1. The act of blaming someone else for your own mistakes.
2. Refusing to take responsibility for anything BAD while always taking credit for anything GOOD.
Greenspanning was pioneered by Alan Greenspan, the former head of the U.S. Federal Reserve System, who has spent the last 5 years denying any responsibility for the housing bubble or subsequent economic collapse -- despite enormous evidence to the contrary.
"Did he ever admit his mistakes."
"No way, man. He's Greenspanning again."
"Typical."
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Greenspan's - A clothing store located in southern California,
They carry such styles as Pendleton board shirts , Ben davis, lowrider Charlie brown shirts,FB County Frisco Cords, even some discontinued clothing they can replicate.
The last original clothing store" family owned and operated in Southern California since 1928. We carry Pendletons, Hush Puppies, Ben Davis, Car Club Coats, winos, Stacy Adams, Levis, Stetson, Dickies, and hundreds of other brands, as well as our own Greenspan's brand. With so many thousands of items in our store, and we are not able to show it all here, so please contact us by email or phone about item inqiries "If you don't see it, just ask
Greenspan's
The last original clothing store !
3405 Tweedy Blvd. South Gate, CA 90280
The Last Original Clothing Store
Carrying many styles you just can't find anywhere else!
(FINANCE) the widely-held belief by most traders or speculators that Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan (s.1987 to 2006) would use monetary policy to ensure that asset prices would not fall below a certain level.
A "put" here refers to the put option, a financial derivative that allows the owner the guaranteed right to sell a fixed amount of the underlying asset for a fixed strike price. A person who has a put for the assets she owns therefore is immune from the risk of those assets falling below a particular floor.
In the case of the Greenspan put, it was widely observed that Greenspan intervened in order to protect gains in asset values; this tended to guarantee that purchases of financial assets during Greenspan's tenure were very unlikely to be mistakes. This, of course, created conditions of moral hazard in the asset markets. particularly in financial stocks and in housing prices.
The outcome of that (October 1994) rate cut turned out to be far worse, as the committee's actions came to be viewed as the Greenspan Put, meaning speculators could take enormous amounts of risk trusting that Greenspan would do anything to stop the market from a serious decline.
William A. Fleckenstein & Frederick Sheehan, *Greenspan's bubbles* (2008), p.61
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someone who is a Jew and you can tell he is a Jew just by looking at him. Also he is not a player
if you are a jew and not a player you are a Ben Greenspan
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An optional golf rule, similar to a mulligan, allowing any shot that ends up father from the hole than it started to not be counted against a players score, on the condition that the subsequent shot be taken using a putter. It is the second shot that is called the "Greenspan Putt." Like the mulligan, its use encourages excessive risk taking, as the player is guaranteed not to end up in a place worse than where he started.
%#*! I totally misread that one. I'm gonna take a Greenspan Putt.
Boy who gets no girls and the girls he does get have missing teeth and vapes in the school toilets