Dow Jones At Lowest In 11 Years — Why That’s Not’s Necessarily Disastrous


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Wednesday, March 10th, 2010 Uncategorized

25 Comments to Dow Jones At Lowest In 11 Years — Why That’s Not’s Necessarily Disastrous

  1. Lehmen Bros, Wells Fargo, Wachovia, Bank of America, AIG, and others; these are all Zombie Banks, insolvent, bankrupt. These banks should be put through chapter 11 bankrupty, which will be turned into chapter 7 bankruptcy, Liquidation.

  2. ludachris475 on March 10th, 2010
  3. 2012 is some bullshit!!! im gonna wake up the next mourning and laugh at all you guys and then party!

  4. jocelyn2315 on March 10th, 2010
  5. shit

    11 years that means

    1+1=2

    which means that the antichrist will arrive in 2 years

  6. fuxu123 on March 10th, 2010
  7. Im with you, I hate this cunt but i still watch

  8. madlam83 on March 10th, 2010
  9. Your not worth anyones time. Cenk’s the man.

  10. westaux999 on March 10th, 2010
  11. Cenk’s a clueless waste of time on economic issues. He’s not worth Peter’s time.

  12. pretorious700 on March 10th, 2010
  13. When is Peter Schiff gonna go on TYT and kick Cenk’s ass?

  14. Chikusoo on March 10th, 2010
  15. ha-ha! now(2may 2009) Dow Jones higher than 8200! It’s a fact! Since march stock began grow up

  16. ALEKSANDREXE2 on March 10th, 2010
  17. March was the Dow’s best month since 1933, it’s a fact. google it!!!

  18. dajooseovmabawls on March 10th, 2010
  19. lmao 3:07

  20. playdrumsmofuxa on March 10th, 2010
  21. So you didn’t vote. You don’t get to complain.

  22. rborchers7 on March 10th, 2010
  23. I voted for Hillary.

    So I guess you vote for obama, the empty suit?

  24. john6echo on March 10th, 2010
  25. Surely! Because it was the OVERregulation of Wall Street that got us into this situation.

    Oh, wait… NOT

  26. rborchers7 on March 10th, 2010
  27. You know who else voted for TARP?

    MCCAIN!

    Who did you vote for?

  28. rborchers7 on March 10th, 2010
  29. Stock market down. Jobless rate up. Bankruptcies up. Foreclosures up. Crime up.

    The stock market and everything else are currently “synonymous”.

  30. EmpireStrikesOut on March 10th, 2010
  31. President Andrew Jackson quote
    The bold effort the present (central) bank has made to control the government … are but premonitions of the fate that await the American people should they be deluded into a perpetuation of this institution or the establishment of another like it.

    Andrew closed the central bank, then we reopened it calling it the fed reserve…stupid and free never lasts

  32. xiola6969 on March 10th, 2010
  33. You’ll see this leftwing nut defend Obama all the way to communism, he is just an asshole.

  34. donottake on March 10th, 2010
  35. (above) nice games :)

    Give yourself 1-7 day of great entertainment..

  36. ADULTFLASHGAMES on March 10th, 2010
  37. Let’s face it. Obama voted for the first TARP.

    It failed miserably.

    Therefore obama has already proved to be a FLOP!

  38. john6echo on March 10th, 2010
  39. You are naive if you believe RE hsa been de regualted, it is HEAVILY regualated and subsidized, you obviously nevr heard of fannie mae and feddie mac and the undue pressure Frrank (D) and Dodd (D) have done to FORCE banks to make loans to unqualified persons, they NEVER disputed this. Thats the source of this collapse. Bush attempted to rein in fannie mae in 2002, but lins like will deny this because of your irrational hatred for everything republicans.

  40. crb4059 on March 10th, 2010
  41. If it weren’t for DEregulation of real estate, would the credit crisis have ever happened?

    nobody borrows hundreds of thousands of dollar unless they’re trying to buy a house.

    yes, we DO need our gov’t to stop a couple million profiteering yuppies from turning every $50k house into a $300k house.

    the whole world is looking at US right now like WTF!

    I’m more concerned about the private sector meddling in gov’t

  42. TheElectricHeat on March 10th, 2010
  43. The two party media mentality is a big problem. Why does every talking head need to strongly identify with a certain party or politicians? Don’t expect the media on the left side of the spectrum to tell things like it is. They are too busy pouncing on the right who are just starting to wake up from their stupor under the Bush years. Listen to Ron Paul. He is the fair and balanced guy.

  44. flexorder on March 10th, 2010
  45. Hey, was there two jerks on this show?…….the other guy was a spaz. He must now be working full time for Obama.

  46. Stark1010 on March 10th, 2010
  47. Well yes, you can over regulate and suffocate your economy, but you can very easily under regulate too. We’ve had under regulation many times in our country’s history like with the robber barons with railroads and steel manufacturing for example. We tested some stuff with the Great Depression, and made a set of regulations that slowed short term growth, yes, but stopped these crashes. Now, we’re paying the price for having been eroding those safeguards ever since by de-regulating everything.

  48. ThoughtRipple on March 10th, 2010
  49. Abssolutely not, the govt meddling in the private secotr is what helped bring this about, theres nothing right wing about or left wing about this. This is about free markets without meddling from the govt. Govts can destroy economies with regualtion taxation. The govts meddling in the mortgage market brought this about, and its continue meddling to “fix” it will make it worse, I promise

  50. crb4059 on March 10th, 2010

Dow Jones Index

The Dow Jones Industrial Average (NYSE: DJI, also called the DJIA, Dow 30, INDP, or informally the Dow Jones or The Dow) is one of several stock market indices, created by nineteenth-century Wall Street Journal editor and Dow Jones & Company co-founder Charles Dow. It is an index that shows how certain stocks have traded. Dow compiled the index to gauge the performance of the industrial sector of the American stock market. It is the second-oldest U.S. market index, after the Dow Jones Transportation Average, which Dow also created. The average is computed from the stock prices of 30 of the largest and most widely held public companies in the United States. The "industrial" portion of the name is largely historical—many of the 30 modern components have little to do with traditional heavy industry. The average is price-weighted. To compensate for the effects of stock splits and other adjustments, it is currently a scaled average, not the actual average of the prices of its component stocks—the sum of the component prices is divided by a divisor, which changes whenever one of the component stocks has a stock split or stock dividend, to generate the value of the index. Since the divisor is currently less than one, the value of the index is higher than the sum of the component prices.
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