BoJack Horseman wrote: » The elites will sneer & mock, but they have been rattled.
Patww79 wrote: » This post has been deleted.
Patww79 wrote: » My facebook is in complete meltdown. Now I have followed shag all of this, but why exactly does it matter so much to non-Americans or is it just fashionable or something to watch like a sport? I cannot fathom why all the social media crying is going on for an election in another country.
[Deleted User] wrote: » Indeed, people are fed up of politicians who only say what their PR advisors tell them to say (aka Cameron). A politician who says what they think themselves, without checking with their advisors (aka vested interests) is a breath of fresh air.
NIMAN wrote: » You think likes of Intel are just going to up sticks and move back to the US? They going to just put that huge building they pumped billions into on the back of a low loader?
BoJack Horseman wrote: » Like Brexit. The elites will spit feathers. There is a slight.... slight chance they will learn from this. People were tired of the status-quo. Remember, the fringes do better when the center fails..... And it has failed. Donny will serve 4 years and may well lose reelection, if he bothers to run. But both the GOP and Dems need to take stock and start listening to people instead of sneering with contempt. Political revolution can be a good thing & shouldn't necessarily be feared, whether it's britain, Greece, Spain or the US. The elites will sneer & mock, but they have been rattled.
Turtwig wrote: » This Brexit comparison makes little sense. If the vote was anti establishment you wouldn't really expect a majority for both house and Senate to be Republican. That's like saying you're going to give two fingers to system but instead you unhook the tethers keeping and the let the beast you resent roam free with full autonomy.
listermint wrote: » What Fringes in Greece and Spain are doing well? .
BoJack Horseman wrote: » Something something.... Alexi tsipras?
listermint wrote: » So basically none.
padd b1975 wrote: » If they can recoup their investment by relocating to a cheaper environment, they'll be gone pretty much overnight. It's what Dell did.
BoJack Horseman wrote: » Basically he's the PM Back to your Ovaltine Lister, pretend this isn't happening. Give it a few hours & try not to be a beligerant prick all your life!
Chuchote wrote: » Why does it matter? Why do the markets matter? Investors lend their money to businesses so that the businesses can afford to hire people and buy machinery and send their goods around the world. Some of those investors are pension funds, and governments, which calculate that the businesses they invest in will do well, and so they will get their money back, plus interest as a repayment on their loan. When the markets 'crash', this means that all these loans lose value. So your grandmother's pension now won't pay her, and she won't have money to buy food, or to buy you a nice present of a phone - which won't be made either, because the company won't have the money to pay its workers and buy its parts. And over in China, those workers will lose their jobs. The money they were paid will disappear from the Chinese economy, so other people will lose their jobs too. Your government will lose the money it lent to companies and to other governments. So there will be no money to pay pack people who have paid insurance against unemployment or towards their pensions; there will be no money to help small businesses to start up or to keep going in hard times. The markets aren't a global illuminati; they're how money is lent and borrowed around the world. It's not a good thing for anyone if they crash. This could be as bad as the 1930s Depression.
SEPT 23 1989 wrote: » Top story is about the reaction of "the markets" That's exactly why he will be elected People are sick of it
Chuchote wrote: » Why does it matter? Why do the markets matter? .
Deleted User wrote: » Markets matter long term. Short term they mean nothing.
Mr.Nice Guy wrote: » They're sick of it and yet they're electing a mega rich tycoon who won't release his tax returns. Only in America.
stankratz wrote: » "I'd rather be first and wrong than second and right." An unfortunately common mantra in times like these. OP is jumping the gun, but soon the thread will more than likely be accurate.