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Old 12-05-2008, 09:26 AM   #421
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This time is a bit different though. This isn't one of the small print disclosures they expect you to simply ignore and throw away. This is a full on formal letter asking him to give them written and explicit permission to change his existing rate regardless of future use. Pretty funny really considering he doesn't and won't ever use the card.
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Old 12-05-2008, 06:28 PM   #422
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Originally Posted by lookout123 View Post
This time is a bit different though. This isn't one of the small print disclosures they expect you to simply ignore and throw away. This is a full on formal letter asking him to give them written and explicit permission to change his existing rate regardless of future use. Pretty funny really considering he doesn't and won't ever use the card.
I would have to tell them to fuck off. No change in the rate.
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Old 12-05-2008, 10:21 PM   #423
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he told them he likes his current rate and doesn't need future borrowing privileges. they chose not to close his available credit anyway.
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Old 12-06-2008, 12:56 AM   #424
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Auto bailout could be tied to gov't-run overhaul

Quote:
WASHINGTON (AP) - The government would order a major restructuring of Detroit's struggling Big Three auto companies in exchange for a multibillion-dollar bailout under a plan circulating in Congress.

Skeptical lawmakers are weighing whether to dole out as much as $34 billion in aid to the automakers as the once-mighty companies make their second round of pleas for government help to keep them from collapsing by year's end and potentially deepening an already painful recession.

With several lawmakers in both parties pressing them to consider a pre-negotiated bankruptcy - something they have consistently shunned - members of Congress and the Big Three both were contemplating a government-run restructuring that would yield similar results, including massive downsizing and labor givebacks.

U.S. auto executives were appearing before the House Financial Services Committee for the second time to outline their plans for staying afloat with a government infusion.

The rescue, though, was facing fresh obstacles in Congress, with lawmakers still unconvinced they should support yet another bailout and congressional officials saying a leading proposal for helping the carmakers wouldn't come close to covering the cost.

"We're looking at a death sentence" for the auto companies, Sen. Chris Dodd, D-Conn., the Senate Banking Committee chairman, said Thursday, pledging to try to help the Big Three. He quickly added, "I'm not a miracle worker and no one here is."

Finding the money was proving to be an uphill battle. Congressional budget analysts said one leading proposal - to use an already approved fund set aside for making cars environmentally efficient - would provide just $7.5 billion - a fraction of what General Motors Corp. (GM), Ford Motor Co. (F) and Chrysler LLC say they need.

Democratic congressional leaders are leaning on President George W. Bush to instead tap into the already enacted $700 billion Wall Street bailout fund to aid the auto industry, arguing that a carmaker collapse would have a devastating impact on the financial firms the program is designed to help.

The Bush administration has said it has no intention of doing so, arguing that the money was supposed to be for financial institutions, and instead wants to convert the fuel-efficiency money into emergency loans.

Auto state lawmakers are threatening to block the administration from accessing the second half of the financial rescue fund unless it comes to the aid of the Big Three.

And President-elect Barack Obama wasn't stepping forward with an alternative. Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., who has been dealing with both the financial bailout and the auto rescue proposal as chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, said Obama is "going to have to be more assertive than he's been."

Repentant after a botched first crack at bailout pleas, the companies' executives said they were willing to overhaul their companies and own up to past errors.

"We made mistakes, which we're learning from," GM chief Rick Wagoner said. Ford CEO Alan Mulally also acknowledged big missteps, saying his company's approach once was "If you build it, they will come."

"We produced more vehicles than our customers wanted, then slashed prices," he said. But as a result of these past mistakes, "we are really focused," he said.

United Auto Workers union President Ron Gettelfinger, aligned with the industry in pressing for the aid, told senators that any kind of bankruptcy, even a prepackaged one, was not "a viable option." Gettelfinger said consumers would not buy autos from bankrupt companies, no matter the terms of the arrangement.

He also warned that without action by Congress: "I believe we could lose General Motors by the end of this month." He said the situation was dire.

It wasn't enough for some skeptics.

"I don't know how they're going to make it," Sen. Richard C. Shelby, R-Ala., said of the automakers. "If they called this a plan to get money, the bankers all over the world would laugh."

Even sympathetic Democrats said it was difficult to find a way to help the Big Three with time running out on this year's Congress.

"Can it be done in the next week?" said Sen. Evan Bayh, D-Ind. "That's a tough lift."
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Old 12-06-2008, 10:12 AM   #425
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Originally Posted by lookout123 View Post
he told them he likes his current rate and doesn't need future borrowing privileges. they chose not to close his available credit anyway.
And that is how a gentleman tells someone to fuck off.
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Old 12-06-2008, 06:22 PM   #426
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.... I find myself disinclined to acquiesce to your request ...
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Old 12-06-2008, 09:57 PM   #427
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There may be two more 'shoes to fall'. Suggested was that credit card companies and pension funds will need government protection.

Obviously top of the pension fund list is GM's. GM was routinely shorting the pension fund to claim profits - to make top management look good.

Many are asking questions of Capital One who attracted (with low interest rates) customers that never pay off the balance. Captial One then hikes those interest rates higher on a slightest excuse.
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Old 12-07-2008, 05:21 PM   #428
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Many are asking questions of Capital One who attracted (with low interest rates) customers that never pay off the balance. Captial One then hikes those interest rates higher on a slightest excuse.
That was not just Capital one, thats the most common trick of a low-end, bottom feeder, deceptive lender.
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Old 12-07-2008, 11:14 PM   #429
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That was not just Capital one, ...
Obviously I never said Captial One was the only one. Capital One is simply a benchmark of companies considered a prime example of the what may be the next 'shoe to fall'. Another pending 'shoe' may be pension funds. Why do you again ignore what was posted? Why do you routinely post with no useful facts? Why do you never demonstrate knowledge?

Last edited by tw; 12-07-2008 at 11:37 PM.
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Old 12-08-2008, 07:28 AM   #430
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Your writing style is very unclear. Your last post, like many of your posts are written in a most unusual style, leaving the reader to guess at some of your intent. You seemed to single Capital One out for some reason and I was simply clarifying that. Your welcome!
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Old 12-08-2008, 11:03 PM   #431
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Originally Posted by classicman View Post
Your writing style is very unclear.
At what point does "credit card companies" somehow become "credit card company"? [quote=tw;511346]There may be two more 'shoes to fall'. Suggested was that credit card companies ... will need government protection. ...

Many are asking questions of Capital One ... [quote] How did Capital One become all "credit card companies"? Cited was a problem - "credit card companies" - and a benchmark example - "Capital One".

Post did not say "company". It said "companies". Please read what was posted. Capital One was singled out as an example. Some "credit card companies" (ie Capital One) are described by others at particularly high risk - an example of the maybe 'next shoe to fall'.
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Old 12-08-2008, 11:07 PM   #432
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I read what you wrote, the implication was still there whether it was intended or not. Geez relax!
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Old 12-08-2008, 11:30 PM   #433
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I read what you wrote, ...
Then deal with what was written. The topic in this thread is "Bailing". Meltdown in the credit card companies (ie massive interest increases on people who can least afford it) and pension funds (which is simply another irresponsible financial organization that all Americans get to pay for - ie via PBGC) are looming crisis yet to implode.

Once upon a time, some Americans foolishly worried about a mythical sucking sound into Mexico. We have finally discovered sources of that sucking sound. It resides among us. Writing was on the wall. A 2% reduction of the average American income over these past 8 years. A $2billion war that now costs over $1000billion. Worse, we even voted for it.

Sucking has probably only started. How much will be sucked into oblivion? How many more implosions are awaiting us? Pension funds and credit card companies are two latest concerns.
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Old 12-09-2008, 10:08 AM   #434
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Don't forget that in 10-15 years at the current rate taxes will double to about 42% for the average American and it will be virtually all consumed by medicare, medicaid, the debt and the interest on the debt.

That leaves nothing for wars, homeland security, Universal healthcare..... nothing.

Just something to keep in mind as we bail more companies & corporations out.
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Old 12-09-2008, 12:41 PM   #435
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Don't forget that in 10-15 years at the current rate taxes will double to about 42% for the average American and it will be virtually all consumed by medicare, medicaid, the debt and the interest on the debt.
That's what happens when taxes are only cut for the rich. Even Warren Buffet complains he pays less than his receptionist. 50% of American corporations now pay no taxes. When liars claim that American corporations pay the highest taxes in the world, then debts are further created. Lying may be the biggest reason why Americans must pay higher taxes or face international bankruptcy.

Ironically, too many Americans believe the Treasury is a bottomless pit of cash. That's a delayed catastrophe attributed to debt. Debt can keep accumulating long after bankruptcy was necessary - then take revenge all at once. Need an example? GM has really been bankrupt for maybe 20 years. The spread sheets only “suddenly discovered” that reality. AT&T was virtually bankrupt for so long that only its name had any value. Having given out or promised away $7.5trillion, the US government is all but bankrupt. We may not know it yet.

Harm has been done. Results of that economic revenge have not yet been seen. Most interesting will be how severely economics will take revenge. The numbers. How deep and for how long. Nobody can really say. We know economics will take revenge. But numbers that define that revenge and where it will be worst are unknown. It could be mild and long. We just don't know and have no history to benchmark a useful model.

Last edited by tw; 12-09-2008 at 12:47 PM.
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