Guess those letters I sent must have worked! Now their pointing fingers. 40% of Dems voted no and 70% of Republicans voted no. God Bless America and down with the corporate money launderers!
The bill goes back up for a vote this Thursday I believe. After talking to some people that work very closely with the congress, senate, and the Fed, they're all certain it will pass.
It's bown to go through sooner or later, regardless of public opinion.
Thank you for courageously taking on the establishment, doing whats right,
and voting your conscience regarding the flawed Wallstreet bailout plan.
In doing so, you also voted in good faith and favor of your constituents;
your actions have been applauded by the public and have not gone
unnoticed. A sincere thank you is in order.
We know that you are already under a lot of pressure to vote again on a
slightly revised bill later this week, and we sincerely hope that you do
whats right for the country,your constituents, and ultimately for the
economy, and once again vote against supporting this bill.
We need to hold these organizations accountable, embrace the free market
system and let this bad debt wash out of America's financials in a fair
and natural way. In doing so, we send the message to Wallstreet that we do
not tolerate irresponsible decisions, and they will never make mistakes
like this again.
Ok so whats the answer? Everyone from Democrats to Republican tax payers are against this, but the Economic analysts (who I trust more than the voting public) are saying that without this we will most certainly head into a deep recession and possibly an actual depression to rival the 1930's.
I don't know about you guys, but this scares me. I understand that a bailout is not a great solution but what is the better one?
On another note, I find it ironic that America is going to fall, not because of a lack of military defense (which we've spent trillions on) but because of our own economic instablity. Forget terriosts. We are going to crash on burn from the inside.
Ok so whats the answer? Everyone from Democrats to Republican tax payers are against this, but the Economic analysts (who I trust more than the voting public) are saying that without this we will most certainly head into a deep recession and possibly an actual depression to rival the 1930's.
I don't know about you guys, but this scares me. I understand that a bailout is not a great solution but what is the better one?
On another note, I find it ironic that America is going to fall, not because of a lack of military defense (which we've spent trillions on) but because of our own economic instablity. Forget terriosts. We are going to crash on burn from the inside.
Honestly, if that's the case; No bailout now and we end up feeling the pain of another recession...everyone has to tighten their belts a bit...yada yada, well I'm fine with that. I said years ago that when they continued to lower the interest rates, for example, which is what caused the freaking mortgage bubble, which then led to the subprime fiasco (that and lax regulations on xyz mortage companies) So I agree that we need to reap what we sew, to a degree.
But if we, as a nation, totally crash and burn and something like a bailout could have delayed it until we came up with something better, then maybe we need to reconsider. I mean I don't want to be standing in any freakin soup line, ya know? Or worse, end up hunkering down on an east texas ranch because of some post economic apocolyptic scenerio.
One more thing. While I think most of you on here, know the deal (wf members tend to be more intelligent than the average american) I think most of the country is against the bailout for the wrong reason. They're just mad that their tax paying dollars are going to bail out big business. I think they're going to be surprised at the result (recession, job losses...etc) and get really pissed all over again. (Which is why the elected officials are tap dancing back and forth)
+1 for being one of the only people here that can step back, stop bitching, and take a look at the bigger picture.