Benchmarks occurring before 2007 and hurling into 2009 became signs of a recession or economic slow down. In hindsight, the formation of economic collapse mounted upon and after 9/11/2001, which included one fiasco after another: destruction of the World Trade Center, Hurricane Katrina, high energy costs, depletion of the housing boom due to people being overcharged on inflated property assessments and variable interest rates that would soon sky rocket and wipe a family out of house and home. Other examples: Bernie Madoff duping the system and ripping stockholders off, and businesses filing for bankruptcy one after another which led to companies going out of business and employees losing their jobs. With all this calamity, the banks needed a huge breath of life called the TARP or the $700 billion bail out, and the U.S. government was left balancing the wavering shreds of business in one hand and delicate American lives in the other.
Amidst the surge of money, many Americans wonder whether the criteria for administering large sums of money to such entities in the event of such an economic storm could have been written to include their pocket books, too? Americans are saying, "if the money could have been given directly to the people, the bills would have been paid, companies would have been started and jump started, and people would not have lost their homes or their jobs. From all the payouts by the people, the banks would have gotten their money, the car companies would have made some money, and the financial and insurance companies would have recouped their losses, also, thus creating a faster upstart to our economy."
America is asking, could the criteria of the TARP law have been written to include the pocket books of the American people? Explain with some detail. Or perhaps you would prefer to answer the following question: Would you have liked for the TARP bill to have included the pocket books of the average American, how much, and what would you have done with your share?