If there's recession how do you explain people buying 40-50K vehicles, RV's, toys.
Sure it's not as good as it used to be 10-15 years ago (under Clinton)

Daninski wrote:This is my MX3. There are many like it, but this one is mine. My MX3 is my best friend. It is my life. I must master it as I master my life. My MX3, without me, is useless. Without my MX3, I am useless. I must fire up my MX3 true. I must drive straighter than any Honda driver who is trying to own me. I must own him before he owns me.

I agreeDaninski wrote:The Rich are taking everything as we speak. No middle class and no lower class. Just working class with no benefits and no pension. No disposable income and no self respect. It's happening right now, right in front of us but people seem almost blind. To interested in the Big Screen TV's comin on sale with no money down, don't pay for 16 months . Even if people wake up right now it's probably already too late. 80 years of progress down the shitter.
Interest rates are still rock bottom, and they can't sit like that forever. Lending requirements did change, but I've got a people many people, maybe too many people, will get a take up call when that changes. I want to say we're doing OK in Canada, but stretched a bit thin, especially with gas prices being too high in most of the country (currently $1.26/L in Ontario while you damn Albertans are under the $1 when I left on Friday, and Quebec is up at $1.34 according and I'll be back there Sunday). If we survive the interest rates going back up (when they do), than we'll be ok in Canada.wytbishop wrote: The big picture thing was the mortgage lending practices that were going on in 08'-09'. People were being lent money that they couldn't hope to afford to pay back. Banks didn't care because the money was insured by the federal gov't, but pretty soon so many houses were being defualted on, and the federal gov't was repaying the banks so much insurance money that the big mortgage holding banks needed billions in assistance. The Canadian gov't saw this coming and tightened up mortgage lending requirements significantly a couple of years ago.
I know what you mean. In early 2008 I had taken a chance and took a contract job working on medical equipment. Loved the job and was making great money. By the end of 2009, they started to deny me any opertunies presented to continue and by spring of 2010, I was out of work. I spent several months unemployed and eventually found a few min wage jobs to keep my head above the water. The market was saturated, I got almost no responces in any jobs I applied for, and one offer where they low-balled me, I turned it down stated I was insulted with the offer, the owner of the company personally walking me out. I felt a bit bad, and a bit proud of that, but I had found out recently that my cousin got a job talking phone calls for Nestley (the 1-800 number on their products) just to talk on the phone, dealing with comments and complaints, for $2 more an hour. I've spent the last almost 3 years in the army, waiting it out and the military experience should yield a positive advantage back in the civilian world. A little over a year left, but I'm seeing options opening up, things are encouraging. A year ago, I felt that the world wasn't ready for me to come back to the civilian side. Today I see the light at the end of the tunnel. Hopefully come March, or pending deployment, I'll be working on my "escape plan".MrMazda92 wrote:Dan hit the nail on the head...
Yes they are. The recent Hostess issue is a good example of thatwagZE wrote:Big corporate places are evil.
Some unsecured creditors had informed the court that last summer — as the company was crumbling — four top Hostess executives received raises of up to 80%.
Over the past eight years since the first Hostess bankruptcy, BCTGM members have watched as money from previous concessions that was supposed to go towards capital investment, product development, plant improvement and new equipment, was squandered in executive bonuses, payouts to Wall Street investors and payments to high-priced attorneys and consultants. [...] Over the past 15 months, Hostess workers have seen the company unilaterally end contractually-obligated payments to their pension plan.
I think you're onto something here...wytbishop wrote:The rest of the world gave a collective head shake at how close Romney came to getting elected. ~facepalm~
Someone really needs to sit you all down and explain the difference between Communism and Socialism and why Socialism is soooooo much better than pure Capitalism. Pure Capitalism doesn't work and the US is proving it.

Jesse let's not turn this into political thread. It doesn't matter who voted Obama/Romney.fowljesse wrote:Someone needs to sit them down and euthanize them. Well, maybe that's too harsh. Here's a fun idea for Youtube:
Line up everyone who voted Romney.. maybe tell them that they won the lottery, and that they have to stand in line to claim it (If it's on FOX news, they'll believe it!). Then, drive by with an arm extended out the window, and do the world's longest continued 3 Stooges style face slap at maybe 35mph. It would hurt the hand after a while, but would be the good kind of hurt.
Idiocracy has begun it's exponential rise
