And I'm not saying there are no companies doing that. I'm saying to automatically assume the worst of all companies is wrong.
I get your point, I do. But the delivery of what you mean is not arriving as you think it is.
Here's the thing. There *are* companies that needed the loan, are going to use it as intended, and meet the guidelines as they loosely were formed and recently tightened down. We all agree that they needed the help, and for them this program is likely a Godsend. I forget which poster here is balls deep into this loan program himself because his small business genuinely needed it.
The problem is the large corporations, those with well in excess of the (first penciled in, later inked) 500 employee cap, who have enough capital to make it through this with nary a dent to the bottom line, standing with hat in hand purposely finding loopholes (or blatantly applying with no disregard) to take the money with no intent of it being seen by the employees that it was intended to.
YOU make it sound like we're making this out to be a Venn diagram where every successful applicant to the paycheck protection program and greedy *ssholes are perfectly overlapping circles.
Meanwhile, you mistakenly believe someone like yourself sitting at a desk filled out the applications out of the goodness of their heart to save their corporation.
Both are wrong.
There are lots of good small businesses who applied and were denied because some corporate CEOs felt that they needed to use separate tax ID's from their departments to maximize the amount they could, for lack of better wording, steal.
Take the L and stop. We're all saying the same thing, yet you continue to argue like this is a goddammed Frank Capra film. Newsflash: in 2020, Mr. Potter keeps the envelope of cash, George Bailey jumps from the bridge, and Clarence doesn't exist.
And I'm one of the ******** optimists around here.