Flake wrote:o.pwuaioc wrote:
FDIC insurance only covers up to $250,000.
Yeah but the safe assumption is that most people don't really have to worry about that upper limit. Certainly the "99%" are good to go under that threshold.
Really? 99% might not make 250k per annum, but it's not at all unfeasible that they wouldn't have been, oh, I dunno, saving their whole life. If I make $50k a year, spend $25k of it, than it only takes me 10 years to get that. So a hardworking American who does this would find himself screwed if he worked, oh, I don't know, 20 years only to find a bank collapsed and he lost half his savings.
Do you enjoy being rude?
No, but I do call ignorance where I see it.
Look I am sorry if I am not defaulting to the populist stance. "Boo, Banks are Bad" is a great slogan for a bumper sticker but other than getting people together to share their misery, mindlessly placing the blame on banks is a terrible idea.
Straw man.
I am more interested in understanding the systemic failure of the global economy.
But are you really, or did you just pick up Republican talking points who've been blaming the people for what were clearly illegal and unethical banking violations? Are you going to blame rape victims for wearing short skirts, saying that the revealing clothing is the real clothing? Why don't we actually look at who's doing illegal things here instead of standing on a soapbox blaming those who did nothing wrong.
I don't know that. All I see is how we got to the point where companies can shed jobs but still post record profits, which is the current situation. Hell, since late 2008 analysts have been calling this a "Jobless Recovery" and the entire situation has baffled everyone.
It actually hasn't. Jobless recovery has been a known phenomenon since the Great Depression, and this isn't that much different. Additionally, corporations have three major things that the American people didn't get: bailouts, tax loopholes, and untaxed overseas profits.
There has to be something different in the job market now than the job market from previous periods of economic recovery.
Actually, there was a jobless recovery in the 1980s too.