Yes I Want a Change

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  • Fish2006
    Member
    • Feb 2007
    • 253

    Yes I Want a Change

    From Republicans who:
    • Have extracted a Wealth Tax on every American by letting the dollar slide some 30-40% against the rest of the world. You pay way higher taxes under Bush every single day when you buy stuff that is made from commodities (i.e. everything).
    • Rip our constitution to shreds in the name of "Security" - the reality is that more people die in car accidents in a single month than died in 9/11. Maybe we need a war against bad driving?
    • Take Cronyism to a new level - the former head of the Arabian Horse Association for head of FEMA? WTF?
    • Conflate religion and morality, while at the same time, demonstrating some of the same behaviors they are condemning (Larry Craig, the congressional Page scandal, etc.)
    • Condemn drugs they can't control, like Marijuana, while they let a pharmaceutical drug epidemic, via OxyContin, Xanax and Adderall - the last of which is basically cocaine for kids, flourish. Drugs are basically legal, so long as you have to buy them from a connected pharmaceutical company and can't grow them yourself.
    • Lastly, (and I could go on and on) - crack down on a group - online sports bettors - in an attempt to simultaneously condemn an activity that the religious right doesn't like (except when it benefits them, as in Bingo), and placate their donors (the LV casinos, the sports leagues)
    Ill take a guy who has a funny name over these same crusty people who've been in Washington and been licking the boots of whomever will pay them the most any day of the week.

    If you want more taxes on your wealth - via devalued currency, higher oil prices - because alternatives that would threaten the established interests are strangled in the crib, and less individual freedom, because too much of that would make people harder to control - then by all means, vote for McCain.
    可你住在有趣的时代 - May you live in interesting times.

    Visit wagertracker and participate in free contests and track your picks.
  • JohnnyMapleLeaf
    Banned
    • Feb 2007
    • 8456

    #2
    :beerbang:

    Comment

    • BoKnows
      SEC!Any Questions?
      • Mar 2007
      • 1089

      #3
      Originally posted by Fish2006
      From Republicans who:
      • Have extracted a Wealth Tax on every American by letting the dollar slide some 30-40% against the rest of the world. You pay way higher taxes under Bush every single day when you buy stuff that is made from commodities (i.e. everything).
      • Rip our constitution to shreds in the name of "Security" - the reality is that more people die in car accidents in a single month than died in 9/11. Maybe we need a war against bad driving?
      • Take Cronyism to a new level - the former head of the Arabian Horse Association for head of FEMA? WTF?
      • Conflate religion and morality, while at the same time, demonstrating some of the same behaviors they are condemning (Larry Craig, the congressional Page scandal, etc.)
      • Condemn drugs they can't control, like Marijuana, while they let a pharmaceutical drug epidemic, via OxyContin, Xanax and Adderall - the last of which is basically cocaine for kids, flourish. Drugs are basically legal, so long as you have to buy them from a connected pharmaceutical company and can't grow them yourself.
      • Lastly, (and I could go on and on) - crack down on a group - online sports bettors - in an attempt to simultaneously condemn an activity that the religious right doesn't like (except when it benefits them, as in Bingo), and placate their donors (the LV casinos, the sports leagues)
      Ill take a guy who has a funny name over these same crusty people who've been in Washington and been licking the boots of whomever will pay them the most any day of the week.

      If you want more taxes on your wealth - via devalued currency, higher oil prices - because alternatives that would threaten the established interests are strangled in the crib, and less individual freedom, because too much of that would make people harder to control - then by all means, vote for McCain.

      Trying to decipher this......

      So, let me get this straight Barrack is a better choice because of the issues, of gambling, legalized marijuana, you feel over securitized in a world of extremist, religion, cronyism, and the fact that he is going to do a whole lot for the devalued dollar and the high price of gas.

      You are definetly a idealist, you may want to wake up from that nap because your dreaming if you think B.O's policies are going to make the dollar stronger and bring the price of gas down....both the entire fault of the current adiminstration...:laughing: ....Since he has no policy on these two items, I am not sure how he will achieve this objective, but I digress....Are you a conspiricy theorist as well? Sounds like it. Your correct more people have died in car accidents than did 9/11....why do you think that is.....well there were only so many people in the buildings at the time they went down. Do you have any idea how many terrorist attacks have been foiled since this unneeded over securitization, how many lives have been saved from Terror? Car accidents are a natural occurence based on the fact that everybody drives, terrorist attacks would be a natural occurance without over securitization and if you think they would not....time to check your pulse because you took one to many Xanax. If your hot buttons are weed, gambling, and cronyism you are definetly the kind of person I am glad is on B.O's side. Please "go on and on" I need to see how this story ends as there has to be more substance to your argument than drugs and bingo:beer2:
      Last edited by BoKnows; 08-29-2008, 09:58 AM.

      Comment

      • Fish2006
        Member
        • Feb 2007
        • 253

        #4
        I don't think its a conspiracy to devalue the dollar, hell, its right out there in the open.

        Of course economic cycles happen. The problem is that by having cheap money policies that had a nice short term effect that the current administration pushed to recover from the .com crash (rising house prices, easier access to credit for everyone), we just created another bubble.

        Bush caused it, though not on purpose (I dont give him that much credit - he isn't that smart). By stripping the SEC and other watchdogs of the budget they need to enforce, say, mortgage standards, it created the conditions that resulted in homeless people being able to get loans on million dollar homes.

        Bush and his friends did that not because they are evil, but because they are short term oriented. What they did to get the economy going in 2003-04 was burn the house down in order to heat it. Works for awhile, but to say the least it is unsustainable.

        Now, as for the terrorism thing, I might even grant that, in the very short term, the torture our enemies in Guantanamo thing might have worked. Again, in the short term. In the long term though, when the camps close, and some of the prisoners make it back home (which is already happening), you create an entire generation of radicals with a cause to rally behind. There is always a risk for terrorism, there is simply too much open borders on a sea, air, and water basis to ever protect you, especially as technology advances and the tools for one whack job to kill an outsized number of people increases.

        I don't know what the long term solution to that problem is but I would guess that imprisoning the enemy indefinitely and torturing them, thus, creating scores of radicals and giving more people more reasons to think terrorism is ok - is probably not part of it.

        Already, we have given other countries with suspect motives, like Russia, a golden ticket to engage in wars of choice. By setting an example on the world stage that gives the green light to unilateralism, how can we then go say "we can do it, but you, Russia, can't".

        What Barack is doing to help is:

        a.) Rally the dollar by taking money out of the economy. Additional taxes on incomes of $250k+ will do that.
        b.) Put real money into windmills, solar, and yes, new drilling. Basically, the Pickens plan. Some of it will probably piss off the far left wing, so he talks about it less, but rest assured, it will probably happen.
        c.) Put restrictions on leverage that our banking institutions can take on. This creates less air for financial bubbles, because hedge funds operating in the context of companies like Bear Stearns can't borrow money at 100x of what they have chasing returns. Having that much leverage in the hands of traders, rather than actual businesses, misallocates capital by putting it into whatever herd mentality says is going up, rather than in the hands of entrepeneurs who can actually put it to move productive uses. Notice the lack of VC money in the last 7 years? I have.

        You can starve the Russian Bear, Islamofacist, and Hugo Chavez by taking the money out of oil, and moving it towards technology, drug research, medical research, and other things that actually contribute towards the common good. It isn't that complicated.
        可你住在有趣的时代 - May you live in interesting times.

        Visit wagertracker and participate in free contests and track your picks.

        Comment

        • dananderson32
          Senior Member
          • Feb 2007
          • 2748

          #5
          Originally posted by Fish2006
          From Republicans who:
          • Have extracted a Wealth Tax on every American by letting the dollar slide some 30-40% against the rest of the world. You pay way higher taxes under Bush every single day when you buy stuff that is made from commodities (i.e. everything).
          • Rip our constitution to shreds in the name of "Security" - the reality is that more people die in car accidents in a single month than died in 9/11. Maybe we need a war against bad driving?
          • Take Cronyism to a new level - the former head of the Arabian Horse Association for head of FEMA? WTF?
          • Conflate religion and morality, while at the same time, demonstrating some of the same behaviors they are condemning (Larry Craig, the congressional Page scandal, etc.)
          • Condemn drugs they can't control, like Marijuana, while they let a pharmaceutical drug epidemic, via OxyContin, Xanax and Adderall - the last of which is basically cocaine for kids, flourish. Drugs are basically legal, so long as you have to buy them from a connected pharmaceutical company and can't grow them yourself.
          • Lastly, (and I could go on and on) - crack down on a group - online sports bettors - in an attempt to simultaneously condemn an activity that the religious right doesn't like (except when it benefits them, as in Bingo), and placate their donors (the LV casinos, the sports leagues)
          Ill take a guy who has a funny name over these same crusty people who've been in Washington and been licking the boots of whomever will pay them the most any day of the week.

          If you want more taxes on your wealth - via devalued currency, higher oil prices - because alternatives that would threaten the established interests are strangled in the crib, and less individual freedom, because too much of that would make people harder to control - then by all means, vote for McCain.

          fish nice to see someone sees it like i see it :beerbang: :beerbang: :beerbang:


          Rip our constitution to shreds in the name of "Security"
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          Comment

          • Q-Unit
            Offensive Coordinator
            • Feb 2007
            • 5180

            #6
            Hell I just thought Dan was the only one supporting Obama in here.

            I wasn't about to hitch my wagon to his train LOL.

            I like some of your points Fish and Bo.

            We havent seen any name calling in here, and THAT alone I respect more than anything.

            ITs a given everyone will disagree, thats our nature we are not lemmings.

            but if ya'll want I can throw the first stone.

            Dan is such a tool but good at shoveling the shyt!
            :hide:

            "Schooly D is fat cake yo."
            -Big Pimpin-

            Comment

            • dananderson32
              Senior Member
              • Feb 2007
              • 2748

              #7
              Originally posted by Q-Unit
              Hell I just thought Dan was the only one supporting Obama in here.

              I wasn't about to hitch my wagon to his train LOL.

              I like some of your points Fish and Bo.

              We havent seen any name calling in here, and THAT alone I respect more than anything.

              ITs a given everyone will disagree, thats our nature we are not lemmings.

              but if ya'll want I can throw the first stone.

              Dan is such a tool but good at shoveling the shyt!

              ill take that as a compliment thank you :cheery: :cheery:
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              Comment

              • Fish2006
                Member
                • Feb 2007
                • 253

                #8
                I will say this though - McCain picked a VPILF today.

                Too bad she is more in the pocket of big oil than even McCain is.
                可你住在有趣的时代 - May you live in interesting times.

                Visit wagertracker and participate in free contests and track your picks.

                Comment

                • dananderson32
                  Senior Member
                  • Feb 2007
                  • 2748

                  #9
                  Originally posted by Fish2006
                  I will say this though - McCain picked a VPILF today.

                  Too bad she is more in the pocket of big oil than even McCain is.
                  :thumbs: :thumbs: :thumbs:
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                  Comment

                  • homedawg
                    Banned
                    • Feb 2007
                    • 7689

                    #10
                    Originally posted by Fish2006
                    I will say this though - McCain picked a VPILF today.

                    Too bad she is more in the pocket of big oil than even McCain is.
                    I agree with the VPILF :beer2:

                    Not sure I understand your pocket comment? Regardless, there is no truth to that statement either way! :thumbs:

                    Comment

                    • Rothko
                      Service *****
                      • Mar 2007
                      • 412

                      #11
                      Originally posted by Q-Unit
                      We havent seen any name calling in here, and THAT alone I respect more than anything.
                      You need to read the thread again, Q!!

                      Bo, I'm sorry bro, but you always come across as an ******* whenever you make your point! I can't understand why you can't state a fact and just be done with it! You behave like the worst of all republicans...insecure and afraid! Why sling insults? Fish made good points from his point of view and you come in with your snide comments and 3rd grade taunts...get over yourself!

                      Bo, I know you can contribute to a conversation more than this...
                      White crushed Americans need weird energy - Robert Pollard

                      Comment

                      • Q-Unit
                        Offensive Coordinator
                        • Feb 2007
                        • 5180

                        #12
                        Originally posted by Rothko
                        You need to read the thread again, Q!!

                        Bo, I'm sorry bro, but you always come across as an ******* whenever you make your point! I can't understand why you can't state a fact and just be done with it! You behave like the worst of all republicans...insecure and afraid! Why sling insults? Fish made good points from his point of view and you come in with your snide comments and 3rd grade taunts...get over yourself!

                        Bo, I know you can contribute to a conversation more than this...
                        I was trying to be diplomatic and ignore the 800 lb elephant in the room (hey that fits on so many levels lol), and throw in some sort of sarcasm.

                        I failed miserably :bang:

                        so fck off Rothko you assclown lol
                        :hide:

                        "Schooly D is fat cake yo."
                        -Big Pimpin-

                        Comment

                        • Skinsfan
                          Old School
                          • Mar 2007
                          • 3240

                          #13
                          Originally posted by Fish2006
                          What Barack is doing to help is:

                          a.) Rally the dollar by taking money out of the economy. Additional taxes on incomes of $250k+ will do that.
                          Say what? That money is not taken out of the economy... it just gets spent right back into it. Even if Obama were to pay down (refinance) the National debt, much of that debt is held by foreign entities.... meaning much of the debt pay-down will get repatriated into local currency, thus devaluing the dollar even more. The only REAL way to improve the value of the US dollar is to a) reduce the trade deficit (becoming independent of foreign oil would help) b) increase interest rates, and c) BUY DOLLARS.

                          To say Republicans "let the dollar slide" is not a fair argument. I'm sure they are flattered that you think they have so much power, but they really don't. And any criticism of a weak US dollar also needs to be accompanied by the counterbalance to the argument -- the weak dollar has kept this country out of recession (GDP grew by 3.3% in Q2 if you believe the economists -- they've been a bit hit and miss lately). For the first time in a LONG LONG time the trade deficit (Ex oil) is approaching respectable levels... The bottom line is that the US needs to become less of a spender and more of a saver... the alternative looks a lot like Zimbabwe (how would you like to pay $1,000,000 for a coke this time next year?). The current Republican administration is been a big disappointment to me (as a fiscally conservative person), but an Obama administration would be even worse. Perhaps Obama brings change you can believe in, but he also brings policies he won't define other than the cost, which is unaffordable.



                          Originally posted by Fish2006
                          b.) Put real money into windmills, solar, and yes, new drilling. Basically, the Pickens plan. Some of it will probably piss off the far left wing, so he talks about it less, but rest assured, it will probably happen.
                          I would LOVE to see this country move to solar and wind.... but why won't Obama define his plan? He is now promising to break our dependance on foreign oil within 10 years! That would be wonderful. I would LOVE to be free of foreign oil.... I would love for our oil companies to not only DRILL DRILL DRILL but to SELL SELL SELL our oil to the world and reverse the flow of money. Instead of oil being a "natural resource" it could be a "store of value" which can be passed on to our businesses, consumers, and government tax revenues.

                          But here is the problem... HOW? Here is an inconvenient truth for you -- It will costs hundreds of BILLIONS of dollars to rebuild our country's electrical infrastructure to support wind and solar power on a substantial level. Why? Because it is hard/impossible to store energy once it is collected, and our current antiquated electrical transport system CAN NOT TRANSPORT the energy from where it is easily collected (the midwest for wind, southwest for solar) to where it is consumed the most (the coastal cities).

                          So, we need to rebuild our infrastructure... but how? Should the government nationalize our electrical production and pay for it with tax revenues? That would be inefficient and impractical. Besides, the tax increases Obama has proposed have already been promised elsewhere. As we all know by now, the most efficient and effective way to implement such a project of great scale is to rely on the free market and for it to be funded by capital markets. WHOOPS.... problem with that... Obama is going to raise corporate taxes by double digit percentage points.... That puts a serious damper on business' ability (and incentive) to re-build our electrical infrastructure as corporate coffers are emptied into the pockets of Washington.... that being said, if oil prices remain high, there will remain potential margin for businesses to seek out in the forms of alternative energy as a mainstream source of power... but where to get the money? YES, that's right.. they'll do what our great producers often do to raise capital to finance these big expenditures: Tap into the capital markets.... perhaps they'll float share issues on the stock market to raise the necessary capital.... WHOOPS.... problem with that.... Obama is going to raise the capital gains taxes (Effectively reducing the demand for the very paper our businesses need to float to replenish the cash the government just took from them). Quite a conundrum.

                          Originally posted by Fish2006
                          c.) Put restrictions on leverage that our banking institutions can take on. This creates less air for financial bubbles, because hedge funds operating in the context of companies like Bear Stearns can't borrow money at 100x of what they have chasing returns. Having that much leverage in the hands of traders, rather than actual businesses, misallocates capital by putting it into whatever herd mentality says is going up, rather than in the hands of entrepeneurs who can actually put it to move productive uses. Notice the lack of VC money in the last 7 years? I have.
                          You make some good points here.... although your attack on hedge funds is misplaced (perhaps you misspoke.... did you mean to attack prop trading?). Asset bubbles are most certainly created by cheap money. And regulation of our banking system surely could use an overhaul... rather, enforcement.... the rules are already there, they are just easy to get around.

                          Your understanding of leverage is a little lacking though. Leverage doesn't misplace capital (it transfers it).... Leverage is nothing more than a loan that must be repaid (or defaulted upon) like any other loan. Put in that context, everyone (with a decent credit score) has access to leverage. A mortgage is leverage (making a 5% down payment on a home is the same as having a 5% margin requirement in the financial markets -- you're leveraged 20x). The entire world is built upon leverage, and the absence of leverage (i.e. the credit markets) would create economic armageddon. Speaking of putting leverage in the hands of traders... it's not the hedge funds OR the prop trading that is killing the banks right now, it's the repackaging (CDOs, etc) of shady mortgages that are defaulting. Countrywide didn't go belly-up because of leveraged prop-trading... it went belly-up because of shady business practices with respect to mortgage lending and the misguided and uneducated belief that the asset bubble would never pop (just level off). Hedge funds and prop-traders rarely get caught in this mentality - it has happened, but it is rare.... These traders don't lose sight of reality.... they KNOW bubbles pop and they actively take part in the popping (take note of the inversion of the put/call ratios on the oil markets over the past month). Speaking of VC money... according to the National Venture Capital Association, VC money has increased from $22 Billion in 2002 to $30.5 Billion in 2007. I wouldn't call that drying up. Of course it pales in comparison to 2000, when there was $105 Billion in VC money... then again, we know what happened in 2000. I guess, in that context, one could make the argument that VC money is similar to leverage and creates asset bubble....

                          Just my two cents, I hope I was not offensive.

                          Comment

                          • Fish2006
                            Member
                            • Feb 2007
                            • 253

                            #14
                            Originally posted by Skinsfan
                            Say what? That money is not taken out of the economy... it just gets spent right back into it. Even if Obama were to pay down (refinance) the National debt, much of that debt is held by foreign entities.... meaning much of the debt pay-down will get repatriated into local currency, thus devaluing the dollar even more. The only REAL way to improve the value of the US dollar is to a) reduce the trade deficit (becoming independent of foreign oil would help) b) increase interest rates, and c) BUY DOLLARS.

                            To say Republicans "let the dollar slide" is not a fair argument. I'm sure they are flattered that you think they have so much power, but they really don't. And any criticism of a weak US dollar also needs to be accompanied by the counterbalance to the argument -- the weak dollar has kept this country out of recession (GDP grew by 3.3% in Q2 if you believe the economists -- they've been a bit hit and miss lately). For the first time in a LONG LONG time the trade deficit (Ex oil) is approaching respectable levels... The bottom line is that the US needs to become less of a spender and more of a saver... the alternative looks a lot like Zimbabwe (how would you like to pay $1,000,000 for a coke this time next year?). The current Republican administration is been a big disappointment to me (as a fiscally conservative person), but an Obama administration would be even worse. Perhaps Obama brings change you can believe in, but he also brings policies he won't define other than the cost, which is unaffordable.





                            I would LOVE to see this country move to solar and wind.... but why won't Obama define his plan? He is now promising to break our dependance on foreign oil within 10 years! That would be wonderful. I would LOVE to be free of foreign oil.... I would love for our oil companies to not only DRILL DRILL DRILL but to SELL SELL SELL our oil to the world and reverse the flow of money. Instead of oil being a "natural resource" it could be a "store of value" which can be passed on to our businesses, consumers, and government tax revenues.

                            But here is the problem... HOW? Here is an inconvenient truth for you -- It will costs hundreds of BILLIONS of dollars to rebuild our country's electrical infrastructure to support wind and solar power on a substantial level. Why? Because it is hard/impossible to store energy once it is collected, and our current antiquated electrical transport system CAN NOT TRANSPORT the energy from where it is easily collected (the midwest for wind, southwest for solar) to where it is consumed the most (the coastal cities).

                            So, we need to rebuild our infrastructure... but how? Should the government nationalize our electrical production and pay for it with tax revenues? That would be inefficient and impractical. Besides, the tax increases Obama has proposed have already been promised elsewhere. As we all know by now, the most efficient and effective way to implement such a project of great scale is to rely on the free market and for it to be funded by capital markets. WHOOPS.... problem with that... Obama is going to raise corporate taxes by double digit percentage points.... That puts a serious damper on business' ability (and incentive) to re-build our electrical infrastructure as corporate coffers are emptied into the pockets of Washington.... that being said, if oil prices remain high, there will remain potential margin for businesses to seek out in the forms of alternative energy as a mainstream source of power... but where to get the money? YES, that's right.. they'll do what our great producers often do to raise capital to finance these big expenditures: Tap into the capital markets.... perhaps they'll float share issues on the stock market to raise the necessary capital.... WHOOPS.... problem with that.... Obama is going to raise the capital gains taxes (Effectively reducing the demand for the very paper our businesses need to float to replenish the cash the government just took from them). Quite a conundrum.



                            You make some good points here.... although your attack on hedge funds is misplaced (perhaps you misspoke.... did you mean to attack prop trading?). Asset bubbles are most certainly created by cheap money. And regulation of our banking system surely could use an overhaul... rather, enforcement.... the rules are already there, they are just easy to get around.

                            Your understanding of leverage is a little lacking though. Leverage doesn't misplace capital (it transfers it).... Leverage is nothing more than a loan that must be repaid (or defaulted upon) like any other loan. Put in that context, everyone (with a decent credit score) has access to leverage. A mortgage is leverage (making a 5% down payment on a home is the same as having a 5% margin requirement in the financial markets -- you're leveraged 20x). The entire world is built upon leverage, and the absence of leverage (i.e. the credit markets) would create economic armageddon. Speaking of putting leverage in the hands of traders... it's not the hedge funds OR the prop trading that is killing the banks right now, it's the repackaging (CDOs, etc) of shady mortgages that are defaulting. Countrywide didn't go belly-up because of leveraged prop-trading... it went belly-up because of shady business practices with respect to mortgage lending and the misguided and uneducated belief that the asset bubble would never pop (just level off). Hedge funds and prop-traders rarely get caught in this mentality - it has happened, but it is rare.... These traders don't lose sight of reality.... they KNOW bubbles pop and they actively take part in the popping (take note of the inversion of the put/call ratios on the oil markets over the past month). Speaking of VC money... according to the National Venture Capital Association, VC money has increased from $22 Billion in 2002 to $30.5 Billion in 2007. I wouldn't call that drying up. Of course it pales in comparison to 2000, when there was $105 Billion in VC money... then again, we know what happened in 2000. I guess, in that context, one could make the argument that VC money is similar to leverage and creates asset bubble....

                            Just my two cents, I hope I was not offensive.
                            Actually, these are not unreasonable arguments. It will actually take me a little time to think through them. The best way to win an argument with me is to give me facts and help me learn something :) - if that is your goal.

                            I think the leverage thing I wrote wasn't as nuanced as yours. I think most people understand that if you allow, say, an internal trading desk at Goldman, Bear, Lehman (!) to borrow money to buy CDOs at 1% down (i.e. 100x leverage), you are making certain assumptions about the risk of those CDOs. And you are right, it works both ways, as from what I understand, it was Goldman that actually popped the housing bubble by going hard short and super leveraged just as the housing was starting to crack - but I could be mistaken.

                            The real root of the problem, when I really think about it, was rating agencies (Moody's et. al.) slapping the AAA label on CDO debt fraudulently. In an environment where there is little *cough* reality around actual risk assessment, allowing super high leverage (i.e. 10x and higher) is really ******* dangerous. Until we get evidence that Moddys, Fitch, and others are actually paying attention to whats going on and not just lapdogging for investment banks whose securities they grade, I think leverage has to be limited.

                            I agree that leverage is just a tool - it is borrowing money. The real question is "for what". Leverage to buy a home or start a business where a.) the risks are at least reasonable understood and b.) there is at least some level of skin in the game that is meaningful == good. Leverage of 100x on securities that you can't even price (hence, what they used to call "mark to model"), let alone price on a RAROC basis (risk adjusted return on capital), well, thats bad.

                            Back to the administration, and by that I mean going all the way from Bush (where the buck stops, remember) - to the SEC and the chain of command in between - should have stopped this years ago. Limitations on capital ratios for leverage, not allowing high leverage on securities you can't even price efficiently - would have stopped this. It didn't, and as a result, we are all paying a tax, through a lower dollar, and worse, through a government bailout of the players involved - which in the end, is simply borrowing from our kids to pay for not allowing the free market to handle these entities that ****ed everything up in the first place.

                            Ok, now for energy. I personally think government is the last entity that should refresh the grid. But I think some leadership to mandate a lot of things that would help, such as requiring states to allow for net metering (some do, some don't) - and promoting through tax incentives to energy companies reinvestment into the grid to make it possible - would achieve a number of positive things, namely:

                            a.) Making the grid more robust because power is generated in a distributed fashion
                            b.) Achieve the upgrades required that will allow us to leverage the wind corridor in the middle of the country

                            The problem is that, currently, a grid upgrade would essentially cannibalize the profits of Exelon and the other power companies. So it doesn't happen. IT isn't a conspiracy, it just is the fact that a company is not going to invest capital in projects that kill their profits. If I owned Exelon, I probably wouldn't either.

                            I am no expert, but it seems like splitting ownership of generation and transmission would do a lot of good here. When one shares interest in the other, we don't get a distributed grid. Government would have to enforce the splitting of ownership and making sure that those two conflicting interests don't collude. As we know, given how friendly BushCo is with energy, that nothing like that is going to happen soon.

                            As for higher taxes pushing up the dollar - hey, it is what they told me in macro econ class :). If you take money out with higher taxes, in theory, you are using it to pay down the debt (outbound to China). Now, thats a special problem, because China still pegs their currency to the dollar to some degree, so you might be robbing peter to pay paul.

                            No candidate is really talking about what would be really nice, which is to tax estates at like 100% of everything over a few million (no more paris hilton), eliminate corporate taxes (which is the most onerous middle class tax, since corporations are mostly just pass through vehicles for middle class wages), and raise taxes on 250k+, so we have a shot at paying off the debt. Reducing money taxed on the middle class, while adding strong incentives for the middle and lower (lets not forget lower - they usually get the shaft in this debate) savings would be a real powerful way to prop the dollar to a reasonable range. Maybe this isn't buying dollars back, but by moving the needle to more saving, less spending, some balance comes back.

                            I think the weak dollar policy of Bush has indeed helped keep us out of recession, but at a huge cost. Given that we entered the recession cycle early (hell, we just got out 4 years ago) - as a result of the housing crisis, we basically have two wrongs (housing crisis + weak dollar) trying to compensate for one another, and kinda doing so in some ways, but in the process, creating some really nasty longer term problems.

                            I want leadership for this country that is right more than its wrong. Obama has to speak to his base on taxes - thats a political reality. But he also, of all the politicians in this cycle, owes the least to anyone that I have seen get this far in a long time. It isn't nothing - every politician deals with lobbyists, just like you can't sail a vessel into the ocean and not pick up some barnicles. But his rapid rise actually helps.

                            For that matter, if Sarah Palin were at the top of the ticket, and did not have some views that, at least to be, are shockingly retrograde (i.e. teaching creationism in school) - I would get behind her.
                            可你住在有趣的时代 - May you live in interesting times.

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                            • Fish2006
                              Member
                              • Feb 2007
                              • 253

                              #15
                              One thing I do want to get across is that the debate here is really civil. Especially by internet standards. Predictem on it's worst day has a civility quotient far higher than even the most civil politics forums elsewhere on the internet. Especially for something as personal as politics where we come from a lot of different backgrounds and such.

                              People will get passionate, and people will toss names around, but that is to be expected. Strong feelings on all sides of this.
                              可你住在有趣的时代 - May you live in interesting times.

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