Moderator: Community Team
BigBallinStalin wrote:If you check opensecrets.org, you'll see that both Republicans and Democrats receive funding from banks. Once again, another voter has fallen victim to the following reasoning: "The x-politicians suck because they side with rent-seeking group x. Instead, I support the y-politicians (who side with the rent-seeking group y)." (In this case, rent-seeking groups x and y are the same. When you talked about Imagined Republicans v. Imagined Democrats, did you bother to verify your claims? No, because the impact of your vote is essentially zero. The electoral process is nothing but rhetoric, pandering to emotions, and voters cheering).
BigBallinStalin wrote:Finally, define: "fair" market value. I'll give you a hint. It's like defining "god."
wikipedia wrote:Fair market value (FMV) is an estimate of the market value of a property, based on what a knowledgeable, willing, and unpressured buyer would probably pay to a knowledgeable, willing, and unpressured seller in the market.
BigBallinStalin wrote:It's doesn't exist until it's arbitrarily defined into 'existence.' You've fallen victim to a very old rhetorical tactic. "Fair" market value is a concept that only appeals to your emotions. Simply because someone says that they'll sell X at 'fair' market value, it does not follow that X is actually sold at fair market value. Fair market value does not exist. It depends on the institutional arrangement under which the exchange is made. In the case of government with its closed-door dealings with major market entities and its lonnngg history of colluding with those major market entities, it would be gullible to believe that government sells X at 'fair' market value.
Metsfanmax wrote:In the case of Goldman, both Treasury and an independent third party agreed that $900 million was a fair price for the warrant, which really only means they agreed on what the future share prices of Goldman would be.
Metsfanmax wrote:Speaking of which, Bernie Sanders for President!
BigBallinStalin wrote:In short, sample size = 1; therefore, WARREN IS FOR THE PEOPLE!! HOORAYYY!! HOOORAYYYY!!! Forget all other colluding parties that fund her campaigns and make underground deals with her! HOORAYY!! Forget any instance of Warren logrolling votes in the mutual back-scratching game of legislation! HOOORAYYY!! Forget about how that government revenue was obtained in order to make those exchanges! Forget about WHO was actually sold those shares FROM WHOM! Whatever! Politician X is AWESOME!
BigBallinStalin wrote:Sorry for sounding like an ass, but I'm so fuckin' tired of 90+% of all voters. They unwittingly contribute to the rent-seeking. They unwittingly support so many politicians who implement and reinforce policies conducive for further rent-seeking by the entrenched businesses. They are the cause of this country's path to democratic oligarchy (a.k.a. crony capitalism, political capitalism, etc.). These voters are responsible for the harmful outcomes, yet they don't ever bother criticizing themselves or being skeptical about their favorite politicians and the outcomes from those favored politicians.
BigBallinStalin wrote:There's no costless path to prosperity through politicians. There's no such thing as "more government oversight and regulation" fixing the problems caused initially by colluding politicians, chief bureaucrats, and particular market entities. Look at the systematic problems.
BigBallinStalin wrote:Look at the policing incidents. Look at how the major politicians are dodging the CIA Torture Report. Look at that history of 50+ years of CIA torture programs and how politicians have continuously failed to address the issue. Consider the effects of the FDIC on promoting MORE moral hazard for banks. They're guaranteed a 'lender of last resort' no matter how risky the investment. In fact, they receive bailouts, and people like you cheer about $1bn of roughly trillions being magically saved. Look at how whistleblowers of government-business collusion are treated (Seggara, Snowden, Manning, and on and on). You're one of many cultists with a faith in benevolent government and (your) saintly politicians. Stop it. For the love of all that is good in this world, stop contributing to the problem.
degaston wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:In the case of Goldman, both Treasury and an independent third party agreed that $900 million was a fair price for the warrant, which really only means they agreed on what the future share prices of Goldman would be.
If Goldman thought that this price was too high, did they have to buy them back, or could they just let the government keep them, or sell them to someone else with a billion dollars lying around?
Phatscotty wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:Speaking of which, Bernie Sanders for President!
So Mets, when did you become an 'Independent'?
Fewnix wrote:Elizabeth Warren for President
But it also hints at the rising power of what has been called the Elizabeth Warren wing of the party: leftwing Democrats appalled at measures to weaken Wall Street reforms, with the president apparently willing to turn a blind eye.
Warren has hitherto insisted she is not running for president herself, but spoke out passionately against the ācromnibusā and presents a growing challenge to what her supporters dismissively call the Wall Street wing of the party and its figurehead: Hillary Clinton.
etc etc etc Sounded good right?"I'm Barack Obama. I'm a Constitutional Scholar and a 'Chicago School of Economics ' professor. Wall Street needs to be reformed. Education needs to be fixed. Racism needs to be put behind us. 48 million Americans are uninsured, and that is unacceptable. There is no red America, there is no blue America, there is just a United States of America. My father was a goat herder in Africa. Marriage is between one man and one woman and God is definitely in the mix. We will put an end to this political darkness between the Republicans and Democrats"
Obama, corporate Democrats and corporate Republicans were dealt a defeat when Liberaltarian Democrats and Tea Party members joined forces to block an extension of the PATRIOT Act on procedural grounds. The 'one party' leadership joined forces to try to push an extension through but were rebuffed after Democrat congressman Dennis Kucinich of Ohio rallied the two-dozen Tea Party Republicans by calling a move to defeat the act "the Tea Party's first test." A test they passed with flying colors.
The one party leadership then planned to reintroduce the measure to overcome procedural blocks and move it to the Senate. Republican Rand Paul and Socialist Bernie Sanders plan to rally senators to stop the extension in the Senate but will likely be defeated.
Obama has asked Congress to quickly extend the Bush-era emergency law that gives his Secret Police forces sweeping powers of oppression and evil.
Metsfanmax wrote:In principle they could have let the government keep the warrants. This was an unlikely scenario, for two reasons. First, Treasury really wanted to offload these assets -- the point of TARP was to get the banks back on their feet, not to make the government money. So there was probably offline pressure for them to accept the deal. Second, Goldman probably wanted to control where the shares went. If they didn't buy, the government would probably have auctioned off the warrants to someone else -- see my first point (some of the other banks did opt for the auction option). So by accepting the subpar deal, Goldman retained control of a significant stake of their company. (This is just speculation though, I don't think Puente nor anyone outside Goldman really knows what Goldman was thinking.)
_sabotage_ wrote:Derivatives are side bets. It is like betting on the guy betting.
Metsfanmax wrote:But that is not a reason to reject the entire basis of the field.
patches70 wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:But that is not a reason to reject the entire basis of the field.
It didn't look like sabo was rejecting the "entire basis of the field" but was instead rejecting the idea that taxpayers should be on the hook for losses.
You seem to have just ignored that. He's right, BTW, but are you being dicky to sabo because you think taxpayers should be on the hook for when derivatives go boom?
patches70 wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:But that is not a reason to reject the entire basis of the field.
It didn't look like sabo was rejecting the "entire basis of the field" but was instead rejecting the idea that taxpayers should be on the hook for losses. You seem to have just ignored that. He's right, BTW, but are you being dicky to sabo because you think taxpayers should be on the hook for when derivatives go boom?
degaston wrote:So, why were the banks investing in these? Because legislators changed the laws to remove regulations that had prevented banks from making risky investments, and kept us from having a major financial crisis for 50 years.
Who elected these legislators? We, the people. That's why we were on the hook when the whole house of cards collapsed.
Why re-regulating derivatives can prevent another disaster
Metsfanmax wrote:As a libertarian, you might also ask the question of whether we should in principle be assisting private businesses with government loans, even if they are paid back.
degaston wrote:patches70 wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:But that is not a reason to reject the entire basis of the field.
It didn't look like sabo was rejecting the "entire basis of the field" but was instead rejecting the idea that taxpayers should be on the hook for losses. You seem to have just ignored that. He's right, BTW, but are you being dicky to sabo because you think taxpayers should be on the hook for when derivatives go boom?
(The following is my understanding from a few minutes of research. Feel free to correct me if I'm mistaken about any of this.)
The problem was not that derivatives went "boom" - it was that the banks were investing in them. If it was just the money of the ultra-wealthy who could afford to take those risks, then few tears would have been shed. But it was everyone's money, and it was guaranteed by the government that it would be safe.
So, why were the banks investing in these? Because legislators changed the laws to remove regulations that had prevented banks from making risky investments, and kept us from having a major financial crisis for 50 years.
Who elected these legislators? We, the people. That's why we were on the hook when the whole house of cards collapsed.
Why re-regulating derivatives can prevent another disaster
_sabotage_ wrote:Does anyone know what is being talked about in this thread?
...
Government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the Earth.
thegreekdog wrote:I think someone listed Warren's top donors above. The top two are:
EMILY's List - a "national political action committee that works to elect pro-choice female Democrats."
Moveon.org - a "left-leaning organization that almost exclusivley supports Democratic candidates for politial office."
Why is Elizabeth Warren different from a politician who "may believe owe their election finance to the big banks?" Seems to me she is the same; she just happens to have different rent seekers.
Users browsing this forum: DirtyDishSoap