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Be nice is you actually read what you posted.
That's the pot calling the kettle black:
"...who do you suppose sets the price of individual medical procedures? If you said insurance companies or the government, you're only half right. Because the prices your insurance company pays are based on a set of values listed in a phone-book sized directory of billing codes. Those codes are pretty much the economic hierarchy of modern medicine. They say what's costs more: a colonoscopy or a CT scan or chemotherapy? And those values are set by a closed-door committee of the American Medical Association.
I already said that M/M sets their own prices...read my original post. My additional point is about how private insurance companies get theirs...it's NOT based on prices set by M/M. If they all were set by M/M, doctors would go out of business.
But what about the NAR Code of Ethics? Doesn't that protect the public?
You have to look at the greater good, how many atrocities do American presidents commit that we never hear about?
You also have to consider the context of his circumstances, many leader of the past would make Pinochet look like a boy scout.
Again it is like an aircraft carrier it takes time to get these things going especially when it was previously a socialist country.
You favor definitions quoted as scripture from within a black box of factual ignorance and denial. Axiom trumps fact for you simply by the act of your speech.
I like to think of it as having a professional view point verses having a practical view point.
The problem is that there is so much specious information out there.
I heard it said that there were only 6 Ausrians a hundred years ago.
It's clear from this video that the biggest problem in the US is the fact that the bottom 25% of citizens don't pay any taxes.
Only to a madman. You apparently are going crazy. (edit) the post was being sarcastic and I didn't catch it. My apologies.
He is just being sarcastic.
WOW! The UNtrustworthy are certainly in control of what information is apparent to the people!
Say hey! This was in the Wall Street Journal on March 30, 1999. Note "... how much it will buy."
Holy cow/interesting/compelling ...!
And where is it up to date??? Right here ... see the first chart shown in this thread.
Recent Dow day is Monday, December 9, 2013 __ Level is 102.5
WOW! It is hideous that this is hidden! Is there any such "Homes, Inflation Adjusted"? Yes! This was in the New York Times on August 27, 2006:
And up to date (by me) is here:
http://patrick.net/?p=1219038&c=999083#comment-999083
WOW! The UNtrustworthy are certainly in control of what information is apparent to the people!
You favor definitions quoted as scripture from within a black box of factual ignorance and denial. Axiom trumps fact for you simply by the act of your speech. It's like talking to an evangelical who's only argument against the concept of deep time is to quote the Bible. No wonder math and representations of measurement creep you out. Fuck facts, let's pray!
Statistics do not equate to fact. Lies, damned likes, and statistics :-)
When a Keynesian observes the rooster crowing 10 days in a row ahead of the sun popping above the horizon, he concludes the rooster causes sun to rise above the horizon based on the 100% correlation.
An Austrian would interject that the rooster is only an observer responding to whatever other phenomenon preceding the sun rise.
The Keynesian then gives the prescription that, in order for the sun to rise earlier, we can go molest roosters in their sleep! simply because their crowing would lead to the sun rise!
Ahem, and I quote myself:
http://patrick.net/?p=1234352&c=1026966#comment-1026966
I'm not convinced at the moment that Zimmerman is guilty of domestic violence. The whole case seems a bit fishy.
And this from a guy that is quite convinced that Zimmerman murdered Trayvon Martin.
I never in a million years would have thought I would be defending George Zimmerman. But I severely disapprove of false accusation of domestic violence or any other crime.
Now, if only the authorities could find some new evidence against Zimmerman in the Trayvon Martin case, at least there could be a civil case against him.
In contrast, when President Carter bailed out Chrysler, the bailout consisted of loan guarantees, and the taxpayers earned a $350 million profit.
The times, they are a changing.
werent there a bunch of people on this blog claiming that we made money from the bailouts???
So what's the solution?
House prices have to decline, to reflect the loss of wage power. In the meantime, families have to band together to live multigenerationally or with siblings or many will die very poor.
Falling house prices will mean less construction of new homes, which means a shortage of homes, which means higher rents.
Are you sure you want that?
A big house like that, in a wonderful area like that, with a rate that low.
I wish I had that problem.
Falling house prices will mean less construction of new homes, which means a shortage of homes, which means higher rents.
Are you sure you want that?
Well, eventually household formation will stop if rents rise. Then the banksters may as well slit their wrists. Here is the problem, housing has been pumped up by the wealthy, and is distorted compared to demand and wages. I don't know the answer, but high house prices can't exactly reduce rents, either.
The Walmart of home building can solve this whole problem rather quickly.
Unfortunately one of those doesn't exist at the moment.
Falling house prices will mean less construction of new homes, which means a shortage of homes, which means higher rents.
Are you sure you want that?
Well, eventually household formation will stop if rents rise. Then the banksters may as well slit their wrists. Here is the problem, housing has been pumped up by the wealthy, and is distorted compared to demand and wages. I don't know the answer, but high house prices can't exactly reduce rents, either.
I have no problems with bankers slitting their wrists, It ain't my blood that will flow.
There is no such thing as the wealthy pumping up prices. It's their money and if they want to pay more it's their business.
What will reduce rents is moving to a cheaper and smaller place.
A big house like that, in a wonderful area like that, with a rate that low.
I wish I had that problem.
Lol, isn't that the truth. And perhaps adjustables are for these people, however, if time comes to sell and he is under water, then what?
In that case he stops making payments, and you get to pay the bill.
That's even a better problem I wish I had.
whatever happened to that perma-bear theory that rents only go up with income (chart #1)?
wait until the dollar bubble bursts (within 10 years according to my estimate) then watch the rents skyrocket when my mortgage remains the same.
whatever happened to that perma-bear theory that rents only go up with income (chart #1)?
wait until the dollar bubble bursts (within 10 years) then watch the rents skyrocket when my mortgage remains the same.
That perma bear theory is crap. Rents are determined by demand and supply, and nothing else. No landlord in San Francisco cares if the McDonald burger flippers can afford rent or not.
it poses the question: which do you think is yours, the professional or the practical?
Austrian economics has been an avocation for a couple of years now, I'm not a professional but I try to view anything I do as one. It is pretty obvious when someone like Reality or Mish, or only a couple of others I have run across on the internet, are professional. The way you can tell is that one they know every nuance of the subject and they actually apply the knowledge, usually in business.
Something that has served me well is the idea of being interesting or interested. If you try to achieve the prior you will be in endless useless pissing/posturing contests. On the other hand you can be interested this is the guy who actually can apply the knowledge he succeeds as it sounds like you were with your business.
We don't get a spiff for turning people on to this subject. It might be worth a look?
by natural law "all about" this or that, being an exemplar of an unmeasurable quality recapitulating said natural law by virtue of the definition of a rooster. Austrians do two things: 1) define something; 2) say the thing. Then they're done.
Let's be Austrians. Here is natural law: porkfat is heavenly.
You obviously do not understand what natural law is. "Heavenly" is a personal subjective description, utterly irrelevant to any natural law. Natural law is not any particular person's subjective standard, but that which logical individual choices would lead to in the absence of man-made laws enforcing special privileges for certain individuals at the expense of others. For example, "thou shall not kill or steal" is a pretty simple natural law regardless what religion you believe or not believe; price control being an exercise in futility is another expression of natural law, because individuals faced with price control would act in self-interest or even cheat, leading to shortage at official price while moving transactions to black market, etc..
It is pretty obvious when someone like Reality or Mish, or only a couple of others I have run across on the internet, are professional. The way you can tell is that one they know every nuance of the subject and they actually apply the knowledge, usually in business.
Thank you for the compliment . . . although personally I do not profess to know every aspect of Austrianism, nor do I get paid for learning it or sharing it. Learning does help put my own ego in check, helping me to see the futility of empire building, and the joy in making other individuals happy/content, one at a time. I have been offered on numerous occasions to get paid for what I write, but I have chosen to maintain my privacy and independence. I guess large sums of money has never been a huge draw for me. I see money as tokens of appreciation; I'd rather earn them my own way from numerous people instead of becoming reliant upon any big patron.
I do not profess to know every aspect of Austrianism
Professionals usually don't. I hear you it is about the quality of the exchange.
werent there a bunch of people on this blog claiming that we made money from the bailouts???
Yes. Same ones that claimed the entire financial system would collapse if the tbtf banks went into bankruptcy or got nationalized.
Scheibe said in the affidavit that she "felt very intimidated" when she was being questioned by police and that police "misinterpreted" her. She also said she "may have misspoken about certain facts."
Women ! will drive you to an early grave....
ah the good old days....
werent there a bunch of people on this blog claiming that we made money from the bailouts???
Yes. Same ones that claimed the entire financial system would collapse if the tbtf banks went into bankruptcy or got nationalized.
I can't speak for anyone else, but I've been on record saying the bailouts were basically cost neutral--excepting, of course, GM. The auto bailout was always a loser. But, you should be thinking about what would have been the cost if GM were allowed to fail--lost jobs (GM and suppliers), lost tax revenue, unemployment benefits, etc. Would it have been more than $10B?
And, it's very easy for folks like Bob to claim that the financial system didn't need any bailouts AFTER it was bailed out. We'll never know what would have happened absent the liquidity injection, but if there was a 5% chance that the system collapses--is that a risk worth taking??
Just saw the last part of your post--who claims that the system fails if the banks got nationalized? I've never seen that argument anyway--what I see is the dreaded socialism claims.
But, you should be thinking about what would have been the cost if GM were allowed to fail--lost jobs (GM and suppliers), lost tax revenue, unemployment benefits, etc. Would it have been more than $10B?
That would be the price of fixing the problems that led to the bankruptcy; i.e. the GM capital structure and labor relationships that led to the inefficiencies and bankruptcy would have been removed, and the resources and human labor made available to other carmakers. Instead, the taxpayers were forced to cough up $10B or more for essentially a kick of the can down the road.
it's very easy for folks like Bob to claim that the financial system didn't need any bailouts AFTER it was bailed out. We'll never know what would have happened absent the liquidity injection, but if there was a 5% chance that the system collapses--is that a risk worth taking??
What if there is a 5% chance the sun won't rise if we don't sacrifice your first-born? Asking such question is committing fraud of the hypothetical. Banking will not cease to exist, so long as it is a necessary service. Some of the big banks would indeed cease to exist . . . turns out even one as big as Lehman getting liquidated did not result in much impact on the financial system. Swaps and derivatives are by definition zero-sum games. For every loser on a trade, there is a winner as his counter-party.
He's hung like a moose. And there is the future royalty stream from the movie series, George Zimmerman, Manhunter.
Wonder how the numbers are collected. The charts may actually reflect the rising underground economy instead of anything else. Just like the mushrooming of Americans on disability (not actually disabled) due to government policies, the combination of high taxes, high minimum wages and government subsidies is driving many Americans to take on jobs that pay under the table (like day labor off the books) or even illegal (such as drug trafficking and prostitution) while using low legit income to qualify for government subsidy programs.
NO they have Socialized medicine.
If we had a "Single payer" it would be nothing more than a Monopoly that would be free to charge at will while they enjoy a protected market without any competition.
Besides that it was always called "Socialized Medicine". Fuck if you even try to read the Wiki article on "Single Payer" the definition is all over the place, only written to project what other countries have with out actually giving us a "Socialized Medicine".
So basically a Single payer is ...
The Government assuming the role of Bluecross and Blueshield, with private contractors making all of the administrative calls.
Our implementation would come loaded with premiums, copays an all of the other hidden cost scheme, that comes with Insurance.
Here's one shoe fits all legal definition that our policy makers are using to sell this bill of shit...
In some cases doctors may be employed, and hospitals run by, the government such as in the United Kingdom. Alternatively the government may purchase healthcare services from outside organizations. This is the approach taken in Canada.
Sure sounds like two different definitions than what we would end up with. So basically a "Single Payer" is what ever Harry Reid and Nancy Pelosi would call the damn thing. Tell a lie long enough, then "Obamacare" starts to sound like a Single Payer system.
What difference does it fucking make who I write a $1600 (or more)check a month too?
What if there is a 5% chance the sun won't rise if we don't sacrifice your first-born? Asking such question is committing fraud of the hypothetical.
lol--but we know that sacrificing my first born has no bearing on the sun rising. Are you implying that it was known that the banking system wouldn't fail? You're committing the fraud of false analogy.
What if there is a 5% chance the sun won't rise if we don't sacrifice your first-born? Asking such question is committing fraud of the hypothetical.
lol--but we know that sacrificing my first born has no bearing on the sun rising. Are you implying that it was known that the banking system wouldn't fail? You're committing the fraud of false analogy.
Yes we know that. "Banking system fail" is a (false) imagination of the mind, like unicorn and tooth fairy. When one or several restaurants or supermarkets close, we don't call that "food distribution system failure." So long as there is market demand, someone else will step in, and probably do a better job without the government putting the burden of rescuing existing banks on them.
There actually has never been in human history a sudden stoppage of all banking activity in a society except for when the government banned all banks from opening. It's always a government-made crisis.
When one or several restaurants or supermarkets close, we don't call that "food distribution system failure." So long as there is market demand, someone else will step in, and probably do a better job without the government putting the burden of rescuing existing banks on them
So, when the CEO of GE was saying he was concerned that he wouldn't be able to make payroll, that's the tooth fairy? When Warren Buffet actually made trades on the open market with investors giving them a negative rate of return on their investments(They gave him $x now in return for $x-1 in the future)--that's a unicorn?
Comparing the entire banking system to a supermarket is the height of idiocy. Sure, new banks would form and take the old banks place. You might have a few years of cannibal anarchy in between, but I guess that doesn't bother you.
So, when the CEO of GE was saying he was concerned that he wouldn't be able to make payroll, that's the tooth fairy?
So you think taxpayers should subsidize big corporations that leverage on their payroll money? Companies that can not meet payroll should be bankrupted because they leverage too much and take too much risk with their worker's well being. The corporate officers engaged in such behavior should be arrested if any dereliction of duty is found.
To advocate that big corporations should be able to call in government to levy the taxpayers to help is little more than advocating the looting of the poor and the middle class to enrich the already wealthy.
When Warren Buffet actually made trades on the open market with investors giving them a negative rate of return on their investments(They gave him $x now in return for $x-1 in the future)--that's a unicorn?
It's called a storage fee . . . like that for any other types of goods, the collecting of which would serve as a deterrence against "hoarding" that you decry so much. Ironic you think that natural market deterrence against hoarding of money should be lifted by the government by ensuring interest is always positive (i.e. storage fee for money is always made to be negative).
Comparing the entire banking system to a supermarket is the height of idiocy.
No it is not. Food and water is far more immediately critical to human existence than even money. It takes more time and labor to set up a new supermarket with all the variety of foods than to open a new bank. In fact, if not for government restriction, there would be banks all over the town in every town. The stocking of money and taking a percentage is far simpler than the stocking of foods; unlike the vast varieties of food, money does not perish and is fungible.
Sure, new banks would form and take the old banks place. You might have a few years of cannibal anarchy in between, but I guess that doesn't bother you.
Banks do not leverage like crazy already exist, and would have been more if not for the FED subsidizing crazy levels of leverage through the bailouts that you advocate. Cannibal Anarchy did not take place in Iceland when all three of their big banks failed.
So, who's going to write the check to pay us back and for putting our kids farther in debt??
Ahh... typical Republian-speak. "We're putting our kids in debt!" without looking at the bigger picture.
The better question to ask in this situation would be how much BIGGER would the costs have been to future generations if GM and Chrysler had not been bailed out? Exactly how much would it have cost not only the average taxpayer, but the overall economy to pay for long-term unemployment of millions of autoworkers, parts manufactures, car dealer salespeople, the businesses that supported all those mentioned above, not to mention the permanent loss of the majority of one of the largest sources of US manufacturing jobs?
The answer to all that is that the loss of GM and Chrysler would have resulted in a net loss and cost to the US economy, and the employees tied to them would have dwarfed the 10 billion dollar amount mentioned above. That and not to mention that if these two companies were gone, the long-term costs would have been untold billions and billions worth of future taxes collected in the form of employee income tax, interest from individual cars sales, property taxes from corporate facilities, taxes paid from dealerships, and the broader financial benefits of simply having millions of taxpaying workers and corporate executives contributing to the US economy as a whole versus simply no longer contributing anything.
What I find ironic about this whole debate is that the very conservatives who continually tout Reaganomics from a perspective where trickle-down economics are surely the way to a brighter economic future for some reason don't get that while this theory does not and never will work on a private level, the bailout was in fact a perfect example of a trickle-down economic fix that worked: The auto companies were responsible for the economic well-being of literally millions of workers and many 1000's of companies, from the assemblyline workers to the small deli across the street from a factory selling sandwiches: The bailout served to benefit all of those interlocking pieces up and down the line, so in effect did have a trickle-down effect.
Given the costs that would have occurred had these companies been allowed to go under would have been devastating and many times greater than the 10 billion mentioned above, the decision that was made due to simple mathematics: Its about money and anyone with even an elementary understanding of how math works would be able to see what an obvious decision this was and also recognize the result as an overwhelming success.
The better question to ask in this situation would be how much BIGGER would the costs have been to future generations if GM and Chrysler had not been bailed out? Exactly how much would it have cost not only the average taxpayer, but the overall economy to pay for long-term unemployment of millions of autoworkers, parts manufactures, car dealer salespeople, the businesses that supported all those mentioned above, not to mention the permanent loss of the majority of one of the largest sources of US manufacturing jobs?
Suppose these companies had tied up hundreds of thousands of workers making horse saddles and whips, your argument would have run just the same, and equally invalid.
What you are not seeing is that: the workers, parts suppliers and dealers would have been absorbed by other carmakers that turn out cars more profitably (to the extent that consumers need cars; the rest will find more profitable employment in other fields in the absence of government disincentive to work).
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