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natty dread wrote:What do you guys think about banks?
http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2012 ... ng-culture
patches70 wrote:In time, all this will blow over and no one will remember. The banks who should have gone belly up from the crash will still be operating. A few kick backs to lawyers and politicians, a few multimillion $ settlements for some class action suits, a few years of subpar earnings for the bank shareholders who should have gone bankrupt in 2008 and it'll all be back to business as usual.....
natty dread wrote:What if there's like a revolution and we burn the basrtards to the ground
a revolution against banks
Chariot of Fire wrote:As for GreecePwns.....yeah, what? A massive debt. Get a job you slacker.
Viceroy wrote:[The Biblical creation story] was written in a time when there was no way to confirm this fact and is in fact a statement of the facts.
GreecePwns wrote:You cannot change the culture of greed. You can only destroy it. You've got at least 4 choices:
1. Nationalize the banks.
2. Mass withdrawals from said banks, moving the money to credit unions
3. Mass withdrawals from said banks, moving the money to employee-owned banks
4. Violent revolution sparked by the Battle at Bank of America Branch #223462
I'm sure I've missed some, but choose wisely.
Chariot of Fire wrote:As for GreecePwns.....yeah, what? A massive debt. Get a job you slacker.
Viceroy wrote:[The Biblical creation story] was written in a time when there was no way to confirm this fact and is in fact a statement of the facts.
GreecePwns wrote:They have fewer branches, ATMs, etc. so its an inconvenience.
In other words, they're not as big as regular banks because they weren't that big before. Of course, if people got fed up enough with banks in general they'd move their money over and the above problem would be resolved, wouldn't it?
GreecePwns wrote:You cannot change the culture of greed. You can only destroy it. You've got at least 4 choices:
1. Nationalize the banks.
2. Mass withdrawals from said banks, moving the money to credit unions
3. Mass withdrawals from said banks, moving the money to employee-owned banks
4. Violent revolution sparked by the Battle at Bank of America Branch #223462
I'm sure I've missed some, but choose wisely.
PLAYER57832 wrote:GreecePwns wrote:You cannot change the culture of greed. You can only destroy it. You've got at least 4 choices:
1. Nationalize the banks.
2. Mass withdrawals from said banks, moving the money to credit unions
3. Mass withdrawals from said banks, moving the money to employee-owned banks
4. Violent revolution sparked by the Battle at Bank of America Branch #223462
I'm sure I've missed some, but choose wisely.
Not sure how 2 or 3 will really solve anything.
Nationalizing the banks will just lead to a different kind of corruption, but we do need much stricter rules.
Things like requiring the banks to hold more real assets, holding managers (AND those on up the chain) more directly responsible for errors, will help. However, a big part of the problem is that making money is just no longer tied to making products.
We are in a transition similar to the one moving away from agriculture to industry. Except, industry actually produces something. This new system is entirely artificial... and therefore doomed to fail. B ut, sadly, not until the rest of us have lost our basis for our incomes as we get told over and over we "cannot afford" this or that protection, this or that environmental rule.. etc.
Army of GOD wrote:They increase a city's gold but you must have a marketplace built in that city to build a bank.
nagerous wrote:Dibbun is a well known psychotic from the forums
Army of GOD wrote:Congrats to Dibbun, the white jesus, and all of his mercy and forgiveness.
Jdsizzleslice wrote: So you can crawl back to whatever psychosocial nutjob hole you came from.
Fruitcake wrote:Well I am on the banks side in all this.
Retail business is shit, rubbish, not profitable, only there so the great unwashed can continue to live in the 21st century and feed their ignorant desires by buying stuff....using banks.
Except, as I remember you saying earlier,Fruitcake wrote:If banks had their way, the charges issued to customers would be a great deal higher than they are.
I pay £150 a quarter for my bank account. Just think about that for a moment...it's rubbish income for the bank. Apply a basic charge out rate of £50 an hour (and that's low) and the bank is in a position of being able to spend just 3 hours a quarter, or one hour a month on my account or they are losing money on it in terms of opportunity revenue. Quite frankly I don't know why they don't just tell any one who won't pay around £1,000 a year to have an account to piss off and go to an effing credit union.
Fruitcake wrote:If a person borrows from a bank and then whines because they are screwed on the interest, then don't bloody well borrow!
BigBallinStalin wrote: if we drop the holistic perspective, and focus on individuals, we may be able to discover how to mutually benefit from a bank.
You're right, but if they had the money banks have they would be able to. The whole not getting new customers because they don't have the abilities of bigger banks because they don't have customers. It's a chicken and egg problem, and those are usually only changed by outside influences (like people getting fed up with the culture of banks) or a slick marketing campaign (Apple's growing market share despite the lack of compatibility with many key programs).BigBallinStalin wrote:GreecePwns wrote:They have fewer branches, ATMs, etc. so its an inconvenience.
In other words, they're not as big as regular banks because they weren't that big before. Of course, if people got fed up enough with banks in general they'd move their money over and the above problem would be resolved, wouldn't it?
I don't think they attract as much business because they can't shuffle nearly as much money as the bigger banks can--in order to suit the needs of very wealthy and reliable borrowers.
Humans are at the controls of both, but I would trust a credit union more than I would a bank, because they are not beholden to shareholders but their "customers." I also have no empirical data on this, but the incentives are very different from banks beholden to shareholders. This system is the cause of the banking culture of "make as much money as possible despite the legality or ethics." Can you really see a credit union doing things like giving subprime loans out and betting that their own borrower won't pay the loan? No, because the customers would not allow it by voting against it democratically, because it would directly hurt them. I don't know what workers in an employee-owned bank would vote for in that circumstance, because you don't see too many employee owned banks anywhere.RE: your question, I'm not sure, but I'd imagine credit unions and employee-owned banks also experience similar problems which larger banks face in the economy, so if that's the case, then the above problem would not be resolved. Humans are at the controls of the #2 and #3 banks, so it's still possible that criminal acts could occur. I'm not sure how the role of federal regulations would affect the behavior of agents in #2 and #3 either. Again, I haven't seen the empirical data on this, so who knows.
Chariot of Fire wrote:As for GreecePwns.....yeah, what? A massive debt. Get a job you slacker.
Viceroy wrote:[The Biblical creation story] was written in a time when there was no way to confirm this fact and is in fact a statement of the facts.
GreecePwns wrote:You're right, but if they had the money banks have they would be able to. The whole not getting new customers because they don't have the abilities of bigger banks because they don't have customers. It's a chicken and egg problem, and those are usually only changed by outside influences (like people getting fed up with the culture of banks) or a slick marketing campaign (Apple's growing market share despite the lack of compatibility with many key programs).BigBallinStalin wrote:GreecePwns wrote:They have fewer branches, ATMs, etc. so its an inconvenience.
In other words, they're not as big as regular banks because they weren't that big before. Of course, if people got fed up enough with banks in general they'd move their money over and the above problem would be resolved, wouldn't it?
I don't think they attract as much business because they can't shuffle nearly as much money as the bigger banks can--in order to suit the needs of very wealthy and reliable borrowers.
GreecePwns wrote:Humans are at the controls of both, but I would trust a credit union more than I would a bank, because they are not beholden to shareholders but their "customers." I also have no empirical data on this, but the incentives are very different from banks beholden to shareholders. This system is the cause of the banking culture of "make as much money as possible despite the legality or ethics." Can you really see a credit union doing things like giving subprime loans out and betting that their own borrower won't pay the loan? No, because the customers would not allow it by voting against it democratically, because it would directly hurt them. I don't know what workers in an employee-owned bank would vote for in that circumstance, because you don't see too many employee owned banks anywhere.RE: your question, I'm not sure, but I'd imagine credit unions and employee-owned banks also experience similar problems which larger banks face in the economy, so if that's the case, then the above problem would not be resolved. Humans are at the controls of the #2 and #3 banks, so it's still possible that criminal acts could occur. I'm not sure how the role of federal regulations would affect the behavior of agents in #2 and #3 either. Again, I haven't seen the empirical data on this, so who knows.
Phatscotty wrote:Maybe we should break up the big banks into smaller banks?
PLAYER57832 wrote:Phatscotty wrote:Maybe we should break up the big banks into smaller banks?
LOL.. seems like I have heard that suggested somewhere.
OH yeah.. those idiot Democrats and liberals!
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
saxitoxin wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:Phatscotty wrote:Maybe we should break up the big banks into smaller banks?
LOL.. seems like I have heard that suggested somewhere.
OH yeah.. those idiot Democrats and liberals!
Which members of the Democrat Party currently holding federally elective office have suggested breaking up banks?
I'm not saying none have, I'm just genuinely curious to know which ones since the Democrat Party is so heavily funded by the banking industry (a cool $15 million from CitiBank alone). I am interested in learning about policymakers and positions.
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