scyther wrote:But there do seem to be a lot of older people here.
beauanderos wrote:Sorta.
All that ignorance. I hate to consider what the effect of that stupidity will result in come election time. If Obama lets that
happen without declaring martial law first... after the false flag event he will orchestrate.
:
Bigjohn wrote:beauanderos wrote:Sorta.
All that ignorance. I hate to consider what the effect of that stupidity will result in come election time. If Obama lets that
happen without declaring martial law first... after the false flag event he will orchestrate.
:
I see your point and agree with a part of the argument. I don't agree that anyone who doesn't know that pre-65 coins were silver is ignorant and stupid and effects of that stupidity [fill in the blinks]. When I was in my 20's, I had 2 business degrees and ran a company with a couple dozen employees. In a matter of a year, I fixed their books, and turned a profit for the company for the first time in nearly 10 years. At the time, I didn't know that pre-65 coins were silver. It's silly to think that someone might not know such simple things but if no one ever talks about it and it's not taught in schools, how would kids even know that? Similarly, many of us might look around a garage sale and not buy a piece of garbage for 10 cents that's actually a rare antique worth hundreds of dollars. Why? You don't know what you don't know. While the guys at the antiques forum are posting how the world is going to hell because 15 dumb ignorant guys walked right by that rare antique and didn't pick it up while it was so simple and obvious
beauanderos wrote:Bigjohn wrote:beauanderos wrote:Sorta.
All that ignorance. I hate to consider what the effect of that stupidity will result in come election time. If Obama lets that
happen without declaring martial law first... after the false flag event he will orchestrate.
:
I see your point and agree with a part of the argument. I don't agree that anyone who doesn't know that pre-65 coins were silver is ignorant and stupid and effects of that stupidity [fill in the blinks]. When I was in my 20's, I had 2 business degrees and ran a company with a couple dozen employees. In a matter of a year, I fixed their books, and turned a profit for the company for the first time in nearly 10 years. At the time, I didn't know that pre-65 coins were silver. It's silly to think that someone might not know such simple things but if no one ever talks about it and it's not taught in schools, how would kids even know that? Similarly, many of us might look around a garage sale and not buy a piece of garbage for 10 cents that's actually a rare antique worth hundreds of dollars. Why? You don't know what you don't know. While the guys at the antiques forum are posting how the world is going to hell because 15 dumb ignorant guys walked right by that rare antique and didn't pick it up while it was so simple and obvious
I didn't say people were unintelligent. Ignorant simply means unlearned and the word has picked up a bad connotation by some who either are unaware of that or use it to imply stupidity.
I am not disparaging the masses when I call them ignorant, simply stating that what they don't know, in this case the value of pre-1964 silver coins, makes them so. The fact that I never
understood the potential of unopened baseball card packs makes me ignorant of that knowledge... a point I will readily admit to without shame. Who would have thought?
Bigjohn wrote:You don't know what you don't know.
johnbrickner wrote:TY BG. Summed up succinctly, this is the bottom line.Bigjohn wrote:You don't know what you don't know.
To which one can add: "The more you know, the more you don't know".
It's all about awareness. *(Drifting it, Ray)
AGgressive Metal wrote:Most of the guys in 20s & 30s who are into bullion & coins are doing it with a high amount of knowledge (via internet) and usually flipping for profit. 20s-30s are earning years, family building years, paying off mortgage & student loan years, not many people in that range can afford to just sit on a pile of metal in addition to all their obligations.
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