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blutto said:...this is a trick question?...isn't it?....
Cheers
blutto
Not at all. You guys think govt is the answer. Corruption never happens in a vacuum.
The question stands. Please answer...
blutto said:...this is a trick question?...isn't it?....
Cheers
blutto
Scott SoCal said:Do lobbyists sign bills into law? Um, no.
Water seeks it's own level, Red.
I asked before and no one bothered to answer... who is more at fault? The exec who offers the bribe or the politician who accepts it?
Scott SoCal said:Do lobbyists sign bills into law? Um, no.
Water seeks it's own level, Red.
I asked before and no one bothered to answer... who is more at fault? The exec who offers the bribe or the politician who accepts it?
patricknd said:Wtf red, quoting goldwater? Are you okay?![]()
blutto said:...ok, this is a bit weird but stay with me on this one ...
...first I read this....
WASHINGTON — An estimated 650,000 consumers have closed their bank accounts and opted for credit union membership over the past four weeks, according to CUNA, bringing the approach to Saturday’s Bank Transfer Day to a crescendo.
...from...http://www.americanbanker.com/issue...credit-unions-1043783-1.html?zkPrintable=true
...so I think, gosh how are the banks going to respond to this...and then I run into this....
Banks have so much cash on hand and interest rates on deposits are so low that in some cases, you'd be ahead of the game if you stored your money in a mattress.
According to Bankrate.com, the national average on 1-year CDs is 0.36 percent. That's right, about one-third of a percent annually, or just $4 in interest on a $1,000 deposit at the end of a year. Money market checking accounts? Forget it, at the 0.10 percent typically paid, you'll have a buck to show for your $1,000 deposit.
The fact is, many banks really don't want your money. Consumers and businesses have moved money out of the falling stock and bond markets and parked it in bank accounts. In response, some banks are even passing along the cost of federal deposit insurance and imposing fees on accounts where piles of cash are moving in and out too much. The result is that you might pay the bank for the privilege of keeping your cash there.
==========
"We just don't need it anymore," said Don Sturm, the owner of American National Bank and Premier Bank, told the New York Times. "If you had more money than you knew what to do with, would you want more?"
Read more: http://abcnews.go.com/Business/banks-pay-interest-cds-i...
...cool eh...like banks have become what exactly?...institutions that don't need clients per se because they have so much bailout money that relatively speaking dealing with the great unwashed is not worth their time????...
...yeah just gotta love the magic of the market place....
Cheers
blutto
redtreviso said:Barry Goldwater wouldn't be allowed in today's Republican party. The democrats might not even have him either..
blutto said:The fact is, many banks really don't want your money. Consumers and businesses have moved money out of the falling stock and bond markets and parked it in bank accounts. In response, some banks are even passing along the cost of federal deposit insurance and imposing fees on accounts where piles of cash are moving in and out too much. The result is that you might pay the bank for the privilege of keeping your cash there.
==========
"We just don't need it anymore," said Don Sturm, the owner of American National Bank and Premier Bank, told the New York Times. "If you had more money than you knew what to do with, would you want more?"
blutto
python said:what do people think about the leaders of our ‘free and democratic' europe scared to death of one of the classic cornerstones of a true democracy - a referendum in a member state !
i sure understand the bigger picture, but i feel very sad for the criminal eurohypocrites who, whilst pounding own democratic chests and in the name of freedom, don’t shy away from violence in teaching other nations our version of ’freedom and democracy’.
yours is certainly a correct analysis .. but my emphasis was on the principal fact of the hypocritical leaders of the largest states in the eurozone putting unbearable pressure on a small state whilst not single main stream media in europe even peeped about the essential anti-democratic nature of such pressure...same with almost any other small state that dares to speak with own voice - examples abound -....ramjambunath said:I think that the referendum being called off was simply to avoid a confidence motion against the govt. If the people had voted against it, as I expect they would have then the opposition and even some dissenting party members may have called for a confidence motion, which could have led to the govt falling a year or so ahead of its term (General elections are due in 2013)
brits hypocritical ?Second part- remember David Cameron. He said twitter and facebook are vital tools for democracy during the Arab spring and Iran protests but when it came to Brit riots, he completely changed his stance.
python said:yours is certainly a correct analysis .. but my emphasis was on the principal fact of the hypocritical leaders of the largest states in the eurozone putting unbearable pressure on a small state whilst not single main stream media in europe even peeped about the essential anti-democratic nature of such pressure...same with almost any other small state that dares to speak with own voice - examples abound -....
financially responsible slovakia being browbeaten until it joined in with the bailout package...serbia's arm-twisting...
python said:what do people think about the leaders of our ‘free and democratic' europe scared to death of one of the classic cornerstones of a true democracy - a referendum in a member state !
i sure understand the bigger picture, but i feel very sad for the criminal eurohypocrites who, whilst pounding own democratic chests and in the name of freedom, don’t shy away from violence in teaching other nations our version of ’freedom and democracy’.
there is one word that every euroleader knows but afraid to say in public - 'italy'.ramjambunath said:It's hardly surprising though that the media put their interests ahead of the 'values' that they have supposedly stood for in other parts of the world. Maybe the short term ramifications of a country's economy failing are too hard for corporations (who hold most of the debts) to bear for them. As far as I've seen, I don't think the Germans want the bailout (Bavarianrider is one of those) and neither do Greeks. So who does?
Iceland's move to allow the failing of the banks and the system has certainly worked better for them now.
python said:there is one word that every euroleader knows but afraid to say in public - 'italy'.
if greece is let go, then italy is unquestionably next. but unlike greece's economy, italy's is simply too large to let fail. hence the animalistic fear of 'democracy' by the very 'democtats'.
the bail out package for italy is totally impractical as it would impoverish germany for decades to come or it would fragment germany into autonomous incoherent pieces the way it was in the days of napoleon ...
sure bavarianrider would love to be the subject of the bavarian king rather than being under the mental midget from portugaleven i would prefer barbarossa to barosso
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Cobblestones said:The (neoliberal) dogma throughout the last two decades was (and I have written a bit about it here before): capitalism is the catalyst to bring about democracy.
What the last two decades have taught us is that the dogma is, in fact, wrong. In the case of China, we see a country with consistently much higher growth rates than 'the West', achieved within an authoritarian, mercantilistic system with no prospect of change.
On the other hand, the Arab revolutions teach us that it was not the benevolent effects of capitalism which ignited the masses, rather, it was the mounting inequalities, the excesses of an unfettered, unconstrained, corrupt capitalism, which swept despots like Mubarak, Gaddhafi etc. from power. In an ironic twist, you therefore may say that capitalism was one of causes of the Arab revolution, but it certainly wasn't in the sense neoliberals were promoting it in the 1990s.
What we have learned, therefore, is that capitalism and democracy, can be divorced. This is a very dangerous thought; the power elites in the West are trembling. It is Marx's specter haunting Europe again. Except this time, it is a international, global phenomenon.
Greece's Prime Minister George Papandreou faces a crucial confidence vote in parliament on Friday with the outcome on a knife-edge.
Mr Papandreou shocked EU partners and sent markets into turmoil after calling for a referendum on a hard-fought EU deal to bail out debt-ridden Greece.
While the prospect of a referendum has receded, even if the PM wins his future is unclear, amid new calls to resign.
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blutto said:...ok, this is a bit weird but stay with me on this one ...
...first I read this....
WASHINGTON — An estimated 650,000 consumers have closed their bank accounts and opted for credit union membership over the past four weeks, according to CUNA, bringing the approach to Saturday’s Bank Transfer Day to a crescendo.
...from...http://www.americanbanker.com/issue...credit-unions-1043783-1.html?zkPrintable=true
...so I think, gosh how are the banks going to respond to this...and then I run into this....
Banks have so much cash on hand and interest rates on deposits are so low that in some cases, you'd be ahead of the game if you stored your money in a mattress.
According to Bankrate.com, the national average on 1-year CDs is 0.36 percent. That's right, about one-third of a percent annually, or just $4 in interest on a $1,000 deposit at the end of a year. Money market checking accounts? Forget it, at the 0.10 percent typically paid, you'll have a buck to show for your $1,000 deposit.
The fact is, many banks really don't want your money. Consumers and businesses have moved money out of the falling stock and bond markets and parked it in bank accounts. In response, some banks are even passing along the cost of federal deposit insurance and imposing fees on accounts where piles of cash are moving in and out too much. The result is that you might pay the bank for the privilege of keeping your cash there.
==========
"We just don't need it anymore," said Don Sturm, the owner of American National Bank and Premier Bank, told the New York Times. "If you had more money than you knew what to do with, would you want more?"
Read more: http://abcnews.go.com/Business/banks-pay-interest-cds-i...
...cool eh...like banks have become what exactly?...institutions that don't need clients per se because they have so much bailout money that relatively speaking dealing with the great unwashed is not worth their time????...
...yeah just gotta love the magic of the market place....
Cheers
blutto
Scott SoCal said:Not necessarily.. Everyone will negotiate the best deal they can get and every company is looking for a competitive advantage. Why compete fairly when you can buy your way to the top? And BTW, that is not a one way street.. someone has to accept and act on the bribe.
Most will take the straightest path to where they want to go.. or the path of least resistance.
redtreviso said:Barry Goldwater wouldn't be allowed in today's Republican party. The democrats might not even have him either..
Scott SoCal said:Except the companies quoted in the US are not evading taxes. What they are doing is perfectly legal.
Instead of blaming company exec's why not blame crooked politicians?
Oh yeah, I forgot. Govt is everyone's answer to every problem.
