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| View Poll Results: Most frequently said word: | |||
| Uhhhh |
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25 | 58.14% |
| Mobility |
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2 | 4.65% |
| Education |
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1 | 2.33% |
| Wage |
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1 | 2.33% |
| Inequality |
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5 | 11.63% |
| Economic |
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7 | 16.28% |
| Partisanship |
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2 | 4.65% |
| Voters: 43. You may not vote on this poll | |||
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#91
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#92
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Lune, don't take this the wrong way, but I want to give an analogy.
You have claimed that snake oil cures cancer. I asked for some evidence to support that claim. You then gave me 3 cases of people who took snake oil and then beat cancer, and the words of a guy who spent a good part of his life selling snake oil. I hope you can think a little more critically than that. | ||
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#93
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And something being 'snake oil' goes both ways. I've provided a hell of a lot more evidence for the perniciousness of deregulation in this situation than you have against it. I'm claiming deregulation occurred and that it hurt, not that it was solely responsible for all our problems. Also, I think there is a compelling case for government intervention in financial markets being immensely destructive and playing a major (probably causative) role in the crash. But you're not even making it, just jacking off to your blanket hatred of government intervention and trying to sloppily apply those principles to the discussion in this thread while being as condescending and dismissive as possible. Quote:
There are wider problems with the system than a simple deregulation - regulation dichotomy, and I acknowledge that. But that's all outside the scope of the points I was trying to make, and the facts I was providing. The reasons I dislike libertarianism and dislike the free market lie almost exclusively outside the scope of this thread. I'm not being narrow-minded just because I'm focusing on getting certain facts straight. But really this has gotten pretty laughable. Hitler: "I hate Jews, and I've systematically killed millions of them". Historians: "Did Hitler really hate Jews? I mean, he says he did, and he exterminated them. But we can't really ever use a single person as evidence. He might by lying, or coerced. I guess we'll never really know whether Hitler actually hated Jews." This thread has been Godwin'd. Thank you, and good night | ||||
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#94
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You type a lot of words yes. But you say very little. I'm asking you for a shred of evidence to back up your claims of massive deregulation. You offer anecdotes and testimony of people who give no evidence of your claims themselves. Just think critically and objectively for 5 minutes and try to think of a way to determine whether banking regulation decreased or increased as a whole during the period in question. You can go back to your emotion-based arguments after that 5 minute period, if you choose to.
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#95
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No, you're just moving the goalposts. If you don't like my evidence, that's your problem. I've already explained it sufficiently and addressed your objections.
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#96
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#97
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I've responded to every one of your assaults on my evidence, but now you're demanding that I reply in a very specific way and you're trying to dictate the conditions under which I can make my point. All this while implying I'm being subjective and ignoring my defense of my evidence.
Moving the goalposts isn't about the conditions you've omitted, it's about the ones you are trying to enforce. The idea that a testimony isn't evidence is fucking laughable, especially when you don't even try to make a compelling case against Greenspan. | ||
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#98
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Is not a testimony, by law, evidence?
__________________
![]() Tanrin,Rinat,Sprucewaynee | ||
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#99
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I think the point Orruar is trying to make is that the financial sector is pretty intricate, and for anyone person to simply say "deregulation caused this" is a little tough to swallow as convincing evidence considering that this is one of, if not the most heavily regulated industry. Also, there was no considerable deregulation after 2000, note the examples that Lune gave, and creating affordable housing goals dates back to 1932 and more simliar to what we see today in the late 60's. We're talking some serious policy lag here. Something else that was happening while this bubble was forming? Greenspan cut the fed funds rate from 6.5% in 2000 down to a low of 1%, which actually kept the real interest rate negative for 3 years. I'd argue the negative interest rates led more to a housing bubble than deregulation.
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#100
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