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With respect to the prosecutions - its 3+ years later and still COMPLETELY empty.
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Over the next few years it appears as though MORE Cadillacs will be produced overseas, namely in China. I guess we really don't have an employment problem here. I am curious as to what the UAW thinks of this development. Personally, I'm thrilled with them building more vehicles there and not here. :yelsick: From The Detroit News: |
My impression is that the china-built GM cars are just FOR china/east-asia, not being imported back to the states, and that china makes importing cars into china difficult, as well as making their own knockoff versions in their own factories for a fraction of the price.
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Well, they're going to do it either way - might as well give themselves a chance to compete right?
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Thats the 'job creators' making jobs for the Chinese.
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We Americans bailed them out and I would have preferred they create some of those jobs here. |
A related piece from the economist ...
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Selective bin Laden leaking
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An unusual way of looking at the unemployment rate.
Tells a different story from the numbers. Quote:
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A glass half-full or half-empty comes of a person's own experience and personality. You apparently feel that individual bankers should be criminally prosecuted for their decisions and actions that lead to the mortgage and financial crisis. But the officers of a corporation are essentially immune from prosecutions, unless they have acted criminally manner (theft, fraud, embezzlement, etc.). In fact, the corporation is required to legally defend it's officials for their decisions, and may be required to financially indemnify the officials from any penalties. The Board of Directors may dismiss it's officials, with or without settlements. But as such, the penalties that the corporation, itself, can incur are only financial, and these are usually offset by liability insurance. Various people, including your nemesis, Obama, have said the bankers may not necessarily have performed illegally - immorally, maybe - but illegally, not likely or very difficult to prove. To attribute lack of federal prosecution to political contributions is dissimulation. OTOH, individual corporate officers are being prosecuted (fraudulent robo-signing, etc.) by States Attorney Generals, but these may not be the particular individuals you want to see imprisoned. Maybe a review at what has been proceeding against Washington Mutual will assuage some of your dissatisfaction. Here is a bit of WaMu's recent history: Quote:
these "former" executives in a law suite brought by the FDIC. Here is a link to Bloomberg News: Quote:
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TheCourt's final decision says, in part: Quote:
they lost their jobs and their penalties were published 12/17/12 in the NY Times. The article also discusses the reasoning behind the FDIC settlement. But, I suspect all this will have little effect on your feelings about Obama and the Dept of Justice, and you will vote accordingly. So be it... only you can fill your own glass. |
LAMP. I've missed you! :)
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Still searching the interior of Alaska for HLJ :rolleyes
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I guess you may as well go on home. :(
I think he was abducted by aliens. Or he rose up or something. |
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