inflamesdjk02
Member
- Joined
- Oct 17, 2007
- Messages
- 66
So I posted the link to the story about the government taking over the 2 mortgage giants followed by a few choice comments of disgust, and these are the responses I'm getting ...
"dude, government supported capitalism is not socialism. the collapses of freddie mac, bear stearns, et al are direct results of deregulatory legislation and policy and the financialization of the US economy. These are the policies of Reagan, Bush 1 and 2 and Clinton and served the wishes of big US capital, banks and investors. They were not designed by China nor had any socialist componant.
If you study the American economy you will learn that it shifted from manufacturing, production of goods and trade to an economy of financialization and speculation in the 70s, with this intensifying in the past 15 years. Financialization is a way for declining capitalist economies to expand artificially (by economic law capitalism depends on expansion). Thus, money and assets are expanded through speculation, real estate bubbles, stock bubbles, manipulation of foreign curreency, growth of insurance and reinsurance industry, financial bureacracy, etc... This allowed periods of economic health in the US when the economy was really contracting in terms of the production of goods and non-financial services.
In simple terms look at Chicago. The city went through economic collapse with loss of the city and regions manufacturing and industrial production in the 70s. However, they replaced that economy with a burgeoning sector of banking, insurance, commodity trading, real estate, and financial jobs in the past 20 years. Most of these jobs depend on financial bubbles, speculation and banking and produce very little, but they have led to an economic boom for the city.
Socialism and especially communism depend on the means of production being transferred to the workers and population. People are theoretically in charge of their industries and how they work and organize their jobs. In practice many such economies have an influential level of government bureacracy and control, but that is a result of how those countries chose to put the ideas of socialism into place.
In the US you have a decline in somewhat socialist structures. Public hospitols/health, public schools, unions, etc... are all going through a consistent easily documented 30 yr period of contraction and disinvestment. The only aspect of government involvement in the economy that is increasing is defense related spending and corporate bailouts, banking bailouts. Our govt continues to pour huge amounts of our treasury into bailing out banks and huge corporations. It is not putting more money into transferring the means of production and ownership to workers (communism). And it is not expanding public control over things like schools, hospitols, transportation (socialism), instead it has tended to commercialize these things.
those who own our massive debts are keeping our economy and the dollar from freefall. It is only because people like the Chinese hold so much American debt that the dollar isn't worth 50 cents. By insuring the dollar doesn't sink they keep their assets (our debt) relatively intact."
And...
"Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac cannot fail, and the US had to do something. Do you realize that when you go to a bank or mortgage company that most times their loan they provide to you is financially backed by Fannie Mae or Freddie MAC? You might have a house mortgage with XYZ Mortgage company and a car load with National City Bank, but more than likely Fannie Mae or Freddie MAC actually own the loan as the mortgage company and bank financed the loan with one of them.
If you want to continue on without these large companies, it can be done, but your way of life will change. A lot less loans for houses, cars, personal money, and credit cards will be approved and people will need to start going without many things they take for granted because they won't be able to purchase them. Our economy will no longer be anywhere near one of the strongest in the world, and we will slowly fall from our power and stature in the world."
I could probably answer back in a well-informed, intelligent manner but I will have to do some research first. Just wondered what some of you more seasoned veterans thought...
"dude, government supported capitalism is not socialism. the collapses of freddie mac, bear stearns, et al are direct results of deregulatory legislation and policy and the financialization of the US economy. These are the policies of Reagan, Bush 1 and 2 and Clinton and served the wishes of big US capital, banks and investors. They were not designed by China nor had any socialist componant.
If you study the American economy you will learn that it shifted from manufacturing, production of goods and trade to an economy of financialization and speculation in the 70s, with this intensifying in the past 15 years. Financialization is a way for declining capitalist economies to expand artificially (by economic law capitalism depends on expansion). Thus, money and assets are expanded through speculation, real estate bubbles, stock bubbles, manipulation of foreign curreency, growth of insurance and reinsurance industry, financial bureacracy, etc... This allowed periods of economic health in the US when the economy was really contracting in terms of the production of goods and non-financial services.
In simple terms look at Chicago. The city went through economic collapse with loss of the city and regions manufacturing and industrial production in the 70s. However, they replaced that economy with a burgeoning sector of banking, insurance, commodity trading, real estate, and financial jobs in the past 20 years. Most of these jobs depend on financial bubbles, speculation and banking and produce very little, but they have led to an economic boom for the city.
Socialism and especially communism depend on the means of production being transferred to the workers and population. People are theoretically in charge of their industries and how they work and organize their jobs. In practice many such economies have an influential level of government bureacracy and control, but that is a result of how those countries chose to put the ideas of socialism into place.
In the US you have a decline in somewhat socialist structures. Public hospitols/health, public schools, unions, etc... are all going through a consistent easily documented 30 yr period of contraction and disinvestment. The only aspect of government involvement in the economy that is increasing is defense related spending and corporate bailouts, banking bailouts. Our govt continues to pour huge amounts of our treasury into bailing out banks and huge corporations. It is not putting more money into transferring the means of production and ownership to workers (communism). And it is not expanding public control over things like schools, hospitols, transportation (socialism), instead it has tended to commercialize these things.
those who own our massive debts are keeping our economy and the dollar from freefall. It is only because people like the Chinese hold so much American debt that the dollar isn't worth 50 cents. By insuring the dollar doesn't sink they keep their assets (our debt) relatively intact."
And...
"Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac cannot fail, and the US had to do something. Do you realize that when you go to a bank or mortgage company that most times their loan they provide to you is financially backed by Fannie Mae or Freddie MAC? You might have a house mortgage with XYZ Mortgage company and a car load with National City Bank, but more than likely Fannie Mae or Freddie MAC actually own the loan as the mortgage company and bank financed the loan with one of them.
If you want to continue on without these large companies, it can be done, but your way of life will change. A lot less loans for houses, cars, personal money, and credit cards will be approved and people will need to start going without many things they take for granted because they won't be able to purchase them. Our economy will no longer be anywhere near one of the strongest in the world, and we will slowly fall from our power and stature in the world."
I could probably answer back in a well-informed, intelligent manner but I will have to do some research first. Just wondered what some of you more seasoned veterans thought...