Want this question answered?
No one is truly to blame, it is our faults. If anyone I would blame radical conservatives (not all Conservatives) who freak out believing that we are loosing our free market. The government didn't watch over our economic status. It is our fault for causing the problem, corporations faults for taking advantage of us and the government, and the government for not refereeing the whole situation because they sided with the radical conservatives.
True, it was a cause of the Great Depression.
wath the enseres
Prior to government involvement in the free market recessions occurred as they always will in cycles. What goes up must come down type of thing. These recessions were pretty short lived and lasted a year or so and corrected. But around the turn of the 20th century politicians began to place the blame for these recessions on the political party in power. By doing so when the economy improved while they were in power they could take credit for it. That is when the problems really began. The free maket will correct itself and it will do it fairly quickly but when the politicians began to try to "make" it correct itself by dabbling with the monetary system (such as creating the fed) it started taking longer and longer for the market to fix itself. Still today, the people want and expect their government to save them from these recessions and there is political power to be gained from it so politicians rationalize that they have better ideas than the people who actually work in the money market and business and continue to try and "fix" the system.
scapegoat theory - Apex
Kinda.
No one is truly to blame, it is our faults. If anyone I would blame radical conservatives (not all Conservatives) who freak out believing that we are loosing our free market. The government didn't watch over our economic status. It is our fault for causing the problem, corporations faults for taking advantage of us and the government, and the government for not refereeing the whole situation because they sided with the radical conservatives.
God doesn't fail. We do. If you are viewing something about God as a failure, then you fail to understand Him. Start studying the Bible.
destiny allows failure for life is a rolling wheel, sometimes we are up, sometimes we are down but when we fall we must not blame our destiny, for what your destiny doesn't matter, what matters most is how you take your destiny..............
mostly their parents, also their peersOr:That blame should be awarded to the individual that drops out. Blaming others for a personal failure to measure up to society's established minimum standards belongs to the individual that makes the choice.
The blame was put on the o-rings in the solid booster rockets. The failure was attributed to a combination of poor design and cold weather.
Because they are lazy and do not apply themselves. Then try to blame someone else for a problem they brought upon themselves.
There were multiple factors that contributed to the failure of the League of Nations, and it would be overly simplistic to solely blame America. While the absence of US involvement and the failure of the Senate to ratify the Treaty of Versailles were significant, other factors, such as the lack of enforcement mechanisms and the inability to effectively address the rise of aggressive powers like Germany and Japan, also played a role in the league's failure.
Yes he wrote another letter accepting full blame if the mission failed. He was a true leader of men.
Perhaps the truth of it is that failure often leads to misplaced blame. Since the Illuminati does not exist, blaming that particular boogieman is definitely misplaced.
blame it on the goose
Your question is awkwardly worded and seems to be the "Is A or A the cause of Event?" type of question. If you are asking "Did the Financial Crisis result from internal mismanagement as opposed to a failure endemic to the capitalist system or the market system?" the answer depends on your economic bent. However, excluding strong Marxist and Corporatist Economic Theories, most economists do blame the crisis on a failure by those in the system to effectively inform others what it was that they were trading and its riskiness. There are no competitors to the financial market that could "squeeze it out of competition." The market is a place to buy and sell financial assets, not the type of assets sold (which can fluctuate with the times). It results include the collapse of large financial institutions, the bailout of banks (by national governments), and downturns in stock markets around the world. There were multiple causes. including internal competition, and financial downturns.