Wednesday, July 16, 2008

"The horror..."

Price jump worst since '91 on record gas, higher food - Jul. 16, 2008

Stocks and the market are not my issue of choice. I hate money - really, I hate it. Nothing good comes of it. That being said I recognize it is kind of important if I want to, you know, eat. And we all know how much I like to eat.

Yesterday I made the mistake of listening to all the news about Fannie Mae and Freddy Mac. Holy freakin' Moses. We might all die. A food crisis, a fuel crisis, the housing market is tanking, Wall Street is out of control, Iran is testing nuclear missiles, Brazil just found a gazillion barrels of oil and nobody knows how that's going to effect things, and this country is run by a bunch of bloody idiots.

As we know, July has been a bad month. My dear friend from Mosaic (see links to the side) came to pick me up and take me to work because I have no car. Bless her heart. And the first thing she says is "I've been listening to NPR - and Bush is speaking about the economy. I wasn't scared until right now. And now I'm terrified." And she was SO right.

For the last 7 years or so we have done exactly the OPPOSITE of what common sense dictates. You cannot slash taxes, especially for those who can afford it, when we are in a war. YOU CAN'T DO IT. The market will not "balance itself out" when you suck away at market resources. You do not have to have a degree in economics to understand that. And while I have any number of socialist rants about equitibility I could go on - if you lend tons of money to people who can't afford to pay them back - it is your own damned fault when you go broke. I do not see that as a comment on the quality of the borrowers - I see that as a complete and total lack of ethics on behalf of lenders determined to turn a profit regardless of who is hurt. And low and behold it bit them in the ass. Once again - these are not hard concepts.

And now our liberal-market priests are panicking because "holy shit - this didn't work out!" So what do they think the right response is - government interference. Okay - putting aside my firm belief that the liberal market is evil and largely based on immorality and greed, bringing in the government to fix a huge mistake made by the government would be comic, were it not for the fact that the whole world will suffer.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Why is it that those who deplore government assistance for the poor never object when the government bails out large corporations? How about if we nationalize the banks? That couldn't be any worse than what we have now.

MET said...

Wow. I detect a Marxist amongst us! Somebody call the feds.

Anonymous said...

It takes one to know one...