UShadItComing
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jul 21, 2008
- Messages
- 680
You're hallucinating like a guy in a mental ward who thinks he's Napoleon.
All right then, can we agree that I have the most unpopular name now?
Is that why you feel threatened?
You're hallucinating like a guy in a mental ward who thinks he's Napoleon.
All right then, can we agree that I have the most unpopular name now?
Is that why you feel threatened?
All right then, can we agree that I have the most unpopular name now?
Is that why you feel threatened?
Well congrats guys I've just read that you've just bought $5 trillion of bum mortgages.... welcome to the world of socialism!
They just this morning did a big segment on this huge government bailout on this morning's news.
According to the financial annalist there she said that stock holders will loose their shirts & shorts (that's her quote).
It just once again shows how the whole Republican mindset (see Phil Graham & the lot) were so anti regulation, let businesses do anything they want, that it's created this steady series of collapses. First it was energy companies and the now infamous Republican pushed "ENRON LOOPHOLE".
Then we had the sub-prime loans & predatory lending scandals with business "policing itself".
For Republican's to say they can fix this when they were totally in charge of how it happened when it happened is a joke...
Not a very funny one though I'll grant you!
gRob;60044]The small holder perhaps will, but when the biggest holders are banks and other financial institutions it does the banking system no good to bail out one company just to tank the other financial institutions that you then must bail out again.
Now hold on here. FDR basically set up these banks and regulated them as such. Banking regulation is nothing new, and certainly cannot be blamed on the Republicans alone...
And further, while it might happen soon, no bailout has of yet occurred.
Officials were concerned mounting losses at the two companies, which own or guarantee almost half of the country's $12 trillion in outstanding home mortgage debt, was sapping their vitality and threatening to undermine them at a time other sources of housing finance have largely run dry.
"Our economy and our markets will not recover until the bulk of this housing correction is behind us," U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said at a news conference. "Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are critical to turning the corner on housing."