Forum Replies Created
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patientrenter
ParticipantI know there are people who oppose the bailout for the automakers, and others who support it. My question is not about that. I want to know what you thought was going to actually happen in the end.
Did anyone on this board believe that the automakers would not be bailed out in the end?
patientrenter
ParticipantI know there are people who oppose the bailout for the automakers, and others who support it. My question is not about that. I want to know what you thought was going to actually happen in the end.
Did anyone on this board believe that the automakers would not be bailed out in the end?
patientrenter
ParticipantI know there are people who oppose the bailout for the automakers, and others who support it. My question is not about that. I want to know what you thought was going to actually happen in the end.
Did anyone on this board believe that the automakers would not be bailed out in the end?
December 10, 2008 at 7:51 PM in reply to: Old Forum topic deserves re-visit: bubble in treasuries #313976patientrenter
ParticipantWhy isn’t deflation or inflation a choice that government can make at will, through the magic of the many money creation tools at the government’s disposal?
In Japan, the government, as far as I know, was absolutely opposed to inflation, because the general population was. In the US, the people hate deflation (= dropping home and stock prices) more than inflation, so our elected representatives will surely do whatever it takes to create inflation. The only question is when it will appear, and how high it will go.
Am I missing something here?
December 10, 2008 at 7:51 PM in reply to: Old Forum topic deserves re-visit: bubble in treasuries #314335patientrenter
ParticipantWhy isn’t deflation or inflation a choice that government can make at will, through the magic of the many money creation tools at the government’s disposal?
In Japan, the government, as far as I know, was absolutely opposed to inflation, because the general population was. In the US, the people hate deflation (= dropping home and stock prices) more than inflation, so our elected representatives will surely do whatever it takes to create inflation. The only question is when it will appear, and how high it will go.
Am I missing something here?
December 10, 2008 at 7:51 PM in reply to: Old Forum topic deserves re-visit: bubble in treasuries #314367patientrenter
ParticipantWhy isn’t deflation or inflation a choice that government can make at will, through the magic of the many money creation tools at the government’s disposal?
In Japan, the government, as far as I know, was absolutely opposed to inflation, because the general population was. In the US, the people hate deflation (= dropping home and stock prices) more than inflation, so our elected representatives will surely do whatever it takes to create inflation. The only question is when it will appear, and how high it will go.
Am I missing something here?
December 10, 2008 at 7:51 PM in reply to: Old Forum topic deserves re-visit: bubble in treasuries #314388patientrenter
ParticipantWhy isn’t deflation or inflation a choice that government can make at will, through the magic of the many money creation tools at the government’s disposal?
In Japan, the government, as far as I know, was absolutely opposed to inflation, because the general population was. In the US, the people hate deflation (= dropping home and stock prices) more than inflation, so our elected representatives will surely do whatever it takes to create inflation. The only question is when it will appear, and how high it will go.
Am I missing something here?
December 10, 2008 at 7:51 PM in reply to: Old Forum topic deserves re-visit: bubble in treasuries #314459patientrenter
ParticipantWhy isn’t deflation or inflation a choice that government can make at will, through the magic of the many money creation tools at the government’s disposal?
In Japan, the government, as far as I know, was absolutely opposed to inflation, because the general population was. In the US, the people hate deflation (= dropping home and stock prices) more than inflation, so our elected representatives will surely do whatever it takes to create inflation. The only question is when it will appear, and how high it will go.
Am I missing something here?
patientrenter
ParticipantI realize you’re not to blame here, HLS. You’re just doing your job.
But it’s very irritating to see my taxes getting thrown at people using it to buy overpriced houses with as little as 10% down.
patientrenter
ParticipantI realize you’re not to blame here, HLS. You’re just doing your job.
But it’s very irritating to see my taxes getting thrown at people using it to buy overpriced houses with as little as 10% down.
patientrenter
ParticipantI realize you’re not to blame here, HLS. You’re just doing your job.
But it’s very irritating to see my taxes getting thrown at people using it to buy overpriced houses with as little as 10% down.
patientrenter
ParticipantI realize you’re not to blame here, HLS. You’re just doing your job.
But it’s very irritating to see my taxes getting thrown at people using it to buy overpriced houses with as little as 10% down.
patientrenter
ParticipantI realize you’re not to blame here, HLS. You’re just doing your job.
But it’s very irritating to see my taxes getting thrown at people using it to buy overpriced houses with as little as 10% down.
patientrenter
ParticipantEnorah (and others), I am a hard-boiled atheist and cynic, but for some reason I am very contented by the notion that you find the Pigg community warm and welcoming enough that you can share this with us.
I recall hearing that someone discovered that one particular area of the brain is more active for people who are very spiritual. I am pretty sure no one will be able to locate that part of my brain, but you may have more of it than the average bear. Does this theory sound familiar to you?
Oh, BTW, Aecetia doesn’t know where I live!
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