>>millions more people lose their jobs then they did, car part manufacuers go bankrupt with GM and Chrysler gone, and zero cars can be manufactured in the US for a decade. <<
Bankruptcy doesn't mean they cease to exist, it means they get a chance to make themselves profitable again by renegotiating contracts. Not only would they have a chance to fix themselves and become profitable again (which would involve manufacturing cars in the USA and demand for parts), but even their lost business would be available to Ford to pick up (which would involve manufacturing cars in the USA and demand for parts).
>>The stock market crashes, the government isn't bailing out anyone, so they aren't backing people's investments, so everyone who owned an account in any bank that goes bankrupt loses everything, which is a huge percent of the country.<<
Accounts are already insured up to $100,000 or whatever the dollar amount is, so I have no idea where you're presuming "everyone" who had an account would lose "everything." I said failing banks should not be given taxpayer dollars, not that the federal government should break the law and abandon money it has insured. Additionally, not everyone had an account in a FAILING bank. I don't have more than $100,000 anywhere. I wouldn't have lost a DIME, yet you've just said I'd lose "everything." You're losing me here because you're wrong on the facts.
>>the value of the dollar is a tiny fraction of what it used to be because there is no stability in the US because the government isn't backing their businesses.<,
Vague generalizations. Inflation because the government is handing out money like candy is what is going to destroy our dollar. Letting failed business fail and letting profitable business pick up their business strengthens our economy and our dollar, not weakens it. Our dollar isn't strong because the government props up failed businesses, it's strong because the free market picks the winners, resulting in a net increase in production, and the government DOESN'T prop up failed businesses.
>>also, giving companies money that are losing money isn't throwing money away. what does the company do with the money? they are giving that money to other business and employees most of whom are probably in the US. and what are those other busninesses and employees doing with the money? they are giving it to other businesses and other employees and it keeps being given and used by more and more people, primarily in the US.<<
They're mostly buying stock in the juggernaut USA government because it's [interest] free money to invest with sure return. It's not helping anyone. It's lining their pockets. Follow any of the bailout money and you'll be disgusted by the stupidity of the lawmakers who gave it out.
Why does everyone pretend the sky was going to fall? Our economy took a hit. But these failing companies still had funds and assets available to liquidate and we have laws to handle bankruptcy which do not necessarily involve these companies disappearing. The market was slow, which it was right to be, but not nonexistent. The monetary system wasn't going to explode by our losing failed companies. No matter how large the hit would have been, it's only going to be worse down the road as we explode our debt to socialize their failure. This is a direct affront to the free market and its successes and will result in the same communist failures we've seen repeatedly across the globe. This is presumably why you've had to make up claims about how much the average citizen would have lost. I don't know anyone with more than $100,000 with any single bank who'd have lost a dime. People know what their accounts are insured for. If they don't care enough to protect their assets it's their free choice to lose them. I don't recall where in the constitution or where in any contract I've agreed to that I would pay for the shortcomings of my countrymen. Making up things about how much everyone would have lost doesn't explain anything, it's a rationalization for actions which you apparently already know were irrational, in addition to unjust. It's nice to say that it would hurt everyone to justify bailing out the failed bankers who worked hard to produce massive failures, but doing so only seems rational so long as you ignore the facts that you're exaggerating the harm to the populace and ignoring the even greater cost to the populace when their currency is devalued.
Again, I point out to twosidedeath that many of these companies are just paying the government back with other government money. Many haven't become profitable, they're just fudging their numbers and the corrupt leaders giving out the money are pretending not to know exactly what's going on.
These bailouts are just putting off the pain. The longer we put it off, the worse it will be. If you want to argue that they were NECESSARY to put off the pain, sure, I agree. But I don't agree that putting off the pain and making it worse in the future is a desirable goal. You're wrong on the facts in claiming that automakers (and their suppliers) would disappear from the country because of bankruptcy--bankruptcy was their chance to renegotiate contracts and become profitable. You're wrong on the facts to presume that every American would pass Ford up as an American-built alternative to failed automakers. Sure there would have been pain, but the simple fact is that the pain to come is going to be worse because we put it off.
If you're worried about a market collapse, do you take comfort in the fact that American markets will simply become irrelevant when we stomp the value out of the dollar and the rest of the world takes up a different currency, congratulating us on shitting away our wealth and becoming a developing country? Because then a "collapse," which you're calling a big hit to the market, wouldn't matter. It strikes me as odd that people are advocating taking a HUGE hit to our monetary system later as a solution to avoid a big hit now.
Nonsense distracts from the real problems we have. We need to address them. Government bailouts will not make failed bankers suddenly competent. Government bailouts will not make American products competitive on a world market, while we pay state employees six figure incomes with huge benefits for work about as good as a monkey would do, and corrupt politicians line their union thug supporters' pockets while they rob Americans of a productive and wealthy future.
[I wish I could obey forum rules]