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RE: Last year, Republicans voted to add 6 trillion in n... - 12/15/2012 10:36:05 PM   
DesideriScuri


Posts: 12225
Joined: 1/18/2012
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: tazzygirl
quote:

How many times should money get taxed?

How many times is our money taxed? Take your gross dollar, and send it through the system. See how well its sliced and diced to nothing.

Well, Hell. Let's feed the monster, then! I've said it all along, earnings are private property and the earner should have the right to determine what happens with their private property.
quote:

quote:

Actually, that's probably more due to the 2% reduction in payroll taxes from 2011. Whoops. Forgot. That was your guy's idea.

Your math is way off. Thats way more than a 2% reduction.

Sorry, darling. My math is spot on. What is 12.4% - 10.4%? 2%, right? It's the reduction in the Payroll Taxes that Obama put into negotiations in 2010 (did have the year wrong).
quote:

quote:

Who really ends up paying excise taxes anyway? Answer: The Consumer.

And? It still doesnt correlate with your assumption.

And, that's a good thing that it's dropping.
quote:

quote:

Making it only the 4th highest all-time. And, not quite $400M from the all-time high, btw.

4th highest doesnt make it "near record highs"

LMAO!! Seriously? 4th best isn't close to the best? Too bad Clinton's best isn't higher. Would make all your tax rate arguments easier, that's for sure.
quote:

quote:

Huh. When did the "Stimulus" start? Should we have a little chat about who makes the budgets and stuff, too? I mean, if Republicans are being blamed for spending now, since they run the House of Representatives, who ran the show from 2007 - 2011? Doesn't count in this argument, right?

The stimulus started with Bush.

What about the Obama Stimulus? The ARRA of 2009? Yanno? That Stimulus? Lemme guess, the $787B package signed into law in February of 2009 was still Bush's, right?
quote:

quote:

I have to add that I missed something in my data. Apparently you didn't catch it, either, but, I said all amounts were in millions of dollars... they were billions of dollars

Doesnt matter if its in millions or billions. Go back to your source.

Huh? I wasn't pointing it out as part of any argument. I was just pointing it out.
quote:

http://www.irs.gov/uac/SOI-Tax-Stats---Collections-and-Refunds,-by-Type-of-Tax---IRS-Data-Book-Table-1
2011
Gross collections from individuals 2011
1,346,182,227
refunds
339,696,496
Business Income
242,848,122
Business Refunds (which arent really, but are effectively the same)
67,777,004
quote:

Where did this non-tax money come from?

I would need the source for that.


A source for what? A source showing the non-tax money revenue? How about the links in post #54? You can get the total Federal revenues from the hist01z1 OMB link and the Federal Tax revenues from the IRS Tables linked to. Do some fancy voodoo (or subtraction, your choice) and you'll get the non-tax revenues.

_____________________________

What I support:

  • A Conservative interpretation of the US Constitution
  • Personal Responsibility
  • Help for the truly needy
  • Limited Government
  • Consumption Tax (non-profit charities and food exempt)

(in reply to tazzygirl)
Profile   Post #: 61
RE: Last year, Republicans voted to add 6 trillion in n... - 12/15/2012 10:42:39 PM   
tazzygirl


Posts: 37833
Joined: 10/12/2007
Status: offline
quote:

Sorry, darling. My math is spot on. What is 12.4% - 10.4%? 2%, right? It's the reduction in the Payroll Taxes that Obama put into negotiations in 2010 (did have the year wrong).


LMAO! I was talking about the drop from one year to the next. Show me any year with just a 2% drop.

quote:

LMAO!! Seriously? 4th best isn't close to the best? Too bad Clinton's best isn't higher. Would make all your tax rate arguments easier, that's for sure.


LMAO! Not even close to the best! Ask any football team! LMAO!

quote:

What about the Obama Stimulus? The ARRA of 2009? Yanno? That Stimulus? Lemme guess, the $787B package signed into law in February of 2009 was still Bush's, right?


LMAO! Which is on Obama's tally sheet.. and so is Tarp,which was not his.. so are the wars.. which he didnt run up those tabs either.

quote:

A source for what? A source showing the non-tax money revenue? How about the links in post #54? You can get the total Federal revenues from the hist01z1 OMB link and the Federal Tax revenues from the IRS Tables linked to. Do some fancy voodoo (or subtraction, your choice) and you'll get the non-tax revenues.


LMAO! So now I have to figure out just how YOU came up with your voodoo complaint?

Non-tax revenue or non-tax receipts are government revenue not generated from taxes.

Sources of non-tax revenue

Examples include:
Aid from another level of government (intragovernmental aid) - for example, in the United States, federal grants may be considered non-tax revenue to the receiving states, and equalization payments

Aid from abroad (foreign aid)

Tribute or indemnities paid by a weaker state to a stronger one, often as a condition of peace after suffering military defeat. The war reparations paid by the defeated Central Powers after the First World War offer a well-known example.

Loans, or other borrowing, from monetary funds and/or other governments

Revenue from state-owned enterprises (for example, revenue from state-owned liquor stores)

Revenue (including interest or profit) from investment funds (collective investment schemes), sovereign wealth funds, or endowments
Revenues from sales of state assets

Rents, concessions, and royalties collected by the state when it contracts out the right to profit from some good or service to a private corporation. An example are contracts for resource extraction (for such natural resources as minerals, timber, petroleum and natural gas, or marine resources) collected privately under license from state-owned lands

Fines collected and assets forfeitured as a penalty. Examples include parking fines, court costs levied on criminal offenders

Fees for the granting or issuance of permits or licenses. Examples include vehicle registration plate permits, vehicle registration fees, watercraft registration fees, building fees, driver's licenses, hunting and fishing licenses, fees for professional licensing, fees for visas or passports, fees for demolition, rezoning, and land grading (which causes silt), and sometimes for increasing stormwater runoff, destroying native vegetation, and cutting-down healthy trees.

User fees collected in exchange for the use of many public services and facilities. Tolls charged for the use of toll roads are an example

Donations and voluntary contributions to the state


LMAO! So hard huh!

LMAO! How much you wanna bet some of that is interest on the stimulus package?

_____________________________

Telling me to take Midol wont help your butthurt.
RIP, my demon-child 5-16-11
Duchess of Dissent 1
Dont judge me because I sin differently than you.
If you want it sugar coated, dont ask me what i think! It would violate TOS.

(in reply to DesideriScuri)
Profile   Post #: 62
RE: Last year, Republicans voted to add 6 trillion in n... - 12/17/2012 7:20:53 AM   
DesideriScuri


Posts: 12225
Joined: 1/18/2012
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: tazzygirl
quote:

Sorry, darling. My math is spot on. What is 12.4% - 10.4%? 2%, right? It's the reduction in the Payroll Taxes that Obama put into negotiations in 2010 (did have the year wrong).

LMAO! I was talking about the drop from one year to the next. Show me any year with just a 2% drop.


Um, the 2% was the actual percentage rate reduction in the Payroll Tax. Since it started at 12.4%, it was an actual reduction of (more voodoo math, but this time, division) 16.4%. If you go back to the numbers, you'll see the Payroll Tax receipts dropped only 7%.

quote:

quote:

LMAO!! Seriously? 4th best isn't close to the best? Too bad Clinton's best isn't higher. Would make all your tax rate arguments easier, that's for sure.

LMAO! Not even close to the best! Ask any football team! LMAO!


How about you ask the Steelers if their 4th best year is close to their best year. When you're talking about, what 100+ years, 4th is pretty damn close to first.

quote:

quote:

What about the Obama Stimulus? The ARRA of 2009? Yanno? That Stimulus? Lemme guess, the $787B package signed into law in February of 2009 was still Bush's, right?

LMAO! Which is on Obama's tally sheet.. and so is Tarp,which was not his.. so are the wars.. which he didnt run up those tabs either.


You can't follow a fucking thing right now. I gave 2009 to Bush, but stated that wasn't completely accurate. You said it was, and that any spending Obama controlled wouldn't start until FY2010. I asked about his Stimulus and you said that was started under Bush. Then, I told you the Stimulus I meant (probably my fault for not specifying which stimulus initially), and you blather on about other stuff? Was any of the ARRA of 2009 spent in FY2009 or not? Obama claimed it was working in FY2009. Was that just Bloomberg spin, or not?

quote:

quote:

quote:

A source for what? A source showing the non-tax money revenue? How about the links in post #54? You can get the total Federal revenues from the hist01z1 OMB link and the Federal Tax revenues from the IRS Tables linked to. Do some fancy voodoo (or subtraction, your choice) and you'll get the non-tax revenues.

LMAO! So now I have to figure out just how YOU came up with your voodoo complaint?
LMAO! So hard huh!
LMAO! How much you wanna bet some of that is interest on the stimulus package?


Um, you sure seem to laughing a lot. I wondered about the sources of the non-tax revenue, but didn't care enough to actually look into it. And, I did not complain about any voodoo. I knew exactly where I got my numbers. And, I was not saying Obama was doing any voodoo, especially since every Administration's numbers I posted included non-tax revenues.

_____________________________

What I support:

  • A Conservative interpretation of the US Constitution
  • Personal Responsibility
  • Help for the truly needy
  • Limited Government
  • Consumption Tax (non-profit charities and food exempt)

(in reply to tazzygirl)
Profile   Post #: 63
RE: Last year, Republicans voted to add 6 trillion in n... - 12/17/2012 7:34:54 AM   
tazzygirl


Posts: 37833
Joined: 10/12/2007
Status: offline
quote:

Um, the 2% was the actual percentage rate reduction in the Payroll Tax. Since it started at 12.4%, it was an actual reduction of (more voodoo math, but this time, division) 16.4%. If you go back to the numbers, you'll see the Payroll Tax receipts dropped only 7%.


LMAO! Yeah, that went way over your head.

quote:

How about you ask the Steelers if their 4th best year is close to their best year. When you're talking about, what 100+ years, 4th is pretty damn close to first.


LMAO! He would say he his best years were superbowl years... he has two. His 4th best year will never measure up.

quote:

You can't follow a fucking thing right now. I gave 2009 to Bush, but stated that wasn't completely accurate. You said it was, and that any spending Obama controlled wouldn't start until FY2010. I asked about his Stimulus and you said that was started under Bush. Then, I told you the Stimulus I meant (probably my fault for not specifying which stimulus initially), and you blather on about other stuff? Was any of the ARRA of 2009 spent in FY2009 or not? Obama claimed it was working in FY2009. Was that just Bloomberg spin, or not?


LMAO! There were multiple stimulus plans. That just starting to sink in?

LMAO! I follow quite well. Which pisses you off.

quote:

Um, you sure seem to laughing a lot. I wondered about the sources of the non-tax revenue, but didn't care enough to actually look into it. And, I did not complain about any voodoo. I knew exactly where I got my numbers. And, I was not saying Obama was doing any voodoo, especially since every Administration's numbers I posted included non-tax revenues.


LMAO! Im laughing a lot? Really?

_____________________________

Telling me to take Midol wont help your butthurt.
RIP, my demon-child 5-16-11
Duchess of Dissent 1
Dont judge me because I sin differently than you.
If you want it sugar coated, dont ask me what i think! It would violate TOS.

(in reply to DesideriScuri)
Profile   Post #: 64
RE: Last year, Republicans voted to add 6 trillion in n... - 12/18/2012 8:37:23 AM   
DesideriScuri


Posts: 12225
Joined: 1/18/2012
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: tazzygirl
quote:

Um, the 2% was the actual percentage rate reduction in the Payroll Tax. Since it started at 12.4%, it was an actual reduction of (more voodoo math, but this time, division) 16.4%. If you go back to the numbers, you'll see the Payroll Tax receipts dropped only 7%.

LMAO! Yeah, that went way over your head.


And, so did that. We seem to have lost any connection for communication on the same ground. That isn't usual for us. We may not agree, but we usually have a clue about what each other is saying.

quote:

quote:

How about you ask the Steelers if their 4th best year is close to their best year. When you're talking about, what 100+ years, 4th is pretty damn close to first.

LMAO! He would say he his best years were superbowl years... he has two. His 4th best year will never measure up.


Ask the Rooney's. They have 5 SB years. Ask them if their 4th best year is close to their best year, not just the current crop of players/coaches.

quote:

quote:

You can't follow a fucking thing right now. I gave 2009 to Bush, but stated that wasn't completely accurate. You said it was, and that any spending Obama controlled wouldn't start until FY2010. I asked about his Stimulus and you said that was started under Bush. Then, I told you the Stimulus I meant (probably my fault for not specifying which stimulus initially), and you blather on about other stuff? Was any of the ARRA of 2009 spent in FY2009 or not? Obama claimed it was working in FY2009. Was that just Bloomberg spin, or not?

LMAO! There were multiple stimulus plans. That just starting to sink in?


That was never in question.

quote:

LMAO! I follow quite well. Which pisses you off.


Actually, all of them. But, that isn't the point, either. Did the ARRA of 2009 have any spending in FY2009?

quote:

quote:

Um, you sure seem to laughing a lot. I wondered about the sources of the non-tax revenue, but didn't care enough to actually look into it. And, I did not complain about any voodoo. I knew exactly where I got my numbers. And, I was not saying Obama was doing any voodoo, especially since every Administration's numbers I posted included non-tax revenues.

LMAO! Im laughing a lot? Really?


Yes. Really.

_____________________________

What I support:

  • A Conservative interpretation of the US Constitution
  • Personal Responsibility
  • Help for the truly needy
  • Limited Government
  • Consumption Tax (non-profit charities and food exempt)

(in reply to tazzygirl)
Profile   Post #: 65
RE: Last year, Republicans voted to add 6 trillion in n... - 12/18/2012 8:49:03 AM   
mnottertail


Posts: 60698
Joined: 11/3/2004
Status: offline
So, I see the teabbaggers are going to have to raise the debt ceiling again, fiscally irresponsible bastards.



_____________________________

Have they not divided the prey; to every man a damsel or two? Judges 5:30


(in reply to DesideriScuri)
Profile   Post #: 66
RE: Last year, Republicans voted to add 6 trillion in n... - 12/18/2012 10:58:18 AM   
tazzygirl


Posts: 37833
Joined: 10/12/2007
Status: offline
quote:

Ask the Rooney's. They have 5 SB years. Ask them if their 4th best year is close to their best year, not just the current crop of players/coaches.


quote:

Don't look now, Steelers fans, but Forbes Magazine ranks rivals Baltimore Ravens and the Green Bay Packers among the 12 National Football League teams that are worth more than the Pittsburgh Steelers' $1.01 billion.

Forbes said that the Steelers rank 13th among the NFL's most valuable NFL Teams. That's just behind the Denver Broncos ($1.04 billion) and the Baltimore Ravens ($1.08 billion). The top three are the Dallas Cowboys ($1.85 billion ), Washington Redskins ($1.55 billion) and the New England Patriots ($1.4 billion).

Forbes said that the Steelers had $255 million in revenue in 2011, up from $243 million in 2010. Its value is $1.01 billion, up from $996 million a year ago but down from the $1.02 billion that Forbes valued it at in 2009.


http://www.bizjournals.com/pittsburgh/news/2011/09/08/steelers-worth-101b-forbes-list-says.html

Knowing the Rooney's... and I do know a few... the answer would be no. They expect every year to be better than the last. So, no, 4th isnt anywhere good enough for them.

_____________________________

Telling me to take Midol wont help your butthurt.
RIP, my demon-child 5-16-11
Duchess of Dissent 1
Dont judge me because I sin differently than you.
If you want it sugar coated, dont ask me what i think! It would violate TOS.

(in reply to DesideriScuri)
Profile   Post #: 67
RE: Last year, Republicans voted to add 6 trillion in n... - 12/18/2012 12:09:36 PM   
DesideriScuri


Posts: 12225
Joined: 1/18/2012
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: tazzygirl
quote:

Ask the Rooney's. They have 5 SB years. Ask them if their 4th best year is close to their best year, not just the current crop of players/coaches.

quote:

Don't look now, Steelers fans, but Forbes Magazine ranks rivals Baltimore Ravens and the Green Bay Packers among the 12 National Football League teams that are worth more than the Pittsburgh Steelers' $1.01 billion.
Forbes said that the Steelers rank 13th among the NFL's most valuable NFL Teams. That's just behind the Denver Broncos ($1.04 billion) and the Baltimore Ravens ($1.08 billion). The top three are the Dallas Cowboys ($1.85 billion ), Washington Redskins ($1.55 billion) and the New England Patriots ($1.4 billion).
Forbes said that the Steelers had $255 million in revenue in 2011, up from $243 million in 2010. Its value is $1.01 billion, up from $996 million a year ago but down from the $1.02 billion that Forbes valued it at in 2009.

http://www.bizjournals.com/pittsburgh/news/2011/09/08/steelers-worth-101b-forbes-list-says.html
Knowing the Rooney's... and I do know a few... the answer would be no. They expect every year to be better than the last. So, no, 4th isnt anywhere good enough for them.


It's too bad the Rooney's can't find any solace in their 6 (my error) Lombardi's not being anywhere near each other in quality.

And, the net worth of the franchise is meaningless to this discussion.

_____________________________

What I support:

  • A Conservative interpretation of the US Constitution
  • Personal Responsibility
  • Help for the truly needy
  • Limited Government
  • Consumption Tax (non-profit charities and food exempt)

(in reply to tazzygirl)
Profile   Post #: 68
RE: Last year, Republicans voted to add 6 trillion in n... - 12/18/2012 1:24:25 PM   
tazzygirl


Posts: 37833
Joined: 10/12/2007
Status: offline
quote:

It's too bad the Rooney's can't find any solace in their 6 (my error) Lombardi's not being anywhere near each other in quality.


LMAO! Its all about the money.

But you keep moving those goal posts.

4th is never "close to the best".

< Message edited by tazzygirl -- 12/18/2012 1:27:06 PM >


_____________________________

Telling me to take Midol wont help your butthurt.
RIP, my demon-child 5-16-11
Duchess of Dissent 1
Dont judge me because I sin differently than you.
If you want it sugar coated, dont ask me what i think! It would violate TOS.

(in reply to DesideriScuri)
Profile   Post #: 69
RE: Last year, Republicans voted to add 6 trillion in n... - 12/18/2012 1:57:07 PM   
DesideriScuri


Posts: 12225
Joined: 1/18/2012
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: tazzygirl
quote:

It's too bad the Rooney's can't find any solace in their 6 (my error) Lombardi's not being anywhere near each other in quality.

LMAO! Its all about the money.
But you keep moving those goal posts.
4th is never "close to the best".


4th is better than anything not 1st, 2nd, or 3rd, Tazzy. And, that makes it close. Considering we are talking about 100 years or so of recordings, being in the Top 4% sure as fuck ain't bad.

_____________________________

What I support:

  • A Conservative interpretation of the US Constitution
  • Personal Responsibility
  • Help for the truly needy
  • Limited Government
  • Consumption Tax (non-profit charities and food exempt)

(in reply to tazzygirl)
Profile   Post #: 70
RE: Last year, Republicans voted to add 6 trillion in n... - 12/18/2012 8:25:31 PM   
Edwynn


Posts: 4105
Joined: 10/26/2008
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: DesideriScuri

quote:

ORIGINAL: Edwynn
So you consider the onslaught of financial deregulation from the '80s onwards as being "government interference"?
The S&L crash of the late '80s was in direct response to deregulation that actually allowed that very thing, just so you know.


quote:

The only reason they de-regulated the S&L's was because they had capped the amount of interest S&L's could offer on savings. With the interest rates rising as they were back then, S&L's would have gone under because of the cap. They couldn't compete with banks for savings, which was where they got money to loan back then. They relaxed those rules, and then slapped them back on, forcing the S&L's to return to the previous limits. Not only did they do that, but Congress then forced a fire sale of all their assets that no longer fit within the regulations. I'm sure you can understand how fire sales tend to not get full value, which hurt the S&L's , sorta like adding insult to injury. There absolutely were some S&L employees that took less than legal actions, but not all of them.



They didn't even need to take illegal actions, though some few of them did. All it took was gross ineptitude, for the most part. The relinquishing of regulation Q was needed, but in the same law the S&Ls also got the right to venture into territory where no S&L had gone before, and they completely blew it. They kept asking for a BB gun, were finally given it, and shot out most of the windows in the neighborhood, most with out even intending to. But results are what matter, and a few thousand S&L closings and commercial RE bankruptcies later, at great taxpayer expense, the government took the BB gun away.


quote:

The Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (Financial Services Modernization Act) and the Phill Gramm-led Commodity Futures Modernization Act, both of which eviscerated any possibility of government interference, the latter Act specifically prohibiting government oversight whatsoever? That sort of 'government intervention,' you mean?
Or was it Wendy Gramm, as chair of the CFTC, who refused to do her job and allowed Enron to do as they liked?
Or was it Alan Greenspan, who never lifted a finger in regards to the congressional mandate that he exercise control over the banks?
You mean THAT 'government intervention'?
Well, yeah, we can all just imagine how much better off the country would be with out that nettlesome 'government interference,' which was and is, in fact, the largest extent of government NON-interference, much less 'intervention,' in over 80 years ....
Oh, but wait ...
After all that government non-intervention we now need government intervention.
One leads to the other, no escaping it.


quote:

What we need is to allow the Markets to work, to not add more and more regulations when the current ones aren't even being enforced (too much porn on the 'net for the regulators to pay attention to doing their jobs).


Just WTF is the real difference between a regulation not existing and an existing regulation not being enforced? Wendy Gramm's assiduous non-enforcement as chair of the CFTC (she being an avid porn watcher, apparently) and her husband Phill's Commodities Futures Modernization Act that prohibited regulation were both as Misesenic as they come, what are you guys bitching about?



quote:

All the Government meddling in setting rates (as opposed to the Market doing so) has done lots of damage to the Nation.


Whatever 'meddling' regarding interest rates by Greenspan was in direct and ineluctable (there's that word again!) consequence of inordinately concentrated economic power translating directly into comensurate political power. Presidents Jefferson, Jackson, and Theodore Roosevelt could recognize this right off the top. The Mises ideology refuses to recognize this inevitability of their ideology as played out through history in the real world.





< Message edited by Edwynn -- 12/18/2012 8:52:22 PM >

(in reply to DesideriScuri)
Profile   Post #: 71
RE: Last year, Republicans voted to add 6 trillion in n... - 12/18/2012 8:27:43 PM   
tazzygirl


Posts: 37833
Joined: 10/12/2007
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: DesideriScuri

quote:

ORIGINAL: tazzygirl
quote:

It's too bad the Rooney's can't find any solace in their 6 (my error) Lombardi's not being anywhere near each other in quality.

LMAO! Its all about the money.
But you keep moving those goal posts.
4th is never "close to the best".


4th is better than anything not 1st, 2nd, or 3rd, Tazzy. And, that makes it close. Considering we are talking about 100 years or so of recordings, being in the Top 4% sure as fuck ain't bad.


lol... its not "close to best" by any stretch. But, do keep trying.

_____________________________

Telling me to take Midol wont help your butthurt.
RIP, my demon-child 5-16-11
Duchess of Dissent 1
Dont judge me because I sin differently than you.
If you want it sugar coated, dont ask me what i think! It would violate TOS.

(in reply to DesideriScuri)
Profile   Post #: 72
RE: Last year, Republicans voted to add 6 trillion in n... - 12/18/2012 9:11:42 PM   
DesideriScuri


Posts: 12225
Joined: 1/18/2012
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: Edwynn
quote:

ORIGINAL: DesideriScuri
quote:

ORIGINAL: Edwynn
So you consider the onslaught of financial deregulation from the '80s onwards as being "government interference"?
The S&L crash of the late '80s was in direct response to deregulation that actually allowed that very thing, just so you know.

quote:

The only reason they de-regulated the S&L's was because they had capped the amount of interest S&L's could offer on savings. With the interest rates rising as they were back then, S&L's would have gone under because of the cap. They couldn't compete with banks for savings, which was where they got money to loan back then. They relaxed those rules, and then slapped them back on, forcing the S&L's to return to the previous limits. Not only did they do that, but Congress then forced a fire sale of all their assets that no longer fit within the regulations. I'm sure you can understand how fire sales tend to not get full value, which hurt the S&L's , sorta like adding insult to injury. There absolutely were some S&L employees that took less than legal actions, but not all of them.

They didn't even need to take illegal actions, though some few of them did. All it took was gross ineptitude, for the most part. The relinquishing of regulation Q was needed, but in the same law the S&Ls also got the right to venture into territory where no S&L had gone before, and they completely blew it. They kept asking for a BB gun, were finally given it, and shot out most of the windows in the neighborhood, most with out even intending to. But results are what matter, and a few thousand S&L closings and commercial RE bankruptcies later, at great taxpayer expense, the government took the BB gun away.


The expense wasn't really all that much ($124B) compared to what we spent during this past recession ($144B on Fannie and Freddie alone). The dumbasses who took the illegal route were the ones that fucked everything up for all the S&L's. When Congress found out and put the rules back in place, and forced a fire sale of all the no-longer-allowed assets, the S&L's crashed and burned. Had Congress gone after the ones who were involved in the illegal activities, and simply barred any new loans that were previously allowed, the S&L solution wouldn't have cost taxpayers as much. Hell, S&L's could possibly still be around.

quote:

quote:

The Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (Financial Services Modernization Act) and the Phill Gramm-led Commodity Futures Modernization Act, both of which eviscerated any possibility of government interference, the latter Act specifically prohibiting government oversight whatsoever? That sort of 'government intervention,' you mean?
Or was it Wendy Gramm, as chair of the CFTC, who refused to do her job and allowed Enron to do as they liked?
Or was it Alan Greenspan, who never lifted a finger in regards to the congressional mandate that he exercise control over the banks?
You mean THAT 'government intervention'?
Well, yeah, we can all just imagine how much better off the country would be with out that nettlesome 'government interference,' which was and is, in fact, the largest extent of government NON-interference, much less 'intervention,' in over 80 years ....
Oh, but wait ...
After all that government non-intervention we now need government intervention.
One leads to the other, no escaping it.

quote:

What we need is to allow the Markets to work, to not add more and more regulations when the current ones aren't even being enforced (too much porn on the 'net for the regulators to pay attention to doing their jobs).

Just WTF is the real difference between a regulation not existing and an existing regulation not being enforced? Wendy Gramm's assiduous non-enforcement as chair of the CFTC (she being an avid porn watcher, apparently) and her husband Phill's Commodities Futures Modernization Act that prohibited regulation were both as Misesenic as they come, what are you guys bitching about?


What's the difference? Gee, I don't know. Maybe if we forced our regulators to do their jobs, this could have been averted, or stopped sooner? Without making the regulators do their jobs, what good is adding more regulations for them to not enforce?

quote:

quote:

All the Government meddling in setting rates (as opposed to the Market doing so) has done lots of damage to the Nation.

Whatever 'meddling' regarding interest rates by Greenspan was in direct and ineluctable (there's that word again!)


Still a damn good word. I hope you didn't take my original compliment as snark. It certainly wasn't.

quote:

consequence of inordinately concentrated economic power translating directly into comensurate political power. Presidents Jefferson, Jackson, and Theodore Roosevelt could recognize this right off the top. The Mises ideology refuses to recognize this inevitability of their ideology as played out through history in the real world.


It is not inevitable. We just need principled officials. Government being "on the take" (which is how I view Corporatism) isn't an Austrian Economic principle at all. If Government is making Market changes to give advantage to one company, or sector, to the detriment of another, there is a diversion from Austrian Economics.

What needs to happen is to make unprincipled officials ineluctably unelectable.


_____________________________

What I support:

  • A Conservative interpretation of the US Constitution
  • Personal Responsibility
  • Help for the truly needy
  • Limited Government
  • Consumption Tax (non-profit charities and food exempt)

(in reply to Edwynn)
Profile   Post #: 73
RE: Last year, Republicans voted to add 6 trillion in n... - 12/18/2012 9:13:15 PM   
DesideriScuri


Posts: 12225
Joined: 1/18/2012
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: tazzygirl
lol... its not "close to best" by any stretch. But, do keep trying.


I'd much rather be 4th than, say 10th, or 100th. I'll allow you to choose your spot between 5th or worse.

_____________________________

What I support:

  • A Conservative interpretation of the US Constitution
  • Personal Responsibility
  • Help for the truly needy
  • Limited Government
  • Consumption Tax (non-profit charities and food exempt)

(in reply to tazzygirl)
Profile   Post #: 74
RE: Last year, Republicans voted to add 6 trillion in n... - 12/18/2012 9:15:49 PM   
tazzygirl


Posts: 37833
Joined: 10/12/2007
Status: offline


Its ok.. you wanna be 4th best? You go right ahead! Im sure its "best enough" for you.

_____________________________

Telling me to take Midol wont help your butthurt.
RIP, my demon-child 5-16-11
Duchess of Dissent 1
Dont judge me because I sin differently than you.
If you want it sugar coated, dont ask me what i think! It would violate TOS.

(in reply to DesideriScuri)
Profile   Post #: 75
RE: Last year, Republicans voted to add 6 trillion in n... - 12/18/2012 9:39:10 PM   
DesideriScuri


Posts: 12225
Joined: 1/18/2012
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: tazzygirl

Its ok.. you wanna be 4th best? You go right ahead! Im sure its "best enough" for you.


If the choices are between 4th through 100th, damn right I want to be 4th best.

_____________________________

What I support:

  • A Conservative interpretation of the US Constitution
  • Personal Responsibility
  • Help for the truly needy
  • Limited Government
  • Consumption Tax (non-profit charities and food exempt)

(in reply to tazzygirl)
Profile   Post #: 76
RE: Last year, Republicans voted to add 6 trillion in n... - 12/18/2012 9:43:25 PM   
tazzygirl


Posts: 37833
Joined: 10/12/2007
Status: offline
You go right ahead!

I want to be first!

I hate settling.

You seem to be happy with it.

_____________________________

Telling me to take Midol wont help your butthurt.
RIP, my demon-child 5-16-11
Duchess of Dissent 1
Dont judge me because I sin differently than you.
If you want it sugar coated, dont ask me what i think! It would violate TOS.

(in reply to DesideriScuri)
Profile   Post #: 77
RE: Last year, Republicans voted to add 6 trillion in n... - 12/18/2012 11:53:32 PM   
Edwynn


Posts: 4105
Joined: 10/26/2008
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: DesideriScuri

quote:

ORIGINAL: Edwynn
They didn't even need to take illegal actions, though some few of them did. All it took was gross ineptitude, for the most part. The relinquishing of regulation Q was needed, but in the same law the S&Ls also got the right to venture into territory where no S&L had gone before, and they completely blew it. They kept asking for a BB gun, were finally given it, and shot out most of the windows in the neighborhood, most with out even intending to. But results are what matter, and a few thousand S&L closings and commercial RE bankruptcies later, at great taxpayer expense, the government took the BB gun away.


The expense wasn't really all that much ($124B) compared to what we spent during this past recession ($144B on Fannie and Freddie alone). The dumbasses who took the illegal route were the ones that fucked everything up for all the S&L's. When Congress found out and put the rules back in place, and forced a fire sale of all the no-longer-allowed assets, the S&L's crashed and burned. Had Congress gone after the ones who were involved in the illegal activities, and simply barred any new loans that were previously allowed, the S&L solution wouldn't have cost taxpayers as much. Hell, S&L's could possibly still be around.



Please read the above again. Thousands of S&Ls went under. If you and I are both saying that the crooks were running only a relatively small number of the S&Ls, the logical conclusion would be that the predominance of the failures is attributable to ineptitude. They were given license to venture out into speculative lending on speculative ventures in which they had no expertise. But again, the result is what matters, however it came about, and the result was not good. With out a single crook in the bunch, the result would have been nearly the same.

BTW, it is noteworthy that the $144B to Fan&Fred combined seems to trouble you more than the unrestricted $182B to AIG alone ($80B of which went to bonuses for job well done), not to mention over $300B in direct funds to Citigroup, over $476B in total economic benefit. I am not surprised, not in the least.


quote:

quote:

Just WTF is the real difference between a regulation not existing and an existing regulation not being enforced? Wendy Gramm's assiduous non-enforcement as chair of the CFTC (she being an avid porn watcher, apparently) and her husband Phill's Commodities Futures Modernization Act that prohibited regulation were both as Misesenic as they come, what are you guys bitching about?


What's the difference? Gee, I don't know. Maybe if we forced our regulators to do their jobs, this could have been averted, or stopped sooner? Without making the regulators do their jobs, what good is adding more regulations for them to not enforce?


My point is that non-enforcement serves the Misesenic cause every bit as well as lack of whatever law to enforce. You invoke Mises in argument for less regulation, then now claim that we should have enforced what regulation there was.

You are confused by this ideology. Understandable.

quote:

quote:

quote:

All the Government meddling in setting rates (as opposed to the Market doing so) has done lots of damage to the Nation.

Whatever 'meddling' regarding interest rates by Greenspan was in direct and ineluctable (there's that word again!)


Still a damn good word. I hope you didn't take my original compliment as snark. It certainly wasn't.


I didn't.

quote:

quote:

consequence of inordinately concentrated economic power translating directly into comensurate political power. Presidents Jefferson, Jackson, and Theodore Roosevelt could recognize this right off the top. The Mises ideology refuses to recognize this inevitability of their ideology as played out through history in the real world.


It is not inevitable. We just need principled officials. Government being "on the take" (which is how I view Corporatism) isn't an Austrian Economic principle at all. If Government is making Market changes to give advantage to one company, or sector, to the detriment of another, there is a diversion from Austrian Economics.

What needs to happen is to make unprincipled officials ineluctably unelectable.



Mises doesn't want ANY government officials, so consideration of how principled they are or not is thereby a moot point.


But the inevitable result of full-blown Mises capitalism is that monopoly power increases exponentially, even if falling short of a single worldwide monopoly-on-everything by one entity. Look at economic history, read about various giants of historic conglomerates; the one theme that stands out above all is that what these 'giants' hate most of all and spend the largest portion of their time in dealing with is the dreaded- competition.

Mises denies even the possibility of a monopoly.

It is difficult to even bother troubling oneself with anything else he had to say given that, even though I certainly did waste some bit of time actually doing just that.

But in any event, just how do you expect a regulator to regulate when the conglomerates are so huge, thanks to Mises-inspired deregulation of antitrust laws (Reagan basically told the FTC to go take an 8 yr. nap) and elimination of Glass-Stegal, that those under such meek regulation as exists openly offer him/her a job at 3-8 times his/her current pay? That is, after the job is done. Those in the regulatory agencies who act (or more accurately, don't act) in accord with Misesenic principles are the most unprincipled regulators, by your estimation, along with that of others.

Again, this ideology confuses you.

On the other side, how 'principled' would you expect Goldman CEOs Robert Rubin and Hank Paulson to be when in their government job? Do you think these multimillionaires took the job of Sec. Treas. paying $120-150k a year out of a sense of civic duty?





< Message edited by Edwynn -- 12/19/2012 12:40:53 AM >

(in reply to DesideriScuri)
Profile   Post #: 78
RE: Last year, Republicans voted to add 6 trillion in n... - 12/19/2012 6:20:31 AM   
DesideriScuri


Posts: 12225
Joined: 1/18/2012
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: tazzygirl
You go right ahead!
I want to be first!
I hate settling.
You seem to be happy with it.


Yawn.

_____________________________

What I support:

  • A Conservative interpretation of the US Constitution
  • Personal Responsibility
  • Help for the truly needy
  • Limited Government
  • Consumption Tax (non-profit charities and food exempt)

(in reply to tazzygirl)
Profile   Post #: 79
RE: Last year, Republicans voted to add 6 trillion in n... - 12/19/2012 7:12:59 AM   
DesideriScuri


Posts: 12225
Joined: 1/18/2012
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: Edwynn
quote:

ORIGINAL: DesideriScuri
quote:

ORIGINAL: Edwynn
They didn't even need to take illegal actions, though some few of them did. All it took was gross ineptitude, for the most part. The relinquishing of regulation Q was needed, but in the same law the S&Ls also got the right to venture into territory where no S&L had gone before, and they completely blew it. They kept asking for a BB gun, were finally given it, and shot out most of the windows in the neighborhood, most with out even intending to. But results are what matter, and a few thousand S&L closings and commercial RE bankruptcies later, at great taxpayer expense, the government took the BB gun away.

The expense wasn't really all that much ($124B) compared to what we spent during this past recession ($144B on Fannie and Freddie alone). The dumbasses who took the illegal route were the ones that fucked everything up for all the S&L's. When Congress found out and put the rules back in place, and forced a fire sale of all the no-longer-allowed assets, the S&L's crashed and burned. Had Congress gone after the ones who were involved in the illegal activities, and simply barred any new loans that were previously allowed, the S&L solution wouldn't have cost taxpayers as much. Hell, S&L's could possibly still be around.

Please read the above again. Thousands of S&Ls went under. If you and I are both saying that the crooks were running only a relatively small number of the S&Ls, the logical conclusion would be that the predominance of the failures is attributable to ineptitude. They were given license to venture out into speculative lending on speculative ventures in which they had no expertise. But again, the result is what matters, however it came about, and the result was not good. With out a single crook in the bunch, the result would have been nearly the same.


Don't need to read it again. You're missing my point. The S&L's went under because they had to sell off their assets at prices that fucked them. There was absolutely no way the could stay solvent after the forced fire sale. Were they good at their newly allowed ventures? Not really. But, should they have been forced into selling those new assets at below market prices? No. They were screwed six ways to Sunday by the Feds, and it was not consensual.

quote:

BTW, it is noteworthy that the $144B to Fan&Fred combined seems to trouble you more than the unrestricted $182B to AIG alone ($80B of which went to bonuses for job well done), not to mention over $300B in direct funds to Citigroup, over $476B in total economic benefit. I am not surprised, not in the least.


There is a reason. We are still funding Fannie and Freddie. The $144B is a "so far" number. And, you shouldn't be surprised, either. I have stated all along that I was pissed that the banks were bailed out. I was in the camp of "they took the risk, allow them the consequence of their actions." I am continually amazed at those here that keep missing that fact.

quote:

quote:

quote:

Just WTF is the real difference between a regulation not existing and an existing regulation not being enforced? Wendy Gramm's assiduous non-enforcement as chair of the CFTC (she being an avid porn watcher, apparently) and her husband Phill's Commodities Futures Modernization Act that prohibited regulation were both as Misesenic as they come, what are you guys bitching about?


What's the difference? Gee, I don't know. Maybe if we forced our regulators to do their jobs, this could have been averted, or stopped sooner? Without making the regulators do their jobs, what good is adding more regulations for them to not enforce?

My point is that non-enforcement serves the Misesenic cause every bit as well as lack of whatever law to enforce. You invoke Mises in argument for less regulation, then now claim that we should have enforced what regulation there was.
You are confused by this ideology. Understandable.


I'm not confused. Not a bit. Would you be okay with everything being on the books as illegal, but them not enforcing half of it? I wouldn't be. What would stop them from changing their minds and enforcing the other things, too? Nothing. If something isn't going to be enforced, get it off the books. If it's going to be on the books, enforce it. I'm not happy with his DoJ not defending DOMA in court cases. That isn't because I support DOMA, but if it's not going to be defended, get rid of it. If you aren't going to get rid of it, defend it. The Congressional Report on the Recession stated that had the regulators done their jobs, the crisis would have been prevented.

quote:

quote:

quote:

consequence of inordinately concentrated economic power translating directly into comensurate political power. Presidents Jefferson, Jackson, and Theodore Roosevelt could recognize this right off the top. The Mises ideology refuses to recognize this inevitability of their ideology as played out through history in the real world.

It is not inevitable. We just need principled officials. Government being "on the take" (which is how I view Corporatism) isn't an Austrian Economic principle at all. If Government is making Market changes to give advantage to one company, or sector, to the detriment of another, there is a diversion from Austrian Economics.
What needs to happen is to make unprincipled officials ineluctably unelectable.

Mises doesn't want ANY government officials, so consideration of how principled they are or not is thereby a moot point.

That's not correct.

quote:

But the inevitable result of full-blown Mises capitalism is that monopoly power increases exponentially, even if falling short of a single worldwide monopoly-on-everything by one entity. Look at economic history, read about various giants of historic conglomerates; the one theme that stands out above all is that what these 'giants' hate most of all and spend the largest portion of their time in dealing with is the dreaded- competition.
Mises denies even the possibility of a monopoly.
It is difficult to even bother troubling oneself with anything else he had to say given that, even though I certainly did waste some bit of time actually doing just that.
But in any event, just how do you expect a regulator to regulate when the conglomerates are so huge, thanks to Mises-inspired deregulation of antitrust laws (Reagan basically told the FTC to go take an 8 yr. nap) and elimination of Glass-Stegal, that those under such meek regulation as exists openly offer him/her a job at 3-8 times his/her current pay? That is, after the job is done. Those in the regulatory agencies who act (or more accurately, don't act) in accord with Misesenic principles are the most unprincipled regulators, by your estimation, along with that of others.
Again, this ideology confuses you.


It does not confuse me. There is a definite place for Government Regulation in the Markets. At some point though, which I maintain we passed long ago, increased regulation negatively impacts the economy, leaving those most vulnerable to take the hit. I have yet to hear anyone here, or any leader of any party, or any talking head call for zero Government regulation. Not a single one. I would consider that person a nutjob for doing so.

quote:

On the other side, how 'principled' would you expect Goldman CEOs Robert Rubin and Hank Paulson to be when in their government job? Do you think these multimillionaires took the job of Sec. Treas. paying $120-150k a year out of a sense of civic duty?


Seriously? You want to go there? How many of those guys are in the Obama Administration? I'm against it. I'm not happy that Bush did it. I'm not happy that Obama continued it. I decried what I saw as favoritism when Bush allowed Bear Stearns to fold, but bailed out Goldman. WTF was that all about? Government picking and choosing winners and losers is a bad, bad way to govern.

Let Government set the rules the same for everyone. Then, let Government make sure the rules are followed. IMO, that is where Government should be working (and, don't forget, I have stated many times that I am in favor of cutting all tax loopholes and carve outs, and cutting all subsidies to businesses).

_____________________________

What I support:

  • A Conservative interpretation of the US Constitution
  • Personal Responsibility
  • Help for the truly needy
  • Limited Government
  • Consumption Tax (non-profit charities and food exempt)

(in reply to Edwynn)
Profile   Post #: 80
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