Forum Replies Created
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AuthorPosts
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September 23, 2008 at 10:26 PM in reply to: UFO? Anyone awake last night around 2 AM here in San Diego? #274839
CA renter
ParticipantExcellent letter, Running Bear.
May I suggest that you fax it as well (if you did indeed mail it), as time is of the essence.
Thank you for doing your part to let our voices be heard!!! π
CA renter
ParticipantExcellent letter, Running Bear.
May I suggest that you fax it as well (if you did indeed mail it), as time is of the essence.
Thank you for doing your part to let our voices be heard!!! π
CA renter
ParticipantExcellent letter, Running Bear.
May I suggest that you fax it as well (if you did indeed mail it), as time is of the essence.
Thank you for doing your part to let our voices be heard!!! π
CA renter
ParticipantExcellent letter, Running Bear.
May I suggest that you fax it as well (if you did indeed mail it), as time is of the essence.
Thank you for doing your part to let our voices be heard!!! π
CA renter
ParticipantExcellent letter, Running Bear.
May I suggest that you fax it as well (if you did indeed mail it), as time is of the essence.
Thank you for doing your part to let our voices be heard!!! π
September 22, 2008 at 11:13 PM in reply to: Bailout Suggestions to Hanky Bernanke from a Banker #274098CA renter
ParticipantThanks for your response, Dave, and we agree that the best scenario would be a few years (3-5?) of severe recession/depression with slow growth thereafter for a number of years.
Personally, as far as fractional reserve banking goes, I’d like to see 100% reserve banking or, at most, 2:1 loaned out (two dollars loaned for every one dollar in deposits).
Shrinkage? Yep.
High interest rates? You betcha!
Lots of pain as we adjust through the credit collapse and begin saving toward future purchases? Tons of pain, but well worth it over the long run, IMHO.
Healthier economy where people can save and actually buy things with their own money…priceless!!! π
September 22, 2008 at 11:13 PM in reply to: Bailout Suggestions to Hanky Bernanke from a Banker #274346CA renter
ParticipantThanks for your response, Dave, and we agree that the best scenario would be a few years (3-5?) of severe recession/depression with slow growth thereafter for a number of years.
Personally, as far as fractional reserve banking goes, I’d like to see 100% reserve banking or, at most, 2:1 loaned out (two dollars loaned for every one dollar in deposits).
Shrinkage? Yep.
High interest rates? You betcha!
Lots of pain as we adjust through the credit collapse and begin saving toward future purchases? Tons of pain, but well worth it over the long run, IMHO.
Healthier economy where people can save and actually buy things with their own money…priceless!!! π
September 22, 2008 at 11:13 PM in reply to: Bailout Suggestions to Hanky Bernanke from a Banker #274351CA renter
ParticipantThanks for your response, Dave, and we agree that the best scenario would be a few years (3-5?) of severe recession/depression with slow growth thereafter for a number of years.
Personally, as far as fractional reserve banking goes, I’d like to see 100% reserve banking or, at most, 2:1 loaned out (two dollars loaned for every one dollar in deposits).
Shrinkage? Yep.
High interest rates? You betcha!
Lots of pain as we adjust through the credit collapse and begin saving toward future purchases? Tons of pain, but well worth it over the long run, IMHO.
Healthier economy where people can save and actually buy things with their own money…priceless!!! π
September 22, 2008 at 11:13 PM in reply to: Bailout Suggestions to Hanky Bernanke from a Banker #274397CA renter
ParticipantThanks for your response, Dave, and we agree that the best scenario would be a few years (3-5?) of severe recession/depression with slow growth thereafter for a number of years.
Personally, as far as fractional reserve banking goes, I’d like to see 100% reserve banking or, at most, 2:1 loaned out (two dollars loaned for every one dollar in deposits).
Shrinkage? Yep.
High interest rates? You betcha!
Lots of pain as we adjust through the credit collapse and begin saving toward future purchases? Tons of pain, but well worth it over the long run, IMHO.
Healthier economy where people can save and actually buy things with their own money…priceless!!! π
September 22, 2008 at 11:13 PM in reply to: Bailout Suggestions to Hanky Bernanke from a Banker #274419CA renter
ParticipantThanks for your response, Dave, and we agree that the best scenario would be a few years (3-5?) of severe recession/depression with slow growth thereafter for a number of years.
Personally, as far as fractional reserve banking goes, I’d like to see 100% reserve banking or, at most, 2:1 loaned out (two dollars loaned for every one dollar in deposits).
Shrinkage? Yep.
High interest rates? You betcha!
Lots of pain as we adjust through the credit collapse and begin saving toward future purchases? Tons of pain, but well worth it over the long run, IMHO.
Healthier economy where people can save and actually buy things with their own money…priceless!!! π
CA renter
ParticipantGood one, cashflow. I’d suggest really focusing on the part where the executives and others responsible for the credit bubble have their personal assets seized. I was unable to get all of that in mine due to lack of space (they recommend keeping it to one page).
Here is mine:
Dear Mr. President [or Senator or Representative]:
Under no circumstances should taxpayers be forced — totally against their will — to bail out Wall Street.
If the Federal Reserve and Treasury think loading the taxpayers with trillions of dollars in debt is the only way to deal with our current situation ($700 billion is just a drop in the bucket, and the real cost will be at least $2-5 TRILLION), they need to show us ALL the details which lead them to their conclusion. They should not be able to keep this information opaque if taxpayers are going to pay for it.
If the government wants **OUR** money, they should have to show us **exactly** what would happen if we refused to bail out Wall Street. If they are unable to detail the problems and consequences of letting Wall Street fail, then they don’t have enough information to commit taxpayers’ money to this bailout.
Instead of investigating short sellers who had nothing to do with this mess (they were the ones warning you years ago), why aren’t we hearing about investigations of Wall Street executives, regulators, ratings agencies, hedge fund managers, insurance companies, and most of all…Alan Greenspan, whose policies of cancerous credit growth and ever-higher inflation led us to the disaster we are in today.
All that being said, we do need Treasury to backstop the following:
-FDIC (this should include money market funds, as is currently being discussed)
-SIPC (to cover brokerage accounts)
-PBGC (many pension funds will go bankrupt, and the seniors/future retirees should not have to suffer for Wall Street’s mess)
-A fund should be set up so insurance companies can continue to pay regular property and casualty claims. This fund should be isolated from the financial swaps business.
-Create money that is funneled directly to workers via infrastructure improvement programs and R&D grants in the energy and healthcare fields (only to public universities and non-profit organizations).This is a defining moment in Washington D.C.. I sincerely hope you will back your constituents instead of pillaging what little they have to pay off Wall Street. Your thoughtful consideration is appreciated.
CA renter
ParticipantGood one, cashflow. I’d suggest really focusing on the part where the executives and others responsible for the credit bubble have their personal assets seized. I was unable to get all of that in mine due to lack of space (they recommend keeping it to one page).
Here is mine:
Dear Mr. President [or Senator or Representative]:
Under no circumstances should taxpayers be forced — totally against their will — to bail out Wall Street.
If the Federal Reserve and Treasury think loading the taxpayers with trillions of dollars in debt is the only way to deal with our current situation ($700 billion is just a drop in the bucket, and the real cost will be at least $2-5 TRILLION), they need to show us ALL the details which lead them to their conclusion. They should not be able to keep this information opaque if taxpayers are going to pay for it.
If the government wants **OUR** money, they should have to show us **exactly** what would happen if we refused to bail out Wall Street. If they are unable to detail the problems and consequences of letting Wall Street fail, then they don’t have enough information to commit taxpayers’ money to this bailout.
Instead of investigating short sellers who had nothing to do with this mess (they were the ones warning you years ago), why aren’t we hearing about investigations of Wall Street executives, regulators, ratings agencies, hedge fund managers, insurance companies, and most of all…Alan Greenspan, whose policies of cancerous credit growth and ever-higher inflation led us to the disaster we are in today.
All that being said, we do need Treasury to backstop the following:
-FDIC (this should include money market funds, as is currently being discussed)
-SIPC (to cover brokerage accounts)
-PBGC (many pension funds will go bankrupt, and the seniors/future retirees should not have to suffer for Wall Street’s mess)
-A fund should be set up so insurance companies can continue to pay regular property and casualty claims. This fund should be isolated from the financial swaps business.
-Create money that is funneled directly to workers via infrastructure improvement programs and R&D grants in the energy and healthcare fields (only to public universities and non-profit organizations).This is a defining moment in Washington D.C.. I sincerely hope you will back your constituents instead of pillaging what little they have to pay off Wall Street. Your thoughtful consideration is appreciated.
CA renter
ParticipantGood one, cashflow. I’d suggest really focusing on the part where the executives and others responsible for the credit bubble have their personal assets seized. I was unable to get all of that in mine due to lack of space (they recommend keeping it to one page).
Here is mine:
Dear Mr. President [or Senator or Representative]:
Under no circumstances should taxpayers be forced — totally against their will — to bail out Wall Street.
If the Federal Reserve and Treasury think loading the taxpayers with trillions of dollars in debt is the only way to deal with our current situation ($700 billion is just a drop in the bucket, and the real cost will be at least $2-5 TRILLION), they need to show us ALL the details which lead them to their conclusion. They should not be able to keep this information opaque if taxpayers are going to pay for it.
If the government wants **OUR** money, they should have to show us **exactly** what would happen if we refused to bail out Wall Street. If they are unable to detail the problems and consequences of letting Wall Street fail, then they don’t have enough information to commit taxpayers’ money to this bailout.
Instead of investigating short sellers who had nothing to do with this mess (they were the ones warning you years ago), why aren’t we hearing about investigations of Wall Street executives, regulators, ratings agencies, hedge fund managers, insurance companies, and most of all…Alan Greenspan, whose policies of cancerous credit growth and ever-higher inflation led us to the disaster we are in today.
All that being said, we do need Treasury to backstop the following:
-FDIC (this should include money market funds, as is currently being discussed)
-SIPC (to cover brokerage accounts)
-PBGC (many pension funds will go bankrupt, and the seniors/future retirees should not have to suffer for Wall Street’s mess)
-A fund should be set up so insurance companies can continue to pay regular property and casualty claims. This fund should be isolated from the financial swaps business.
-Create money that is funneled directly to workers via infrastructure improvement programs and R&D grants in the energy and healthcare fields (only to public universities and non-profit organizations).This is a defining moment in Washington D.C.. I sincerely hope you will back your constituents instead of pillaging what little they have to pay off Wall Street. Your thoughtful consideration is appreciated.
CA renter
ParticipantGood one, cashflow. I’d suggest really focusing on the part where the executives and others responsible for the credit bubble have their personal assets seized. I was unable to get all of that in mine due to lack of space (they recommend keeping it to one page).
Here is mine:
Dear Mr. President [or Senator or Representative]:
Under no circumstances should taxpayers be forced — totally against their will — to bail out Wall Street.
If the Federal Reserve and Treasury think loading the taxpayers with trillions of dollars in debt is the only way to deal with our current situation ($700 billion is just a drop in the bucket, and the real cost will be at least $2-5 TRILLION), they need to show us ALL the details which lead them to their conclusion. They should not be able to keep this information opaque if taxpayers are going to pay for it.
If the government wants **OUR** money, they should have to show us **exactly** what would happen if we refused to bail out Wall Street. If they are unable to detail the problems and consequences of letting Wall Street fail, then they don’t have enough information to commit taxpayers’ money to this bailout.
Instead of investigating short sellers who had nothing to do with this mess (they were the ones warning you years ago), why aren’t we hearing about investigations of Wall Street executives, regulators, ratings agencies, hedge fund managers, insurance companies, and most of all…Alan Greenspan, whose policies of cancerous credit growth and ever-higher inflation led us to the disaster we are in today.
All that being said, we do need Treasury to backstop the following:
-FDIC (this should include money market funds, as is currently being discussed)
-SIPC (to cover brokerage accounts)
-PBGC (many pension funds will go bankrupt, and the seniors/future retirees should not have to suffer for Wall Street’s mess)
-A fund should be set up so insurance companies can continue to pay regular property and casualty claims. This fund should be isolated from the financial swaps business.
-Create money that is funneled directly to workers via infrastructure improvement programs and R&D grants in the energy and healthcare fields (only to public universities and non-profit organizations).This is a defining moment in Washington D.C.. I sincerely hope you will back your constituents instead of pillaging what little they have to pay off Wall Street. Your thoughtful consideration is appreciated.
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