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#1
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posted to rec.boats
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On Mon, 12 Jan 2009 03:31:44 -0500, "Eisboch"
wrote: "jps" wrote in message .. . On Mon, 12 Jan 2009 02:20:22 -0500, "Eisboch" wrote: "Vic Smith" wrote in message ... I know. But on Jan 21 we can blame it all on Obama according to your logic. Seriously, we are in bad shape. Not sure there is a way to recover. I need to think about this some more. Do that and get back to me. I'm going to make a cup of coffee. Should be enough time for you to work it out. --Vic I used the word "logic" to refer to your previous acknowledgement that you hold the sitting POTUS responsible for whatever the current state of affairs is. So does Harry. That's why you were lumped together. Perhaps I should have used the word "illogical". :-) Ok. Back from thinking. Here's the dilemma and my idea. According to the economic think tank panel on the CNN presentation, the prime reason for the economic mess we are in is our credit card mentality. It goes way beyond credit cards however. We want, so we buy with money we don't have. Sub-prime mortgages follows the same mentality and brought the life style problem to a head. The (almost) unanimous recommendation of the panel was for the country to return to a post depression mentality and concentrate on savings. People who lived through the depression learned a lesson and were much more fugal in their spending habits, putting money away for a rainy day. Somewhere along the line we shifted away from this mentality, and got into a buy now, pay later style of living. Saving for the future changed it's meaning to 401k investment planning, relying on others for a secure future. But now, here's the current problem in trying to recover from this mess: The government's solution is to encourage us to spend more now. The "stimulus" programs are intended to encourage spending. This is 180 degrees out of phase of what most conservative economic experts recommend and continues the "I want it now" mentality. It probably won't work because smart people *are* concerned and will most will put any extra money received through give a ways or tax reductions into savings. Here's my proposal. Forget about big business bailouts and stimulus checks/tax relief programs to private individuals. Establish a federal version of the state small business administration (SBA) programs and use a fraction of the bailout monies being spent on bailouts to provide start-up funding or growth funding for small businesses nation-wide. This is where 80 percent of the population works. Some of those who have lost jobs will apply for start-up funding to create new ones. Obviously not all new businesses will make it, but those that do will hire more people, many from the unemployed ranks. Small businesses are better suited to focus on new technologies, green programs, or service sector areas anyway because they don't have the diverse baggage to carry like big business. A recovery won't be fast, but it will be based on a solid footing and will open the door to re-establish manufacturing in the US. It's a good idea and goes hand-in-hand with fostering an entreprenurial, green-driven economy. The problem is, it'd need to go through the banking system which, apart from dicey mortgage loans, has never been a big fan of playing venture capitalist. They have a hard time with investment banking, let alone venture. The SBA isn't set up to handle the load. It'd be like FEMA trying to get a handle on New Orleans. Again, good idea but where the agency to handle the traffic? Skip the banks. As you must know by running a business a bank is the last place to go when you *need* funding. The money will come from already approved and future "bailout" funds. Forget about billions and trillions also. If someone made a million dollars available to me tomorrow, I'd attempt to fire up a new business on Tuesday. State run SBA *is* too small. I am proposing a temporary federal version of SBA to get things started, funded by the already approved bailout funding. Eisboch Have you seen what the federal gov't did with the program it initiated to help victims rebuild their homes in NO? Yikes. Bureaucrats are good at layering bull**** between good intentions and execution. |
#2
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "jps" wrote in message ... On Mon, 12 Jan 2009 03:31:44 -0500, "Eisboch" wrote: State run SBA *is* too small. I am proposing a temporary federal version of SBA to get things started, funded by the already approved bailout funding. Eisboch Have you seen what the federal gov't did with the program it initiated to help victims rebuild their homes in NO? Yikes. Bureaucrats are good at layering bull**** between good intentions and execution. The mistake made there was depending on a bureaucratic government to execute the details of the program. The government is good at approving and allocating money, that's all. Make the funding available to hands-on people that know how to get things done. Normally, I wouldn't even propose federal funding for new company start-ups (or even SBA loans) because I think learning how to self-fund a company is as important as the product or service you provide. However, given the crisis that currently exists and the increase in un-employment, a temporary avenue for start-up funding using federal money (now being completely wasted on bailouts and so called "stimulus" packages) would be money much better spent in the long run with benefits to the economy and country that are more concrete and long lasting. Just an idea. Eisboch |
#3
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posted to rec.boats
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Eisboch wrote:
"jps" wrote in message ... On Mon, 12 Jan 2009 03:31:44 -0500, "Eisboch" wrote: State run SBA *is* too small. I am proposing a temporary federal version of SBA to get things started, funded by the already approved bailout funding. Eisboch Have you seen what the federal gov't did with the program it initiated to help victims rebuild their homes in NO? Yikes. Bureaucrats are good at layering bull**** between good intentions and execution. The mistake made there was depending on a bureaucratic government to execute the details of the program. The government is good at approving and allocating money, that's all. Make the funding available to hands-on people that know how to get things done. Normally, I wouldn't even propose federal funding for new company start-ups (or even SBA loans) because I think learning how to self-fund a company is as important as the product or service you provide. However, given the crisis that currently exists and the increase in un-employment, a temporary avenue for start-up funding using federal money (now being completely wasted on bailouts and so called "stimulus" packages) would be money much better spent in the long run with benefits to the economy and country that are more concrete and long lasting. Just an idea. Eisboch Reduce government regulation at the local, state and federal levels and cut long term capital gains to 5%. Let businesses be businesses and not bureaucracies. Get the current capital in the market working again. |
#4
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posted to rec.boats
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BAR wrote:
Eisboch wrote: "jps" wrote in message ... On Mon, 12 Jan 2009 03:31:44 -0500, "Eisboch" wrote: State run SBA *is* too small. I am proposing a temporary federal version of SBA to get things started, funded by the already approved bailout funding. Eisboch Have you seen what the federal gov't did with the program it initiated to help victims rebuild their homes in NO? Yikes. Bureaucrats are good at layering bull**** between good intentions and execution. The mistake made there was depending on a bureaucratic government to execute the details of the program. The government is good at approving and allocating money, that's all. Make the funding available to hands-on people that know how to get things done. Normally, I wouldn't even propose federal funding for new company start-ups (or even SBA loans) because I think learning how to self-fund a company is as important as the product or service you provide. However, given the crisis that currently exists and the increase in un-employment, a temporary avenue for start-up funding using federal money (now being completely wasted on bailouts and so called "stimulus" packages) would be money much better spent in the long run with benefits to the economy and country that are more concrete and long lasting. Just an idea. Eisboch Reduce government regulation at the local, state and federal levels and cut long term capital gains to 5%. Let businesses be businesses and not bureaucracies. Get the current capital in the market working again. YES |
#5
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posted to rec.boats
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BAR wrote:
Eisboch wrote: "jps" wrote in message ... On Mon, 12 Jan 2009 03:31:44 -0500, "Eisboch" wrote: State run SBA *is* too small. I am proposing a temporary federal version of SBA to get things started, funded by the already approved bailout funding. Eisboch Have you seen what the federal gov't did with the program it initiated to help victims rebuild their homes in NO? Yikes. Bureaucrats are good at layering bull**** between good intentions and execution. The mistake made there was depending on a bureaucratic government to execute the details of the program. The government is good at approving and allocating money, that's all. Make the funding available to hands-on people that know how to get things done. Normally, I wouldn't even propose federal funding for new company start-ups (or even SBA loans) because I think learning how to self-fund a company is as important as the product or service you provide. However, given the crisis that currently exists and the increase in un-employment, a temporary avenue for start-up funding using federal money (now being completely wasted on bailouts and so called "stimulus" packages) would be money much better spent in the long run with benefits to the economy and country that are more concrete and long lasting. Just an idea. Eisboch Reduce government regulation at the local, state and federal levels and cut long term capital gains to 5%. Let businesses be businesses and not bureaucracies. Get the current capital in the market working again. We've had eight years of little or no regulation...no thanks. We're supposed to trust business to do the right thing, when its motivation seems to be greed and short-term profit? The behavior of business gives me no warm and fuzzy feelings we should return to the 19th century. |
#6
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posted to rec.boats
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hk wrote:
BAR wrote: Eisboch wrote: "jps" wrote in message ... On Mon, 12 Jan 2009 03:31:44 -0500, "Eisboch" wrote: State run SBA *is* too small. I am proposing a temporary federal version of SBA to get things started, funded by the already approved bailout funding. Eisboch Have you seen what the federal gov't did with the program it initiated to help victims rebuild their homes in NO? Yikes. Bureaucrats are good at layering bull**** between good intentions and execution. The mistake made there was depending on a bureaucratic government to execute the details of the program. The government is good at approving and allocating money, that's all. Make the funding available to hands-on people that know how to get things done. Normally, I wouldn't even propose federal funding for new company start-ups (or even SBA loans) because I think learning how to self-fund a company is as important as the product or service you provide. However, given the crisis that currently exists and the increase in un-employment, a temporary avenue for start-up funding using federal money (now being completely wasted on bailouts and so called "stimulus" packages) would be money much better spent in the long run with benefits to the economy and country that are more concrete and long lasting. Just an idea. Eisboch Reduce government regulation at the local, state and federal levels and cut long term capital gains to 5%. Let businesses be businesses and not bureaucracies. Get the current capital in the market working again. We've had eight years of little or no regulation...no thanks. We're supposed to trust business to do the right thing, when its motivation seems to be greed and short-term profit? The behavior of business gives me no warm and fuzzy feelings we should return to the 19th century. When you have to come up with a recycling plan before you can open your doors but, there is nobody who will pick up your recyclable materials because they can't sell them. The cost of new materials is cheaper than the recycled materials yet you are forced to recycle. The trash guys won't haul away recyclable materials because it is illegal for them to do so you have to pay somebody an exorbitant amount of money to come and get your recyclable materials which are going to sit in a pile and become a fire hazard. Why, it is just a waste of time and money. My wife's lab has to file all kinds of paperwork with the county due to the fact that she has some chemicals, most of them are less than 1 liter and none are more than 2 liters. This puts her lab on the lowest level of hazmat. But, because she can only buy mercury in 50 lb packages it moves her up to near superfund site level. It takes her about 10 or 12 years to go through 50 pounds of mercury. You should see all of the paper work she has to do just because of that. |
#7
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posted to rec.boats
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On Mon, 12 Jan 2009 07:35:29 -0500, hk wrote:
BAR wrote: Eisboch wrote: "jps" wrote in message ... On Mon, 12 Jan 2009 03:31:44 -0500, "Eisboch" wrote: State run SBA *is* too small. I am proposing a temporary federal version of SBA to get things started, funded by the already approved bailout funding. Eisboch Have you seen what the federal gov't did with the program it initiated to help victims rebuild their homes in NO? Yikes. Bureaucrats are good at layering bull**** between good intentions and execution. The mistake made there was depending on a bureaucratic government to execute the details of the program. The government is good at approving and allocating money, that's all. Make the funding available to hands-on people that know how to get things done. Normally, I wouldn't even propose federal funding for new company start-ups (or even SBA loans) because I think learning how to self-fund a company is as important as the product or service you provide. However, given the crisis that currently exists and the increase in un-employment, a temporary avenue for start-up funding using federal money (now being completely wasted on bailouts and so called "stimulus" packages) would be money much better spent in the long run with benefits to the economy and country that are more concrete and long lasting. Just an idea. Eisboch Reduce government regulation at the local, state and federal levels and cut long term capital gains to 5%. Let businesses be businesses and not bureaucracies. Get the current capital in the market working again. We've had eight years of little or no regulation...no thanks. We're supposed to trust business to do the right thing, when its motivation seems to be greed and short-term profit? The behavior of business gives me no warm and fuzzy feelings we should return to the 19th century. The year was 1980. Runny Nose Raygun had the same plan. Deregulate and prop up business.The Hunt brothers had done the unbelievable, cornered the silver market. Today it's oil. I wish Runny Nose was still alive making Nancy's life miserable. She deserves it from the way she listened to her soothsayers to run things from behind the curtain. Nothing new here folks, move along! Old plans sound familiar that's all. The plan that worked brought three terms to a president. Make work even though it was CCC. Collaborate with other politicians to start a world war in the end. One with heros that everyone knew their name. Not caskets hidden from view. The fifties seem like the good ol' days. A return to the roaring twenties. The circle begins a new loop. How does Hooverville sound or just "Jerk-Bush". |
#8
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "RLM" wrote in message ... The plan that worked brought three terms to a president. Make work even though it was CCC. Collaborate with other politicians to start a world war in the end. One with heros that everyone knew their name. Not caskets hidden from view. Right. Any other worthwhile thoughts? Eisboch |
#9
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posted to rec.boats
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On Mon, 12 Jan 2009 10:38:28 -0500, Eisboch wrote:
"RLM" wrote in message ... The plan that worked brought three terms to a president. Make work even though it was CCC. Collaborate with other politicians to start a world war in the end. One with heros that everyone knew their name. Not caskets hidden from view. Right. Any other worthwhile thoughts? Eisboch I don't buy, Let's get them to fall for the same game plan that got us in this mess. |
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