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What's worse, it's not clear that GM actually repaid what it's gotten credit for repaying. Check out this note buried in the inspector's report: "As part of a credit agreement with Treasury, $16.4 billion in TARP funds were placed in an escrow account that GM could access only with Treasury's permission."
No, brain dead dunce, Re-read the article.![]()
Sometimes we call it picking fly shit out of pepper.
Merc is trying to discount this fact:
"As it turns out, GM got Treasury's OK to "repay" more than $6.7 billion "using a portion of the escrow account that had been funded with TARP funds." So GM is merely paying the government back with government money, not money GM is earning selling cars, as the administration has claimed."
So you didn't quote the article when you posted this??
Stating very plainly that GM used TARP funds to repay part of the bailout (also TARP funds put in escrow) that it turned out not to need, presumably because their sales were up.
Since the WSJ says that GMs sales figures have been higher in the US for quite some time I'm thinking I presume correctly.
But you can look for yourself.
http://online.wsj.com/mdc/public/page/2_3022-autosales.html
The escrow fund given to GM was in exchange for stock. Vette thinks it was a handout.
Apparently if Vette loaned someone $20 (assuming his socialist retirement check came in) and they turned out not to need it after all he would refuse the original $20 as payment and insist that they spend it and make another $20 to repay him.
My money is no good here! Go make some of your own money to pay me back!
Yeah... That makes perfect sense.![]()
They don’t know how to clean it up. It’s not in cold shutdown.
The corium — the mass, hundred tons of melted uranium lava — is laying on the floor of the containment vessels.
It hasn’t finished and will never finish.
I think it means the end of Japan financially."
- Dr. Helen Caldicott: The Medical Implications of Fukushima, Nuclear Power and Nuclear Proliferation, address to Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute, 23 May 2012
There are several reasons why I believe the country will be evacuated if the #4 SFP collapses. The amount of radioactive material in the fuel pool dwarfs the total amount at Chernobyl by a factor of 5 to 10. Chernobyl’s core was still mostly contained in a building (although heavily damaged), and most of the radioactive material melted downward and became lava like. If #4 SFP collapses it will be lying on the completely open ground, probably going critical on and off in portions of the pile for years. The dose rate from this pile will make dropping sand or anything from the air much more lethal than anything at Chernobyl. And probably impossible. The entire site at Fukushima will be uninhabitable and unworkable because of the dose rate coming from this pile of fuel. That means there will be no control of the other fuel pools, and we could lose control of them.
Nuclear experts will soft sell the ramifications because that is how the industry works. When the experts “have concerns” about the situation at #4 that means they are pooping their pants. My experience at Fukushima was 30 years ago. I worked in the industry for about 15 years as a health physics technician. I was also referred to as a “nuclear gypsy” because I traveled from plant to plant working outages. That meant I was always in the middle of the hottest jobs in the heart of the plant. The engineers will talk about this part or that part of a plant, but I have been all those places wearing full gear.
- Chris Canine, Former Fukushima Daiichi Worker and Health Physics Technician, Chemist and Radiation Safety Instructor, 15 May 2012
http://spectator.org/archives/2012/05/24/the-problem-with-high-mileageThere is a big problem with high-mileage cars -- from the point-of-view of the government.
Less revenue.
Imagine an 80 MPG car -- which could be built right now, easily, with existing technology. (Several current European models are already pretty close to the 80 MPG bar.)
Such a car could cut the average person's fuel costs by two-thirds -- in effect, putting things back the way they were circa 1986, when gasoline still cost about $1 per gallon. It would do a great deal to ease the economic pressure bearing down on the average person. But if tens of millions of Americans were suddenly using two-thirds less fuel, they'd also be paying two-thirds less in motor fuels taxes.
You don't have to be a conspiracy nut to wonder what effect contemplation of this possibility has had on government policy.
Even assuming the most benevolent, public-spirited intentions, the situation is a debacle in the making. If revenue derived from motor fuels taxes declined by 20-30 percent, there would be that much less revenue available to maintain existing roads -- and build new ones. Meanwhile, the population is galloping upward -- more people, more cars. Where will the money come from to keep pace?
There is always the possibility of making up the shortfall some other way -- but the beauty of the motor fuels tax, historically, is that it's a largely hidden tax. The average motorist is not made to confront the bill in the same way that he's made to confront, say, the sales tax on the food he buys after gassing up. Because unlike the food on which he pays a tax in addition to the cost of the food itself, the motor fuels tax is discreetly folded into the cost of the fuel. One does not pay $2.40 a gallon -- plus 80 cents per gallon in taxes. One just pays the $3.20 per gallon.
Thus, "big oil" takes most of the heat -- rather than big government.
Debt crisis now taking toll on German economy
Euro-zone PMI points to steeper downturn; German Ifo tumbles
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/debt-crisis-now-taking-toll-on-german-economy-2012-05-24
Demand For Business Equipment In U.S. Falls For Second Month
...“There has been a legitimate loss of momentum in manufacturing recently,” Ryan Sweet, a senior economist at Moody’s Analytics Inc. in West Chester, Pennsylvania, said before the report.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-...-equipment-in-u-s-falls-for-second-month.html
Got that sinking feeling? Amid signs that the U.S. housing market is finally rising from a long slumber, real estate Web site Zillow reports that homeowners are still under water.
Nearly 16 million homeowners owed more on their mortgages than their home was worth in the first quarter, or nearly one-third of U.S. homeowners with mortgages. That’s a $1.2 trillion hole in the collective home equity of American households.
http://economywatch.msnbc.msn.com/_...-three-mortgage-holders-still-underwater?lite
Got that sinking feeling? Amid signs that the U.S. housing market is finally rising from a long slumber, real estate Web site Zillow reports that homeowners are still under water.
Nearly 16 million homeowners owed more on their mortgages than their home was worth in the first quarter, or nearly one-third of U.S. homeowners with mortgages. That’s a $1.2 trillion hole in the collective home equity of American households.
http://economywatch.msnbc.msn.com/_...-three-mortgage-holders-still-underwater?lite
^^^ So Republicans can raise interest rates on students and rape our children. Vote Romney!![]()
You are a dunce. Why don't you ask instead why the cost of education escalates every year?
You are a dunce. Why don't you ask instead why the cost of education escalates every year?
Because the answer is simple. But if you refuse to do my homework I'm not really in the mood today.
The first word out of your mouths when the price of gas goes up is to investigate the oil companies, but when the cost of education goes up all of a sudden nobody cares why, they just want the taxpayer to pay for it.
Because the answer is simple. But if you refuse to do my homework I'm not really in the mood today.
You are a dunce. Why don't you ask instead why the cost of education escalates every year?
Real federal deficit dwarfs official tally
The typical American household would have paid nearly all of its income in taxes last year to balance the budget if the government used standard accounting rules to compute the deficit, a USA TODAY analysis finds.
Under those accounting practices, the government ran red ink last year equal to $42,054 per household — nearly four times the official number reported under unique rules set by Congress.
A U.S. household's median income is $49,445, the Census reports.
The big difference between the official deficit and standard accounting: Congress exempts itself from including the cost of promised retirement benefits. Yet companies, states and local governments must include retirement commitments in financial statements, as required by federal law and private boards that set accounting rules.
The deficit was $5 trillion last year under those rules. The official number was $1.3 trillion. Liabilities for Social Security, Medicare and other retirement programs rose by $3.7 trillion in 2011, according to government actuaries, but the amount was not registered on the government's books.
- more @
http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/story/2012-05-18/federal-deficit-accounting/55179748/1
Please share that simple answer.