We've likely officially broken forum rules on politics (albeit, we're more discussing economics and stimulus) - ishop123 would have our heads on a platter for this - but, I agree, it's been fun (even though I think you're totally one-sided like Shopetal and you both are completely wrong and I'm right...hehehe).@maverick1 wrote:
Yep, it's been fun shoptastic...unfortunately others are bored. Bored with the politics and financial matters that impact their lives. But we see reality as it is.![]()
Looking ahead, herd immunity by May 2021. May-be herd immunity, get it?
The numbers are correct, msimon-2000.@msimon-2000 wrote:
Our current debt is what...20.3 trillion? If I add up your 16 trillion and 4.5 trillion amounts, then you are basically saying that the USA had no debt prior to or since 2009 other than the secret loans and QE? Sorry, but the numbers just don't add up...
I'm sure there will be plenty of opportunity for me to fight with the likes of Shopetal, maverick1, et. al - I love you, but you two are wrong!@iagal wrote:
@maverick1 and shoptastic please continue. I found it quite interesting.
Okay - so what do you call $16 trillion in Fed zero interest loans and $7 trillion in QE then? stimulinfinity?@maverick1 wrote:
Let's get back to the stimulus topic of $600 or possibly $2,000 now, or in multiple waves from Progressives like Shoptastic, it should be called stimuli.
@shoptastic wrote:
We've likely officially broken forum rules on politics (albeit, we're more discussing economics and stimulus) - ishop123 would have our heads on a platter for this - but, I agree, it's been fun (even though I think you're totally one-sided like Shopetal and you both are completely wrong and I'm right...hehehe).@maverick1 wrote:
Yep, it's been fun shoptastic...unfortunately others are bored. Bored with the politics and financial matters that impact their lives. But we see reality as it is.![]()
Looking ahead, herd immunity by May 2021. May-be herd immunity, get it?
Feel free to stay on topic with stimulus chat. I shall try to do the same going forward.
It's a tough time to volunteer. I saw an article about the Salvation Army having much less people taking donations for the holidays this year.@1forum1 wrote:
You know, thinking about you and your road to recovery, maybe you can volunteer a couple of nights a week serving at a homeless shelter. Many churches have homeless ministries. Perhaps join one.
For those that can still give, praise God.@1forum1 wrote:
Yes, I know. I was just planting a seed for consideration in the future. My church has suspended that part of the ministry (homeless shelter service). They still do other things.... drive by food bank 6 days a week. I personally don't do anything that involves congregating with groups of people indoors. I do lots of outdoor activities''' hiking, biking, and once in a while outdoor dining with friends. Yes, I give, and I do volunteer work twice a week, but our small group is consistently spaced 20-100 ft apart. Myself, I almost 100% of the time work alone in another building.
@ wrote:
Americans also stopped broadly sharing libraries, movie theaters, train stations and public school classrooms, the spaces that still created common experience in increasingly unequal communities. Even the D.M.V., with its cross-section of life in a single room, wasn’t that anymore.
Instead, people who could afford it retreated into smaller, more secure worlds during the pandemic. And that has made it harder to see all the inequality that worsened this year: the unemployment that soared even as the stock market did, the eviction threats that grew as home prices hit new highs.
@shoptastic wrote:
Okay - so what do you call $16 trillion in Fed zero interest loans and $7 trillion in QE then?
Dodd-Frank has helped a little bit, but has loopholes (because it was largely written by Wall Street lobbyists) and doesn't go far enough to protect us. For example, the large banks can get around trading-for-their-own-book limitations by saying they are simply market making for clients. Many advocates/activists want to reinstate Glass-Steagall as the ultimate solution, because it would separate investment banking from consumer/commercial banking.@ wrote:
My concern from the financial crisis is I do not believe the Gov't has implemented safety controls and regulations to prevent it from happening again.
@msimon-2000 wrote:
@shoptastic wrote:
Okay - so what do you call $16 trillion in Fed zero interest loans and $7 trillion in QE then?
Shoptastic, you are really fixated on the steps taken by the Gov't after the financial meltdown in 2008. While I am not a fan of Gov't bailouts in general, had they not stepped in to prop up the house of cards that was our financial system, there was a very real chance of cascading failures imploding the entire financial system. Who really knows how that would have played out, but just about every scenario was very bad, perhaps armageddon type bad.
My concern from the financial crisis is I do not believe the Gov't has implemented safety controls and regulations to prevent it from happening again.
I believe that if you took all the money in the world and divided it evenly amongst the world's population, within 5 maybe 10 years you would have a similar distribution of wealth that we have today. Some people attract money and others (most) blow it quickly...think about it....
[www.usatoday.com]@ wrote:
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — The homes of Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi were vandalized over the weekend after Congress adjourned Friday without securing $2,000 stimulus checks.
Messages like "where's my money" and other expletives were written with spray paint across the front door and bricks of the Kentucky Republican's house in Louisville. Police spokesman Dwight Mitchell said the incident happened around 5 a.m. Saturday and there was "minor damage of graffiti on a window and door." The department has no suspects.
Meanwhile, at the San Francisco home of Pelosi, a Democrat, vandals painted graffiti on the garage door and left a pig's head on the sidewalk around 2 a.m. Friday morning, police said. Vandals also wrote messages like "$2k cancel rent" and left fake blood on Pelosi's driveway, according to local news reports. San Francisco Police said its Special Investigations Division was investigating.
The simple solution was to simply bail out the homeowners' roughly $500 billion in sub-prime mortgages.@msimon-2000 wrote:
While I am not a fan of Gov't bailouts in general, had they not stepped in to prop up the house of cards that was our financial system, there was a very real chance of cascading failures imploding the entire financial system. Who really knows how that would have played out, but just about every scenario was very bad, perhaps armageddon type bad.