It could... possibly... although education would probably be a more surefire way to do it. If the average person actually knew more about finance, they'd probably invest smarter.Flaming_Maniac wrote:
Which brings us back full circle to why leadership is key to solving the other problems.
I think you misinterpreted me. Never did I say that the government should be exempt from responsibility. I was stating that the government works for corporations. They follow the needs of the average person only so far as it is required for re-election.FM wrote:
Still, that was not the point. Corporations influence to some degree, but do not run government, and they certainly do not exempt government from taking responsibility.
Yes, because investing for your retirement generally involves said piggy backing.Flaming_Maniac wrote:
Reckless speculation is only a danger to the individual engaging in it. The problem only occurs at large when others piggy back on it.
The problem is that reckless speculation has become widespread. When companies that are considered "too big to fall" engage in this behavior, millions lose their retirement.
That, to me, is the greatest crime of our system. The many suffer for the greed of the few.
At what point would you consider the group of gamblers large enough to constitute being society that suffers? With this most recent crisis, a rather large portion of our population has been affected. I would consider this society suffering, as would many others.Flaming_Maniac wrote:
A guy wants to gamble his life savings in Vegas. He is only hurting himself. Then other individuals bet on him betting. Then other individuals bet on those individuals, and yet more individuals bet on those individuals. Then when guy #1 goes down, the whole pyramid goes with him. It is not "society" that suffers, it is a series of individuals engaging in that gamble.
...or when it becomes known that the institutions that most of us invest in are no more trustworthy than a casino.Flaming_Maniac wrote:
Society only suffers when leadership decides the gamblers are too big to fail.