Pierre wrote:
Do you guys have any idea what is going to happen if the bill isn't passed in the very near furure? Have you ever heard of the Great Depression? This is a repeat from those days.Mek-Stizzle wrote:
Same, I'm happy it hasn't gone through. It's like, you need to let this shit happen. It's better in the long run.
Well, in the meantime banks will refuse to give eachother any credit, and surely all companies including SME, will have a hard time to find any money to invest. So in the not so long run this will have effect on employment.Varegg wrote:
It's now in the hands of the senate to rearrange the bill and send it back to the house, that may very well take some time ... maybe not on this side of the election ...Pierre wrote:
Do you guys have any idea what is going to happen if the bill isn't passed in the very near furure? Have you ever heard of the Great Depression? This is a repeat from those days.Mek-Stizzle wrote:
Same, I'm happy it hasn't gone through. It's like, you need to let this shit happen. It's better in the long run.
This shit needs to sort itself out. Artificially propping up a house of cards will only lead to bigger pain in the longer term. No amount of asset sales could possibly recoup the colossal ocean of worthless debt that tax money would have been used to buy.Pierre wrote:
So in the not so long run this will have effect on employment.
Last edited by CameronPoe (2008-09-29 12:03:29)
Pelosi wrote:
We worked in a bipartisan way and must now continue to do so
That was a different expansion (the military industrial complex) - the new deal began in 1933 the War ended in 1945.Locoloki wrote:
I thought building war machines for world war brought us outtopal63 wrote:
Have you ever heard that the Fed. might have actually caused the great depression? And, factually it contracted the money supply during that period prior to recovery. Did you ever hear the one about Americans being put to back to work (on a New Deal) and working itself out of the depression and the Fed. getting in-line and expanding the money supply where it counts most - when spent on work.Pierre wrote:
Do you guys have any idea what is going to happen if the bill isn't passed in the very near furure? Have you ever heard of the Great Depression? This is a repeat from those days.