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Petrovsk Mizinski View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 11 2008 at 17:43
Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:

I'm one of millions of unemployed people here in the USA, which has an unemployment rate sitting right under a scary 7%.

I lost my job as a teacher in July (which had nothing to do with the economic at all, but with major property tax cuts).  I've applied to over 75 positions, and had two interviews that went nowhere.

And companies continue to lay off workers, or as the British say, the "redundancies."

I hoping things take a turn for the better come January.  At least gasoline is under two dollars a gallon.


Not very on topic in terms of the topic at large, but geezus dude, that's a harsh situation man.
Hope things are going be looking better down the track for you financially.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 11 2008 at 18:18
Originally posted by Slartibartfast Slartibartfast wrote:

Originally posted by kibble_alex kibble_alex wrote:

However, I am planning to take an economics degree at University. I'm highly interested in it and I know a fair bit also.



Hmm, I wonder what the unemployment rate is for economists? LOL


Oh I love your irony

Probably pretty high actually. Looking at the unemployment rates of the past few years, it doesn't look too promising for the future. In the UK they have fallen from 6.1% to 5.8%, but that won't last for long and it will probably rise back up again if the banks don't get bailed out. Then again, Gordon Brown might have something tucked up his sleeve - but I seriously doubt it. I walked over to my local corner shop this afternoon to buy a simple Galaxy, and it was shut. I found out it had gone out of business, whilst about 6 months ago they were thriving. It's better over here in the UK, but not that much better.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 11 2008 at 18:24
Originally posted by Tapfret Tapfret wrote:

Please don't boot me for posting the S word, but this is just too apropos. 



maybe they'll boot me for quoting it as well..... nice gig if you can get it...  the private jets with hats in hand was priceless.   Should be a condition from Congress as well....  each one of their jobs... immediate resignation.. no f**king bonuses.. golden parachutes or whatever.  Like that guy I read about who asked for a 10 million bonus simply because the finanical institution he led (the name escapes me) only lost so many billions but didn't go tits up.  Nice....

almost to the point of agreeing with the wackos on the right and just saying.. let the f**kers go bankrupt.. and start over.  The workers are screwed either way....
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 11 2008 at 18:30
Ladies and Gents, I present you with Starbucks.  The ultimate coffee luxury (by volume) in the USA is in the crapper due to the economy.    Folgers is looking pretty good right about now.  Buy enough coffee for two weeks for 8 bucks or spend 5 bucks a day at Starbucks?  Do the math.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 11 2008 at 18:32
Let me give you another example of entrepenurial idiocy.  About a mile from where I work, there is a lot of retail space and a lot of restaurants.  About 50 restaurants in a mile long stretch.  But TGI Friday's decides to build a restaurant right there.  Out of business in 6 months.  A fast food taco place build a brand new building right there.  Out of business in 3 months.  Supply and demand meant nothing. to them and some people took a huge bath. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 11 2008 at 18:35
Originally posted by johnobvious johnobvious wrote:

Ladies and Gents, I present you with Starbucks.  The ultimate coffee luxury (by volume) in the USA is in the crapper due to the economy.    Folgers is looking pretty good right about now.  Buy enough coffee for two weeks for 8 bucks or spend 5 bucks a day at Starbucks?  Do the math.




hahaha....   yeah... Folgers will look good when the half smoked cigarettes off the ground start look appetizing.

gotta have my starbucks Clap




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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 11 2008 at 18:39
Originally posted by johnobvious johnobvious wrote:

Let me give you another example of entrepenurial idiocy.  About a mile from where I work, there is a lot of retail space and a lot of restaurants.  About 50 restaurants in a mile long stretch.  But TGI Friday's decides to build a restaurant right there.  Out of business in 6 months.  A fast food taco place build a brand new building right there.  Out of business in 3 months.  Supply and demand meant nothing. to them and some people took a huge bath. 


I've been reading about the decline in business in those type of resturants for at least a year or so...  they are crazy to be opening any.  As you said.. enterpenurial idiocy. Clap  In these times.. those chili dogs.. 2 for $2.22 at the 7-11 hit the spot
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 11 2008 at 19:15
Originally posted by micky micky wrote:

Originally posted by Tapfret Tapfret wrote:

Please don't boot me for posting the S word, but this is just too apropos. 



maybe they'll boot me for quoting it as well..... nice gig if you can get it...  the private jets with hats in hand was priceless.   Should be a condition from Congress as well....  each one of their jobs... immediate resignation.. no f**king bonuses.. golden parachutes or whatever.  Like that guy I read about who asked for a 10 million bonus simply because the finanical institution he led (the name escapes me) only lost so many billions but didn't go tits up.  Nice....

almost to the point of agreeing with the wackos on the right and just saying.. let the f**kers go bankrupt.. and start over.  The workers are screwed either way....


You mean I've been showing restraint all this time from linking to comics and images with curse words for nothing? LOL
Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 11 2008 at 19:20
Originally posted by Slartibartfast Slartibartfast wrote:

Originally posted by micky micky wrote:

Originally posted by Tapfret Tapfret wrote:

Please don't boot me for posting the S word, but this is just too apropos. 



maybe they'll boot me for quoting it as well..... nice gig if you can get it...  the private jets with hats in hand was priceless.   Should be a condition from Congress as well....  each one of their jobs... immediate resignation.. no f**king bonuses.. golden parachutes or whatever.  Like that guy I read about who asked for a 10 million bonus simply because the finanical institution he led (the name escapes me) only lost so many billions but didn't go tits up.  Nice....

almost to the point of agreeing with the wackos on the right and just saying.. let the f**kers go bankrupt.. and start over.  The workers are screwed either way....


You mean I've been showing restraint all this time from linking to comics and images with curse words for nothing? LOL


leave it to us to find ways around the autocensor LOL


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 11 2008 at 19:50
That looks exactly l;ike one of our cats.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 11 2008 at 19:58
More happy news:


Former Nasdaq chairman arrested for fraud

Madoff reportedly told employees Ponzi scheme lost billions for customers

Thousands gather on Pearl Harbor anniversary

Detective: Teen was chained in fireplace

Pentagon 'dragging its feet' on injured vets

Illinois governor's words 'beyond greed'

Most viewed on msnbc.com


NEW YORK - Bernard Madoff, a longtime fixture on Wall Street, was arrested and charged on Thursday with allegedly running a $50 billion Ponzi scheme, U.S. authorities said.

The former chairman of the Nasdaq Stock Market who remains a member of Nasdaq OMX Group Inc’s nominating committee, is best known as the founder of Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC, the closely-held market-making firm he founded in 1960.

But the alleged fraud involved a hedge fund he ran from a separate floor of the building where his brokerage is based.

Madoff told senior employees of his firm on Wednesday that “it’s all just one big lie” and that it was “basically, a giant Ponzi scheme,” with estimated investor losses of about $50 billion, according to a criminal complaint against him.

A Ponzi scheme is a pyramid-type swindle in which very high returns are promised to early investors, who are paid off with money put up by later investors.

Prosecutors charged Madoff, 70, with a single count of securities fraud. They said he faces up to 5 years in prison and a fine of up to $5 million.

“Madoff stated that the business was insolvent, and that it had been for years,” Lev Dassin, acting United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, said in a statement.

Authorities said that, according to a document filed by Madoff with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on January 7, 2008, Madoff’s investment advisory business served between 11 and 25 clients and had a total of about $17.1 billion in assets under management.

“Bernard Madoff is a longstanding leader in the financial services industry,” his lawyer Dan Horwitz told reporters outside a downtown Manhattan courtroom where he was arraigned. “We will fight to get through this unfortunate set of events.”

A shaken Madoff stared at the ground as reporters peppered him with questions. He was released after posting a $10 million bond secured by his Manhattan apartment.

The SEC filed separate civil charges.

“Our complaint alleges a stunning fraud -- both in terms of scope and duration,” said Scott Friestad, the SEC’s deputy enforcer. “We are moving quickly and decisively to stop the scheme and protect the remaining assets for investors.”

The SEC said it appeared that virtually all of the assets of his hedge fund business were missing.

Madoff had long kept the financial statements for his hedge fund business under “lock and key,” according to prosecutors, and was “cryptic” about the firm.

Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities has more than $700 million in capital, according to its website. It is a market maker for about 350 Nasdaq stocks, including Apple, EBay and Dell, according to the website.

The website also states that Madoff himself has “a personal interest in maintaining the unblemished record of value, fair-dealing, and high ethical standards that has always been the firm’s hallmark.”
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 11 2008 at 20:02
Originally posted by Tapfret Tapfret wrote:

That looks exactly l;ike one of our cats.


 
I do say that's a fine looking cat occupying a typically cat-friendly place. 
 
On the economy, I only gotta say, and I'm not religious, "please please Lord give me the strength to not open my 401K statement".
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 11 2008 at 21:42
Has Zimbabwe ever not been a terrible place to live?
if you own a sodastream i hate you
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 11 2008 at 22:04

"Best damn government cheese ever" Rachel Maddow



"Italian Government Bails Out Cheese Producers

Morning Edition, December 10, 2008 · As governments around the world bail out troubled industries, the Italian government is buying 100,00 wheels of parmigiano cheese. The Wall Street Journal reports the government will donate the cheese to charity. The problem isn't deteriorating demand. Apparently Italy's parmagiano industry has been financially shaky for years " National Public Radio

However over here...

"Government cheese, or "Pasteurized Process American Cheese for Use in Domestic Programs", is processed cheese that was provided to welfare and food stamp recipients in the United States during the 1980s. (The style of cheese predated the era, having been used in military kitchens since the Second World War.)

The cheese was bought and stored by the government's Commodity Credit Corporation. Direct distribution of dairy products began in 1982 under the Temporary Emergency Food Assistance Program of the Food and Nutrition Service. According to the government, it "slices and melts well."[1] The cheese was provided monthly, in unsliced block form, with generic product labeling and packaging."  Wikipedia


Hot Plate Heaven At The Green Hotel

by Frank Zappa

"I used to have a job
An' I was doin' very well
Depression came along
An' everybody start to yell
"Where'd they go, them good ol' days,
'An all that crap we used to sell?"
Now I'm in Hot-Plate Heaven,
at the Green Hotel

Republicans is fine,
If you're a multi-millionaire
Democrats is fair,
If all you own is what you wear
Neither of 'em's REALLY right,
'Cause neithor of 'em CARE
'Bout that Hot-Plate Heaven,
'Cause they ain't been there"...



Edited by Slartibartfast - December 11 2008 at 22:13
Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 11 2008 at 23:02
Funny how governments trust the little people when it comes to cutting taxes (let them choose where they want to spend, they know better than governments), but it doesn't trust them when it comes to handing out multi billion dollar corporate welfare.
Once more, I say - give the bailouts to the citizen, let him vote with that money as to who (corporation-wise) should survive and who should be left to die.
If GM goes under, do you really believe that their 20% market share of sales will disappear ? Toyota, Honda, Hyundai, heck Subaru, will take up the slack. And with those companies expanding their operations in host countries as the sales increase, much of the slack will be picked up. It will just mean that GM/Ford/Chrysler workers won't get their $75/hour, and their retirees won't get pension increases every new contract.
Yes, you read that right, American car companies and the Unions would include increases to retirees pension for those already retired.
"Here I am talking to some of the smartest people in the world and I didn't even notice,” Lieutenant Columbo, episode The Bye-Bye Sky-High I.Q. Murder Case.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 12 2008 at 08:18
Originally posted by micky micky wrote:

Originally posted by johnobvious johnobvious wrote:

Ladies and Gents, I present you with Starbucks.  The ultimate coffee luxury (by volume) in the USA is in the crapper due to the economy.    Folgers is looking pretty good right about now.  Buy enough coffee for two weeks for 8 bucks or spend 5 bucks a day at Starbucks?  Do the math.




hahaha....   yeah... Folgers will look good when the half smoked cigarettes off the ground start look appetizing.

gotta have my starbucks Clap






Bet the lines are shorter nowadays so bonus for you.Wink
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 12 2008 at 08:28
Slart, I read a long article about the cheese thing in the WSJ.  They are selling cheese for less than it costs to make it.  There is something like 500 small, independent parmigiano cheese makers in Italy and there is more supply than demand.  The strong should survive and the weak go out of business.  That is a free market system.  But the Italian gov't is going to make an ill-fated attempt to fix the situation when it will only delay many of these outfits shuttering their doors.

I know first hand about this situation.  I work for one of the top pet supply companies in America.  I keep track of all the competition as part of my job.  I have a list of over 700 other companies selling pet supplies (no pet food or cat litter) in the USA.  Any clown can import a toy from China or cook up a new treat in their kitchen, get assigned a manufacturer's code (upc number for their company) and they are out peddling their wares.  A lot of these small guys are going to face dire straits through this turndown.  There will not be a buyout for them, nor should there be.  I don't like to see people out of work but when they get into this particular business it is dog eat dog (pun intended).  And it is part of my job and my company's goal to hasten as many departures out of our market as we can.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 12 2008 at 09:44
Originally posted by kibble_alex kibble_alex wrote:


So as you all know, many countries are in a downturn at the moment, the main culprit being oil prices in my opinion.
You're confusing the cause and effect here. Oil is a commodity and as such its material value is pretty much a constant. Its price however is not and may fluctuate because of supply-demand conditions. The demand of late was rising, but so was the supply as such countries as Angola, Equatorial Guinea, etc., joined the ranks of oil producing states. So if the supply is adequate the culprit should be something else.
Now if you can think for a moment of money as a commodity, the supply-demand laws are applicable here too. So the more the money supply, the lower its price, i.e. the buying power. Thus since everything else is denominated in Money, the lower the price of money, the higher the price of everything else.
Originally posted by kibble_alex kibble_alex wrote:

and if we are not careful with the bank bailouts, we may be in a rare deflation state.
I know the situation with banks in England in general. Just curious what you mean by the corelation of the bailout and deflation.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 12 2008 at 09:52
Originally posted by johnobvious johnobvious wrote:

I usually at least leaf through the Wall St Journal every day and it is depressing and becoming a vicious cycle.  People losing their jobs, people spending less so more places have to cut jobs and so on and so on.  The United States has built it's economy on people wanting to own so much superfluous crap and others building businesses and employing people to sell them that crap that once we all opened our eyes and realized that maybe we only need essentials, it is like a house of cards come crumbling down. And when we buy less stuff, we are also importing less stuff so that affects other countries as well who have built up industries on American's desire to own.
Consumerism is the mantra of the past couple decades. Hard to tell if it's harmful or beneficial as it has both its positives and negatives
Originally posted by johnobvious johnobvious wrote:


Bailout or no, I think we are in the dumper for quite some time. 
Looks this way.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 12 2008 at 09:55
Originally posted by johnobvious johnobvious wrote:

Atkingani:  well at least one of the major forces who ran us into the ground is gone and that is Alan Greenspan.  The most overrated government official in quite some time was nothing but a fraud.  If that guy sleeps at night, I would be even more mad than I am now. 
He's singled out as a scapegoat for now, but he hadn't been the only one who ran us into the ground. At the very least Clinton and Rubin should be added to the list
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