The US is in pretty good shape, IMO, and will weather the extended malaise better than most.
Quote from syswizard:
Oh, you mean like the attorney in our area who was challenged in court and then awarded $260,000 in fees for the defense against a local school district right of privacy case. He did 4 weeks of work for that fee.
B.S. I say. Those people above are not productive relative to the rest of the populace. They perform stupid work for (relatively) exhorbitant fees.
You are definitely a bleeding heart liberal, aren't you ?
Good for you...and you alone.
Quote from piezoe:
Well, I am very much a "Liberal" in the traditional sense of the word. See any dictionary if you don't know what I mean.
I think it is very much a concern of us "liberals" that in the U.S. it is very difficult for anyone of modest means , or less, to obtain competent legal representation in a court of law. That concerns me, because I believe that to maintain a country on the basis of law everyone, regardless of means, needs access to competent legal representation. That's something we don't have in the U.S.A. That is especially true in criminal law.
I'm opposed, by the way, to letting lawyers make laws. It, to me, is a clear cut case of conflict of interest. Therefore if had my druthers I would forbid any lawyer from serving in a legislative body. Which is just the opposite of what we have now.
I'm in favor of tort reform, but not in the form of arbitrary caps on damages. That would be just as absurd as mandatory sentencing. The kind of tort reform I favor is nothing like what is being proposed.
I don't know what "bleeding heart" liberal means. Maybe you can explain it.
Over the years I've observed that it is common to think that someone we know little about can't be working as hard as we are and is making too much money for the work they are doing.Quote from syswizard:
Those people above are not productive relative to the rest of the populace. They perform stupid work for (relatively) exhorbitant fees.
$900 billion? You're off by about 1.4 trillion. Were you asleep during QE1 and QE2?Quote from 4thaugust1932:
US can print dollars to buy OPEC oil.
Other countries have to buy/borrow US dollars.
There is only about $900 billion paper and coin dollars.
There is about $14 trillion dollars worth of credit supplied by banks.
There is about $55 trillion dollars in total debt, again, supplied by banks.
What backs the dollar is the faith that the $14 trillion dollars will some day pay the $55 trillion dollars (plus $217 trillion dollars derivatives contracts) off.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triffin_dilemma
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ideal_money

Quote from ExchangeBonds:
...Bsam, unless you have some actual counter points, I'm not going to go on about myself or my family on this board. You can probably figure it out anyway since I have actual knowledge about this issue unlike some here.
Quote from syswizard:
I love this comment and it is so totally appropriate given our revenue starved government right now.
Prostitution, Gambling, Drugs and other vices are skipping their tax obligations in a manner similar to the corruption that has occurred in Greece !
USA = the new Greece.
The underground economy in America is nothing short of phenomenal right now. Therein lies our problem. Some people are "getting away with murder"....others are way "overpaying their share".
Totally unfair...and it cannot last.
Thus the Occupy Wallstreet movement...and other US radical organizations.