Does Yoni know that TARP was a Repug Paulson Secy of Treasury plan approved by his good buddy dubya?
Does he think it's a winner?
Does Yoni know that TARP was a Repug Paulson Secy of Treasury plan approved by his good buddy dubya?
Well, if I thought it was orders of magnitude higher than the entire US budget, I'd be down there with my torch and pitchfork too.
That TARP might've been wrong in principle seems to have eluded you.
Good call.
who said so?Well, if I thought it was orders of magnitude higher than the entire US budget,
I think the alternative may have been worse (can't prove -- obviously).
I said focusing on TARP misrepresents the scale of the bailout. That's undeniably true.
Your first link had some crazy-ass numbers.
funds disbursed, not costs, but the magnitude of the funds committed put TARP in the shade.
And I think that the younger generation is getting screwed over by demographics and their grandparents' en lements WAAAAAAY more than they are getting screwed by WS fat cats.
both are true, but it's telling you choose to minimize the part played by big finance
And become an unproductive member of society? Say it ain't so.
But I would absolutely refuse to participate in group chant and jazz hands.
As Jimmy Kimmel said...
"I don't like this focus on paying for things. That's what future generations are for."
There he goes again, making fun of deaf people.
I think most of them are mindless idiots that want a Nanny state.Do OWS loons know how much TARP cost?
I'm not so sure that's fraud. Ostensibly, the fire insurance contract calls for the insurer to cover the insured's permitted claims in the event of a fire. I'm not aware of a contract for insurance which explicitly (meaning, per its terms) allocates risk.
Is that a function or a byproduct of the contract? Absolutely. But the insurance policy is still a contract. Meaning if there's no fire, there's no allowed or allowable claim - and - if there's no claim, there's nothing to claim that the contract was breached.
I understand the argument. And there's some merit to the claim that the government shouldn't act as an insurer for the financial sector's risk taking. But I think that's a matter of public policy; the implication that the bailouts cons ute legal fraud is off the mark.
Now, the author might not be getting at actionable fraud - but then how are you to make sense of his use of "defrauded" in the insurance example above.
Last edited by vy65; 01-12-2012 at 06:05 PM.
Just the other day, the Federal Lightbulb Department gave me a citation on incandescent bulb use in my home!
$133B outstanding, $34B in likely losses. So much for TARP the moneymaker.
http://www.sigtarp.gov/reports/congr...o_Congress.pdf
Where's your link to anything other than a poorly supported article which you try and pigeonhole me with because it mentions a dislike for babyboomers?
You can hardly speak for yourself without looking like a dip so please refrain from speaking for me.
Thanks!
http://www.sigtarp.gov/frate2abAt2a/tre9uPrUvAst.pdfAfter 3½ years, the Troubled Asset Relief Program (“TARP”) continues to be an active and significant part of the Government’s response to the financial crisis. It is a widely held misconception that TARP will make a profit. The most recent cost estimate for TARP is a loss of $60 billion. Taxpayers are still owed $118.5 billion (including $14 billion written off or otherwise lost).
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