Rodebaugh wrote:Yep, Hatches are battened
Rodebaugh wrote:Yep, Hatches are battened
Mossy wrote:Rodebaugh wrote:Yep, Hatches are battened
And the bats are hatchened.
Rodebaugh wrote:Greece is about to default and the S&P is green
neilgin1 wrote:Rodebaugh wrote:Greece is about to default and the S&P is green
you know why? probably half of Wall Street, naw, three quarters of Wall Street, three quarters of the lobbyist shops on K Street are medicated on seratonin uptake inhibitor's...anti-depressant's...its more widespread then we're even aware. on reliable info...trust me, i've heard that they have retinal scan dispensers of the stuff at a certain five sided buidling....you can get anti-dee's AND benzo's, there's a machine on each floor, and wing, stocked daily. Just walk up to the eye reader, scans you, dispenses the meds, a lil dixie cup slides down, squirts in some spring water, and you're good to go. i've also heard they have a similar set up at the Fed, Homeland Security, Treasury, IMF, BIS, its the new norm. And i'm almost positive that the guys at the big houses in the private sector have similar arrangements.
of course, i might enjoy my indulgences, but one thing i absolutely stay away from are anti-D's, seratonin uptake inhibitors, because you dont FEEL, dont feel sad, dont feel happy...you're just even EVEN, and when i get depressed, i want to feel that..means somethings wrong. Its when you cant FEEL, that's the danger zone. So now we have all there petty and major oliogarches medicated to the gills, just chimped out, baked, making some very major policy decisions, while gassed on state of the art intense pharmaceuticals....and i'm not just talking about a wee paper pushing GS-11 at the Fed, this goes all the way up the food chain to the HIGHEST LEVEL's......did any of you see the President during his "pass this bill" rant?....hmmm? Do i hafta get specific? Barry was little "amped" up, wouldnt you say?....and i'm not talking about a iced double double mocha pre-speech, he gets the industrial strength stuff, nuff said.
its all gotten so bad in the halls of power, both private and public sector, its like you have a thousand "Tony Montana's" (of "Scarface" fame http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2T1GOCCaiWA ) churning and burning stocks all day long with white junk at the corners of their mouths, acting on the economical guidance of a battalion of newly minted "Chance the Gardener's" ("Being There" http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TYeVQzTVyLk ) camping out at the Fed, muttering "in the spring there will be growth", all the while piles of bones, sucked clean of marrow litter the floors of the Pentagon, food for the savage packs of Generals all believeing they were Patton ( http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XZJcAeJ8 ... re=related ) in another life. Its madness and insanity packaged as the "American Way", and we have to live with the fact, we are doomed.
68Camaro wrote:One only needs to examine the fundamental facts (not the media spun opinions) to see the issues before us. It seems pretty obvious that the major financial and political institutions are fighting a desperate and inevitably losing rear-guard battle against overwhelming odds, in a crisis of their own making. The markets are (I believe) artificially propped up by some unknown combination of national asset selling and fiat money printing with instructions to institutions to keep markets from falling too quickly, and PMs from rising too fast.
In a stable system, small disturbances create correspondingly small displacements. The level of stability is related to the level of displacement. In a stongly stable system the disturbance comes back to equilibrium quickly and decisively. In a weakly stable system the displacements from equilibrium are larger, and the return takes longer. In a weakly unstable system a small disturbance causes a new definition of equilibrium, but one that is not far removed from the previous equilibrium, and the change tends to occur relatively slowly and without too much energy change.
Where are we? We are in a strongly unstable system, but one which is under artificial external control. When the system is displaced from equilibrium there are additional external forces which attempt to push it back to equilibrium.
However, in every inherently unstable system there comes a loading point where even extensive, artificial, active, external controls with instructions to attempt to maintain stability cannot overcome the increasing tendency toward instability. When that happens the new equilibrium point is reached very quickly and decisively, with a tremendous amount of energy change.
That point of no return is simply called the critical point. We are very near that point.
Coppercrazy wrote:so where do you think silver will be at the weeks end?Im trying to decide when to buy.I was totally tempted today when silver dipped under 40.There a local pawn shop that lets me buy at one or 2 strikes under spot...thing is last two times silver was 42 and 43 so now I feel like its already on sale....
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