Non Sequitur by Wiley Miller for November 30, 2010

  1. Woody with beer
    WoodEye  over 13 years ago

    Too TRUE!

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  2. Thinker
    Sisyphos  over 13 years ago

    It’s kinda reassuring….

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  3. The end
    mrnews2u  over 13 years ago

    Way too true.

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  4. Minotaurfanart
    Joe_Minotaur  over 13 years ago
    OMG!

    Granny Smith Blarney are moving into my home town! There’s barely 9,000 people there! How desperate can you get?!

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    cdward  over 13 years ago

    Dumb? Smart? All depends on how much you want to get investigated.

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  6. Flash
    pschearer Premium Member over 13 years ago

    Once again Wiley demonstrates his anti-business bias, which, of course, he constantly denies. “It’s just a joke.” Yeah, right.

    BTW, until they fix it, one of the ads on the right says “Get the new Non Sequitur 2010 Calendar”. While supplies last? It’s so hard getting good help these days.

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  7. Young wmb
    wmbrainiac  over 13 years ago

    wikileaks announced late yesterday that they’d be dumping the documents of a major bank next month. we shall see.

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  8. Crab hat rear
    Crabbyrino Premium Member over 13 years ago

    They are selling mattress covers, but since the dollar isn’t worth anything, we will be sleeping on hard wooded slats soon.

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  9. Flash
    pschearer Premium Member over 13 years ago

    BJR: No, Wiley has open season all all kinds of businessmen, not just banks. You could check the archives if you subscribed. Sounds to me like you have a bit of his same condition.

    Sayhow: They have meds now for paranoia.

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  10. Image
    peter0423  over 13 years ago

    pschearer, it’s always seemed to me that Wiley is basically anti-weasel. When businessmen are weasels, he’ll come across as anti-business; when politicians of one stripe or another are weasels, he’ll seem to be anti-whatever-they-are. And so on.

    If he seems to be picking on more group more often, a plausible explanation might be that that group has a higher proportion of weasels than some others.

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    Potrzebie  over 13 years ago

    I wonder If the firm actually had good ROI’s for their clients during those 627 days? As I recall Madoff’s clients had a nightmare reconciling their tax returns for capital investment revenues!

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  12. Harvey
    ImaginaryFriend  over 13 years ago

    There use to be a day when Bankers actually tried to help you make money with your money. Now they just want your money to make themselves money.

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    Trebor39  over 13 years ago

    We are living in interesting times.

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    peter0423  over 13 years ago

    It never was like that, ImaginaryFriend. Banks have always been in business to make money, just like any other business – that’s why businesses exist, and there’s nothing wrong with that, since it (usually) involves a win-win situation. Bankers may have been happy to help you make money with your money…as long as they made more. But that may have been when times were plummy; in hard times, like now, businesses are in survival mode. (Economics 101, good buddy.)

    To the extent that any business operates with personal friendliness and/or a social conscience, that’s terrific and we should celebrate it whenever it happens. But it’s not a requirement for them to exist and operate, and they sure as hell don’t teach it in business school.

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    AlanDF  over 13 years ago

    @pschearer, You are so right. The financial giants have shown such a fine grasp of reality and concern for their customers.

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    puddleglum1066  over 13 years ago

    This firm should have no trouble finding customers.

    When Bernie Madoff was running his Ponzi scheme, many (if not most) of his clients suspected he was doing something illegal. Their mistake was in believing it was some kind of illegal insider-trading scam, which would have left them with their profits when/if he was caught.

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  17. Missing large
    starbase502  over 13 years ago

    Wikileak that firm immediately!

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  18. Tn
    syke34  over 13 years ago

    The SEC IS COMING.

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  19. Pogomarch
    MatureCanadian  over 13 years ago

    “If it sounds too good to be true, then it probably isn’t.”

    Thanks Wiley, again you’ve hit the nail on the head with a wallop!

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  20. Possum
    Possum Pete  over 13 years ago

    @pschearer,

    Why are you defending bankers? What have you got to hide? A closet republican? Don’t be ashamed. We won’t think any less of you (that would be inmpossible). ;)

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  21. Turkey2
    MisngNOLA  over 13 years ago

    I’m a fiscal conservative, a business school graduate, and generally a free-market advocate. That being said, I think the bank bailout was one of the worst ways to try and deal with the liquidity problem that many banks had after the real estate bubble burst. By simply giving money to the banks to cover their losses, and offering to have the Federal Government take some of the toxic assets off of the banks’ ledgers for them, Congress did a grave disservice to the Constitutents they purportedly serve, since the banks are still left with a smaller bottom line, and are not in any way incentivized to lend more money. A more reasonable plan would have been to return the entire year’s income tax paid to the taxpayers of this nation. They in turn could have used the money for purchases, to pay down their debts, and to redeem their bad mortgages. As such, the money would wind up going ot the banks anyway, would have reduced the amount of toxic assets the banks held, and left the banks in a more liquid position while also helping “the little guy” become more liquid. Of course, the little guy wasn’t the one pumping millions of dollars at a time into the campaign coffers of Congresscritters.

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  22. Yellow pig small
    bmonk  over 13 years ago

    @MisngNOLA, worse, the banks who were caught have no incentive to be more careful next time, to look into the chance of a bubble and avoid the risk–why bother? If it works, we’ll make money, and if it doesn’t, then Congress will save us.

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  23. Laughter
    Karen345  over 13 years ago

    wiley rules.

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  24. Computerhead
    Spyderred  over 13 years ago

    I was able to actually ask a member of Congress why so much free money was given to banks rather than to individuals. The answer was that there were fewer banks and it was easier to keep track that way. It’s possible that was the truth, although the feds have no trouble at all dealing with individuals when it comes to placing the majority of the tax burden.

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  25. Lum happy
    yohannbiimu  over 13 years ago

    Blarney & Associates isn’t doing anything that the federal government hasn’t been doing for the last 80 years…so what’s the beef?

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  26. Hal 9000
    Kali  over 13 years ago

    They make money the Old Fashioned Way. They STEAL it!

    (with apologies to John Houseman)

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    thirdguy  over 13 years ago

    pschearer: most people who read the comic strips, much less comment on them, understand, that a sense of humor is a prerequisite. You need to get back on line, you forgot yours.

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    chuckercan  over 13 years ago

    If you go to the NY Post cover for March 13, 2009, 627 days ago, it’s all you need to know. Wiley strikes again!

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    dfowensby  over 13 years ago

    how do i contact these guys

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  30. Cat29
    x_Tech  over 13 years ago

    So Friday, the 13th of March 2009 wasn’t a good day for Blarney & Associates

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  31. Phil b r
    pbarnrob  over 13 years ago

    The Supremes, some years ago, solved the problem that a business (at least a corporation, now a full person!) has the absolute obligation to maximize profit, at the expense of anything else.

    Mom-n-Pop businesses may get away with having a social conscience, but if they incorporate and sell shares, look out!

    And that’s why the term “Banksters” was coined.

    If corporations could go to jail (might take some BIG handcuffs) this might be fixable.

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  32. Cathy aack
    lindz.coop Premium Member over 13 years ago

    “Inside Job” is a great documentary film that exposes it all – on both sides from the Depression to Reagan & onward to Obama.

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  33. Flash
    pschearer Premium Member over 13 years ago

    To all those who addressed me directly:

    When Wiley is funny I laugh. There are many comic strips set in the business world, mostly making fun of bad bosses and inane policies, which I saw enough of in 35 years in the corporate world, but Wiley, more than any cartoonist I can think of, consistently implies businessmen are immoral per se. That is what I will continue objecting to every time he resorts to it.

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    Archistoteles  over 2 years ago

    There are many more immoral businesses and businessmen than there are cartoons made by Wiley and all other cartoonists. Don’t let the bee into your bonnet.

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