It's hard because when does compassion supersede what's right and wrong, or visa versa?
I don't want this guy to lose his house. He will, probably this month. On one hand I wish it didn't have to happen, but at the same time the cold hearted side of me says "that's what you get." I'd rather have bail out systems for people who deserve it... good hard working people who have expierienced some kind of tragedy or a loss of job due to layoffs. But even then, you need to be responsible and plan for these things.
I will freely admit that having been an Estate Planner and now an analyst, it's far easier to advise than it is to do. My wife and I should be more vigilant at times, but often times we just say "f" it and do it.
There's certainly a component to how life has changed since my parent's days that make it nearly impossible to compare my life, my profession, to the same just 10 years ago, let alone 20. I've been at my company for 8 years. 2-5 years earlier, most departments didn't have a single computer and others, just a few. No one had email, and no voicemail. In that short time, just 5 years, everyone had pc's and email. It changed everything. I do an expenential amount more work because of technology. If my CEO is in Washington, he can email and ask me for something and I'll drop what I'm doing and will breakdown or analyze or whatever something incredibly complicated in just a short while and forward it off to him. That was unheard of just 10 years except for the highest end, most technologically savvy companies.
So now, most of us are all doing a lot more in jobs. Gone are the 9 to 5 days where you truly leave your job when you step out the door. We live to work and work to live and it breeds a certain amount of discontent. We have to go out and buy things to make us happy, to help justify why we work so hard. We want more things, so we work harder, become more discontent, have to more things, and so on and so forth. Every now and then, that cycle has to break. We either do it ourselves, or it's done for us... maybe like it is now with fuel and other economic issues that we're facing.
The markets and our economy are driven by two things now more than ever... the global environment (events, politics, and economies) and perception and those two also feed off each other.
The other day Phil Grahm called Americans a bunch of whiners while talking about our economy. To a large degree, he's spot on. But at the same time, too many Americans are living far too fragile a balance between prosperity and insolvency.
As a former I-Banker, I think your entire post is spot on. The two things that kill the markets are panic and greed.
I highlighted the above because it floors me as well how someone would sign a contract without reading it. Of course, the brokers share some of the blame as they offer ignorant (or brainwashed depending on your view) people the "American Dream." But I also have little sympathy as people need to learn to pay attention and take responsibility.
To answer the original question, the economy has not affecting my audio hobby.