Financial topics
Re: Financial topics
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C2YbPQ2tJOQ
actively destroying the economy
even the brits are mocking the retards here
Biden is past insane is the conveyance.
as we wonder how easter island b feeds it self
Face it, Colonial was either a false flag or a MAJOR "intelligence" failure.
Or both.....
It's a veritable alphabet soup of 17 agencies and offices.
Honk Honk
Its a probe check Malasia Hong Kong and Taiwon for outages since our pipe line outage.
It was probe for response timelines for intel.
Filter and scrubs adding up.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2MWPVquWhX8
Prepare with food, water, gasoline, cash... In sane measures to three weeks.
We are working up to three month.
Open source to your thinking only up to three weeks.
Get past the foot in the water as adults.
actively destroying the economy
even the brits are mocking the retards here
Biden is past insane is the conveyance.
as we wonder how easter island b feeds it self
Face it, Colonial was either a false flag or a MAJOR "intelligence" failure.
Or both.....
It's a veritable alphabet soup of 17 agencies and offices.
Honk Honk
Its a probe check Malasia Hong Kong and Taiwon for outages since our pipe line outage.
It was probe for response timelines for intel.
Filter and scrubs adding up.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2MWPVquWhX8
Prepare with food, water, gasoline, cash... In sane measures to three weeks.
We are working up to three month.
Open source to your thinking only up to three weeks.
Get past the foot in the water as adults.
Re: Financial topics
manufacturing ignorance
bees are back as we let the soil rest
the poisons from past practices
they will lie to you every day about even a 1000 times
below threshold levels
yep dumb luck
bees are back as we let the soil rest
the poisons from past practices
they will lie to you every day about even a 1000 times
below threshold levels
yep dumb luck
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Re: Financial topics
Ok, cool, at least you made very specific and bold predictions. Respect to you for that, Higgy.Higgenbotham wrote: Mon May 17, 2021 7:31 pmCool Breeze wrote: Mon May 17, 2021 4:31 pm What's your prediction, Aeden, on the coming 3 years?
Higster?
This was posted over 3 years ago and it was and still is my best shot.
Maybe the first 2 bullet points will be complete within the next 3 years. The reason for some of the verbiage such as "settling of long-standing scores" is that I had discussed these things in more detail previously.
Higgenbotham wrote: Wed Feb 07, 2018 10:49 pm My more specific predictions would be:
- There will be a major global financial panic and crisis. Supply chains will break, resulting in unavailability of critical raw materials and components. Global trade will begin to shut down. As it begins to become apparent that the supply chain linkages are permanently broken, the global interlinked financial markets will shut down and cease to exist. This will all happen very quickly. It will not take years from the initial panic.
- The focus of governments will turn to controlling their panicked and hungry populations. Due to lack of availability of imported goods and adequate storage "sufficient to reconstitute" a system consistent with nation state government, this will prove to be too little too late and most government will devolve to the local level as populations lose faith in their national governments and the national governments lose the resources and ability to control their populations.
- There will be no large scale nuclear war. Instead, the population will be culled through starvation, local strife (including settling of long-standing scores) and disease. Wave after wave of pandemics will sweep the world.
- Similar to national economies and governments, centralized utilities will fail or become so decrepit as to be unsafe and unusable. All centralized utilities including the power grid will shut down permanently.
- The initial worldwide kill rate during the first couple decades following the financial panic will exceed 90%. The global population will be in the range of a few tens of millions when the bottom is hit in two or three centuries. Similar to the last dark age, the world's largest cities will have a population on the order of 25,000 and a large town will be 1,000.
- Life during the coming dark age will be similar to the last dark age but worse due to environmental damage and pollution.
It looks like we should be in the throes of your prediction, then. I think you are really, really doomsaying and severe in these predictions, but as I said, I'm happy you put them down and are sticking by them.
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Re: Financial topics
Yes, it keeps going.vincecate wrote: Mon May 17, 2021 7:44 pm https://www.tradingview.com/symbols/TVC-DXY/
In the last year the DXY is down 10%. This probably means imports will have higher USD prices. This probably pushes up on the inflation numbers.
Vince, what do you think of the general doom saying of the forum, such as in Higgy or John's predictions?
Re: Financial topics
You are here. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2CbZqdqqidc
Do some research to what was the taken from the museum in Bagdad when Iraq was sacked.
It already happened and you never had a clue since as we conveyed.
Many reasons for this effect of disconnects. Advanced propaganda you never understood.
Meat bags for Iraq, Army, be all you can be. Meat bags for New York Police, be all you can be.
Patterns impossible to miss. Tighten labor pool for meat bags.
Madness of the crowds is a feature.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xeVyfiP0cLk What Does That Mean?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5-6adETiqTM cohort realities
Nobody cares about one or the other since we are seeking Utility.
In this sense we may say that causality is a category of action. The category means and ends presupposes the category cause and effect. In a world without causality and regularity of phenomena there would be no field for human reasoning and human action. Such a world would be a chaos in which man would be at a loss to find any orientation and guidance. Man is not even capable of imagining the conditions of such a chaotic universe.
Where man does not see any causal relation, he cannot act. This statement is not reversible.
Even when he knows the causal relation involved, man cannot act if he is not in a position to influence the cause.
The philosophical, epistemological, and metaphysical problems of causality and of imperfect induction are beyond the scope of praxeology.
We must simply establish the fact that in order to act, man must know the causal relationship between events, processes, or states of affairs.
And only as far as he knows this relationship, can his action attain the ends sought.
We are fully aware that in asserting this we are moving in a circle.
For the evidence that we have correctly perceived a causal relation is provided only by the fact that action guided by this knowledge results in the expected outcome. But we cannot avoid this vicious circular evidence precisely because causality is a category of action. And because it is such a category, praxeology cannot help bestowing some attention on this fundamental problem of philosophy.
https://mises.org/library/human-action-0/html/pp/617
We understand such critiques.
https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/bitco ... red-debate
Pandora’s Box
Such criticism, of course, strikes even more nerves (and claims of potential illogic) when precious metal professionals open the Pandora’s box of any conversation around Bitcoin, which has become, understandably, the sacred cow of many over-night millionaires and legitimately intelligent folks who, like us, distrust now obviously debased fiat currencies.
The Asset Question
As for being an asset, BTC provides no income, cash flow, dividends, or coupon interest. Everyone, knows this, and everyone also knows that the same can be said of physical gold.
Bitcoiners, of course, rightly don’t care, as the money they’ve made is the key driver behind their “logic” and trade.
Candidly, few can fault such motives—but at least be honest: The BTC trade is precisely that—a trade, not an asset, store of value or currency.
Re: Financial topics
I think we are going to have US dollar hyperinflation and probably most fiat money hyperinflation. This is going to be really hard on the world. There will be lots of suffering, starvation, and riots. Probably wars too. But I don't think we will get a "dark age".Cool Breeze wrote: Mon May 17, 2021 10:03 pm Vince, what do you think of the general doom saying of the forum, such as in Higgy or John's predictions?
When hyperinflation comes the government's power is reduced. Right now the US government can control the equivalent of 50% of the US GNP just by printing money which is used around the world. It is a crazy situation that a printing press results in such power. In hyperinflation this power goes way down. At some point you end up with the tax collector being better off to stay home and attend his garden then go to work for the government and get paid in funny money. The government has trouble buying votes too.
Probably some countries will move to some cryptocurrency that no government can print like crazy and those economies will start to prosper. Then other will follow that lead. So eventually the power of government will be reduced enough that people are free enough to prosper. But the transition will be painful and not everyone makes it through.
Rome devalued their currency, made price controls, and then laws to make people do the type of work their father did (to keep people in certain professions that were not profitable with price controls). This killed the economy. Somehow much of this bad policy lasted longer than Rome and so kept a dark age going. But these days if some country were reasonable many people could move there and prosper. With the Internet we would all know that this country was doing well. So keeping the whole world down is just not so easy. As long as WW3 does not get a world government, I don't think we get a dark age.
Re: Financial topics
Just like the retards before they taxed the trees before they had fruit to pick.
Trees fell over and mercenary's sacked the city's they castigated the legions as romans.
Mud cakes are a dime and idle society's collapse and starve to death.
Crypto is the hill they will die on just as they accuse the stackers shaking the coin jars as shamans.
Example: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/ ... -banknotes
Are central banks this stupid. Yes they are says the starving peasant.
$1 dollar can purchase around 1,700 sats so that equals 10 mud cakes.
The market could care less so they barter all retards as we see also in real time.
Trees fell over and mercenary's sacked the city's they castigated the legions as romans.
Mud cakes are a dime and idle society's collapse and starve to death.
Crypto is the hill they will die on just as they accuse the stackers shaking the coin jars as shamans.
Example: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/ ... -banknotes
Are central banks this stupid. Yes they are says the starving peasant.
$1 dollar can purchase around 1,700 sats so that equals 10 mud cakes.
The market could care less so they barter all retards as we see also in real time.
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Re: Financial topics
Wrong again here.aeden wrote: Mon May 17, 2021 10:35 pm Candidly, few can fault such motives—but at least be honest: The BTC trade is precisely that—a trade, not an asset, store of value or currency.
Make your prediction instead of vomiting high level thoughts that are tenuously linked ... and ultimately appealed to your Seventh Day made up religion.
Make it. I won't ask again.
BTC is a store of value, it is a pristine asset as Saylor states. Why? Energy produces it and its secure network effect, and it is deflationary, and more importantly, can be moved effortlessly and not confiscated (unlike gold) in a world where movement is potentially critical, as is asset flow to set up a new life if necessary.
As I have said before, privacy is a bit of an issue, so I am diversified only in xmr, but swaps and other innovations are coming which will be hugely key for all those wanting to escape the digital fiat soon to be created (CBDCs) to monitor and tax people.
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Re: Financial topics
I agree with much of this. Dark Age? Nah, no way. Too many game theory problems with that. Slave age through technocracy? Possible. The fact that the mark is imminent (the vaccines are a type of mark) is the scariest part about this, since one realizes that the population by and large is sheeple - they fear death more than love freedom or God. And even if this is only 30% of the population, with the media and the corrupt leaders they all combine to enforce the madness on the certain types that are generally resistant to such foolishness.vincecate wrote: Tue May 18, 2021 10:08 amI think we are going to have US dollar hyperinflation and probably most fiat money hyperinflation. This is going to be really hard on the world. There will be lots of suffering, starvation, and riots. Probably wars too. But I don't think we will get a "dark age".Cool Breeze wrote: Mon May 17, 2021 10:03 pm Vince, what do you think of the general doom saying of the forum, such as in Higgy or John's predictions?
When hyperinflation comes the government's power is reduced. Right now the US government can control the equivalent of 50% of the US GNP just by printing money which is used around the world. It is a crazy situation that a printing press results in such power. In hyperinflation this power goes way down. At some point you end up with the tax collector being better off to stay home and attend his garden then go to work for the government and get paid in funny money. The government has trouble buying votes too.
Probably some countries will move to some cryptocurrency that no government can print like crazy and those economies will start to prosper. Then other will follow that lead. So eventually the power of government will be reduced enough that people are free enough to prosper. But the transition will be painful and not everyone makes it through.
Rome devalued their currency, made price controls, and then laws to make people do the type of work their father did (to keep people in certain professions that were not profitable with price controls). This killed the economy. Somehow much of this bad policy lasted longer than Rome and so kept a dark age going. But these days if some country were reasonable many people could move there and prosper. With the Internet we would all know that this country was doing well. So keeping the whole world down is just not so easy. As long as WW3 does not get a world government, I don't think we get a dark age.
Burry is beting yields go up, TSLA gets crushed (pops) and interestingly is betting on GOOG and FB keeping up the government connection, also going up.
Re: Financial topics
18. Emotionalize, Antagonize, and Goad Opponents. If you can't do anything else, chide and taunt your opponents and draw them into emotional responses which will tend to make them look foolish and overly motivated, and generally render their material somewhat less coherent.
Enjoy your audit.
The solution was right in front of you provided. To lazy to read so good luck.
Do you realize how many just went into the dark ages? No you do not.
Dark Age? Nah, no way. lulz
Enjoy your audit.
The solution was right in front of you provided. To lazy to read so good luck.
Do you realize how many just went into the dark ages? No you do not.
Dark Age? Nah, no way. lulz
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