Cap'n Cat wrote:travelinman67 wrote:
Make it, Blowhard.
Real GDP grew under Reagan. Adjusting for the demise of defense spending, and U.S. GDP fell flat under Clinton, and remained that way under Bush who was not a fiscal conservative. The Fed's mismanagement of borrowing mechanisms coupled with the now brutally apparent corruption, greed and mismanagement the housing and banking industry put us where we are today: Not any of Reagan's policies.
I will, Sluggo. When I'm good and fvcking ready. Kiss my ass.
Greed and mismanagement did not start with Reagan (it started with the Romans and then they took over the Church), but it got one big ass boost when Reagan started slashing and deregulating and deriding proper oversight as "government interference". He did more harm with his words, perhaps than his actions. Fvck him. He's in Hell.
I'll be back, Rush.
I'm sure you will, Leon.
Deregulation was neither the foundation nor the trigger of this economic collapse. Our country's economy has been built on a house of cards since the late 70's. GDP began diving in '73, and has been on a decline since. Merely shuffling or redistributing wealth cannot support ANY industrial nation, yet that has been the economic model for the past 15 years. The last strong back to support the sloth know as American banking industry was the residential mortgage market, built with greed driven, smoke-and-mirrors, ARMS and Interest-Only products destined to fail, and as the inflated value of housing dissipated as earnings dried up, the housing, and inevitably, Wall Street, house of cards finally collapsed. If any "deregulation" can be faulted as a chief contributor, it was the Dem led passage of CRA which attempted to impose socialist economic philosopy on the otherwise politically neutral mortgage underwriters.
One need not be a professional economist to figure this one out...it was childs play.
This had NOTHING to do with Reagan's policies.
The foundational cause was a failing GDP and absence of energy independence, and the trigger was the greed and mismanagement of the housing/mortgage markets, and ancillary incompetence of The Fed which tailored rates and availability in an attempt to keep the house of cards standing, rather than enforcing mechanisms to stabilize and rebuild the economy.
P.S. Mort...I predicted this collapse years ago, been repeating it consistently, and last year told you this was going to happen, the cause, how it could be stopped or dampened, and the duration of this event...
...and you ignorantly mocked me. As always. Maybe you ought to check your Reagan hate at the door, and start listening and learning for a change.
SMFH