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๐ŸŒฒ-alist | @threalist@social.fbxl.net

If your retirement is at risk because of stock market events maybe you're gambling too much with your nest egg.

Maybe the stock market should be treated as an investment with inherent risk, and not as a guiding star for corporate strategy, and national policy.

> there's many other things he could be doing

He is.

What would you recommend to encourage American industry?

> on these tariffs, they are not being done in a smart or careful way

The system loves "smart and careful" so they can get their tentacles around it before anything happens.

How can an investment go down in value? This is not what I was promised when buying heckin stockerinos

Enact policies to try and improve things somewhat for Americans.

Stock market doesn't like that.

..hmmm..

It's deeper than a politician. The court convicted her based on existing law.

Everything is downstream from culture.

Looks about right

Trump is pushing back against longstanding one sided unfair tarrifs.

The experts are noting this is bad for the economy.

Trump:

"if you extort American businesses, we're going to extort your businesses at the same rate."

Very smart people:

"You can't stop the extortion. It will be bad for the economy."

Well, if it makes you feel better, economics are usually the trigger of wars

What score?

Romney led directly to Trump.

Republican voters just threw their hands in the air and voted for the rich guy from New York after the GOP tried to give them Jeb Bush after trying Romney.

With private equity, they leverage debt then leave the company to bleed to death.


> In July 2005, after struggling for years to compete with big-box retailers like Kmart, Walmart, and Target, Toys โ€˜Rโ€™ Us agreed to a $6.6 billion private equity buyout deal with KKR, Bain Capital, and Vornado Realty Trust in the hopes it would help turn the company around.


> The fund spent $1.3 billion of its own money and saddled the company with $5 billion more in debt to buy out the ailing retailer.

Most interesting part of the article is the first comment:

> It still surprises me when I see mentions of Angi, because I'm old enough to remember when it was Angie's List. Angie's List had a stellar reputation of being 1000% the best place to turn to if you needed to hire someone to do something to your home or your car. What happened to it?

> The same thing that seems to be happening to every formerly decent product, service or business:

venture capital and private equity firms that pushed the company into an IPO.

I don't accept the premise that "public spirit" is a negative or somehow communist.

Did the Greeks have "public spirit?" The Romans?

Seems like most places I wouldn't want to live in have a significant "dirth of public spirit."

Tfw your crew is a bunch of woke soyjacks..

"Washington was a man of exceptional, almost excessive self command, rarely permitting himself any show of discouragement or despair, but in the privacy of his correspondence with Joseph Reed [in 1776], he began...to reveal how very low and bitter he felt, if the truth were known.

Never had he seen 'such a dearth of public spirit and want of virtue' as among the Yankee soldiers, he confided in a letter to Reed of November 28."

- Historian David McCullough

"In every disaster throughout American history, there always seems to be a man from Harvard in the middle of it."

- Thomas Sowell

What would you do about countries that have massive tarrifs to boost their industry and prevent American goods from being sold there, but dump cheap goods in America which kills American industry?

Ignoring the problem gave us the Rust Belt.

Reminds me of Brad Pitt being sued by the people he was trying to help because basically the architecture was not designed for the climate:

https://www.architecturaldigest.com/story/brad-pitt-make-it-right-foundation-new-orleans-katrina-lawsuit

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