so it looks like our economy is teetering on the edge of the crapper. but if we've learned much of anything at all from history, we should know by now that there are things that we can do now to prevent a recurrence of the great depression.
it may not be a popular thing to say, but i support this $700 billion bailout-thingy that they're kicking around in washington. not as a 'here's a crapload of money, just let us know how you use it' blank check, but definitely with regulations and oversight and an attempt to fix the systems that got us into this mess.
and even though he can say some pretty kooky things sometimes, i believe that moby's rant on this subject pretty much sums up what i've been thinking.
ok, financial markets and bailout.
this might not make me very popular, but although i don't like it, i support the $700,000,000,000.00 bailout.
why?
because it will prop up our banks and investment houses long enough for real reform to implemented and it will keep the u.s and global economy from sliding into depression.
if more banks and investment houses fail you'll see a severe recession and possibly a depression.
and this effects everyone.
the reason that people start businesses and create jobs is because they have access to capital.
the reason that people buy houses or renovate houses is because they have access to capital.
if people close businesses or stop buying or renovating houses they will stop creating jobs.
people will be fired.
unemployment will skyrocket.
retirement accounts will dry up.
more mortgages will be foreclosed on.
and the world will head towards severe recession or depression.
this bailout isn't bailing out fat-cats on wall street, it's protecting local businesses in iowa and kansas and sacramento.
it's protecting shakey mortgages in idaho and florida.
it's protecting retirement accounts in alaska and maine.
it's protecting your job.
it's protecting your neighbors job.
wall st screwed up. seriously. the collusion between the different financial service providers has been disgraceful and dangerous.
and securitizing high-risk mortgages was, in hindsight, a disastrous idea.
wall street screwed up.
but to let the banks and investment houses fail and to let the dow and the nasdaq (and the ftseand the dax and nikkei, etc) plummet is to create a crisis that will effect every person onthe planet (the global depression of the 20's and 30's, resulting from protectionist trade practices, caused world war 2, for example).
the republicans (and some democrats) in the house of representatives (most of whom know nothing about global markets and finances) have made a huge mistake in not supporting the bailout.
to be clear, no one likes the bailout, and no one is happy at the thought of having to use taxpayers money to buy up crummy securities.
but it's a necessary evil, and to let the banks and investment houses continue to fail would have deleterious consequences that people can't even begin to imagine.
again, not just for bankers and brokers, but for you and your friends and your grandparents and your children.
the markets do not exist in a bubble, and to pretend that they do is to exhibit a dangerous lack of understanding of how the global economy actually works.
if the gop in the house don't pass the bailout they won't be punishing wall street, they'll be punishing you and your friends and your family.
moby
about me
- ellieherrity
- i am a dreamer, an idealist, a creator, an introvert, a thinker, and an all-around neat person...if i do say so myself.
30 September 2008
bailout?
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4 comments:
i haven't made up my mind just yet.
did you watch the jim wallis video that rodrigo shared? i'm much more leaning that way.
part of me, though, feels like america deserves to be shoved into poverty again. maybe we'll open up our eyes a bit more, pull together...
and i dig bono's comment that wallis also mentioned...
why oh why can our gov't say "here's 700billion dollars" to our banks but we can't way "here's $25billion(or million, i forget) to help out the poverty issues in africa.
oh that's right...because there's nothing in it for us.
such crap. i've been so annoyed with politics lately that i've had to step away from it and remind myself that Jesus is the only perfect one. :)
nope, didn't watch the video, but heard him on an NPR piece about the bailout. he impressed me.
we're reading a book of his for the M68 group next month.
i agree with a lot of these points 100%, but its hard to tackle poverty when there is no financial infrastructure and 40% unemployment and the world is in recession...or depression.
ahhhh, economics.
she can be a cold bitch.
okay, after reading the news today and reading the new changes they made to the bill, i'm much more in support of it today.
it made me quite nervous that they were considering passing a bill that was put together in only a couple of days. i know the problem was urgent but this was a huge decision...i'm glad they waited in order to make changes. hope it goes through this time.
we talked about this in my class & it was rad to understand what caused the problem & that a revised bill will be a good thing and not actually the beginnings of socialism in the states. our economy is already affecting banks internationally. i believe it's intended as not a bailout per se, but more that the government will hold the investments until the economy is better. so hopefully taxpayers don't have to deal with even more debt in the future.
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