Obama's Radicalism Is Killing the Dow

Quote from Mercor:

The difference is that Reagan had to fight inflation with higher interest rates and he knew it was going to hurt business in the short term.

Obama has said nothing about his policies being negitive for business in the short term. I am beginning to believe Obama doesn't care about equity markets. He only cares about expanding goverment.
Obama doesn't understand the relationship between markets, capital and jobs.
Obama figures he can make all the jobs he needs from bigger goverment

I don't understand how he is trying to stimulate the economy and decrease the account deficit at the same.
 
Quote from OldTrader:

Are you a trader? Because if you are, then surely you remember the 40 handle drop in the S&P on 2/10 for instance, a drop that commenced with Tim Geithner testimony in Congress...
Eking out the last bit of mileage out of that one, aren't you?
 
Quote from Thunderdog:

Eking out the last bit of mileage out of that one, aren't you?

It's an example. Nearly every day though there's another example.

OldTrader
 
Quote from OldTrader:

It's an example. Nearly every day though there's another example.

OldTrader
And yet you continue to use this example from one day to the next and from one thread to the next...:p
 
Quote from Thunderdog:

And yet you continue to use this example from one day to the next and from one thread to the next...:p

And your point? If I use the example more than once, does it invalidate it?

OldTrader
 
Quote from NY_HOOD:

well,considering Obama has only been in office a little over a month,i doubt its his so called "radicalism" thats killing the dow. i think its the "radicalism" of wall streets stupidity and irresposibility thats killing the dow,don't ya think?

yes, I do.
 
Quote from Lightningdog:

I think that is one of major points of the article. Obama is raising income and capitol gains taxes during a recession.

This might be difficult for you to comprehend, but taxes are not going up until the Bush tax cuts expire at the end of 2010.

The logic behind rolling them back to the rates of the Clinton era in 2011 ( which I might add was the longest peace-time economic expansion in our nation's history ), is that we will hopefully be out of our Recession by then.

Duh.
 
Quote from Lightningdog:

I think that is one of major points of the article. Obama is raising income and capitol gains taxes during a recession. In addition, he is also proposing a carbon tax that will increase energy costs, as well as goods and services produced with energy.

The semantics of that "major point", as you say, may be correct, assuming the recession is still on in 2011, however it certainly is misleading, because in reality President Obama's 2010 budget calls for over a trillion dollars of net income tax reductions There is no net increase being called for in 2010, and the net decreases are expected to carry over into 2011.

Another point of the article, which is full of misguided opinions and short on facts, is this: " he's proposed [for social security] additional taxes on earnings above the current payroll tax cap of $106,800 -- a bad policy that would raise marginal tax rates still further and barely dent the long-run deficit. Well that's certainly debatable!

It is likely that a majority of US citizens believe this is the best way to make Social Security financially sound. It is not a radical idea in the least. For any one to suggest that social security contributions are no different from say taxes that pay for general government operation is highly misleading. Your contributions, and mine, to Social Security, are returned to you later in the form of a defined benefit retirement plan that you can not outlive. Contrast that to a typical 401K plan, if you will. Because of its shared risk feature S.S. requires lower contribution rate for the same benefit in perpetuity that a 401K plan would. Social Security is in reality a very efficient, well run government program, that gives the lie to those who falsely believe that government can't do anything well.

Sorry to have to say it, but the article you quote is just another WSJ opinion piece full of Wall Street drivel. It's the kind of thinking that got us into the current mess.
 
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