I am really surprised at how the voting is going on this issue.
I did not expect so many people to say that they do not see signs of recovery.
The Glass-Steagall Act was enacted in 1933 after excessive risk-taking that contributed to the Great Depression and I agree that repealing it was a serious mistake, but Clinton was pressured into signing the bill which was veto proof, unfortunately.
The fact is that too many mistakes were made by too many smart people who should have known better like Detroit automakers caving in to the unions and discovering that the Japanese could make better cars cheaper and better without the heavy burden of the unions. The unions killed the goose that laid the golden eggs.
To further complicate matters, Bush took this country in the wrong direction with his idiotic war in Iraq, but thankfully, Obama is now working to end that war and already set an August deadline to bring the troops home. The money spent on that foolish war would have better served building up our economy.
In spite of the pessimism, I remain very optimistic that Obama is exactly what this country needs at this time and I maintain that the recovery has already begun!
I've also heard those dire warning about inflation coming next, but I don't buy that argument either. We just need to fine-tune the money we're pumping into the recovery to prevent that. We can do that.
The ignorance of the US contributed to the Great Depression by not promptly jumping in and pumping cash into the economy, but we know better now.
The great bail out was necessary like bad-tasting medicine (to the taxpayer) but many banks have already paid back the TARP money and that gives me hope.
God bless the USA.
Originally Posted by Fast Gunn
The Great Depression began after the an economic downturn. With the tax increases that followed the effects of the depression were prolonged. More companies failed and more people were out of work, reducing tax revenue even further resulting in even more tax increases.
Blackwater may have been Bush's private army in Iraq, but Triple Canopy(TC), a company founded in Chicago, is the current administrations choice. At least Blackwater hired more American's than TC who is at 75% foreign employees.
It appears we think alike when it comes to the unions, but knowing that 'caving to the unions' resluted in the debacle of the US auto industry, why would anyone nominate a pro-union attorney, Craig Becker, to the National Labor Relations Board?
Obama, just announced that he was 'agnostic' to tax increases and his campaign promises are turning into campaign reteric. It appears they are now following the same paths taken during the Great Depression. Whether it's the legislature or the executive branches, I have zero faith in anyone practicing Keynsian economic theory.