The word depression is a description that was given to he 1929
downturn after the event. It is an historical appellation.

On Sep 16, 11:45 pm, Gaar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Recession is not Depression...
>
> Many said the same thing of the Policies Reagan put in place during
> the early '80's.
>
> On Sep 16, 6:42 am, Frank <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > No it doesn't, it means another family is thrown on the street, which
> > becomes a drain on government services. How many job losses so far
> > this year 700,000, with thousands more acknowledged to be lost just in
> > the finance industry because of today's crash. Every job lost means
> > another job lost in an affiliated industry meaning less money to
> > spend, leading to further business down turn, leading to more layoff
> > leading to more defaults. With "at least" another 5 million home
> > default expected by 2012 how many more families will end up on the
> > street or relying on welfare? Debt doesn't disappear, someone must pay
> > and it is ALWAYS the worker that get stuck with the bill..
>
> > Go to this site Gaarhttp://mwhodges.home.att.net/nat-debt/debt-nat.htm.
> > It will give you all the info you need, it is very comprehensive. He
> > is a believer in the free market, Milton Freidman and Ludwig Von
> > Mises, who I think are imbeciles. Nevertheless, this guy is very
> > worried about the US debt situation and has gone to a great deal of
> > trouble compiling data from the Fed Bureau of stats to warn Americans
> > of the gravity of this problem.
>
> > Its no good telling me to keep a perspective on things when capitalist
> > economists are predicting as Greenspan said "a once in a hundred year
> > recession". He said that, not me.  You need to come to grips with what
> > is really occuring. Go to bloombergs now, see for yourself.
>
> > On Sep 16, 11:12 pm, Gaar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > > Frank,
>
> > > What you fail to realize is that with each Foreclosure, that number
> > > changes, for the better.
>
> > > The reason it got so bad was because of these bad Loans, and once they
> > > work their way out of the System, we are heading back up.
>
> > > Yes, there may be as many as 5% - 7% of Total Mortgages that may end
> > > up being affected, overall and those are going to take a bit to work
> > > through..
>
> > > But may I remind you that means that at LEAST 93% will in FACT
> > > continue to pay their Mortgages on time without problems.
>
> > > During the Great Depression, that number went up to well over 50%.
>
> > > So let's try to keep a bit of perspective on this, shall we?
>
> > > On Sep 16, 6:07 am, Frank <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > > > Gaar,
>
> > > > The main concern with the debt is not the collateral, it is the
> > > > ability to service it. Last year US debt grew 5.5 times that of GDP,
> > > > meaning America can not keep up with current debt repayments and
> > > > requires one trillion in loans per annum to finance debt, further
> > > > compounding the problem. I can't remember the precise figure (do a
> > > > google search), but the average US household debt is over 100% of
> > > > income over per annum. Any collateral they have is owned by finance
> > > > companies.
>
> > > > On Sep 16, 10:47 pm, Gaar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > > > > Perhaps those who have been railing on about this would be good enough
> > > > > to also tell us how much "Net Worth" JUST American Households have,
> > > > > not including the Net Worth of our Governmental Assets?!?!?!?!?
>
> > > > > Anyone?- Hide quoted text -
>
> > > > - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text -
>
> > - Show quoted text -
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