Financial topics

Investments, gold, currencies, surviving after a financial meltdown
aedens
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Re: Financial topics

Post by aedens »

The ecological predations rate will convey what it will as before.
The tiny bubbles as in the consumers collapse as seen before will simply be ignored until it cannot. After the local 1968 recession attitudes where unbraided. We watched the free cheese and send your kids to rice paddy's for us was another simply brilliant idea. The POTUS conveyed a mistake was made not stabilizing a region as order from chaos in theory, as in the field of studies the behavior and condition of dynamical systems that are highly sensitive to initial conditions of conditional reality. The locals could care less about theory since the government really could care less serving its own mandates.
The numbers seen point this out since 1977, the total indebtedness of U.S. government, corporate and household borrowers was $323 billion. By 1985, that figure had grown to $7 trillion.
As we noted correctly 65 million people assure here the simple point that the 65 million over there in just one region alone will be annihilated.
Another theory of production states the Aramaic word for 'camel' is the same as the word for 'rope', and that Jesus could of been describing a rope (made of camel's hair) passing through a larger wooden needle (used for 1st century industrial projects). The point of the interpretation to create a possibility of passing through the eye of a needle. He knew they had no chance since hearts of stone assure the stone age continues until the day we see unfolding as we are. As I consider today in a simple view they can clean up isle five of Al's Snack bar after Amos told us it was full of serpent's in the cracks of its house anyways.
Last edited by aedens on Sat Apr 16, 2016 6:55 am, edited 1 time in total.
aedens
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Re: Financial topics

Post by aedens »

The change, of change.

Shaw was a Fabian Socialist. If you want the worst, up front, from an unbiased source, we have Stanley Weintraub’s “GBS and the Despots” in the August 22, 2011, Times Literary Supplement. Weintraub is a distinguished Shaw scholar, and editor of Bernard Shaw: The Diaries 1885–1897. In 1927 Shaw published in the London Daily News a letter titled “Bernard Shaw on Mussolini: A Defence.” He came under sharp attack for this by both socialists and liberals, but persisted in his admiration of Mussolini throughout the 1930s. While sharply condemning Hitler’s anti-Semitism, he spoke positively about the Nazis for renouncing the Versailles Treaty, which Shaw had opposed, and for their supposed economic reforms, writing in 1935, “The Nazi movement is in many respects one which has my warmest sympathy.” As late as 1944, deep into World War II, when he was strongly supporting the British war effort against Germany, he still in print had something positive to say about Hitler’s Mein Kampf. He claimed that he was a National Socialist before Hitler was. He was well-disposed toward Oswald Mosley, Britain’s home-grown fascist demagogue, declaring Mosley “the only striking personality in British politics.” He turned against the German Nazis and Italian fascists during World War II, but never wavered from his adulation for the Soviet Union, first under Lenin, and then, undiminished, under Stalin.
As it happens, George Orwell in his 1946 pamphlet James Burnham and the Managerial Revolution does shed light on some claim’s that Shaw’s dual embrace of communism and fascism was broadly typical of Fabians or other sorts of socialists:
“English writers who consider Communism and Fascism to be the same thing invariably hold that both are monstrous evils which must be fought to the death; on the other hand, any Englishman who believes Communism and Fascism to be opposites will feel that he ought to side with one or the other. The only exception I am able to think of is Bernard Shaw, who, for some years at any rate, declared Communism and Fascism to be much the same thing, and was in favor of both of them.”
The warning of not being hot or cold brings its own rewards.
Sympathy for Italian fascism, and even German Nazism, was widespread after the bloody debacle of World War I and the Great Depression, and far more so on the right than on the left, Shaw being an outlier here.
The very idea that there is such a thing as social change dates mainly from the Industrial Revolution, when it became obvious in daily life. Much of philosophy, social theorizing, and political organizing since has aimed to figure out to what degree we can have effective input into our own future, to guide the unfolding changes rather than simply submit to them. Many paths forward have been embraced only to prove disastrous later. Communism and fascism are the textbook examples. Darwin showed that there was biological change as well as political and economic change. Eugenics was an attempt to take charge of human evolution, which was ultimately found to be far more difficult and to involve a far greater potential for evil than its first advocates imagined.

His views written are condensed as such here "These, however, are merely expedients of transition. The Russian proletariat is now growing its own professional and organizing class; and the ex-bourgeois is dying out, after seeing his children receive a sound Communist education and being lectured by them on his old fashioned prejudices. And the planners of the Soviet State have no time to bother about moribund questions; for they are confronted with the new and overwhelming necessity for exterminating the peasants, who still exist in formidable numbers. The notion that a civilized State can be made out of any sort of human material is one of our old Radical delusions."
As we are today it has announced its principal effect, as simply another delusionary and subsidized death tissue merchants on the taxpayers. Science cannot only be considered for what it is, but as it does. The inability to create dirt in a garden of consequences over times already written in better books.

The Spiral of Silence Theory is a political science and mass communication theory proposed by the German political scientist Elisabeth Noelle-Neumann, which stipulates that individuals have a fear of isolation, which results from the idea that a social group or the society in general might isolate, neglect, or exclude members due to the members' opinions. This fear of isolation consequently leads to remaining silent instead of voicing opinions. Media is an important factor that relates to both the dominant idea and people's perception of the dominant idea. The assessment of one's social environment may not always correlate with reality.

Edward Bernays, Sigmund Freud’s nephew, changed that as his proudest accomplishment was the creation of a nation of female tobacco addicts in the 1920s. Bernays, who was well-connected in the media, asked photographer friends to take photos of slim, pretty women smoking. He also paid physicians to go on record stating that cigarettes were an important part of a meal because the smoke “disinfects the mouth and soothes the nerves.”
The quote above comes from the book Made by Hand by Mark Frauenfelder, editor of Make magazine. He goes on to explain other things Bernays did such as persuading restaurants to add cigarettes to the desert menu and staging public events to make it look like women smoked openly.
The campaigns was quite effective. By the end of 1928, American Tobacco’s annual revenue increased by $32 million (about $400 million in today’s money, adjusted for inflation) over the previous year.

Nothing new under the Sun on His footstool.
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aedens
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Re: Financial topics

Post by aedens »

data events

Based on a meta-analysis of nearly 50 studies, researchers found that social factors, including education, racial segregation, social supports, and poverty accounted for over a third of total deaths in the United States in a year. In the United States, the likelihood of premature death increases as income goes down. Similarly, lower education levels are directly correlated with lower income, higher likelihood of smoking, and shorter life expectancy.

http://kff.org/disparities-policy/issue ... th-equity/

The disconnect in sentiment between everyday people and financial pundits must just be the result of a communications issue. And of course, we look forward to the UMich confidence report to beat expectations when it is released in just a few minutes.

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-04-1 ... prices-bla

http://www.lawfulpath.com/ love you long time

https://nativeamericancraftssupplies.co ... 132181.jpg
Last edited by aedens on Sat Apr 16, 2016 7:12 am, edited 2 times in total.
aedens
Posts: 5211
Joined: Tue Nov 04, 2008 4:13 pm

Re: Financial topics

Post by aedens »

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-04-1 ... -banksters


Higg the Passover window approaches. Our best guess window we wished to be so wrong about. If not a perfect storm
one hell of a tempest for the news arbiters we considered.

Anyways some sidebar review notes. http://www.godandscience.org/apologetics/passover.html

Normalcy bias since the final exam was why? The answer was because.

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-04-1 ... e-peddling

These men of honor saved what they could.
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aedens
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Re: Financial topics

Post by aedens »

U.S. mutual fund company attracted almost $29 billion to its long-term mutual funds and exchange-traded funds in March, more than all of its competitors combined, according to a report Thursday by Morningstar Inc.

President Barack Obama announced he would sign an Executive Order directing every relevant agency of the Federal government to take steps in identifying bottlenecks to competition and to create new ways to increase competition in the economy. The Executive Order puts agencies on a fast-track path to, within 60 days, identify the steps they’ll take.

“Accordingly, the chart above, investor sentiment suggests the market has just completed a recessionary ‘bear market’ with virtually no substantial losses.”

Are you long or short? Yes

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-04-1 ... bobulation

http://www.miamiherald.com/news/nation- ... 13037.html
aedens
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Re: Financial topics

Post by aedens »

aedens
Posts: 5211
Joined: Tue Nov 04, 2008 4:13 pm

Re: Financial topics

Post by aedens »

https://kpfa.org/episode/58530/
http://www.amazon.com/gp/offer-listing/ ... dition=all
cheese to rice paddies for some who remember
http://cnsnews.com/news/article/terence ... 2933372906

http://www.thefiscaltimes.com/Columns/2 ... er-Problem
make them drink bottled flint water in dc and buttonwood tree until they comply

At no time during the crisis, or in the many years since, has anyone made a legitimate case for why we should put up with the threat of another implosion.
aedens
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Joined: Tue Nov 04, 2008 4:13 pm

Re: Financial topics

Post by aedens »

XOM says the new rules will cost $25B over 10 years and render many offshore discoveries worthless.

Offshore drilling stocks are broadly lower on the news: RIG -6.1%, DO -1.4%, ESV -5.1%, RDC -7.3%, NE -5.4%, ATW -9%, SDRL -8.9%, SDLP -4%.

Will repost the rig date when the penguins wanted rig and how it was a needed in my book.
It still lingers like that craptastic hangover I had in 1984 btw was the last one I ever had since.

thread: http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-04-0 ... -year-lows

march 24 2016 penguin speakologist :The stock has eased off this week trading towards the lows now at $9.30.
Should investors even think about owning Transocean until the earnings trend reverses?

The watermellons and greenmasks will be ditched before they awake some still assert.

Are we carving a bottom. Saint Peter warned us of those measures as his anger is kindled.

System updates continue in measured steps as we witness the fourth technological revolution.

Wed Nov 05, 2014 4:22 pm As you note G the pleomorphism can be missed since time series of study never wanted to see it.

Anyways, money degrades all the gods of mankind and turns them into commodities.
Guess who leads that mindset into the dust bin of history.

Communal living and the common stock economic model had been a disastrous failure. Not only had the London capitalists received almost no return on their investment, but it became evident that the principal of socialism itself was lost. By December, 1624, some of the English businessmen had decided to abandon the venture and lose what they had already expended rather than risk any more, suggesting that the Pilgrims send over what they could to pay off their special debts.
Capitalism was birthed out of an earlier failed socialist experiment as far back as the Mayflower.
Only four of their married women had survived, and only five teenage girls, three of those being the sole survivors of their families.

“Those who don’t know history are destined to repeat it.” Edmund Burke, 1729-1797

As I conveyed to a friend the effect is real.
Meanwhile nafta will be seen as a Elysian field compared to what's coming.

When the International Monetary Fund (IMF) agreed to add the Yuan to the basket of world currencies used for Global Reserves and International Trade, they wanted China to make the Yuan more reliable as a currency. Since then, China has almost un-pegged its Yuan from the Dollar, allowing its value to fluctuate on world markets.

Policy-induced short squeezes do tend to take on lives of their own. This one’s no exception http://creditbubblebulletin.blogspot.de ... erate.html

http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jso ... lecki.html an example of inexplicable goodness at a time of inexplicable evil

http://cosmopolitanreview.com/witold-pilecki-review/

Marian Rejewski, Henryk Zygalski and Jerzy Różycki crack the Enigma code at the University of Poznań; in July 1939 they present their results to British and French intelligence. Not that either country showed much gratitude.
http://io9.gizmodo.com/5950138/did-poli ... lan-turing

Whenever you see the word 'smart' today they are talking about the ABI [activity based information] collection and assessments.

For instance, the problem of determining whether an arbitrary Turing machine will halt on a particular input, or on all inputs, known as the Halting problem, was shown to be, in general, undecidable in Turing's original paper. Rice's theorem shows that any non-trivial question about the output of a Turing machine is undecidable.
A universal Turing machine can calculate any recursive function, decide any recursive language, and accept any recursively enumerable language. According to the Church-Turing thesis, the problems solvable by a universal Turing machine are exactly those problems solvable by an algorithm or an effective method of computation, for any reasonable definition of those terms. For these reasons, a universal Turing machine serves as a standard against which to compare computational systems, and a system that can simulate a universal Turing machine is called Turing complete.

An abstract version of the universal Turing machine is the universal function, a computable function which can be used to calculate any other computable function. The utm theorem proves the existence of such a function.



thread: 2018
MarvyGuy
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Re: Financial topics

Post by MarvyGuy »

The possibilities of billions of people connected by mobile devices, with unprecedented processing power, storage capacity, and access to knowledge, are unlimited. https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2016/01/ ... to-respond

Well that's pretty frightening. I can only imagine the a new kind of Techno Dictatorship is evolving.

I found this interesting as well
that in the future, talent, more than capital, will represent the critical factor of production. This will give rise to a job market increasingly segregated into “low-skill/low-pay” and “high-skill/high-pay” segments, which in turn will lead to an increase in social tensions

I supposes the current system can remain in place only for a limited periods and then the newer system might be possible once the world war John envisions is over and the new construct is in place for world governance.
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From the JBL 4320 the 4310 was brought to market in the 60/70's and from there the wonderful L100 'Century' line. These defined the music of that age since this was what the people in the recording booths and musicians were listening to their music through. When you listen to a recording of that period on a pair of L100's the sound literally fills the room from ceiling to floor. When you play a current highly compressed song on the L100 the sound is limited to mid and upper ranges and sounds rather flat and even confusing. Today's music is being developed for the cheap ipod earphones etc. and not the sound systems of the 70's. I recounted to an audiophile friend who introduced me to this that it seemed sad that no one is able to hear good music being played over a good pair of speakers anymore. I have been listening to music all my life but never heard it like I did over those L100's. So I suspect the rush towards the next industrial revolution that more will be lost than is gained as it is nearly impossible to get someone to really listen anymore their being conditioned to multitasking sensory overload.

The head of gold forever lost we are living in broken toes as the anitpope paves the way for the next and possibly final act in this sad play.
Higgenbotham
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Re: Financial topics

Post by Higgenbotham »

MarvyGuy wrote: I found this interesting as well
that in the future, talent, more than capital, will represent the critical factor of production. This will give rise to a job market increasingly segregated into “low-skill/low-pay” and “high-skill/high-pay” segments, which in turn will lead to an increase in social tensions
To me it looks like whoever is not already established in the work force is being shut out or, if they are good, relegated to slave status.

I just met a young engineer:
BS 3.57 grade average in mechanical engineering from UC Berkeley (top 5 engineering school)
MS 3.53 grade average in petroleum engineering from UT Austin (top 10 engineering school)
1 year in Saudi doing construction 80+ hour work weeks at 6K/month

Came back to the states. Currently making 40K on a 40 hour work week.
His comment to me, "I never thought I'd be making $40,000."

My thought was you will in the new dark age. Because what you know doesn't matter. All that matters is your capacity to be a slave in the neo-feudal fascist system. He was told no raise this year.
While the periphery breaks down rather slowly at first, the capital cities of the hegemon should collapse suddenly and violently.
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