1/4% Tax on all stock trades pushed in NY Times today

Quote from benwm:

yeah, that was about as one sided as you can get, "high velocity trading caused the crisis"...an interesting take...

:p
but it's scary when you think about there being people who actually believe in this kind of bullshit... like Berkeley students for example
 
Quote from muller:

but it's scary when you think about there being people who actually believe in this kind of bullshit... like Berkeley students for example



Berkeley? lol True. Their the type of liberals (along with Susan Sarandon) that would be advocating for the release of Osama Bin Laden, should we capture him.
 
Hey guys, you're doing a great job with this thread, please continue to stay current and post on topic content whenever it becomes available.

While not everyone on ET agrees with the thread, and some are willing to just rollover and play dead while this populst idiocy rages on both here and abroad, don't let that nonsense deter you in the least.

We know exactly what type of Government the Democrats want to create ... and if people don't take action to stop them, they will.
 
Quote from rsikit:

Here is the cnbc video for those who missed it:

http://www.cnbc.com/id/15840232?video=1372185738&play=1

Its pretty funny the guy on the left has no idea what he is talking about or does not even make sense when he keeps talking about layers and high velocity trading.
That's a great video rsikit.

It goes a long way towards showing that the proponents of the Financial Transaction Tax don't have a clue when it comes to understanding what caused the financial meltdown, or the role that the financial markets play in maintaining free markets, transparency and liquidity.

If anything, a FTT would be ruinous to our already unstable economy and could concievably be the push that sends us into a recession ... I sincerely hope the common sense displayed by Chris Edwards of the Cato Inst. holds sway ... and yes, Mark Walsh really is an idiot, but that is what makes him dangerous.
 
What we need is a hedge, not sure how, I'm leaning towards perhaps some more Republicans in Congress. But politicians are politicians. What other hedges can we do for situations like this?
 
Quote from traderjb:

What we need is a hedge, not sure how, I'm leaning towards perhaps some more Republicans in Congress. But politicians are politicians. What other hedges can we do for situations like this?

prop firms?
 
Quote from traderjb:

What we need is a hedge, not sure how, I'm leaning towards perhaps some more Republicans in Congress. But politicians are politicians. What other hedges can we do for situations like this?
Here are a few of the things we can do:

1. Write your Senators.

2. Write the IMF.

3. Stay up-to-date and current on all of the relevant news.

***

Everyone is hopefully doing all of the above, to the best degree they can. While this is seasideheights thread, and he was (and is) a strong force against the financial transaction tax at its earliest stages, this nasty little problem isn't going to go away by ignoring it or putting our heads in the sand.

We're going to have to continue fighting this "grass roots" style. Stay abreast of the issues, write Chris Edwards, Director of Tax Policy Studies at Cato Institutue. Do what you can, how you can, while you can.
 
Quote from themarket:

I'm torn. I really don't know which is more horrifying. The transaction tax or the responses of the people who have posted comments to the NYT in FAVOR of it. Does ANYBODY know how our system is supposed to work anymore?

For the love of GOD...please bring Economics back to the high school classroom!
Quote from Landis82:

Agreed 100%.

Our kids and the many Adults have no clue when it comes to basic Economics . . . they need to make this a MANDATORY one-year curriculum at the high school level.
for starters; go read Economics in One Lesson by Henry Hazlitt
http://www.amazon.com/Economics-One...=sr_1_4?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1262128630&sr=1-4
 
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