Thogey wrote:Election is coming quick. Omambo may want to swing his d%%% if we get hurt by the, relatively cheap Russian missiles. If this escalates, even if Israel fights as our proxy, someone will pay for it.
Engineer wrote:Every US cruise missile supposedly vaporizes a monster box of silver. In the event of a BIG conflict, that sort of military use could put a squeeze on the market.
AGgressive Metal wrote:I refuse to believe there are 500 ounces of silver in a missile unless someone can prove it with actual documentation not Zero Hedge articles (no offense to ZH but they sometimes publish rumors to get hits or to try to be in front of the "regular" news). Even if they have a massive computer system (I'm sure they do) I cannot see how it would be more than a couple ounces.
scyther wrote:5 tons of nickel isn't a lot relative to overall supply either... and I do believe it would be scrapped, unlike vaporized silver.
blackrabbit wrote:So as the white house has instructed the military to prepare a "no fly zone" on Syria ie: bombing campaign/war. I have been wondering if this will affect the prices of metals? With Russia arming the Syrians with sophisticated weapons it seems like it will be quite a different show than Libya. Any ideas from you knowledgable folks?
ZenOps wrote:scyther wrote:5 tons of nickel isn't a lot relative to overall supply either... and I do believe it would be scrapped, unlike vaporized silver.
Says you. The US doesn't have a nickel mine. If Canada says no more nickel or no more oil for you, you guys are seriously in trouble. Russia also has a stockpile of 40,000 mostly rusting tanks as well (post-war hardware had low nickel content due to cost, as nickel was parity with silver for most of the 1940's) Imagine mixing in a few tonnes of silver into a tank, and thats what it cost, and many willingly paid.
US doesn't have a Neodymium mine either.
In 1964, the US had 10 ounces per capita in silver, but only 6.5 ounces of nickel in coin form. You also managed to spend $37 Billion on combat ships (Littoral) that seem to contain no nickel. You would think that if it was slightly more available, you would spend the extra $100 million to make them rustproof and armored. Most modern jet fighters are made of alloyed nickel in the frame and engines (aluminum is too weak to survive the stresses)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_Dy ... ing_Falcon
The F-16 at 9,100 kilograms (10 ton) is considered a "lightweight" fighter, not for its ability to fight, but its acutal weight. I can imagine the frame and hull of a Tomahawk has 500 ounces of nickel in it as well.
It also means that a single 5 cent piece from Canada (4.54 grams) was worth twice what a 90% silver dime was during WWII.
Nickel is a very important metal in time of war.
ZenOps wrote:...
Canada might cancel the small order for 65 F-35's simply because you guys can't produce one that meets minimum specs (bending airframe at high speed is a big issue) Thats usually a sign that you "used cheap concrete". I know the US is planning on producing 2,443 F-35 along with a hundred or so F-22's for internal use.
...
ZenOps wrote:Nickel is probably what you want to be stacking, not silver.
ZenOps wrote:scyther wrote:5 tons of nickel isn't a lot relative to overall supply either... and I do believe it would be scrapped, unlike vaporized silver.
Says you. The US doesn't have a nickel mine. If Canada says no more nickel or no more oil for you, you guys are seriously in trouble. Russia also has a stockpile of 40,000 mostly rusting tanks as well (post-war hardware had low nickel content due to cost, as nickel was parity with silver for most of the 1940's) Imagine mixing in a few tonnes of silver into a tank, and thats what it cost, and many willingly paid.
US doesn't have a Neodymium mine either.
In 1964, the US had 10 ounces per capita in silver, but only 6.5 ounces of nickel in coin form. You also managed to spend $37 Billion on combat ships (Littoral) that seem to contain no nickel. You would think that if it was slightly more available, you would spend the extra $100 million to make them rustproof and armored. Most modern jet fighters are made of alloyed nickel in the frame and engines (aluminum is too weak to survive the stresses)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_Dy ... ing_Falcon
The F-16 at 9,100 kilograms (10 ton) is considered a "lightweight" fighter, not for its ability to fight, but its acutal weight. I can imagine the frame and hull of a Tomahawk has 500 ounces of nickel in it as well.
It also means that a single 5 cent piece from Canada (4.54 grams) was worth twice what a 90% silver dime was during WWII.
Nickel is a very important metal in time of war.
neilgin1 wrote:blackrabbit wrote:So as the white house has instructed the military to prepare a "no fly zone" on Syria ie: bombing campaign/war. I have been wondering if this will affect the prices of metals? With Russia arming the Syrians with sophisticated weapons it seems like it will be quite a different show than Libya. Any ideas from you knowledgable folks?
oh man, i'm sorry...I didn't see this post, before I put up those two vid's and a mainstream media report.......i'm sorry.
I agree with the author of the two video's...its "smelling" like WWIII.....you have Russia/China/Iran lining up.....against the US/EU, and the whole guiding force is resource competition.
my MAIN worry is this, (and maybe Thogey will back me)...IF we get into a hot war, a shooting war, we run a HIGH risk of nuclear weapons release. I don't care what anybody says, once that demon gets let out of the bottle, I don't see how anyone can contain it to a limited nuclear exchange...the only way it stays limited, is if there is leadership decapitation....and even then, there might be "deadman switches" built into any system, where national leadership has been taken out.
Preppers can prep all they want, and stackers can stack all they want....but when you get into a discussion of nuclear "war", unless you have one of 70 "kneecap" style bunkers...forget it, all bets are off. I mean not EVERYBODY will die....out of 6-7 billion souls, maybe 25 million might live.
interesting times....should I make the donut run?
neilgin1 wrote:I agree with the author of the two video's...its "smelling" like WWIII.....you have Russia/China/Iran lining up.....against the US/EU, and the whole guiding force is resource competition.
I mean not EVERYBODY will die....out of 6-7 billion souls, maybe 25 million might live.
interesting times....should I make the donut run?
johnbrickner wrote:neilgin1 wrote:I agree with the author of the two video's...its "smelling" like WWIII.....you have Russia/China/Iran lining up.....against the US/EU, and the whole guiding force is resource competition.
I mean not EVERYBODY will die....out of 6-7 billion souls, maybe 25 million might live.
interesting times....should I make the donut run?
I always thought China had its eye on Russian living space (Lebensraum?). But, with Russia no longer a superpower it might make a good coolie for China. Interesting to see how their relationship pans out.
Resource wars? Yes, they will be fought. It's why we are in the middle east still. I'm not sure it will be a WWIII though. More likely the bigger countries pushing on the smaller ones to get what they want. Until, it starts getting real rough getting what they want. Meaning one of the big boys decides it just cant do without (anymore, right now, or at some time in the not so distant future). Perhaps a pre-emptive wack. Will billions die? Yes, but from combined emergencies (famine, flood, lack of medical, lack of energy, super bugs, financial, war, and other general civilization degradation, etc.)
(edit for spelling)
Then you might see two or more of the big powers go at it. Will there be an exchange? I'm thinking more tactical (regional or regions) in nature than world wide. Hopefully, the complete and abject horror of it will make those involved stop. Or more likely they just wont exist at the level to continue.
Another thing you have to consider is, superpower military runs on huge amounts of energy & resources. If you are the US you have to include uber-technology. And uber-technology takes even more energy & resources to make. At some point, we just wont have the energy or resources to perform war as we now know it nor use technology as we now know it. But not before hell is released at least on a limited scale.
While I believe it can and will be profitable to either collect, horde or invest in high tech, or rare earth, or military, or financial metals in the short-term, I think for the long-term we need to concentrate on low tech metals. Say metallurgy from a time that didn't require as much energy to make stuff. This and salvage from the cities will be the future. But, I'm sure I'm talking at least a few generations down the road here. Or at least I hope I am.
And all of this, because humanity is still attempting to maintain the unsustainable status quo. Where do I think we are headed? Something along the lines of fascist enforced economic austerity. Or the corporate government decides the priority of energy and resources. Really I ask, does it seem like a whole lot of a stretch from where we are now?
Make mine a cinna-bun.
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