After all, what your really saying is... "I will work entirely for the government this percentage of my time" which is actually slave labor... but that's another story altogether.
Actually what I'm saying is that in order to have an economy with a sufficient amount of jobs, increased expansionary policies in government spending and extravagant actions are necessary (in fact, mandatory by current law) even from the most basic macroeconomic perspective.
You simply cannot allow the banks to fail. It's as simple as that. If the banks fail on the level that they were heading, there is no economy. You assert I will be working for the government; in response, I'll tell you that you wouldn't have a job if the economy were allowed to completely collapse under the assumption that it will rebuild itself.
Ok so the answer is yes... you actually believe there is only one solution possible to fix the problem, and that is bailout, or the entire economy will collapse. That's what I was checking... If a bank collapses it can cause problems yes, but that is inevitable.. you do realize that these bailouts are only temporary band-aids right...?... the economy by design will do this again and again, until the percentage of your check taken for taxes is 100% and your a government employee no matter where you work. This is the idea of socialism, you believe socialism is the only way. Others believe differently is all I'm saying, and there are multiple options.. Like throughout all of history... socialists believe their way is the only way or there will be ruin.. capitalists believe the same... fascists.. .communists... every type, so I cant fault you for that... You should however just be aware that you support the end of capitalism and the government funded and run banking systems of socialism.
I also would like to mention that its not just banks being bailed out...
How many economics classes have you taken, and what level were they?
A lot of what you're saying is completely contradictory to even the most basic of the principles of macroeconomics.
You can stop with the fear mongering surrounding socialism as well. FDR's actions were much larger than what has been done so far by the Obama and Bush Administrations...yet we have remained a very capitalist-minded economy. Numerous other countries have inserted socialist programs (health, education, etc.) and their countries did not go down the toilet...most are doing better than the US at the moment.
Bailing out the banks does not send our country down an unending slippery slope of constant bailouts. It prevents the banks for falling completely, which would lead to the crashing of our entire economy. The government props them up by allowing them to have non-toxic assets to start loaning to people again. When they can start getting loans out and receiving quality returns as they were before, the bailouts stop. How long that takes is questionable, but you won't find a legitimate economists who asserts that bailouts will continue until our income tax is 100%. That's pure nonsense, paranoia, and fear mongering at its best.
What you're asserting is, at the onset or in the middle of a recession, a government should utilize contractionary monetary and fiscal policies. And that is factually incorrect in the eyes of every educated economist. It is one of the first things taught in introductory macroeconomics courses; that expansionary monetary and fiscal policies are required to bring an economy out of recession or depression and that contractionary policies are used to control the rate of inflation, spending, and much more.
I am not encouraging a fully socialist economy (yes, aspects of socialism are necessary as the top economies in history will serve as examples). I am encouraging the pretty basic economic principle that when an economy is on the brink of recession or is in a recession, expansionary policies (increased government spending mainly) are necessary and, as I mentioned earlier, REQUIRED by law. When the unemployment rate reaches a certain percentage, for example, the federal government is REQUIRED BY LAW to step in and do everything possible to lower that unemployment rate. When the rate of inflation or deflation reaches a certain point, the government is REQUIRED BY LAW to step in and stop the changes.