Video61@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
>On Apr 23, 12:03 am, alexy <nos...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>> Vide...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
>> >the fed is forgiving fat cat
>> >debt, period.
>>
>> Maybe. But so far you have been singularly unsuccessful in providing
>> an example of any debt owed by one of these fat cats that has been
>> forgiven.
>
>liar.
No. You have given no single case of a debt owed by the "fat cat", who
it was owed to, and when it was forgiven. You have presented asset
swaps as examples of debt forgiveness, but no actual debt forgiveness.
>
>You never could point out an example in the first article
>> you posted.
>
>liar
Then show where you pointed out a debt owed, who it was owed to, and
when it was forgiven.
>
> And you were caught in your lie about Bear Stearns getting
>> debt forgiveness through bankruptcy.
>
> what do you call bankruptcy then? liar
I call "bankruptcy" what BS was on the brink of and avoided by being
bought by JPM. You may not like it, but bankruptcy has a specific
generally accepted definition. "Financial hard times" or even
"insolvency" are not the same as "bankruptcy", and do not lead to
court-directed debt forgiveness.
>
> And this libertarian article also
>> doesn't claim there has been any debt forgiveness, at least that I
>> saw. Maybe you can point out an example here, though?
>>
>
> you are to stupid to understand, i was correct.
Well since I'm so stupid, why don't you spell it out in baby steps for
me. What debt was identified in this article? Who was it owed to? When
was it forgiven? If there is debt forgiveness, that should be pretty
easy to do.
For instance, here's an actual case of debt forgiveness:
Delta got debt forgiveness under bankruptcy. All the information is at
www.deltadocket.com. The FAQ for creditors other than retirees and
survivors shows that unsecured creditors owed less than $2,000 get
paid at 70%. So an example of debt forgiveness would be a sandwich
shop from which they ordered lunches for noon-time meetings, to whom
they owed $1,500 at the time of the bankruptcy. $450 of that debt owed
to the sandwich shop was forgiven.
That's an example of a real debt forgiveness. Now, show me an example
of debt forgiveness in either of these articles. Who was owed money,
and when and how was that debt forgiven?
> keep posting liar.
>later on a will be right, you will vanish again.i
My, that certainly is coherent!
You know, you remind me of a little boy who hears the "big boys" talk
about stepping in "dog doo", and thinks it is really neat to know such
a "dirty word". That little boy uses "dog doo" to describe anything
that smells bad, with no concept of what the word actually refers to.
Apparently you have heard someone, maybe even someone with a clue,
talk about debt forgiveness in a negative context. Now, like the
little boy saying "dog doo", you use "debt forgiveness" for any
negative financial transaction (such as asset swaps) that you don't
understand (a fairly broad classification) and disapprove of, with no
clue as to what the term means.
--
Alex -- Replace "nospam" with "mail" to reply by email. Checked
infrequently.


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