Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News [View article]
Doubleguns, contracts have been breakable for centuries, contrary to your statement, and many economists argue that they should be if that's the economically sensible thing to do. Our bankruptcy laws have reflected that for centuries, too. It's neither anyone's business nor their duty to validate or even respect anyone else's unilateral expectations, in or out of business. You pays your money and you takes your chances. The old fishing adage comes to mind-- "that's why it's called fishing, not catching."
Credit Card Catastrophe: Congress Can't Help [View article]
It's pretty basic that the foolishness of some is wealth itself to the wise. There's nothing wrong with profiting from one's own wisdom. But it's deeply immoral to go out of one's way to evoke foolishness for one's own profit. Some idiots might call me a socialist, but capitalism and a sense of morality are in no way mutually exclusive.
This is in part Congress's fault, for not having acted to overturn the Supreme Court decision Marquette National Bank (1978) which took financial regulation, including usury laws, away from the states when dealing with federally chartered banks, which-- surprise!-- all the credit card companies then rushed to form.
Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News [View article]
Credit Card Catastrophe: Congress Can't Help [View article]
This is in part Congress's fault, for not having acted to overturn the Supreme Court decision Marquette National Bank (1978) which took financial regulation, including usury laws, away from the states when dealing with federally chartered banks, which-- surprise!-- all the credit card companies then rushed to form.