I was there during the crypto-bubble, the housing market bubble, but I don’t have any memory of the internet/dotcom bubble, and I was not alive during the rail-road bubble.
However, I want to know what the thoughts of the people were during that time. During AI, that fact that it’s a bubble is more apparent but during the housing and dotcom, I feel like it was more subtle (or I am too naive).
Does anyone have any personal experience of what it was like at that time? Were people as skeptical as they are today? What were they right/wrong about? Were the attitudes different? What changed after the crash?


I should add to this a little.
The 2008 crisis and how the government reacted is partly why I live frugally. Watching millions lose their homes and no one go to prison changed my whole outlook on life. I was a massive Obama supporter, and there was no meaningful support for Occupy Wall Street, and in fact, Obama’s admin stood aside while NYPD ganged up and brutalized the protesters. I still hate Obama for bailing out Wall Street while so many lost their homes and livelihoods. All the big bankers who stole our money walked.
Essentially, I no longer have any hope for meaningful change as long as the Democrats and Republicans are in charge. My focus on saving and investing partly comes from a place where I fully expect Social Security to be gone when I hit retirement age, so I’m doing what I can to ensure I’m able to sustain myself.
TARP was enacted October of 2008, the year Obama was elected to office. Obama was not sworn in until 2009. The Dodd frank act in 2009 lowered the amount that TARP could push out.
No.
We’re not giving Obama credit for token gestures here. He had a supermajority and could have enacted meaningful reforms, but he didn’t.
Everyone involved in the subprime mortgage crisis walked and under Obama were still paying bonuses to themselves with taxpayer’s money, all while the foreclosure crisis ravaged the American people.
I do not care that the crisis originated under Bush. I care that Obama knew how bad it was and allowed people to become impoverished further while Wall Street partied with our money.
My reply was only about the bailout, nothing else you mentioned. I agree completely that these asshots shouldn’t have went free, and didn’t lose their fortunes they built off the backs of us.
I’m just not happy that the missinformation about Obama and the bailouts is still going strong this long after
I understand this sentiment. As someone who didn’t see wealth during their childhood, people get confused as I still travel by public transport instead of driving. I just assume that things can go sideways at any moment. Yes, it can seem like I’m a bit paranoid, but it’s not illogical.
Thanks for sharing.
Yup.
My parents have been ‘borrowing’ my car for two years. I get around on a Segway e-scooter, which given the explosion in gas prices, has turned out to be a very lucky purchase.
Plan for the worst. Hope for the best. It’s really the best way to navigate America these days.