first of all, +1 on kilby's post about 3 posts up. :)
to 38th: i know what you're saying. certainly, i feel sorry for those who just happened to need a house at the height of the boom. however, even people with only one house were often rubbing their hands with glee (not talking about you, obviously) at the "gains" they were making (not quite sure why, when you only have one house, all the other houses are going up in value too, so unless you're going to live in a tent, any gains are strictly on paper only).
I know that at one point it seemed that everyone in our estate (except for us) was rubbing their hands with glee and was planning to move once they saw how much money their house would sell for. these people only had one house.
not to mention, a heck of a lot of people with only one house were buying one house they could ill-afford, and hoping that with the increase in the property market, they could trade up. again, making money from the boom.
as i said, i accept that some people who don't deserve to lose anything will lose. I feel genuinely sorry for those people. just i disagree that there are so few people to blame for the mess. granted some people are more to blame than others, but the house prices weren't rocketing solely because of speculators etc. the fact that once easy credit dried up, the bottom fell out of the market, more or less proves that- a lot of those speculators probably had enough money not to need those loans, or at least would be a safe enough bet to still be able to get credit.
:)
^ what about the dudes who get in at the top because daddy owns the company?
Nearly missed that bit dave :D
Access to capital, sadly is one of the measurements of the "legs" that we are born with.
It was in my first post, or at least I meant it with:
"some because they were born with the funds (= their ancestors did some hard work),"
Might not have been daddy, might have been grand-daddy, whoever. Might even be based on what we now regard as the ill-gotten gains of slavery, piracy, or something else we wouldn't tolerate now.
But most of us expect our stuff to go to our descendants - how can we have one rule for us and not allow the rich to do the same? I don't see why I should get a share in the fruits of someone else's labours just so that their offsrping don't get it. I know it's what causes the great rich-poor divide, but the other answer means that our kids won't get the fruits of our labours either...
The business of "Johnny" getting a seat on the board because he's family - who cares? Any banker/industrialist that puts his idiot son on the throne without "training" him up first (or providing trustworthy support) has probably made a lot worse business decisions than that already :lol:
ah, ok, i didn't realise you meant that. i guess that's fair enough. though i'd say that some jobs pay better than others, whether or not merit is involved... i mean, just as an example, university lecturers are among the best-qualified people in the country, and they get paid a pittance. not to mention, in some jobs you're almost considered evil if you like money (those jobs considered a "calling", or a vocation e.g. teaching, nursing), while in others it's positively encouraged.
Not a major fan of double standards. :(