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	<title>Comments on: Crash into me</title>
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	<link>http://www.palmettoscoop.com/2009/03/02/crash-into-me/</link>
	<description>REINVENTING THE S.C. SCENE</description>
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		<title>By: Jackie</title>
		<link>http://www.palmettoscoop.com/2009/03/02/crash-into-me/comment-page-1/#comment-432754</link>
		<dc:creator>Jackie</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 02 Mar 2009 19:44:09 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>Bull, the Republicans brought all of this down on our heads, and now, no matter what anyone does to try and fix the problem, they are going to attack them, the same way they have attacked anyone who criticized them, or disagreed with them for the past 8 years.  Acting as though it is a major catastrophe because the market has dropped 800 point under Obama when they presided over a 4500 point drop while telling the public, everything is fine and the economy is fundamentally strong is the height of hypocrisy.&quot;  They didn&#039;t know what they were doing then, and they don&#039;t know what they&#039;re doing now. 

  Maybe Obama does not know how to do to stop this mess, but he is trying, and who should we look to as to how to get out of this hole?  Our choices are, the new guy, or the guys who dug the hole and pushed us in.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Bull, the Republicans brought all of this down on our heads, and now, no matter what anyone does to try and fix the problem, they are going to attack them, the same way they have attacked anyone who criticized them, or disagreed with them for the past 8 years.  Acting as though it is a major catastrophe because the market has dropped 800 point under Obama when they presided over a 4500 point drop while telling the public, everything is fine and the economy is fundamentally strong is the height of hypocrisy.&#8221;  They didn&#8217;t know what they were doing then, and they don&#8217;t know what they&#8217;re doing now. </p>
<p>  Maybe Obama does not know how to do to stop this mess, but he is trying, and who should we look to as to how to get out of this hole?  Our choices are, the new guy, or the guys who dug the hole and pushed us in.</p>
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		<title>By: Charles</title>
		<link>http://www.palmettoscoop.com/2009/03/02/crash-into-me/comment-page-1/#comment-432736</link>
		<dc:creator>Charles</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 02 Mar 2009 18:47:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.palmettoscoop.com/?p=5752#comment-432736</guid>
		<description>I agree that what has been proposed thus far has not helped the Stock Market.  Will it help the general economy and will that trickle down to the Stock Market?  We will simply have to wait and see.  The stock market is not the entire economy, it is only one part.  However,  its collapse has taken the rest of the economy with it primarily for three reasons.   1)  Gas going to 4 and 5 dollars per gallon for an extended period of time crushed the middle class leaving anyone who was stretching to make ends meet  unable to pay their mortgage; while simultaneously destroying the country&#039;s only remaining major manufacturing industry, the automobile industry.   2)  The repeal of the Glass  Steagall Act (which was enacted at the end of the Great Depression to prevent a Wall Street collapse from taking down the rest of the economy) left the banks free to become investment banks and invest their capital reserves in speculative securities.  It also allowed banks and insurance companies to become so large that the failure of any one could take the economy with it.  Those failures then occurred.  3)   Finally, the war in Iraq, stripped the treasury of a trillion dollars and hampered our ability to work with traditional allies to stop the bleeding because much of the world no longer trusted us and so long as it was not impacting them, enjoyed watching us struggle (now they realize it is impacting them, but it may be too late).

  The most frightening part is more and more signs are pointing to the possibility that we do not have the resources to stop the collapse of the Stock Market, and we may be no where near the bottom.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I agree that what has been proposed thus far has not helped the Stock Market.  Will it help the general economy and will that trickle down to the Stock Market?  We will simply have to wait and see.  The stock market is not the entire economy, it is only one part.  However,  its collapse has taken the rest of the economy with it primarily for three reasons.   1)  Gas going to 4 and 5 dollars per gallon for an extended period of time crushed the middle class leaving anyone who was stretching to make ends meet  unable to pay their mortgage; while simultaneously destroying the country&#8217;s only remaining major manufacturing industry, the automobile industry.   2)  The repeal of the Glass  Steagall Act (which was enacted at the end of the Great Depression to prevent a Wall Street collapse from taking down the rest of the economy) left the banks free to become investment banks and invest their capital reserves in speculative securities.  It also allowed banks and insurance companies to become so large that the failure of any one could take the economy with it.  Those failures then occurred.  3)   Finally, the war in Iraq, stripped the treasury of a trillion dollars and hampered our ability to work with traditional allies to stop the bleeding because much of the world no longer trusted us and so long as it was not impacting them, enjoyed watching us struggle (now they realize it is impacting them, but it may be too late).</p>
<p>  The most frightening part is more and more signs are pointing to the possibility that we do not have the resources to stop the collapse of the Stock Market, and we may be no where near the bottom.</p>
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