Harmor
Error_Name_Not_Found
+605|6834|San Diego, CA, USA
Source: http://www.investors.com/NewsAndAnalysi … ?id=534021
via http://www.drudgereport.com/

So why is the US going towards a single payer system again with Obamacare?
11 Bravo
Banned
+965|5522|Cleveland, Ohio
go figure.
SEREMAKER
BABYMAKIN EXPERT √
+2,187|6854|Mountains of NC

bc Obama knows better this all of us ................. the messiah
https://static.bf2s.com/files/user/17445/carhartt.jpg
eleven bravo
Member
+1,399|5544|foggy bottom
you guys realize thats the thing you do to "3rd world" countries when you give em a loan they wont be able to repay because of the economic constraints that the loan conditions bring
Tu Stultus Es
Bertster7
Confused Pothead
+1,101|6867|SE London

You do realise this isn't true?

Greece are not privatising their healthcare system. I certainly haven't seen anything about them privatising it in the proposed austerity measures.
Turquoise
O Canada
+1,596|6690|North Carolina
IBD is about as right wing as World Net Daily.
Cybargs
Moderated
+2,285|7002

Bertster7 wrote:

You do realise this isn't true?

Greece are not privatising their healthcare system. I certainly haven't seen anything about them privatising it in the proposed austerity measures.
They have to if they're getting IMF loans. IMF usually makes a lot of public services privatized. Real fucking cutthroat and good for business, but if your country needs a loan from the IMF you guys fucked up a lot.
https://cache.www.gametracker.com/server_info/203.46.105.23:21300/b_350_20_692108_381007_FFFFFF_000000.png
Turquoise
O Canada
+1,596|6690|North Carolina

Cybargs wrote:

Bertster7 wrote:

You do realise this isn't true?

Greece are not privatising their healthcare system. I certainly haven't seen anything about them privatising it in the proposed austerity measures.
They have to if they're getting IMF loans. IMF usually makes a lot of public services privatized. Real fucking cutthroat and good for business, but if your country needs a loan from the IMF you guys fucked up a lot.
Sounds good to me.  Privatization is a necessary thing when a planned economy is suffering.

Last edited by Turquoise (2010-05-16 11:53:17)

eleven bravo
Member
+1,399|5544|foggy bottom
its not just privatization.  things like "tax free zones" where foreign corporations have an advantage over domestic ones.
Tu Stultus Es
Turquoise
O Canada
+1,596|6690|North Carolina

eleven bravo wrote:

its not just privatization.  things like "tax free zones" where foreign corporations have an advantage over domestic ones.
I'm assuming that's put into place to encourage foreign investment.
Benzin
Member
+576|6284
Greece's problem isn't public healthcare. Greece's problem is that the government workers are abusing the system every way to Sunday (raping is probably a more accurate term). For instance: Greek civil servants cannot be fired. Once you have the job, you have it for life. You get paid A BONUS for showing up on time. Many civil servants have two jobs and don't go to the government job. Greece has thousands of committees that they pay money out to and being a member earns you a paycheck. Problem is, Greece has no clue how many of these committees exist, but there is one that is in charge of taking care of a lake - that dried up decades ago. Then if you are the divorced or unmarried daughter of a civil servant, you can collect the pension of your parent even after they are dead and gone. Civil servants can also go into retirement and start collecting their pension at the age of 47. (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/10093758.stm)

Last edited by CapnNismo (2010-05-16 13:39:23)

Turquoise
O Canada
+1,596|6690|North Carolina

CapnNismo wrote:

Greece's problem isn't public healthcare. Greece's problem is that the government workers are abusing the system every way to Sunday (raping is probably a more accurate term). For instance: Greek civil servants cannot be fired. Once you have the job, you have it for life. You get paid A BONUS for showing up on time. Many civil servants have two jobs and don't go to the government job. Greece has thousands of committees that they pay money out to and being a member earns you a paycheck. Problem is, Greece has no clue how many of these committees exist, but there is one that is in charge of taking care of a lake - that dried up decades ago. Then if you are the divorced or unmarried daughter of a civil servant, you can collect the pension of your parent even after they are dead and gone. Civil servants can also go into retirement and start collecting their pension at the age of 47. (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/10093758.stm)
It sounds like they need to end tenure and radically change their government's rules.

Hell, to be honest, it sounds like the EU needs to take control of their government and smack these idiots around some.  The way I see it...  if they're sucking up foreign funds, those paying for it need to have the leverage to force them to do what is necessary to reform.

Protesters be damned.  These people need a dose of harsh reality.

Last edited by Turquoise (2010-05-16 14:03:01)

Benzin
Member
+576|6284
Turq, I can only agree with you, but do you really think a country is going to be very willing to giving up its sovereignty, even a piece of it? The member states of the EU already handed over a sizable portion just to be members.
Turquoise
O Canada
+1,596|6690|North Carolina

CapnNismo wrote:

Turq, I can only agree with you, but do you really think a country is going to be very willing to giving up its sovereignty, even a piece of it? The member states of the EU already handed over a sizable portion just to be members.
Oh, I'm not suggesting that will happen.  I just find it sad that these countries so quickly take the money of other nations without doing what is necessary to fix things in the long run.

Look at what happened with Ireland, for example.  They were rather pathetic economically before the EU dumped billions into them, and then their economy fell flat when that money dried up as the world economy collapsed.  Now, they don't want to pay back the EU what they've received.

The lesson learned here is...  don't bailout countries.  Let them fall.  America learned this lesson as well.  We bailed out our finance sector (and continue to do so) and our automakers and even AIG (a completely useless company rife with fraud).

If there's any hope for humanity in the near future, we'll let the next round of "too big to fail" companies collapse as they should, and the EU will just kick out any countries that don't pull their weight economically.

If I were a German citizen, I would be demanding the expulsion of Greece from the EU, because they are useless to the interests of the rest of Europe.  They might as well expel all the PIIGS countries at this point.  The U.K. is the exception to this with regard to debt, because their economy is large enough and diversified enough to recover from this current recession in a timely manner.

And most importantly, the U.S. will hopefully implement some sensible financial regulations soon.
Benzin
Member
+576|6284
Well as to the UK, they don't have the euro and are therefore not really part of the problem.

As to the bailouts of the financial sector - that's a whole other topic. Let's stick to Greece.
ATG
Banned
+5,233|6814|Global Command
Obama wants America to be just as jacked as Greece.
Diesel_dyk
Object in mirror will feel larger than it appears
+178|6280|Truthistan
Greece should just default... screw the bond holders, take Goldman Sachs down with them, pull out of the Euro, help destroy the EU, ruin the plans for a world govt, put out arrest warrants on the IMF with shoot to kill orders... cause it looks like the IMF just declared war on Greece and laid out terms of unconditional surrender.
Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5643|London, England

Diesel_dyk wrote:

Greece should just default... screw the bond holders, take Goldman Sachs down with them, pull out of the Euro, help destroy the EU, ruin the plans for a world govt, put out arrest warrants on the IMF with shoot to kill orders... cause it looks like the IMF just declared war on Greece and laid out terms of unconditional surrender.
Is that how you run your own life? Run up a bunch of credit card and mortgage debt and then declare bankruptcy? How's that working out for you? Are people still willing to loan you money? Do you own your own business or do you suck off the teet of your employer?

I had a lot of respect for you when I first came to this forum but you've clearly gone way off the deep end.

A) Sovereign nations can not declare bankruptcy.
B) Defaulting on your debts leads to zero foreign investment. So if you're resource poor like Greece, what will they do for things like fuel oil? Cars? Trains? Little plastic McDonald's Happy Meal toys? None of it. You'd become a third world nation instantly and irrevocably.
C) Yeah, screw those bond holders. Fuck the fat cats. Don't cry on my shoulder when you lose your job.
D) The IMF is evil? Yeah? Who does Greece have to blame for it's current situation besides itself? You like to point fingers and place blame on things that are irrelevant. What you are is a populist idiot who kowtows to whatever politicians tell you to believe. Nevermind that politicians never use logic to create an argument and instead depend on inciting the emotions in their listeners. That doesn't seem to matter to you. Turn your brain back on man.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
Turquoise
O Canada
+1,596|6690|North Carolina

Diesel_dyk wrote:

Greece should just default... screw the bond holders, take Goldman Sachs down with them, pull out of the Euro, help destroy the EU, ruin the plans for a world govt, put out arrest warrants on the IMF with shoot to kill orders... cause it looks like the IMF just declared war on Greece and laid out terms of unconditional surrender.
I agree with you on one part.  Fuck Goldman Sachs.  All of those fuckers need to be Al Quida's next target.  The only difference is that they would actually be a legitimate target rather than an undeserving one like the previous ones.
Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5643|London, England

Turquoise wrote:

Diesel_dyk wrote:

Greece should just default... screw the bond holders, take Goldman Sachs down with them, pull out of the Euro, help destroy the EU, ruin the plans for a world govt, put out arrest warrants on the IMF with shoot to kill orders... cause it looks like the IMF just declared war on Greece and laid out terms of unconditional surrender.
I agree with you on one part.  Fuck Goldman Sachs.  All of those fuckers need to be Al Quida's next target.  The only difference is that they would actually be a legitimate target rather than an undeserving one like the previous ones.
Do you know what a derivative is? The government uses the term 'credit default swap' instead. Same thing, two different names.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
Turquoise
O Canada
+1,596|6690|North Carolina

JohnG@lt wrote:

Turquoise wrote:

Diesel_dyk wrote:

Greece should just default... screw the bond holders, take Goldman Sachs down with them, pull out of the Euro, help destroy the EU, ruin the plans for a world govt, put out arrest warrants on the IMF with shoot to kill orders... cause it looks like the IMF just declared war on Greece and laid out terms of unconditional surrender.
I agree with you on one part.  Fuck Goldman Sachs.  All of those fuckers need to be Al Quida's next target.  The only difference is that they would actually be a legitimate target rather than an undeserving one like the previous ones.
Do you know what a derivative is? The government uses the term 'credit default swap' instead. Same thing, two different names.
Yep, and both need to be illegal.
Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5643|London, England

Turquoise wrote:

Yep, and both need to be illegal.
Why exactly? All it is is 'weather insurance'. Every business has inherent risk built into it. If a company sells snow shovels it stands a very good chance of going out of business if there is no snow. Company X comes in, assesses the risk of there being no snow and writes the snow shovel company an insurance policy that pays out if it doesn't snow. In return, they get a monthly premium fee. The lower the risk, the lower the premium. Company X takes on much of the risk for the snow shovel company in return for this monthly fee. It's a win/win situation for both because Company X is also free to write an insurance policy for the casino across the street that is dependent on there being no snow in order to get it's customers in the door. So, if it snows, it pays out the casino, if it doesn't snow it pays out the manufacturer. In both cases, the premiums it charges allows it to make a small profit. Derivatives themselves have very meager payouts so companies that write them are forced to sell vast quantities of them.

There's nothing inherently evil about this insurance business by any means. Neither the snow shovel company nor the manufacturer are forced into the contract and they benefit from the service Company X provides anyway. Derivatives have only been demonized because they were the spawn of Enron and because governments don't like the fact that they can't sell bonds if the cost of the derivative outstrips their interest rate. This is why Goldman has become the whipping boy of the Obama administration. They're afraid their own bond ratings will nosedive and they won't be able to fund their government. It's asinine and they and the media are scaring the shit out of ignorant people who have no fucking clue what they are talking about. Populism at it's worst and exemplified by Diesel in this very thread.

They like to point out that Goldman was placing bets against the housing market and other garbage when all it was doing was writing insurance policies in case it collapsed. Sure, insurance can be likened to gambling if you want to take it to an extreme, but so is walking across the street. If you read the risk correctly, you're fine, and if you stack the deck in your favor by only crossing at a crosswalk and at a red light, the risk is minimal. Same with most derivatives that are sold.

Last edited by JohnG@lt (2010-05-16 20:25:47)

"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
Turquoise
O Canada
+1,596|6690|North Carolina

JohnG@lt wrote:

Turquoise wrote:

Yep, and both need to be illegal.
Why exactly? All it is is 'weather insurance'. Every business has inherent risk built into it. If a company sells snow shovels it stands a very good chance of going out of business if there is no snow. Company X comes in, assesses the risk of there being no snow and writes the snow shovel company an insurance policy that pays out if it doesn't snow. In return, they get a monthly premium fee. The lower the risk, the lower the premium. Company X takes on much of the risk for the snow shovel company in return for this monthly fee. It's a win/win situation for both because Company X is also free to write an insurance policy for the casino across the street that is dependent on there being no snow in order to get it's customers in the door. So, if it snows, it pays out the casino, if it doesn't snow it pays out the manufacturer. In both cases, the premiums it charges allows it to make a small profit. Derivatives themselves have very meager payouts so companies that write them are forced to sell vast quantities of them.

There's nothing inherently evil about this insurance business by any means. Neither the snow shovel company nor the manufacturer are forced into the contract and they benefit from the service Company X provides anyway. Derivatives have only been demonized because they were the spawn of Enron and because governments don't like the fact that they can't sell bonds if the cost of the derivative outstrips their interest rate. This is why Goldman has become the whipping boy of the Obama administration. They're afraid their own bond ratings will nosedive and they won't be able to fund their government. It's asinine and they and the media are scaring the shit out of ignorant people who have no fucking clue what they are talking about. Populism at it's worst and exemplified by Diesel in this very thread.

They like to point out that Goldman was placing bets against the housing market and other garbage when all it was doing was writing insurance policies in case it collapsed. Sure, insurance can be likened to gambling if you want to take it to an extreme, but so is walking across the street. If you read the risk correctly, you're fine, and if you stack the deck in your favor by only crossing at a crosswalk and at a red light, the risk is minimal. Same with most derivatives that are sold.
That's all fine and well until taxpayers have to bail them out.  As long as bailouts happen (and they will surely happen again as long as we have a crony capitalism), the government should limit the amount of risk taking that businesses should be allowed to take.

Otherwise, we'll continue to have to cover their risks with our tax money on a very frequent basis.

In short, because they aren't willing to take the fall for their risks, they shouldn't be allowed to take them to begin with.
Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5643|London, England

Turquoise wrote:

That's all fine and well until taxpayers have to bail them out.  As long as bailouts happen (and they will surely happen again as long as we have a crony capitalism), the government should limit the amount of risk taking that businesses should be allowed to take.

Otherwise, we'll continue to have to cover their risks with our tax money on a very frequent basis.

In short, because they aren't willing to take the fall for their risks, they shouldn't be allowed to take them to begin with.
I'm not going to disagree that the bailouts need to cease... but saying they need to make a wholesale ban on something just because there is risk involved is silly. Every single company has inherent risk.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
Diesel_dyk
Object in mirror will feel larger than it appears
+178|6280|Truthistan

JohnG@lt wrote:

Diesel_dyk wrote:

Greece should just default... screw the bond holders, take Goldman Sachs down with them, pull out of the Euro, help destroy the EU, ruin the plans for a world govt, put out arrest warrants on the IMF with shoot to kill orders... cause it looks like the IMF just declared war on Greece and laid out terms of unconditional surrender.
Is that how you run your own life? Run up a bunch of credit card and mortgage debt and then declare bankruptcy? How's that working out for you? Are people still willing to loan you money? Do you own your own business or do you suck off the teet of your employer?

I had a lot of respect for you when I first came to this forum but you've clearly gone way off the deep end.

A) Sovereign nations can not declare bankruptcy.
B) Defaulting on your debts leads to zero foreign investment. So if you're resource poor like Greece, what will they do for things like fuel oil? Cars? Trains? Little plastic McDonald's Happy Meal toys? None of it. You'd become a third world nation instantly and irrevocably.
C) Yeah, screw those bond holders. Fuck the fat cats. Don't cry on my shoulder when you lose your job.
D) The IMF is evil? Yeah? Who does Greece have to blame for it's current situation besides itself? You like to point fingers and place blame on things that are irrelevant. What you are is a populist idiot who kowtows to whatever politicians tell you to believe. Nevermind that politicians never use logic to create an argument and instead depend on inciting the emotions in their listeners. That doesn't seem to matter to you. Turn your brain back on man.
Hey if you're dumb enough to lend it, you're dumb enough to lose it, I won't shed a tear. Fact is money only has value in the hands of the end user who actually uses it to purchase something like food or shelter. Money for any other purpose lacks real tangible value because at that point its only value is relative to some other intangible.

So do you really think that the solution to Greece's problem is to get credit from the IMF? take the risk from the bond holders and let the taxpayers from other countries bear that burden? I don't think the solution for a country or a person with credit problems is more credit. I say screw the bond holders.

On the other hand I shouldn't be complaining too much because the Greece problem is crashing the Euro and that BS paper oil trade where oil contracts were traded in Euros and run through China and then back through the US on the carry trade is breaking down. So on the other hand if I were thinking that this was a conspiracy involving economic hitman, maybe Goldman Sachs made Greece a little poison pill for Sarkosy and that twat merkel to swallow. And we all know that the IMF is an arm of our govt. So may be this is all a good thing afterall a weak Europe is good for the US. If it causes oil to drop we should see the markets return to normal. What we need is a break from all this market bubble making.

But things would be even more intersting if Greece just repudiated its debt.

And I wouldn't mind see a significant devaluation in that 700 trillion derivative market.... creating deriviatives is the creation of tradeable instruments between private parties. It is the creation of legal private currency and its counted as part of the money supply. Its legal counterfeting is what it is and its endangering the US dollar and the US economy. When private people can literally make currency, then that currency really has no value. eventually we will get a crash in what is the mother of all bubbles that has been created by this deriviative currency creation. Just wait until that one pops.

Board footer

Privacy Policy - © 2025 Jeff Minard