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Keep giving the banks more money so they won't give it to anybody on the street. I don't know anybody right now that has been granted a loan for small business in Michigan. Where is all this money???
check out this propaganda
Huge Job Losses Could Be Signal That Worst Is Over
Once the initial knee-jerk doom-and-gloom reaction is over, something resembling optimism will prevail in the conclusion that the worst is over for the economy.
CNBC Utilities Page, Politics, Markets, Stock markets, Commodity markets, Currency markets, Bonds, US Top News and Analysis, US Homepage, stocks, Make It, Currencies, Futures & Commodities, business news
Keep giving the banks more money so they won't give it to anybody on the street. I don't know anybody right now that has been granted a loan for small business in Michigan.
We don't need to give banks more money. Many smaller and more poorly capitalized banks will fail, and we should let them. We have already given the important players the sufficient support to avert the collapse of the entire financial infrastructure.
And what we do now is primarily this:
1. We try to provide whatever tax break and fiscal policy benefits we can to put more resources into peoples' hands.
2. We try to develop government-sponsored job corps as quickly as possible, like we did during the Great Depression. Government spending is a crucial lever during recession.
3. We strengthen other national systems to feed people and give them basic resources. That means bread lines and all that shit we did during the Great Depression.
4. We hunker down, tough it out, and wait. When losses are realized, asset values will again become transparent, trust between remaining market participants will grow, and economic stability will slowly return. That probably won't be until 1-2 years from now.
You didn't expect the bailout to cause everything to go back to normal and banks to lend like they used to, did you? Sorry dude...that was never in the cards. We're in the heaviest recession since the Great Depression and most of the carnage lies ahead of us, not behind us. I never said this wasn't going to hurt a lot.
Originally posted by runningman
check out this propaganda
Huge Job Losses Could Be Signal That Worst Is Over
Once the initial knee-jerk doom-and-gloom reaction is over, something resembling optimism will prevail in the conclusion that the worst is over for the economy.
what a crock of shit
Agreed, it is a crock of shit. I don't think we've reached the bottom in terms of deleveraging of the consumer and the unwinding of overvalued assets. Worst is still ahead. We will lose millions of jobs in 2009.
CNBC Utilities Page, Politics, Markets, Stock markets, Commodity markets, Currency markets, Bonds, US Top News and Analysis, US Homepage, stocks, Make It, Currencies, Futures & Commodities, business news
Keep giving the banks more money so they won't give it to anybody on the street. I don't know anybody right now that has been granted a loan for small business in Michigan. Where is all this money???
check out this propaganda
Huge Job Losses Could Be Signal That Worst Is Over
Once the initial knee-jerk doom-and-gloom reaction is over, something resembling optimism will prevail in the conclusion that the worst is over for the economy.
what a crock of shit
It's called 'consolidation'. Big companies eat little companies and since some of the bankers sit on the fed/treasury, they'll do as they please with the infusion of money. They like to cut the grass and eventually more small banks will grow again and once again down the road, bankers will seize the opportunity to consolidate more companies. Call it natural selection in the business world.
Many people would sooner die than think; In fact, they do so.
-Bertrand Russell
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