68Camaro wrote:All good points but... think a bit further ahead.
Less than 10% of the population are capable of retaining any standard of living in the above scenario. More than half would literally be destitute, and soon, desparate. The other 40% not far behind them. What will the 90% do to the 10%. That's the real worry.
beauanderos wrote:68Camaro wrote:All good points but... think a bit further ahead.
Less than 10% of the population are capable of retaining any standard of living in the above scenario. More than half would literally be destitute, and soon, desparate. The other 40% not far behind them. What will the 90% do to the 10%. That's the real worry.
True... and another consideration usually given short shrift to. Who will buy the metals, consistently, after hyperinflation? It surely won't be the 99% having a rough time surviving. Paradigm shift of the new 1% selling (if needed) to the old 1%... although a good percentage of that old 1% surely have some metals tucked away. The disruption that accompanies the greatest transfer of wealth ever witnessed will surely be immense.
beauanderos wrote:
What does this mean? How much did you expect to live on in retirement? $5000 a month? Just to throw a number out there... to have $5000 a month would mean holding 200 ounces of silver priced at $25 an ounce.... per month! Do you expect to live forty years after you retire? That would mean you should be sitting on 96,000 ounces of silver... right NOW!
IdahoCopper wrote:If you time your play right you would covert silver and gold into real estate that pays monthly rentals. Productive farm land is much better than rental houses.
IdahoCopper wrote:Productive farmland PRODUCES FOOD. Your tenant can pay you in FOOD. You can EAT food, or SELL it for other stuff like FUEL to heat your home or drive your car. Your mindset is contaminated with NORMALCY BIAS. If all the above comes to pass, things will NOT BE NORMAL.
Rodebaugh wrote:The key is to be as debt free @ retirement as you personaly can.
You should NOT have a house payment, two car payments, RV payment, Boat payment, ect payment......at retirement.
Money coming in should be used for food, utilities, and $5 bills for grandchildrens birthday cards.
beauanderos wrote:http://kingworldnews.com/kingworldnews/KWN_DailyWeb/Entries/2013/10/18_Billionaire_Sprott_Asks_How_Will_People_Survive_Whats_Coming.html
Read this link. Let it sink in. Read it again. Try and understand the implications. <snip>
what I allude to is a matter of survival, not becoming rich. <snip>
TXBullion wrote:I assume then you are buying farmland currently ?
IdahoCopper wrote:If you time your play right you would covert silver and gold into real estate...
Rosco wrote:Rodebaugh wrote:The key is to be as debt free @ retirement as you personaly can.
You should NOT have a house payment, two car payments, RV payment, Boat payment, ect payment......at retirement.
Money coming in should be used for food, utilities, and $5 bills for grandchildrens birthday cards.
Check,check, check, but its $25.00 birthdays an Christmas an includes Great grandchildren totals 18 Gifts Times 2. Stay with the $5.00 as long as you can tight wad
Engineer wrote:Emotions aside, our race would be much better off if 90% of us died off. In that case, we wouldn't need everyone crowded together in cities eating fake foods grown with oil-based fertilizers, and could simply spread out so we don't overwork the land.
theo wrote:Engineer wrote:Emotions aside, our race would be much better off if 90% of us died off. In that case, we wouldn't need everyone crowded together in cities eating fake foods grown with oil-based fertilizers, and could simply spread out so we don't overwork the land.
I have to say I'm surprised that you really believe that. So by extension you would argue that life was better when the population was 10% of what it is now. That would be about 800 years ago; during the middle ages when life was "nasty, brutish and short." Of course you would prefer 10% of our population along with today's modern advances. Unfortunately economics argues that advances in knowledge and technology is actually animated by population growth. Why? Because humans ARE a resource. Two of the four factors of production (Labor and Entrepreneurial ability) involve people. This is why Malthus was wrong 200 years ago and his followers are just as wrong today.
Of course humans must be to be used to their full potential they must have a certain measure of freedom. All of the problems that we face (overuse of land, overcrowding, lack of access to water etc) have solutions that don't involve genocide if we have the freedom to explore them. However with the government grabbing power by the day and the Fed running the largest price fixing scheme in history, those solutions become more difficult to come by much less implement. In fact sometimes I wonder whether this economic bubble (and inevitable crash) is being created by people who wish to engineer a reduction in population for the "sustainability" of the human race.
theo wrote:Engineer wrote:Emotions aside, our race would be much better off if 90% of us died off. In that case, we wouldn't need everyone crowded together in cities eating fake foods grown with oil-based fertilizers, and could simply spread out so we don't overwork the land.
I have to say I'm surprised that you really believe that. So by extension you would argue that life was better when the population was 10% of what it is now. That would be about 800 years ago; during the middle ages when life was "nasty, brutish and short." Of course you would prefer 10% of our population along with today's modern advances. Unfortunately economics argues that advances in knowledge and technology is actually animated by population growth. Why? Because humans ARE a resource.
Engineer wrote:
Life in a ghetto tends to be nasty, brutish, and short. Life in a cubicle is nasty, brutish, and long. Life in an Indian or Chinese slum is no picnic, either...
All I'm saying is that each acre of the earth has a finite carrying capacity, and once you breach that capacity, you start to drown in your own poisons. If you don't like my number, feel free to propose your own...maybe you want more people badly enough for everybody to eat pink slime burgers processed from feedlot cows stuffed with corn grown with frac gas fertilizer, along with a side of GMO corn or whatever that white powder is that they process into the stuff in the box with a list of unpronounceable chemicals...and don't forget the "artificial cheese food" topping. You can serve that up with some melamine milk on your plastic coated fiberboard furniture in your apartment constructed with poisonous Chinese drywall.
I happen to like a nice steak cut from a pastured cow, a salad, and some broccoli, all fresh from the fields...and a log cabin would suit me just fine.
scyther wrote:Just putting this out there... just because life was a lot less comfortable 800 years ago doesn't mean it would be any worse if the population dropped back to that level. Most of the technology humans have acquired since then won't disappear if 90% of the population dies. It would of course be catastrophic at first, but once things stabilized I think the human race as a whole would be better off.
theo wrote:There seems to be this idea that after losing 9 out of every 10 people, society would just turn into something straight out of Waldon Woods. This strikes me as naive. There is no template for what 6 billion deaths in a short time period would do to society. I would argue that most of today's infrastructure and institutions would be destroyed along with much of our current knowledge and values. Also, I actually do think that our post-apocalyptic governments would resemble those of the middle ages since oppression and centralized power almost always follow instability. These elites would tightly control any surviving technology snuffing out anything resembling progress for multiple generations.
Engineer wrote:You sound as passionate as Bernacke preaching deflation doom, but it doesn't have to be an apocalyptic event.
A 90% reduction might be a bit drastic, but if you've ever been stuck in LA traffic, it's certainly nice to think about 90% of those cars being vaporized from the road.
I could certainly live with a 66% reduction, which would put us at late 1940's population levels. Even back then, people were worried about population pressure, but there were few enough workers that they could actually get ahead and eventually retire on one person's salary. With 3x more mouths to feed in 2013, you just aren't as valuable a resource as your grandfather was. And, if population growth continues along it's exponential path, how much will the work of your grandchildren be worth? Will it follow a linear path and be worth 1/9 of your grandfather's wages, or an exponential path, and drop to 1/27 of his purchasing potential?
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