No... it happened because the government and Fed bailed everyone out in the dot.com bubble 8 years earlier. Bad companies grow bigger. Money printing pushed down interest rates artificially, government programs (guaranteed deposits being one of them) encouraged banks to lend money recklessly and taught depositors not to worry, and banks were able to repackage mortgages and sell them to fannie and freddie (government entities), thinking there is nothing to lose! Don't read from the mainstream media because they know nuts about economics :)
Why would you make taxpayers own a part of a bankrupt company? It doesn't make economic sense, let alone moral sense.
Why must millions of hardworking americans who did nothing wrong, who saved for the future and did not buy 4 or 5 houses, pay for those who did? And pay for those bankers who gamble?
Let the companies go bankrupt. Successful companies will come in and buy up the assets and gain market shares, and the whole system start from a sounder base. Scandinavia did it. South Korea did it. The US had done it before. Japan didn't do it. In the 1990s the US TOLD japan that they were doing the wrong thing to bail out japanese companies. Now Japan has have 2 lost decades already. What an irony, the US went on to do what it preached not to do.
Yes and no. It saves jobs in those failed companies, YES. But the resources used to save these companies must come from another part of the economy Elldallan. Somewhere else, jobs (more productive jobs!) that would have otherwise come into existence could not because the resources have been diverted away to save those failed companies. There's no free lunch. Many economists assume that there is.
And hoarding money is not a bad thing at all. The money is saved in banks, which lowers interest rates and gives signal to businesses to borrow and invest for the future, in anticipation of future spendings by those savers. Savings and investment is how an economy grows, not spending per se. What is spent is gone.
It is complex indeed. But there are a few economics laws and fundamental principles that will never change till the end of time. :)