Reader comments: Bush seeks to calm jittery investors

1 comment  |  Read story

Bob G | 5:57 a.m. Oct. 12, 2008
They don't get it, the system is the problem and not fixing the system will only lead to more problems and more collapses in the economy, here and abroad. Encouraging debt and credit in an economy that is collapsing because of it doesn't make any sense at all. Consumers have stagnent jobs, stagnent and declining wages, and no money to spend is the problem. We consumers are the backbone of the whole system and we are tired of being abused by it. If consumers can't by with cash and companies don't use their profits wisely they can't be solvent. Where are all their profits going if not back in to the business? To their investors first? Operating a business means it has fixed overhead such as wages, utilities, rent, etc., and if they can't meet their fixed overhead without borrowing, how can they expect to stay in business? It seems more of a problem with business mind set than a consumer stay in debt problem. The financial industry it trying to recover its losses with responsible debts and credit, as it should. Now the Bush Cartel is hammering them to keep doing what has caused the economic crisis.

Add your comment

Comments are monitored. Any comments found to be abusive, offensive, off-topic, misrepresentative, more than 200 words or containing URLs will not be posted.

Words Remaining

E-mail address: For internal use only. We may want to contact you to publish your comment (not your e-mail address) in the newspaper or for a separate story idea.

Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, left, Fed chairman Ben Bernanke, President Bush and Brazil Finance Minister Guido Mantega, right, attend a gathering of the Group of 20, which includes rich countries as well as major developing nations. (Mandel Ngan, Getty Images)
Mandel Ngan, Getty Images
Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, left, Fed chairman Ben Bernanke, President Bush and Brazil Finance Minister Guido Mantega, right, attend a gathering of the Group of 20, which includes rich countries as well as major developing nations.