I'll keep it short, so my mother lost her house during the financial crisis - I was deployed at the time, she didn't let me know she needed help until it was really bad, the money I saved in a year was barely half of what she owed just to get caught back up on her mortgage (most of it was fees and interest) but the bank that owned the loan did get bailed out by the government when that trillion dollar check got out. Still even with the loan paid by the taxpayers, they still foreclosed on her property.
I see what Iceland did with their financial crisis and I am amazed - over there, from what I can tell, one of the few governments that actually still cares about their citizens. Forgiving all the personal debt of an entire nation.
Iceland forgives the personal national debt.
Iceland government does not bail out its private banks.
The Ice Rises...
That's pretty much it, I read a lot about the world news and zika mosquitos and stuff, but this, this one country standing up to the global banks... nope, silence. Just my personal thoughts.
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ReverieandEnvisage ago
I do have a question for you though. You said you had been deployed. So obviously you are and have had military training. What do you think then of what happened with the banks? Because honestly, is this something you would have let happen if you had the power? I mean, to be honest, my opinion of the military is that if they really had cared about it's citizens, then it would not have let this happen. Especifically banks stealing and cheating it's citizens, and then being told that the banks were too big to fail.
In my opinion, this is something that perhaps law enforcement and military presence could have prevented. I mean, isn't it the military's job to protect it's citizens? Or perhaps I'm over stepping my bounds, but this seems like a really big problem to be honest. And if the military does have power then they could have perhaps called bullshit on this and helped out it's citizens.
amerikanoX ago
You have asked a very deep question and for that you will never get a satisfying answer to it. I would love to tell you that the United States Armed Forces, that I still currently serve in, is the last bastion of hope left in our great country.
Things are more complicated that right now. I once I asked a man who I really respected as a mentor and leader why he was getting out of the Army - he told me something that in time I would come to see with my own eyes.
"The people I respect and value are all getting out or retired, those who remain are those who could never compete in the outside market for a real job - the people who progress up the ranks simply by staying in and doing the bare minimum."
The professional forces are looking a lot more like a corporation now a days and unlike the younger American days where great people of virtue (Like Smedley Darlington Butler - who pretty much single handily prevented a corporate backed military coup in the United States) are no longer relevant in today's media climate.
The days of a charismatic leader rallying the masses into over throwing their oppressors are long gone. Those who fear Tyrants do so because they listen to the control narrative - which serve the status quo.
I ask you did Julius Caesar destroy the Republic or buy it another five hundred years? Was Lincoln as noble as the historic narrative tells us he is, or was he merely a tool to destroy state rights and solidify the Federal power over them - only to be killed after he served his usefulness.
Like I said boss.... DEEP QUESTION. I can give you some solace thought, many of us see what is happening, and if ordered to, would obey the constitution and our own morality over a political agenda, if seen as unlawful.
ReverieandEnvisage ago
Thank you. I honestly don't know what to say, but you have given a meaningful response that needs to be considered and thought of. I'm a bit more comforted that many do feel the same as you in the military and more importantly of your last comment. I often do wonder if individual morals play a part of how a soldier acts if he views something that doesn't fit well with the person himself.
Thanks again for your response.
Edit: I'm currently listening to Smedley Darlington Butler War is a Racket. I'm just starting to see what you meant by a lack of a charismatic leader rallying the masses.