Excellent job btw getting through one whole paragraph.
Originally Posted by SillyGirl
If you noticed the two reasons why I liked Veblen, you would have been able to deduce that I read more than one paragraph.
"Although Veblen was sympathetic to state ownership of industry, he had a low opinion of workers and the labor movement and was hostile toward Marxism. "
Sympathetic != Socialism.
I am severely anti-socialist. Veblen represents a middle ground between Marxists and Randites. His affection for those who produce is a tenet of objectivist capitalism, however his views are a little more palatable for those who still believe in altruism.
I chose him specifically as opposed to Rand (because the knee-jerk reaction to her is appalling) or Mises because of the negative feelings so many people unfamiliar with their work feel the need to express as soon as the name pops up.
Originally Posted by SillyGirl
SG, I think there is little doubt he was a socialist, but not a Marxist socialist. It is comparable to there being three levels of Democrats or Republicans (liberal, moderate, or conservative). Not all fall under the same umbrella, although many try to force them under the same one. Because of this, I would not call Thorstein's views as necessarily being a middle ground of the Marxist/Capitalist scale. His Wikipedia page (and I know it is not gospel) makes mention of his socialistic views:
"Veblen had a penchant for socialism and believed that technological developments would eventually lead toward a socialistic organization of economic affairs. However, his views regarding socialism and the nature of the evolutionary process of economics differed sharply from that of Karl Marx; while Marx saw socialism as the ultimate goal for civilization and saw the working-class as the group that would establish it, Veblen saw socialism as one intermediate phase in an ongoing evolutionary process in society that would be brought about by the natural decay of the business enterprise system and by the inventiveness of engineers."
By all means, lets not let them have a tax cut, can't let that free ride end. Are there a ton of other factors? Well of course. But what it boils down to is that our economy is in the shitter thanks to the lower-middle and middle class being incredibly irresponsible with income they do have. Living on credit, subprime mortgages, etc etc. Is it easy to blame the banks for this? Surely, and while a fat lot of blame does need to set at the feet of the people offering up this sort of credit, why don't we instead look at the people who were so caught up "something for nothing" that they damn near broke our economy.
Originally Posted by SillyGirl
I didn't realize the lower and middle class set the banking regulations and the process for determining the lending criteria the banks used. I guess the lower and middle class also were the ones to market derivatives that were essentially worthless and sold them on the market. The lower and middle class were the ones to continually swapping mortgages on the open market creating the "ultimate storm"?
The middle class is not the "backbone" of this country. The producers are. I have no sympathy for the common man. He shouldn't have been living above his means in the first place. But we are all entitled to live however we so choose right? Even if that choice means just not paying the mortgage anymore because the banks are too busy to get to foreclosing on you any time soon.
Originally Posted by SillyGirl
Would you give me an example of a "producer" and of a "common man"?
As far as living beyond one's means, don't forget it takes two to Tango.
Personally, I have no sympathy for the banks. These institutions have all the information at their disposal when it comes to credit worthiness, yet they continued to approve loan after loan they knew the lendee would not have the ability to pay. These same institutions were literally falsifying customer wage/salary information in order to approve the customer for more money. The same banks continued to send credit card after credit card to people that if the cards were maxed out, the borrower would not be able to pay. The banks essentially ignored the debt-to-income ratio that is the standard for lending.
I also don't have sympathy for the borrower that KNEW he wouldn't be able to pay his mortgage. However, SG, it seems as if you are indicating this is the the main cause of the foreclosures. Many lost their homes as a result of job loss, not because their had a adjustable rate or interest only loan that was set to change. I do have sympathy for the homeowner and his/her family that lost their home as a result of job loss. Even if he or she is just a "common man".