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of course he won't......................
that's why we have been waiting.....and waiting...and waiting....
I'm getting bullish..............................
quick...put me in the nuthouse
Maybe he'll correct the problem.................
who knows...
but why??!
lol - I love it
"I just sunk your battleship"
keep em comin'
we'll get even financially..em
Indeed - I have a sharp quill too lol
he had his chance........................
he could have held it at .01 by re-negotiating/giving some up and cleared out the sleazy crapola - but he didn't and now the light is shining so brightly the path is set. Greedy or Stupid or Both?
He who appoints, falls..
TS is the one who has the action against his lawyers.
We have the action against him.
Answer - I don't. Not smart enough by half.
Trust me on that...............
really? LOL
if there is a crook in the den...........................
...it's no time to play smart
playground rules, right?
True.......................................
But not the complaint at hand imo
People (I assume you are included) are f*cked off AND - without knowing these present details personally to be true - would be just more incensed (enraged?) to know/believe that a plant in their midst was/is compounding their problem for gain/loss recovery.
Oh well, just the way it is - another symptom of the crooked market this is. This forum is not the place to get even. That happens elsewhere of course. Let's hope TS gets his act together - or he will be sunk.
but the hole being dug.............................
....will bury a few back in the darkness imo
Can it be proven?
glad you think so soothsayer! lol..em
good post.......................................
if he plays it smart, you're right imo...we'll see.
me too - I'll drop you a line..em
hang in there...why not?!! lol
it's a good idea................................
the thought had crossed my mind also!
everyone loves a happy ending.........
now just watch all the roaches pop up and say there won't be one- it's going to the crapper lol
all a bit silly really..em
what's the market cap with another billion at this pps?
the action is overwhelming..em
bye!..em
nothing doin' today - we wait..em
not much happening huh?..em
"With out that payment WF is going to 'bitch' slap Tom and shut down Hackett and what's left of this debt ridden farce."
Neither very nice nor very objective. LMAO
Measured, Thoughtful and Progressive................
Choose between regulation and markets? - it's a false dichotomy - OF COURSE, markets need regulation. Anything else is absurd. This isn't a banana republic - or is it operating like one? As for the SEC, fire his azz, shake 'em up and kill the naked shorts - thieves in ties, nothing more. all imo:)
Barack - it's your election to lose.......
"We are facing one of the most serious financial crises in this nation’s history. The events of the last week – from the failure of Lehman to the bailout of AIG to the continued volatility of the market – have not just threatened the trading floors and high-rises of Wall Street, but the stability and security of our entire global economy. Across this country, Americans are worried about whether they can make their mortgage payments, or keep their jobs, or ensure that their retirement is secure. Truly, we are all in this together.
Our government and the Federal Reserve have already taken unprecedented action to prevent a deepening of this crisis that could jeopardize the life savings and well-being of millions of Americans. But it is now clear that even bolder and more decisive action is necessary.
In recent years, I have outlined plans that would have helped prevent the problems we now face, and yesterday I proposed the outlines of a plan that would establish a more stable and permanent solution to strengthen our financial system. Today, I fully support the effort of Secretary Paulson and Federal Reserve Chairman Bernanke to work in a bipartisan spirit with Congress to find this kind of solution.
What we’re looking at right now is to provide the Treasury and the Federal Reserve with as broad authority as necessary to stabilize markets and maintain credit. We need a more institutional response to create a system that can manage some of the underlying problems with bad mortgages, help homeowners stay in their homes, protect the retirement and savings of working Americans.
In the coming days, I will more closely examine the details of the Treasury and Fed proposal, and as I do, I’ll work to ensure that it provides an effective emergency response by including four basic principles that my economic advisors and I just discussed this morning.
First, we cannot only have a plan for Wall Street. We must also help Main Street as well. I’m glad that our government is moving so quickly in addressing the crisis that threatens some of our biggest banks and corporations. But a similar crisis has threatened families, workers and homeowners for months and months and Washington has done far too little to help.
For too long, this Administration has been willing to hit the fast-forward button in helping distressed Wall Street firms while pressing pause when it comes to saving jobs or keeping people in their homes. We already know that the credit crisis that has emerged from our largest financial institutions is becoming a credit crunch for small business owners, homeowners, and students seeking loans in big cities and small towns. Now that American taxpayers are being called on to share in this new burden, we must take equally swift and serious action to help lift the burdens they face every day.
In the same bipartisan spirit that is being shown with regard to the crisis on Wall Street, I ask Senator McCain, President Bush, Republicans and Democrats to join me in supporting an emergency economic plan for working families – a plan that would help folks cope with rising gas and food prices, spark job creation through repair of our schools and roads, help states and cities avoid painful budget cuts and tax increases, help homeowners stay in their homes, and provide retooling assistance for America’s auto industry. John McCain and I can continue to argue about our different economic agendas for next year, but we should come together now to work on what this country urgently needs this year.
The second principle I would like to see in the emerging plan from the Treasury and the Fed is that our approach should be one of mutual responsibility and reciprocity. It must not be designed to reward particular companies or the irresponsible decisions of borrowers or lenders. It must not be designed to enhance the personal gain of CEOs and management. The recklessness of some of these executives has helped cause this mess, even as they walk away with multimillion dollar golden parachutes while taxpayers are left holding the bag. As taxpayers are asked to take extraordinary steps to protect our financial system, it is only appropriate that those who benefit be expected to contribute to the protection of American homeowners and the American economy. Just as support is not designed to payoff egregious executive compensation, it should not reward those who are ruthlessly foreclosing on American families.
Third, this plan must be temporary and coupled with tough new oversight and regulations of our financial institutions, and there must be a clear process to wind down this plan and restore private sector assets into private sector hands after restoring stability to the system. Taxpayers must share in any upside benefit that such stability brings.
Fourth, this plan should be part of a globally coordinated effort with our partners in the G-20. This is a worldwide issue, and while the United States can and will lead in stabilizing the credit markets, we should ask other nations, who share in this crisis, to be part of the solution as well.
One last point. We did not arrive at this crisis by some accident of history. What led us to this point was years and years of a philosophy in Washington and on Wall Street that viewed even common-sense regulation and oversight as unwise and unnecessary; that shredded consumer protections and loosened the rules of the road. CEOs and executives got reckless. Lobbyists got what they wanted. Politicians in both parties looked the other way until it was too late. And it is the American people who have paid the price. The events of this week have rendered a final verdict on that failed philosophy, and it will end if I am President of the United States. We must build upon the ideas I have laid out over the last several years about how to modernize our financial regulation in this country, and establish commonsense rules of the road for our financial system to help restore confidence in our financial system.
Finally, given the gravity of this situation, and based on conversations I have had with both Secretary Paulson and Chairman Bernanke, I will refrain from presenting a more detailed blue-print of how an immediate plan might be structured until I can fully review the details of the plan proposed by the Treasury and the Federal Reserve. It is critical at this point that the markets and the public have confidence that their work will be unimpeded by partisan wrangling, and that leaders in both parties work in concert to solve the problem at hand.
I know these are difficult days. And I know there are a lot of families out there right now who are feeling anxiety – about their jobs, about their homes, about their retirement savings. But here’s what I also know. This isn’t a time for fear or panic. This is a time for resolve and for leadership. I know we can steer ourselves out of this crisis. That’s who we are. That’s what we’ve always done as Americans. Our nation has faced difficult times before. And at each of those moments, we’ve risen to meet the challenges as one people, and one nation. That is the America we need to be and can be today."
I find it real interesting...........................
that the pps at the declaration date is the same at .0004
sure no accident
destiny calls either way.....
well...umm..we'll see, won't we?..em
Ground Control to Major Tom....em
ya know, the argument that .......................
the crooks are running the show used to be some kind of communist conspiracy theory
but they were right and if they are gonna bail this out they had better change the financial regulatory structure and get weeding....and quick
the politics of distraction again
just stamp on naked shorters (crime) and bring back the uptick rule http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uptick (dampen the bearish swings but don't kill liquidity)
I have no idea why naked shorts even share the word - it is white collar crime
the rest of it is bs
this guy has it right imo
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/main.jhtml?xml=/money/2008/09/19/bcnshort119.xml
btw my thought on the volume is escrow
sums it up imo
not long now.................................
we'll see if Tom has any ammo or he is shooting blanks
almost showtime....
yep, it's a must listen..em
no BEEF until RS over; no sense..em
Of course..............................
the explanation could be a little more sophisticated, dare I say nuanced - make that crooked (I really hope not) - since these guys make money on pps movement (either newly issued or helping friends short it) and the bigger the fat old swing up or down the better.
I don't like the fact that is even a possibility - but it is very plausible on the facts.
Perhaps there is a moonshot on the horizon that the commons can benefit from - but, either way, conceivably there is a whole lot of manipulation going on.
and that's a very bad word...............
it's not up to me to disprove it - it's up to Tom. Not in a court of law, you understand - in the court of market opinion.