TranceAddict Forums (www.tranceaddict.com/forums)
- Political Discussion / Debate
-- The Revolution of 1917, American-Style
Pages (3): « 1 [2] 3 »
Bernanke has done several interviews recently where he said as much. Watch the 60 minutes interview krypt. I believe he says quite clearly that he will not let another company go down like he did with Lehman..that he is committed to preventing this no matter the cost. Geitner repeated this idea also during his recent testimony. These men don't have faith in the market system and their policies should be all the proof you need.
And pk, do you have a link to the page where my ass was handed to me? I believe I answered all points in our recent debates here and oc and I ended up agreeing on things in the end. I've noticed that you however contribute very little (if anything) to most discussions in PDD. Why don't you participate occasionally instead of sniping from the sidelines with little 1-sentence replies every day? Please wow us with your intellect.
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Capitalizt Bernanke has done several interviews recently where he said as much. Watch the 60 minutes interview krypt. I believe he says quite clearly that he will not let another company go down like he did with Lehman..that he is committed to preventing this no matter the cost. Geitner repeated this idea also during his recent testimony. These men don't have faith in the market system and their policies should be all the proof you need. |
| quote: |
| And pk, do you have a link to the page where my ass was handed to me? I believe I answered all points in our recent debates here and oc and I ended up agreeing on things in the end. I've noticed that you however contribute very little (if anything) to most discussions in PDD. Why don't you participate occasionally instead of sniping from the sidelines with little 1-sentence replies every day? Please wow us with your intellect. |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by occrider So when I reference modern economic data you say that it's meaningless as per the above rationale. When I ask you to substitute this "tainted" data with other data from our robust history of economic data of booms and busts prior to the Federal Reserve you state that that data is unreliable. Look I'm not an idiot, I can recognize a catch-22 when I see one. Any hard statistics I reference based on ANY data from ANY time period will be dismissed in the face of broad based platitudes that are simply not mathematically cogent. It is not without some amusement that I see you continue to mix and match economic data in your arguments whilst completely disregarding the economic data that I reference in mine. However, the same reasons that make my economic references irrelevant, according to your logic, also apply to you. |
Well krypt I disagree that the system would completely fall apart if we allowed failed companies to go bankrupt. Citi's collapse would undoubtedly cause a painful correction as the losses are finally realized..but this is a necessary process if you want an economy based on savings, sound profits and sound growth rather than credit expansion and illusory prosperity. The crisis was caused by excessive credit and overleveraging. A sharp contraction after things went to such an extreme should be expected. In any case, it's very likely that Citi would have been bought out at JPM at the right price. Everything in a market economy is a function of price, and C wasn't cheap enough to justify the risk at $1. At .50 or .25 however, hell yes you can bet they would have been saved and restructured by a stronger firm..but instead of allowing this process to take place we are mugging the taxpayers of future generations, propping up failure, and prolonging the corrective process.
Would the credit contraction worsen if Citi went down? No doubt..but a bottom would be reached one way or another and the ultimate cost to America would be far less than what we are taking on now.. Look at the past 12 months krypt. Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Bear Stearns, AIG, Citigroup, GM, Chrysler, and dozens of other nameless companies are being propped up and even BOUGHT outright by the government and the fed. This is America krypt..AMERICA.. If you have studied history properly you should be alarmed and appalled at the direction things are moving today. Government involvement on this scale is maiming the foundations of the market economy..and you know full well that major government institutions and programs of this type form a parasitic growth.. They will be around forever. The treasury is now a permanent player and won't be removed once the current crisis is past. The debt being accrued in this process is simply monstrous. We are delaying a painful contraction now by putting trillions in obligations on the backs of future taxpayers. Will we prevent the depression of 2009? YES!..but the cost in both freedom and treasure is simply not worth it.
As for the links you posted, I suggest you finish reading them. OC and I actually agree on the big picture and I made it quite clear that I have no disagreement with him on his charts. Data is data...It doesn't lie, but people can draw different logical inferences from some of the data.
Also, I have yet to hear a satisfactory response from you or any other big government apologist for the cluster of errors argument I made on page 7 there. If you can give me an alternative explanation for the increasingly disruptive and damaging boom/bust cycle we've been experiencing over the past few decades, I'd be glad to change my view on interventionism. Please enlighten me.
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Capitalizt Well krypt I disagree that the system would completely fall apart if we allowed failed companies to go bankrupt. Citi's collapse would undoubtedly cause a painful correction as the losses are finally realized..but this is a necessary process if you want an economy based on savings, sound profits and sound growth rather than credit expansion and illusory prosperity. The crisis was caused by excessive credit and overleveraging. A sharp contraction after things went to such an extreme should be expected. In any case, it's very likely that Citi would have been bought out at JPM at the right price. Everything in a market economy is a function of price, and C wasn't cheap enough to justify the risk at $1. At .50 or .25 however, hell yes you can bet they would have been saved and restructured by a stronger firm..but instead of allowing this process to take place we are mugging the taxpayers of future generations, propping up failure, and prolonging the corrective process. |
| quote: |
| Would the credit contraction worsen if Citi went down? No doubt..but a bottom would be reached one way or another and the ultimate cost to America would be far less than what we are taking on now.. Look at the past 12 months krypt. Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Bear Stearns, AIG, Citigroup, GM, Chrysler, and dozens of other nameless companies are being propped up and even BOUGHT outright by the government and the fed. This is America krypt..AMERICA.. If you have studied history properly you should be alarmed and appalled at the direction things are moving today. Government involvement on this scale is maiming the foundations of the market economy..and you know full well that major government institutions and programs of this type form a parasitic growth.. They will be around forever. The treasury is now a permanent player and won't be removed once the current crisis is past. The debt being accrued in this process is simply monstrous. We are delaying a painful contraction now by putting trillions in obligations on the backs of future taxpayers. Will we prevent the depression of 2009? YES!..but the cost in both freedom and treasure is simply not worth it. |
| quote: |
| As for the links you posted, I suggest you finish reading them. OC and I actually agree on the big picture and I made it quite clear that I have no disagreement with him on his charts. Data is data...It doesn't lie, but people can draw different logical inferences from some of the data. |
| quote: |
| Also, I have yet to hear a satisfactory response from you or any other big government apologist for the cluster of errors argument I made on page 7 there. If you can give me an alternative explanation for the increasingly disruptive and damaging boom/bust cycle we've been experiencing over the past few decades, I'd be glad to change my view on interventionism. Please enlighten me. |
This is exactly what we need, and this is exactly what we'r seeing happen. Good work Bernanke!
| quote: |
| Bernanke Doctrine The seven steps that the Federal Reserve needs to take are: 1) Increase the money supply (M1] and M2). "The U.S. government has a technology, called a printing press, that allows it to produce as many dollars as it wishes at essentially no cost." "Under a paper-money system, a determined government can always generate higher spending and, hence, positive inflation." 2) Ensure liquidity makes its way into the financial system through a variety of measures. "The U.S. government is not going to print money and distribute it willy-nilly ..."although there are policies that approximate this behaviour." 3) Lower interest rates - all the way down to 0 per cent. Bernanke observed that people have traditionally thought that, when the funds rate hits zero, the Federal Reserve will have run out of ammunition. However, by imposing yields paid by long-term Treasury bills, "a central bank should always be able to generate inflation, even when the short-term nominal interest rate is zero ...[this] more direct method, which I personally prefer, would be for the Fed to announce ceilings for yields on all longer-maturity Treasury debt." He noted that Fed had successfully engaged in "bond-price pegging" following the Second World War. 4) Control the yield on corporate bonds and other privately issued securities. Although the Federal Reserve can't legally buy these securities (thereby determining the yields); it can, however, simulate the necessary authority by lending dollars to banks at a fixed term of 0 per cent, taking back from the banks corporate bonds as collateral. 5) Depreciate the U.S. dollar. Referring to U.S Monetary Policy in the 1930's under Franklin Roosevelt, he states that: "This devaluation and the rapid increase in money supply ... ended the U.S. deflation remarkably quickly." 6) Execute a de facto depreciation by buying foreign currencies on a massive scale. "The Fed has the authority to buy foreign government debt ... [t]his class of assets offers huge scope for Fed operations because the quantity of foreign assets eligible for purchase by the Fed is several times the stock of U.S. government debt." 7) Buy industries throughout the U.S. economy with "newly created money" In essence, the Federal Reserve acquires equity stakes in banks and financial institutions. In this "private-asset option," the Treasury could issue trillions in debt and the Fed would acquire it - still using newly created money. |
Way to go guys... turn a thread about something cool like bloody revolution into an economics debate...
Nerds. 
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Joss Weatherby Way to go guys... turn a thread about something cool like bloody revolution into an economics debate... Nerds. |
Lets keep going in circles krypt..it's fun!
First, Citigroup's failure does not mean global apocalypse. You disagree. Fine. Moving on..
You think the financial cost of recession would is larger than the cost of the intervention. Bernanke agrees with you and is trying to cure temporary deflation with term inflation. I believe the amount of inflation in the pipeline will do much more damage than a 2-3 year deflationary recession (which was by far the worse case scenario among major economists). So basically I think the intervention will end up costing more. We disagree. Time will tell if you are right. Moving on..
| quote: |
Government intervention is not "parasitic growth". That's complete nonsense. You know full well the government will eventually re-privatize most if not all of these firms. |
K, moving on..| quote: |
| The government isn't in the business of running fortune 500 companies and certainly they get blow back if they do not at least break even on these bailouts. You'v also completely discounted the fact that many of these "bailouts", the government is probably going to get a positive return on their investments. |
| quote: |
| I don't know how I can argue any further when you lack knowledge in just basic levels of economic operations such as how the Federal Reserve works. Even a paper by one of the world's top economists, Bernanke, written in the early 1980's when he was a professor, you just totally blew off because it didn't fit a radical libertarian doctrine. While OCC references some of the best sources possible, you reference almost none. Absolutely no response to Bernanke's paper other than, "He's a government hound." |
| quote: |
You mean your last response to me on page 7? One can only debate so much without going around in circles, of which I'm frankly not going to do for a million pages. I'v made my points and I'm not going to repeat them over and over and over again, even though I'm doing it in this thread, yet again. Additionally, booms and busts happen in every type of economy. We'r going back to just the basic level of education in economics. This is econ 101. Booms and busts. It's unavoidable. Whether we'r on a gold/silver standard, on fiat money, capitalist, communist, booms and busts, AND INFLATION, are a normal function of all economies. *SIGH*.............. |
European socialism works. Show me examples of how it negatively affects the populations of the countries that have implemented socialist policies and I will then maybe think about how it could be bad in the US.
All these arguments about banks and what not, its total crap.
Fuck them. This is the intangible capital that Marx warned about, its a system of governance of the proletariate through the means of creating capital that only the wealthy can gain and control. That capital, this non-existant, totally theoretical capital then affects everyone, in good ways a lot of the times, but in bad ways when the few that wield it either become too greedy or too stupid.
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Capitalizt First, Citigroup's failure does not mean global apocalypse. You disagree. Fine. Moving on.. |
| quote: |
| You think the financial cost of recession would is larger than the cost of the intervention. Bernanke agrees with you and is trying to cure temporary deflation with term inflation. I believe the amount of inflation in the pipeline will do much more damage than a 2-3 year deflationary recession (which was by far the worse case scenario among major economists). So basically I think the intervention will end up costing more. We disagree. Time will tell if you are right. Moving on.. |
| quote: |
Right, the same way social security was supposed to be a temporary program.. The same way 1000+ government agencies that have been created since the new deal are still in existence. You seem to have stronger faith on less evidence that even our man alex in the other thread. K, moving on.. |
| quote: |
| Correction: The government WASN'T in the business of running fortune 500 companies but it seems that responsibility is being forced on us. It's a shame you can't see what a radical departure this is from our entire history and what a bad precedent it sets for the future. And "break even" on the bailouts? Are you shitting me krypt? Since when has the government ever made a wise investor? Hundreds of billions have been sent down a black hole at AIG and others and they are still bankrupt. I don't consider zombifying corporations a great success. Better to let them die and be reborn from bankruptcy. |
| quote: |
| I know exactly how the fed works bud..and once upon a time I believe you glimpsed the truth too. The fed inflates the economy to excess..then when the excess pops and starts to shrink to normality, they inflate some more to cover up the malinvestment and keep the cycle rolling. It's been the same trend for nearly 70 straight years and the bubble being blown today is the MOAB. |
| quote: |
| I actually meant my response to oc, and I don't blame you if you can't find a counter explanation because there isn't one as far as I can tell. |
| quote: |
| Yes bubbles can happen at a small scale on free market economies but as I pointed out to oc (and as his own examples prove), most panics and bubbles in history were preceded by some form of government intervention..some tampering with the marketplace at the federal level. |
| quote: |
| Krypt...I know you have a good brain. Kindly put aside your bitter feelings for my crazy "laissez faire" attitude and use your reason to tell me where I'm wrong here.. |

| quote: |
| Entrepreneurs in a free market are in the business of forecasting..and those who have the best judgement and take the most far-sighted approach tend to make the most profits, while those fail in forecasting go bankrupt. Capitalism has a kind of natural selection mechanism in this way. Because it weeds out inefficiencies and rewards the best forecasters, you aren't likely to see many firms taking simultaneous losses unless price signals are being distorted in some way by an outside force. |
| quote: |
| The economy started to crater in late 2007.. Many industries felt the slowdown simultaneously..the service industry, banking, transportation, manufactuuring, technology, etc. That is when the recession officially began. Now, is it likely that there just happened to be a spontaneous failure across a variety of market sectors..that all of these bright professionals across a variety of industries failed dismally at their work?..or could there have been something else at work influencing those markets? Could expansionary monetary policy have been responsible for sending false price signals through the economy that led to the cluster of errors? Do you at least acknowledge it can have this negative effect? |
| quote: |
| I obviously believe excessive credit expansion was the culprit here. It is the only reasonable explanation for the enormous amount of malinvestment and lack of foresight across a variety of unrelated sectors that preceded the current bust. Do I have a perfect solution? No..but finding one requires that we correctly identify the problem first. |
ah krypt isn't it wonderful..I see fallacies all over your posts and you see them in mine
How can you miss the patterns buddy? Easy credit and low rates in the 90's led to the tech bubble..Greenspan tightened credit and boom, the bubble pops. You acknowledge that we inflated in the early 2000's to prevent deflation after the crash.. The result? A massive housing bubble. The fed kept the easy money spigot on far too long and was too slow to tighten credit...the result when they did tighten? Boom, financial bubble slows and pops with disastrous results.. The fed has now loosened policy again in light of the crash..not only lowering rates as low as they can possibly go but blatantly inflating the money supply and doubling the monetary base in less than 9 months. How can you possibly expect a different result this time krypt? The cluster of errors that will accrue as a result of these policies are going to make the collapse of 08 look like a pleasant memory when we finally face the music.
All I can do is say is take a peek at the real world friend. Watch the news occasionally. We are witnessing the culmination of 70 years of Keynesiasm and interventionist policy among central banks around the world. Bernanke's philosophy has been completely dominant in the circles of government and academia for many decades now. Where has it gotten us?...global stagnation, record government and personal debt..malinvestment across the board, job loss, systemic failure of industry..major governments approaching 50% of GDP...trillion dollar deficits as far as the eye can see, and coming soon...competitive currency devaluation. If you want to follow this path to hell because your textbook advised it, I wish you luck.
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Capitalizt ah krypt isn't it wonderful..I see fallacies all over your posts and you see them in mine How can you miss the patterns buddy? Easy credit and low rates in the 90's led to the tech bubble..Greenspan tightened credit and boom, the bubble pops. You acknowledge that we inflated in the early 2000's to prevent deflation after the crash.. The result? A massive housing bubble. The fed kept the easy money spigot on far too long and was too slow to tighten credit...the result when they did tighten? Boom, financial bubble slows and pops with disastrous results.. The fed has now loosened policy again in light of the crash..not only lowering rates as low as they can possibly go but blatantly inflating the money supply and doubling the monetary base in less than 9 months. How can you possibly expect a different result this time krypt? The cluster of errors that will accrue as a result of these policies are going to make the collapse of 08 look like a pleasant memory when we finally face the music. |
| quote: |
| All I can do is say is take a peek at the real world friend. Watch the news occasionally. We are witnessing the culmination of 70 years of Keynesiasm and interventionist policy among central banks around the world. Bernanke's philosophy has been completely dominant in the circles of government and academia for many decades now. |
| quote: |
| Where has it gotten us?...global stagnation, record government and personal debt..malinvestment across the board, job loss, systemic failure of industry.. |
| quote: |
| If you want to follow this path to hell because your textbook advised it, I wish you luck. |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Krypton You don't have to repeat what you'v said a million times, which I'v continually answered to. Your cause and effect is grossly fallacious. Inflation did not cause the tech bubble or the subprime bubble. Bubbles happen in all economies not because of inflation but because they happen in all economies! They'r unavoidable, yet you believe following this extremist libertarianism is going to be the end of asset bubbles! LOL... |
| quote: |
Bernanke's philosophy is based on sound economics and it's no wonder why almost every modern industrialized country follows such a philosophy in regards to economics. |
| quote: |
| lol, global stagnation, record government and personal debt..malinvestment across the board, job loss, systemic failure of industry???????? All that happens in EVERY ECONOMY! Nice how you conveniently left out the great boom years and the millions who'v been lifted out of poverty in the last 100 years. Nice going. In fact, for every 10 years, there are about 7 up years and 3 down years, since 1928. Obviously you are utterly wrong. |
| quote: |
Again, 7 up years and 3 down years every 10 years, since 1928. Millions lifted out of poverty. You do the math. lol at my textbook. At least I have an academic understanding of just how the economy works on a fundamental level. I know being actually educated in economics makes me another crony of the system, but I'm content in the fact that knowledge is power. And if one doesn't even know how the economy works on the most essential level, one shouldn't even be able to comment on it until they do. Sorry I woke up to the absurdities of Ron Paul economics... |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Capitalizt Keep calling it extremism if you wish.. This is reality krypt. Yes lenders acted like wild children.. They made irresponsible decisions and stupid loans. They leveraged up to ridiculous levels and made plenty of malinvestment which made the crash worse.. They were certainly on a sugar high last decade.. True True True..but you keep neglecting the kindergarten teacher who left the candy on the table for them. |
| quote: |
| Sound economics that has led every modern industrialized country to the brink of collapse and bankruptcy. K. |
| quote: |
| Not nearly to the extent we have seen in recent years.. The consecutive reflation game has made the boom/bust cycle much more painful and the damage much more widespread. The cycle is getting more severe every time because the government is refusing to allow the underlying malinvestment to be purged. We are simply papering over the mess again with the same tools that created it in the first place..debt, cheap money, and credit expansion. This is very unsound economics and it is not a recipe for true prosperity. |
| quote: |
| Krypt, the patterns I've mentioned are so blatantly obvious that I'm stunned you can't see them. And I feel sorry for you if you feel truly educated after 2 semesters of economics. I took micro and macro as well and consider all the little formulas I learned there quite irrelevant today. A few classes can't hurt..but those should be the starting point for your learning. Much more important is that you look out the window occasionally and take in the big picture. Observe what is happening in the real world and start drawing conclusions from history. Take a look at human reaction to government and fed policy over the past 20 years and draw logical inferences from what you see. |
| quote: |
| The successive patterns of boom/bust in recent years can be traced directly back to government/fed policy and this is blindingly obvious.. You seem obsessed with blaming corporations and individuals for stupid behavior..for excessive borrowing and leverage. In short, you are focusing entirely on the SYMPTOMS while neglecting the disease itself. |
| quote: |
| Wake up my man. |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Krypton What else do you want me to call it? You want no central bank. |
| quote: |
Absolutely no government regulation of the markets. |
| quote: |
| You'd rather have deflation rather than healthy inflation. |
| quote: |
| And the central banks are responsible for every calamity known to man! |

| quote: |
| As for you kindergarten teacher analogy. It's just flat out wrong. What actually happened was, there was no teacher to begin with. No rules, no restraint. |
| quote: |
Not to the extent we have seen in recent years? Ok, show me the numbers. You got data to support that or just throwing it out there to see if I'll bite? Inflation, booms and busts are completely normal functions of the market. |
| quote: |
What patterns? Booms and busts? They'r normal. Inflationary monetary policy in response to deflation. Also normal. You have nothing new to add except how bad they are and how all our problems are all the central banks fault. Utter nonsense. |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Capitalizt Not necessarily.. I want some restrictions placed on them at minimum. Some mechanism must be in place to prevent endless devaluation based on political whims. This could be done through a balanced budget amendment or some other process. |
| quote: |
| Inflation isn't healthy, and I'd rather have neither set in stone by policy makers. Inflation is now enshrined into the global economic structure. |
| quote: |
No, just the wildly excessive consumption and risk taking that occurs when banks have access to large amounts of virtually free money and when people take poorly judged risks with that money in order to try and outpace inflation. ![]() |
| quote: |
| Well the teacher certainly neglected her job on several fronts didn't she? Giving the kids a large dose of sugar AND allowing them to make a mess without disciplining them. She's pretty frakkin incompetent in my view and I certainly wouldn't want to put more kids under her supervision. Better to fire the dumb bitch and find an alternative. |
| quote: |
| I don't have numbers for 2009 but I did find this: http://articles.moneycentral.msn.co...th-quarter.aspx $11+ trillion in household wealth gone in 2008 (doesn't include what corporations or governments lost). I saw a CNBC report a few weeks ago that mentioned the losses in America alone were over $12 trillion now..staggeringly large and worse than any correction since the great depression. These corrections will keep getting larger and larger because we keep blowing the same damn bubble up bigger and bigger. |
| quote: |
| BS krypt..these kinds of busts are NOT normal, not on the scale we are seeing today. You never gave me a proper answer to the cluster of errors argument I made earlier. How can you pretend that mass failure across a variety of independent industries in late 2007 was not influenced by external events? You gave me some mumbo jumbo response about monopolies forming and causing the booms and busts in a free market. Well that didn't happen in the past 2 years did it?? As I recall we have a huge government that enforces strict antitrust laws to prevent monopolies and corporate collusion from taking place. This being the case how the feck do you explain the simultaneous failure of so many industries at the start of this recession? How do you explain the abysmal forecasting and poor judgment made by entrepreneurs in radically different areas of the economy? Why do you refuse to see the tremendous impact the fed can have on these things? |
| quote: |
| Monetary policy helped blow (then pop) the largest asset bubble in history..and the ramifications filtered down to everything else. The "boom" time of cheap credit the early 2000s sent false price signals through the economy. It clouded visibility and led to huge amounts of overinvestment and malinvestment in real estate and other sectors of the economy. People overbuilt and overleveraged their homes. Businesses did the same with their properties..and when the fed decided to finally choke things off, every sector got smacked down hard and we are still paying the price today. Stupid lenders were a factor..YES, but they were NOT the root cause of this crisis krypt. Look no further than the fed for that. I'm the first to admit that I don't have a proper alternative to the central bank..But when your house is on fire, step one is to recognize it's on fire and step two is to try and limit the damage. You can worry about rebuilding the foundation with stronger materials later. |
It's been a good game these past few decades hasn't it krypt..but I'm afraid it's coming to an end one way or another. Enjoy yourself over the next few years but prepare yourself as well. I firmly believe this is the last great reflation. China is holding around $4 trillion in US treasuries and they have already made clear that they aren't happy about what the fed is doing. I can't imagine countries like Japan (who hold more paper) are any happier about the blatant printing Bernanke has started.
They could destroy our economy in an instant without firing a single bullet krypt. The global fiat system has left us incredibly vulnerable. It has been propped up by faith and tradition..but the fit is eventually going to hit the shan. Hold tight buddy. 
i dont understand how you can be rather bright yet so completely full of shit.
I love you too pk.
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Capitalizt It's been a good game these past few decades hasn't it krypt..but I'm afraid it's coming to an end one way or another. Enjoy yourself over the next few years but prepare yourself as well. I firmly believe this is the last great reflation. China is holding around $4 trillion in US treasuries and they have already made clear that they aren't happy about what the fed is doing. I can't imagine countries like Japan (who hold more paper) are any happier about the blatant printing Bernanke has started. They could destroy our economy in an instant without firing a single bullet krypt. The global fiat system has left us incredibly vulnerable. It has been propped up by faith and tradition..but the fit is eventually going to hit the shan. Hold tight buddy. |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Krypton All I'm going to say is I argued RonPaul-onomics out of ignorance. I believe anyone who advocates exactly what he advocates economically...abolition of the central bank and return to gold standard...is also arguing out of ignorance of economics and how our system really works. Don't get me wrong, I like his social and political ideas, but the man really should stay the fuck away from economics because he doesn't know what the hell he's talking about. I don't know one person who isn't for sound fiscal and monetary policy so this really isn't about that. I just don't like hearing people propose that we have no monetary policy at all... And Cap, I'm well cushioned against inflation. In fact, more than 50% of my portfolio is in actual gold and silver which I have locked up somewhere secret. But all my new money deposits are going towards equities so that gold/silver allocation is being sharply curtailed. Not selling though. |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by gallantrybot Our Fabian Socialist system has failed, man. It's time to move on and I don't mean by accepting the global currency that the central planners in the UN, Russia and China are working on for us. |
| quote: |
| It's time to allow supply and demand to take it's course and let free market Capitalism burn away the underbrush that's been piled up over the course of the artificially fixed interest rate credit bubble. Sure, it's going to be tough for a little while but it sure does beat having our country become under the control of the IMF and World Bank. |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Capitalizt It's been a good game these past few decades hasn't it krypt..but I'm afraid it's coming to an end one way or another. Enjoy yourself over the next few years but prepare yourself as well. I firmly believe this is the last great reflation. China is holding around $4 trillion in US treasuries and they have already made clear that they aren't happy about what the fed is doing. I can't imagine countries like Japan (who hold more paper) are any happier about the blatant printing Bernanke has started. They could destroy our economy in an instant without firing a single bullet krypt. The global fiat system has left us incredibly vulnerable. It has been propped up by faith and tradition..but the fit is eventually going to hit the shan. Hold tight buddy. |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by gallantrybot Our fiat system was designed by a Fabian Socialist. What did people expect, that the people who have been planning to destroy our Republic in order to achieve a global government were going to ensure us some kind of long term prosperity? Of course not. The seeds of our destruction were sewn into the system itself. |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Krypton A system by which millions have been lifted out of poverty and of which 7 out of every 10 years is a bull market since 1928. That system? |
Powered by: vBulletin
Copyright © 2000-2021, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.