Home › Forums › Financial Markets/Economics › My Personal Credit Crisis
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May 14, 2009 at 9:27 PM #399968May 14, 2009 at 9:31 PM #399284equalizerParticipant
I don’t understand how people can “pay” for divorce, esp the trauma and financial nightmare for kids, etc. However, There are reports that people are postponing divorce because of the economy.
BTW, I just found this flashback gem from Krugman (at least one economist smarter than Piggs), who predicted the San Diego bubble in Aug 2005, at the height of the bubble. [I told marketwatch.com econ professor same thing in 2005 and was told all markets are local!] Maybe this reporter should had read the Krugman article in his own darn paper!
May 14, 2009 at 9:31 PM #399535equalizerParticipantI don’t understand how people can “pay” for divorce, esp the trauma and financial nightmare for kids, etc. However, There are reports that people are postponing divorce because of the economy.
BTW, I just found this flashback gem from Krugman (at least one economist smarter than Piggs), who predicted the San Diego bubble in Aug 2005, at the height of the bubble. [I told marketwatch.com econ professor same thing in 2005 and was told all markets are local!] Maybe this reporter should had read the Krugman article in his own darn paper!
May 14, 2009 at 9:31 PM #399768equalizerParticipantI don’t understand how people can “pay” for divorce, esp the trauma and financial nightmare for kids, etc. However, There are reports that people are postponing divorce because of the economy.
BTW, I just found this flashback gem from Krugman (at least one economist smarter than Piggs), who predicted the San Diego bubble in Aug 2005, at the height of the bubble. [I told marketwatch.com econ professor same thing in 2005 and was told all markets are local!] Maybe this reporter should had read the Krugman article in his own darn paper!
May 14, 2009 at 9:31 PM #399826equalizerParticipantI don’t understand how people can “pay” for divorce, esp the trauma and financial nightmare for kids, etc. However, There are reports that people are postponing divorce because of the economy.
BTW, I just found this flashback gem from Krugman (at least one economist smarter than Piggs), who predicted the San Diego bubble in Aug 2005, at the height of the bubble. [I told marketwatch.com econ professor same thing in 2005 and was told all markets are local!] Maybe this reporter should had read the Krugman article in his own darn paper!
May 14, 2009 at 9:31 PM #399973equalizerParticipantI don’t understand how people can “pay” for divorce, esp the trauma and financial nightmare for kids, etc. However, There are reports that people are postponing divorce because of the economy.
BTW, I just found this flashback gem from Krugman (at least one economist smarter than Piggs), who predicted the San Diego bubble in Aug 2005, at the height of the bubble. [I told marketwatch.com econ professor same thing in 2005 and was told all markets are local!] Maybe this reporter should had read the Krugman article in his own darn paper!
May 14, 2009 at 9:44 PM #399304UCGalParticipant[quote=Allan from Fallbrook][quote=UCGal]He drank the kool-ade. He should have known better. I have some emotional sympathy, but no rational sympathy. (Not sure if that makes sense to you all, but it does to me.)
Having read the article – I was struck by how much the wife expected him to somehow magically make it all better. As a wife, I don’t get that attitude… How could she have abdicated her part in the financial mess?
[/quote]
UCGal: Don’t you think this entire country has been seized by “magical” thinking and for a while now? We were all going to get rich on the internet during the dot.bomb era. Then our houses were going to appreciate ad infinitum and provide limitless supplies of money.
Then, when the feces hit the rotary oscillator, Obama and the gubment were going to save us and hit the “reset” button. You know, the one that magically would preserve our standard of living, keep housing values inflated, and keep the money spigot flowing.
Granted, this author certainly should have known better, but, in truth, the average American consumer has been fed so much BS for so long, we’re no longer able to discern any sort of objective reality.
[/quote]I agree Allan. Lots of people drank the koolade – including our leaders. I have a few coworkers who are in deep doo-doo… bought nice CV homes on a single income (stay at home wife), interest only loans, HELOCS to put in pools… On the same salary as mine. I know I couldn’t afford it…. but they had/have the feeling that since everyone around them was doing the same thing.
I shook my head when they bought… and wondered what I was missing in the math. I feel bad for them, emotionally, but don’t get how they justified it to themselves, rationally.
May 14, 2009 at 9:44 PM #399556UCGalParticipant[quote=Allan from Fallbrook][quote=UCGal]He drank the kool-ade. He should have known better. I have some emotional sympathy, but no rational sympathy. (Not sure if that makes sense to you all, but it does to me.)
Having read the article – I was struck by how much the wife expected him to somehow magically make it all better. As a wife, I don’t get that attitude… How could she have abdicated her part in the financial mess?
[/quote]
UCGal: Don’t you think this entire country has been seized by “magical” thinking and for a while now? We were all going to get rich on the internet during the dot.bomb era. Then our houses were going to appreciate ad infinitum and provide limitless supplies of money.
Then, when the feces hit the rotary oscillator, Obama and the gubment were going to save us and hit the “reset” button. You know, the one that magically would preserve our standard of living, keep housing values inflated, and keep the money spigot flowing.
Granted, this author certainly should have known better, but, in truth, the average American consumer has been fed so much BS for so long, we’re no longer able to discern any sort of objective reality.
[/quote]I agree Allan. Lots of people drank the koolade – including our leaders. I have a few coworkers who are in deep doo-doo… bought nice CV homes on a single income (stay at home wife), interest only loans, HELOCS to put in pools… On the same salary as mine. I know I couldn’t afford it…. but they had/have the feeling that since everyone around them was doing the same thing.
I shook my head when they bought… and wondered what I was missing in the math. I feel bad for them, emotionally, but don’t get how they justified it to themselves, rationally.
May 14, 2009 at 9:44 PM #399787UCGalParticipant[quote=Allan from Fallbrook][quote=UCGal]He drank the kool-ade. He should have known better. I have some emotional sympathy, but no rational sympathy. (Not sure if that makes sense to you all, but it does to me.)
Having read the article – I was struck by how much the wife expected him to somehow magically make it all better. As a wife, I don’t get that attitude… How could she have abdicated her part in the financial mess?
[/quote]
UCGal: Don’t you think this entire country has been seized by “magical” thinking and for a while now? We were all going to get rich on the internet during the dot.bomb era. Then our houses were going to appreciate ad infinitum and provide limitless supplies of money.
Then, when the feces hit the rotary oscillator, Obama and the gubment were going to save us and hit the “reset” button. You know, the one that magically would preserve our standard of living, keep housing values inflated, and keep the money spigot flowing.
Granted, this author certainly should have known better, but, in truth, the average American consumer has been fed so much BS for so long, we’re no longer able to discern any sort of objective reality.
[/quote]I agree Allan. Lots of people drank the koolade – including our leaders. I have a few coworkers who are in deep doo-doo… bought nice CV homes on a single income (stay at home wife), interest only loans, HELOCS to put in pools… On the same salary as mine. I know I couldn’t afford it…. but they had/have the feeling that since everyone around them was doing the same thing.
I shook my head when they bought… and wondered what I was missing in the math. I feel bad for them, emotionally, but don’t get how they justified it to themselves, rationally.
May 14, 2009 at 9:44 PM #399845UCGalParticipant[quote=Allan from Fallbrook][quote=UCGal]He drank the kool-ade. He should have known better. I have some emotional sympathy, but no rational sympathy. (Not sure if that makes sense to you all, but it does to me.)
Having read the article – I was struck by how much the wife expected him to somehow magically make it all better. As a wife, I don’t get that attitude… How could she have abdicated her part in the financial mess?
[/quote]
UCGal: Don’t you think this entire country has been seized by “magical” thinking and for a while now? We were all going to get rich on the internet during the dot.bomb era. Then our houses were going to appreciate ad infinitum and provide limitless supplies of money.
Then, when the feces hit the rotary oscillator, Obama and the gubment were going to save us and hit the “reset” button. You know, the one that magically would preserve our standard of living, keep housing values inflated, and keep the money spigot flowing.
Granted, this author certainly should have known better, but, in truth, the average American consumer has been fed so much BS for so long, we’re no longer able to discern any sort of objective reality.
[/quote]I agree Allan. Lots of people drank the koolade – including our leaders. I have a few coworkers who are in deep doo-doo… bought nice CV homes on a single income (stay at home wife), interest only loans, HELOCS to put in pools… On the same salary as mine. I know I couldn’t afford it…. but they had/have the feeling that since everyone around them was doing the same thing.
I shook my head when they bought… and wondered what I was missing in the math. I feel bad for them, emotionally, but don’t get how they justified it to themselves, rationally.
May 14, 2009 at 9:44 PM #399992UCGalParticipant[quote=Allan from Fallbrook][quote=UCGal]He drank the kool-ade. He should have known better. I have some emotional sympathy, but no rational sympathy. (Not sure if that makes sense to you all, but it does to me.)
Having read the article – I was struck by how much the wife expected him to somehow magically make it all better. As a wife, I don’t get that attitude… How could she have abdicated her part in the financial mess?
[/quote]
UCGal: Don’t you think this entire country has been seized by “magical” thinking and for a while now? We were all going to get rich on the internet during the dot.bomb era. Then our houses were going to appreciate ad infinitum and provide limitless supplies of money.
Then, when the feces hit the rotary oscillator, Obama and the gubment were going to save us and hit the “reset” button. You know, the one that magically would preserve our standard of living, keep housing values inflated, and keep the money spigot flowing.
Granted, this author certainly should have known better, but, in truth, the average American consumer has been fed so much BS for so long, we’re no longer able to discern any sort of objective reality.
[/quote]I agree Allan. Lots of people drank the koolade – including our leaders. I have a few coworkers who are in deep doo-doo… bought nice CV homes on a single income (stay at home wife), interest only loans, HELOCS to put in pools… On the same salary as mine. I know I couldn’t afford it…. but they had/have the feeling that since everyone around them was doing the same thing.
I shook my head when they bought… and wondered what I was missing in the math. I feel bad for them, emotionally, but don’t get how they justified it to themselves, rationally.
May 14, 2009 at 9:48 PM #399309scaredyclassicParticipantthat stpry made me anxious reading it. late nite panic attacks. divorces. kids. huge credit card bills. juggling. money. good god, it makes me remember why i .am such a financial sissy.
May 14, 2009 at 9:48 PM #399561scaredyclassicParticipantthat stpry made me anxious reading it. late nite panic attacks. divorces. kids. huge credit card bills. juggling. money. good god, it makes me remember why i .am such a financial sissy.
May 14, 2009 at 9:48 PM #399793scaredyclassicParticipantthat stpry made me anxious reading it. late nite panic attacks. divorces. kids. huge credit card bills. juggling. money. good god, it makes me remember why i .am such a financial sissy.
May 14, 2009 at 9:48 PM #399850scaredyclassicParticipantthat stpry made me anxious reading it. late nite panic attacks. divorces. kids. huge credit card bills. juggling. money. good god, it makes me remember why i .am such a financial sissy.
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