They claim to be free market advocates, when it's really an anything-goes mentality. No regulation, no supervision, no discipline. And if you fail, you will have a golden parachute, and the taxpayer will bail you out... The party is over in that respect. Democrats believe in a free market. We know that it can create jobs, it can create wealth, it can create many good things in our economy. But in this case, in its unbridled form, as encouraged, supported, by the Republicans - some in the Republican party, not all - it has created not jobs, not capital; it has created chaos.
A technically-oriented trading blog sprinkled with various (ir)relevant and/or (ir)reverent musings (formerly known as Musings of a Trader)
December 21, 2009
TARP Bill Memories
December 20, 2009
We Are All Cynics Now
This can be seen in the increasingly urgent political plight of Barack Obama. Though the American left and right don’t agree on much, they are both now coalescing around the suspicion that Obama’s brilliant presidential campaign was as hollow as Tiger’s public image — a marketing scam designed to camouflage either his covert anti-American radicalism (as the right sees it) or spineless timidity (as the left sees it). The truth may well be neither, but after a decade of being spun silly, Americans can’t be blamed for being cynical about any leader trying to sell anything. As we say goodbye to the year of Tiger Woods, it is the country, sad to say, that is left mired in a sand trap with no obvious way out.
December 18, 2009
Blogs and Introverts
We are all these days — inveterate introverts or not — increasingly disconnected people. What I’ve learned over the past four years is that we can use sites like this to disconnect further, or to transcend our apparent differences and find our common humanity. The pain caused by the first can be acute. The pleasure of the latter is immeasurable.
December 14, 2009
Walter Scott Bruan, Day Trading Pioneer, R.I.P.
Paul Samuelson
If government gets too big, and too great a portion of the nation’s income passes through it, he said, government becomes inefficient and unresponsive to the human needs “we do-gooders extol,” and thus risks infringing on freedoms.
But, he said, no serious political or economic thinker would reject the fundamental Keynesian idea that a benevolent democratic government must do what it can to avert economic trouble in areas the free markets cannot. Neither government alone nor the markets alone, he said, could serve the public welfare without help from the other.