Bankrupt 

18 creative works found

  • A Vote for Joe
    by Bonnie T. Barry

    Where his sense of self-worth was concerned, Joe was bankrupt . . .

  • Wall St, the root of all eeevviiilll!

  • This is one for anyone keeping up with politics in the UK! I think we are all screwed Make sure you check out my Bubble Site for more great designs, examples of which you can see below.

  • For lack of discipline!!!!! I am cutting them up…... as soon as I…... /

  • A peaceful image to give someone in their time of need. We know there is never really something we can say, but a card lets them know they are in your thoughts. This sometimes can mean more than words. Card would be good for giving someone who has become unwantingly separated from a loved one by divorce or breaking up, or perhaps is going thru a bad financial situation. ©2009 Gary L. Suddath All Rights Reserved

  • Knife stabbed into Ben’s throat, focus on Ben.

  • One hundred dollar bill with hypodermic needle.

  • 2009. 9×12 ballpoint pen and prismacolor marker on 11×14 bristol. tongue in cheek

  • Straw figures depicting homeless street people with pumpkins at halloween. Sitting on a straw bale against a clear blue sky.

  • Haunting image of an abandoned doll in a dilapidated vacant home.

  • Broken Wings
    by ArcadiaTempest

    She is secretive with her practiced no think look on her face / Crowds of multiplicity walk the talk on ever bitching streets

    Singing a different song…....isn’t always about being different…....maybe it is just about being you.

  • the NEW AMERICAN SOCIALISM: Socialize the RISK Privatize the REWARD Thanks OBAMA! That’s the kind of CHANGE Capitalist swines can live with! The White House estimates that the government will rack up an unprecedented $1.8 trillion budget deficit this year. That would be more than four times last year’s all-time high. CHANGE that NO ONE can live with: ( By Binyamin Appelbaum and Neil Irwin / Washington Post Staff Writers / Saturday, May 30, 2009 On the day before Thanksgiving in 1991, the U.S. Senate voted to vastly expand the emergency powers of the Federal Reserve. Almost no one noticed. The critical language was contained in a single, somewhat inscrutable sentence, and the only public explanation was offered during a final debate that began with a reminder that senators had airplanes to catch. Yet, in removing a long-standing prohibition on loans that supported financial speculation, the provision effectively allowed the Fed for the first time to lend money to Wall Street during a crisis. That authority, which sat unused for more than 16 years, now provides the legal basis for the Fed’s unprecedented efforts to rescue the financial system. Since March 2008, the central bank’s board of governors has invoked its emergency powers at least 19 times: to contain the wreckage of Bear Stearns and ease the fall of American International Group, to preserve Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, to limit losses at Bank of America and Citigroup, to lend more than $1 trillion. The repeated use of the once-dusty law has surprised and alarmed a wide range of people, including economists and members of Congress. It has even raised worries among presidents of the regional banks that make up the Federal Reserve system. Many critics are concerned that an institution not accountable to voters is risking vast amounts of public money and choosing which companies get help. Others are concerned that the Fed’s new role will interfere with its basic responsibility for regulating economic growth. There is also a question about the roots of the crisis: Did investment banks take greater risks in the past two decades because they knew the Fed could rescue them? The 1991 legislation, authored by Sen. Christopher J. Dodd (D-Conn.), was requested by Goldman Sachs and other Wall Street firms in the wake of the 1987 market crisis, and it would save some of them a generation later. Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and other leaders of the central bank have argued that the emergency authority has allowed it to rescue the financial system and that without it, the economy would be in far worse shape. And they argue that they are using the power as Congress intended. “This provision was designed as a last resort to make sure credit flows when times are tough and credit isn’t being extended,” said Scott Alvarez, the Fed’s general counsel. “That’s exactly what it’s being used for today.” Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.), chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, said that the actions taken by the Fed have been necessary and important but that those actions should have been taken by an agency accountable to voters. He said he was not aware of the Fed’s emergency power until September, and he favored removing much of that authority from the Fed once the crisis has passed…..’riiight’ ) WHAT HYPOCRITES, LIARS & THIEVES WE HAVE ELECTED TO LEAD US TO OBLIVION….. / ....This is how the world ends….not with a BANG or a WHIMPER, but a YAWN; )

  • Finally, economic troubles defined understandably!

  • Just like everyone else nowadays…

  • This shirt design is adapted from a painting I did on a Pontiac hubcap. I liked how much movement it had. It should draw people to you like darts to a board. I am not responsible for any dart related injury. Here’s a detail: / ...A happy customer: /

  • A 3d color bar graph showing continual decline until the line crashes through the floor.

  • A 3d rendered bar graph showing continual decline until the line crashes through the floor.

RedBubble is a great place to find art, design, photos and writing from over 80,000 talented people.

You can buy their stuff

On stunning greeting cards, awesome t-shirts or beautiful prints to hang on your walls.

Risk Free Returns

It’s really simple. If you’re not happy with your purchase for any reason, we’ll fix it.

About RedBubble

Since February 2007 we’ve shipped over 308,200 items to more than 70 countries around the world.

Join In

Sign up for your free account, upload your work, join some groups and share your creative genius with the world.

Find More…

Bankrupt T-Shirts

Bankrupt Wall Art

Bankrupt Journal Entries

Bankrupt Writing

Bankrupt Calendars