• clucose@lemmy.ml
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    4 hours ago

    2008 didn‘t damage mortage holders, how did you get to this opinion? Banks were packaging bad credits with good ones an shifting those packages like hot potatoes between each other. Till it crashed.

      • clucose@lemmy.ml
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        4 hours ago

        Yes. That’s a different case to todays case. People should‘ve been bailed out. Trump used his powers wrong and thus the paid tariffs have to be paid back to the importer. If the importer give this back to customers is a different question. Everybody should speak to Walmart et. al. about a this.

        • NihilsineNefas@slrpnk.net
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          27 minutes ago

          Because these companies have ALWAYS responded positively to consumers wishes, its why prices are so low and why we’re in a golden age of national production, instead of paying companies to ship products from one country, where they’re farmed, to another country to be processed, then another country to be packaged, and finally to their destination where they’re sold.

    • Hacksaw@lemmy.ca
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      4 hours ago

      Instead of giving the default money to banks they could have given it to the “bad credit” mortgage holders, who could have used it to pay their mortgages. The money still goes to banks but people get houses too.