se7ensnakes
Critical Thinker
- Joined
- Dec 7, 2006
- Messages
- 263
Dr Kittens Idea to remedy the inflation problem is to invest money. That sounds simple except Dr Kitten apparently dont know what tulipmania means.
Dr Kittens Idea to remedy the inflation problem is to invest money. That sounds simple except Dr Kitten apparently dont know what tulipmania means.
... and all investing is like tulip mania.![]()
What makes Tippit's stance doubly hilarious is that there's a major economic crisis happening in Greece that persists in part because they can't inflate their currency.
When you're wrong in theory, you can always argue that the theory is incomplete and that actual practice bears you out.
When you're wrong in practice, you can always argue that someone has tampered with the system, keeping it from operating as theory says that it should.
But when you're wrong in both theory and in practice,.... you might a Gold Bug.
Or, their crisis has to do with the fact that the government's budget deficit alone is 12.7% of the country's GDP, and their debt/GDP is 113%. The crisis is due to the malinvestment which has been the result of persistent euro-inflation for the past decade, combined with the fact that they can't service their enormous debt.
When the Fed was set up, it was deliberately set up to be outside of Congress' direct supervision (and of the President's, for that matter) so that we wouldn't see things like a deliberate easing of monetary policy to produce a temporary stock market boost just before the election,.... which of course would cause inflation after the election.
If there's inflation going on, then the value of the debt is contracting and Greece's position is getting better, not worse. (That's why inflation is good for borrowers and bad for lenders.)
That's why people like 7 and Tippit are so terrified of inflation,... because they can't tell the difference between Warren Buffett and Charles Ponzi, or between buying shares in a profitable company or useless objects that they hope to sell to a still greater fool.
Not all companies pay dividends. Buffet's Berkshire Hathaway doesn't. If I own a share, all I can do with it is sell it to someone else, at a price that I hope is higher than what I bought it at. I guess you'd say that neither I nor the buyer are fools in that case. But why not?
I'm trying to figure out why the pre-Fed system would have such a populist base. A short-term stock market boost itself wouldn't mean much to the little guys who support Ron Paul and Lyndon Larouche. Is there some other economic/financial benefit these supporters perceive?
In the late 19th century, indebted farmers would like inflation, right? I remember reading about the people who wanted an increase in the monetary supply through silver, but I don't remember the details.
Today, would indebted suburbanites like inflation (or think they would)?
I'll also echo the point that a lot of these attitudes about banks are laundered anti-Semitic conspiracy theories. That could explain a cultural reason for favoring anti-Fed ideas irrespective of their economic sense or consequences.
I'm trying to figure out why the pre-Fed system would have such a populist base. A short-term stock market boost itself wouldn't mean much to the little guys who support Ron Paul and Lyndon Larouche. Is there some other economic/financial benefit these supporters perceive?
Because gold doesn't generate wealth the way an ongoing commercial concern does.
I don't understand why that matters.
What wealth are you talking about? The products of the company? I'm not interested in buying them; I'm interested in making money by investing in the company. The profits of the company? They don't help me, because the company doesn't give them to me as dividends.
All that remains for me to do is to sell my share in the company to someone else, the same as I can sell my gold to someone else. So, the relevant question is, will anyone else want to buy the share or the gold for a higher price than what I bought it for? I don't see why potential buyers would prefer one to the other; all they can do with either is to sell it in turn to yet someone else for a price that is yet higher.
It all seems quite circular.
I don't understand why that matters.
What wealth are you talking about? The products of the company? The profits of the company?
All that remains for me to do is to sell my share in the company to someone else, the same as I can sell my gold to someone else. So, the relevant question is, will anyone else want to buy the share or the gold for a higher price than what I bought it for?
For some people, life didn't turn out exactly the way they had hoped. As they sit in their trailers, drinking can after can of beer, they just know that someone (not them) is to blame. They watch their Glen Beck program on TV, and see those rich bankers (aka Jews), in their fancy $1000 suits, getting bailed out by a black president, and figure it's all their fault.
To be fair...aren't most of organized tax/fed protestors wealthy white folks? Didn't the NYTimes have some demographic poll published recently?
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/15/us/politics/15poll.html
Though, there are plenty of rednecks who have no idea how to take responsibility for themselves...
Yes, those are known as "Greedy Douchebags." They are annoying. They represent everything wrong with America. But they are not the ones that buy into these conspiracy theories....though they may help perpetuate them to serve their own narrow interests.
I don't know that I would go that far, but they do seem misguided. They are the old guard in it's dying gasp. Time to kick and scream and write poorly executed protest signs I guess. I get the frustration, but how do you explain to a huge demographic that they are just the programming by-product of faulty societal memes that have spiraled out of control and floated to the surface of all the post-relevance-angst on a suicide mission to not make any sense?
Why it is very important for the fed to end:
Fed System:
1) Fractional Reserve banking which allows private corporations to expand and contract the money in circulation, and therefore have the ability to forecast economic conditions and invest accordingly.
2) Liquidity is managed by private corporations for profit, regardless of such concerns as bankruptcies, high unemployment, and foreclosures.