Financial topics

Investments, gold, currencies, surviving after a financial meltdown
gerald
Posts: 1681
Joined: Sat May 02, 2009 10:34 pm

Re: Financial topics

Post by gerald »

and you want to believe what?

From a formally respectable source?

WSJ Notes "Chances That China's Data Is Real Is Very Low" Then Promptly Scrubs It

"The chances that that data is real is very low," said Alicia Garcia Herrero, Natixis's chief economist for the Asia-Pacific region. "Would you publish GDP data that looks south at this point in time? I don't think so."
Such brutal honesty, even if in paraphrase. And yet, did someone make an error allowing this much truthiness to sneak through strict editorial efforts? We ask because when we look at the final draft of the WSJ report now titled "China Stocks Tumble as Investors Doubt Beijing’s Help", and updated at 5:14am, we find....

Nothing.

The entire quote by Natixis' Herrero has been completely scrubbed, as is both the observation that "the chances that the data is real is very low" and the rhetorical question if one would:"publish GDP data that looks south at this point in time? I don't think so."

Apparently, if one is the WSJ, one would also not publish a quote stating just that."

and from the comments section -----

JustObserving

The free and fair media of the West doing their jobs to the best of their ability and ethics.

If the WSJ censors itself on China, what do you think it does about the land of the free?
aedens
Posts: 5211
Joined: Tue Nov 04, 2008 4:13 pm

Re: Financial topics

Post by aedens »

Hadrians wall and the Enclosures.

http://www.trans-lex.org/108950/pdf/

There is a hint perhaps, in that stilted legal language, of the old injustice, when tribal land was
confiscated, and its farms and sacred places were surveyed and sold to strangers.

=================================================================================
As for some context http://greecesodiousdebt.anthempressblog.com/

This is a legal theory, established in the 1920s, which holds that national debt incurred by a government for purposes that do not serve the best interests of the nation should not be enforceable. Such debts are held to be personal debts of the unrepresentative regime that incurred them and not of that country’s population.

One of the Soviet economists asked his English conterparts a simple question.
Who is in charge of the bread supply for London?
They had to answer, nobody. At least in the sense he meant.

In that day you will be like a man who runs from a lion--only to meet a bear.
Escaping from the bear, he leans his hand against a wall in his house--and he's bitten by a snake. Amos 5:19

The 1000 yard stare when asked what did you see.
http://gdxforum.com/forum/viewtopic.php ... per#p21386 mind the spell check.....

A comment from a non nasa link clicker: A mini ice age is on the way according to your high priests.
The only thing that keeps expanding is leftist stupidity. http://news.investors.com/ibd-editorial ... ivists.htm
http://nunes.house.gov/uploadedfiles/di ... debate.pdf

http://gdxforum.com/forum/viewtopic.php ... lar#p27606
http://mauricecotterell.com/ Read a few of his books to understand that they knew more
then than few can ever suggest today.

The first River Thames frost fair was in 1607 and the last in 1814; changes to the bridges and the addition of an embankment affected the river flow and depth, hence diminishing the possibility of freezes. Freezing of the Golden Horn and the southern section of the Bosphorus took place in 1622. In 1658, a Swedish army marched across the Great Belt to Denmark to attack Copenhagen. The winter of 1794–1795 was particularly harsh, when the French invasion army under Pichegru could march on the frozen rivers of the Netherlands, while the Dutch fleet was fixed in the ice in Den Helder harbour. In the winter of 1780, New York Harbor froze, allowing people to walk from Manhattan to Staten Island. Sea ice surrounding Iceland extended for miles in every direction, closing harbors to shipping.

"I can hire one-half of the working class to kill the other half." Jason "Jay" Gould (May 27, 1836 – December 2, 1892)
http://yourblackbloggers.net/2015/02/bl ... publicans/
gerald
Posts: 1681
Joined: Sat May 02, 2009 10:34 pm

Re: Financial topics

Post by gerald »

Next For Greece: Imminent Government Reshuffle, New Elections
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2015-07-1 ... -elections

from the comment section
Oldwood

How will an extension of more credit in any way solve the problem? Does the German assets used to back these loans come from heaven or is it actual citizen capital? If this is a democracy, why does the German citizen not have a right to vote on this bailout, rather than the recipient?
aedens
Posts: 5211
Joined: Tue Nov 04, 2008 4:13 pm

Re: Financial topics

Post by aedens »

Define taxpayer rights: https://www.tedcruz.org/news/cruz-congr ... arenthood/
In my opinion Cruz should use a fine piece of hickory on some people as other sane people should also on the left.
Whatever happens to this Country is has decended to what it deserves. As for the every thing will be fine rhetoric
the answer is no, it is not so. I think H is correct on what he conveyed.

Greece is a Enclosure now. I checked there numbers on per capita before and after the Euro was introduced.

Both sides of the debate has Lost its Moorings.

The Ex-ante conditionality is no accident as Hume declared clearly.
aedens
Posts: 5211
Joined: Tue Nov 04, 2008 4:13 pm

Re: Financial topics

Post by aedens »

The way it goes is, an inspector was walking through a clothing factory in Bangladesh and noticed that it had three fire extinguishers on the wall, one right on top of the other. He asked why, and the manager of the factory told him, “We get audited under three different standards, and they each require us to have a fire extinguisher a different distance from the floor. We got tired of moving the fire extinguisher every time an inspector came, so now we just have one at each height.”

These days, there’s no such thing as cycles, only products.

Lot offered his daughters knowing they would be refused to not compromise strangers under the Rules of House.
The alleged new sheep pen leaders still think a cycle could not be seen by others since they consider
the product is more important than the facts they ignore.

They are not our children, and indeed no one elses so it leaves one standard alone.....
Last edited by aedens on Thu Jul 16, 2015 12:27 pm, edited 1 time in total.
John
Posts: 11501
Joined: Sat Sep 20, 2008 12:10 pm
Location: Cambridge, MA USA
Contact:

Re: Financial topics

Post by John »

aedens wrote:The way it goes is, an inspector was walking through a clothing factory in Bangladesh and noticed that it had three fire extinguishers on the wall, one right on top of the other. He asked why, and the manager of the factory told him, “We get audited under three different standards, and they each require us to have a fire extinguisher a different distance from the floor. We got tired of moving the fire extinguisher every time an inspector came, so now we just have one at each height.”

These days, there’s no such thing as cycles, only products.
That's a great story. Do you have a link?
aedens
Posts: 5211
Joined: Tue Nov 04, 2008 4:13 pm

Re: Financial topics

Post by aedens »

It is a risk management straw man argument posited to remind the plebes that corporate tee shirts are expensive and
it a sub contractor who killed the 112 chained inside.
http://www.salon.com/2012/11/25/112_kil ... t_factory/

Slow-onset disasters and regional migration flows. The issue, they know this "bad guys"

http://publications.iom.int/bookstore/f ... NG_web.pdf

Point is this, take out the bad guys before the point announces the obvious consequences we trend.
No good deed ever went unpunished now did it. The other side of the coin is never let a crisis go to waste
to foster effective corrosive change locally. Always drive a population into the enemys resources.....

http://www.strategicmanagementinsight.c ... lysis.html
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2015-07-1 ... ity-motion

http://www.mckinsey.com/insights/high_t ... e_learning
Erwin the AI truncated the “cookie cutter” results.
http://www.econmatters.com/2015/06/how- ... ip-to.html

In our country (the former U.S.S.R.) the lie has become not just a moral category,
but a pillar of the State. Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
aedens
Posts: 5211
Joined: Tue Nov 04, 2008 4:13 pm

Re: Financial topics

Post by aedens »

derivative charges for db, just have wait and see
http://redefininggod.com/category/globa ... atch-2015/

velvit rope
John
Posts: 11501
Joined: Sat Sep 20, 2008 12:10 pm
Location: Cambridge, MA USA
Contact:

Brainnets

Post by John »

Multiple Monkey brains and multiple rat brains linked into brainnets

Researchers have linked multiple rat brains and multiple monkey brains
and synchronized them and trained them to perform classificiation and
other tasks

Nature Scientific Reports – Building an organic computing device with
multiple interconnected brains

Researchers proposed that Brainets, i.e. networks formed by multiple
animal brains, cooperating and exchanging information in real time
through direct brain-to-brain interfaces, could provide the core of a
new type of computing device: an organic computer. They describe the
first experimental demonstration of such a Brainet, built by
interconnecting four adult rat brains. Brainets worked by concurrently
recording the extracellular electrical activity generated by
populations of cortical neurons distributed across multiple rats
chronically implanted with multi-electrode arrays. Cortical neuronal
activity was recorded and analyzed in real time, and then delivered to
the somatosensory cortices of other animals that participated in the
Brainet using intracortical microstimulation (ICMS). Using this
approach, different Brainet architectures solved a number of useful
computational problems, such as discrete classification, image
processing, storage and retrieval of tactile information, and even
weather forecasting. Brainets consistently performed at the same or
higher levels than single rats in these tasks. Based on these
findings, they propose that Brainets could be used to investigate
animal social behaviors as well as a test bed for exploring the
properties and potential applications of organic computers.

A 4-rat Brainet was capable of maintaining a level of global neuronal
synchrony across multiple brains that was virtually identical to that
observed in the cortex of a single rat.

In conclusion, they propose that animal Brainets have significant
potential both as a new experimental tool to further investigate
system neurophysiological mechanisms of social interactions and group
behavior, as well as provide a test bed for building organic computing
devices that can take advantage of a hybrid digital-analogue
architecture.

http://www.skynetchronicles.com/2015/07 ... brainnets/
gerald
Posts: 1681
Joined: Sat May 02, 2009 10:34 pm

Re: Financial topics

Post by gerald »

"The more I learn, the more I realize that the Fed is nothing but a criminal enterprise, that the guys at the top know it. Everyone within breathing distance of top slots at the NY Fed is a criminal. Remember, the NY Fed shares space with the Exchange Stabilization Fund/Working Group on Financial Markets even though the latter is formally part of the Treasury." – John Titus, one conclusion from reading the 2009 FOMC transcripts

"The chief enabler of the Greece-ification of the U.S. is, without question, the Federal Reserves and the psychopaths running it…Our choice is stark: We can hang them for treason, or they will kill us. That process formally began with the 2008 bailouts". – John Titus

http://investmentresearchdynamics.com/s ... -governed/
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