Uraniun235 wrote:
Sorry, I guess I shouldn't have called you out on a really badly-worded post; at least, I sure hope that's what it was. I'd hate to think you consider torture and warmongering to be acts of "negligence".
Negligent, illegal, horrific, totally uncool. I can list off many synonyms for the evil that this government and others have caused through action and inaction. I sure as hell am not shrugging them off, but they are neither the focus of this thread either.
But, funny, I could have sworn from the OP that this thread was about the legality of the Federal Reserve's actions, not over the prudence of the bailout. I could have sworn this thread was about a CONSTITUTIONAL CRISIS which could set dangerous precedent. At least, that's the assumption I was operating under when I compared it to other actions which could be considered "CONSTITUTIONAL CRISES".
If you want to call it bad fiscal policy, then fucking call it bad fiscal policy! Don't get pissy when people start picking apart the validity of calling it a "CONSTITUTIONAL CRISIS" and don't get all butthurt when I call you out on blowing it out of proportion.
I used that title because
that's what the damn article was called. You have issues with the title? Fine. I'll remember not to bother quoting another author's headline next time.
And it's only blown out of proportion because your system truly is broken anyway. Am I shocked over this happening? No, as I said. I am shocked by the lack of any tackling of this or related problems, because I've come to expect little good from the incumbents in Washington now.
You don't care that it's a "constitutional crisis", despite the title of the thread, you're just pissy that the American public is acting completely within character and not rising up against this Fed policy like you wish they would.
You damn right I'm pissy over that. Given the ranting I see online both here and elsewhere, I'd expect more. Which is why Obama quite simply has to win and actually get work done, else there really is no end to the death spiral the US is going down. Maybe when China and India overtake the US, then people will really take action. I still doubt it.
And what about the oft-argued point around here that the public should stay out of affairs it cannot comprehend? "Hey you guys really need to get involved in the financial sector BUT SHUT THE FUCK UP ABOUT NUCLEAR POWER", right? Don't get me wrong, I love nuclear power, but we can't exactly have our cake and eat it too. How can we argue that people should somehow manage to educate themselves in global finance to the degree that they can make informed decisions about such matters and apply pressure to their elected officials accordingly... and then argue that the very same public should delegate such decisions to "trained professionals" (which, I'll remind you, is what comprised the management of Bear Stearns and other irresponsible banking institutions) when it comes to other highly complex and technical matters?
That's part of the problem: the complexity. What they need are referendums on certain issues, select committees on others. No single system is perfect, but I do wonder whether the Westminster system would be better as some argue. In this case, it's an easy case of kicking out the big corporations who are buying out all leaders. You don't need a degree in economics to grasp that. Most people are just apathetic. If the effort put into upholding gun laws was put into fighting corruption, you'd be getting somewhere. Passion does wonders for a cause.
Not to mention the entire issue of whom they should even trust to give them an education in responsible finance to begin with. I mean at least with engineering and science you can generally trust the education you get out of a university, but can you - YOU, Admiral Valdemar, YOU PERSONALLY - can YOU trust the majority of economists in universities throughout the US to deliver an education which would permit their students to recognize the folly of the Stearns bailout as clearly as you have?
I can't trust most of them in power to educate the public in the media, that's for sure. Having taken some economics in high-school, I know how easy it can be to twist around and dress up in a way that favours your views. It's not exactly rocket science, but the subject is beyond the grasp of many people it would seem, while there is more than good enough reason for people to at least have rudimentary knowledge of how to organise personal finances. If they at least understood that, they might consider the leveraging going on now to be a bad thing. That some express shock when being called on debts to be repaid after time is just baffling. And as with all non-science subjects, objectivity is at a premium.
I submit that this thread was started on
false pretense, because as you yourself have stated
you do not care that the act is in fact illegal (never mind Constitutional or not) and yet the whole opening post was basically about "this is illegal you guys should be pissed about that". Not because you have any interest in the rule of law here, but because - it would seem - you hoped to spur us into political action on your behalf. I sure hope you weren't trying to spur people into political action on false premises; that almost sounds like it could be slightly dishonest.
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You got me. I'm Jefferson reincarnated. We need to dump T-bills in the Boston harbour, stat.
I submit that it has been demonstrated that the reaction of the American public was completely predictable, if not inevitable, and that therefore your "outrage" is as impotent and useful as it would be at cursing a bird for shitting on your head.
Being shown to be not as cynical as some make me out to be... hurts.
Pretty sure I've already said that a couple of times before on this forum. But, if it makes you feel better to say it some more, go ahead; should help take some of the stress off, which it sounds like you need.
I am a veritable ball of angriness right now.
I for one am not disputing the illegality of the actions at hand, especially now that someone has explained the relevant aspects of the Federal Reserve Act. The whole problem has been that this thread was framed within the context of "UNPRECEDENTED CONSTITUTIONAL CRISIS" as claimed by The Market Ticker and has failed to live up to that claim, seeming instead to be basically "business as usual".
Okay, it's not a crisis like that because no one gives a shit about the Constitution (except in cases involving guns and religion, it seems) and the government has pissed all over it like a drunkard's urinal since
time immemorial. But, the legality of this whole affair is not as cut and dry as has been stated by others. There was an illegal vote. The money from taxpayers will be at risk of being lost if things get worse (and they ain't getting better, Sonny Jim ). Was the Market Ticker article somewhat hyperbolic and filled with emotion? Yes. Did it alert me to an issue I can see snowballing? Also yes.
In the next six or so months, we shall see how this event affects your nation's, and by extension, every nation's economy. Right now, the spin doctors of CNBC and their ilk are happy to make any bad news seem like it's A-OK if it's less than the Apocalypse, which is what they did with company profit reports at the start of the year ("Hey, HSBC only lost a dozen billion this past month. Phew, I thought it was going to be
bad").
The thing of it is, this financial credit crunch doesn't interest me as much any more, least, not right now. What is on my scope now is the food inflation going on, which affects a great many more people more immediately. But I'm sure posting a food crisis thread would only get negative reviews anyway, so I'll lay off that particular idea until half the world is dining on fine
Rattus rattus three times a day.