Not really. Very recently they did pass a bill to slash like 30 grand from everyone's mortgage, but that was long after the crisis actually took place and a pretty dubious plan overall.
What the Icelanders actually did to combat the crisis was to nationalize all of the banks.
Here we go with "fair" again. I wasn't talking "fair," it's a term without an effective definition. I was talking effectiveness and efficiency. I note that you didn't refute my argument, you went haring off after "fair." I'll take that as an admission that you can't refute my argument.
I assumed that was what you were getting at. Trying to go through and pay off everyone's loans would not be efficient in any way. There are way too many loans out there and no real way to determine a fair price while the market is in free fall. Recapitalizing the banks is a lot more efficient than trying to work through all the individual home loans, or trying to take over all of the outstanding home loans.
What Iceland did works ok in a country with an economy half the size of the smallest US state. The US government nationalizing the entire US banking industry was never going to happen.
Can you really think of an electable US politician who would support nationalizing the banking industry.
I don't see how a robust government option is logical, but then again, you use words funny a lot. Maybe you meant "reasonable," or possibly "efficient and effective." I note that you're agreeing with me that Obamacare sucks, but still trying to defend Obama. Must be tough, you have my sympathy.
You can choose whatever terminology you want. What seems to work all around the world is to build a public healthcare system that provides good quality medical care to everyone.
The US has a lot of partial program that provide healthcare to some people and mostly end up picking up the tab for all of the expensive things when **** gets out of hand. They need a system that provides preventative care and doesn't require your life to go to hell before they step in.
But that would be a massive expansion of the government, which seems to scare the crap out of everyone in the US.
The difference between you and me on these issues seems to be that I am comparing him to realistic alternatives.