Copper Catcher wrote:I was wondering what the group as a whole felt? Why has it not crashed by now? We are buying our own debt, they are pumping more money into the system with no end in sight. They will likely raise the debt limit. At what point will all this implode and what will likely happen after this? What say you?
brian0918 wrote:I have done a lot of thinking about this and been involved in many discussions on the topic. The most likely short-term scenario is a flight to the dollar, as bubbles burst and people around the world are forced to either pay back their US-dollar denominated debt or default. This will likely send precious metals very low, and would be a great time to buy (so long as you have enough liquidity to get by). Once the US-dollar denominated debt has unwound, there will be no further reason for the world to use the dollar, and foreign governments will sell off their dollar holdings. That is when we'll get major price inflation here, as all of those dollars that were sitting idly by suddenly enter the market and bid prices up; hyperinflation may also occur, if folks lose all faith in the dollar as a store of value (you'd think losing 98% of its value over a century would be enough evidence).
shinnosuke wrote:brian0918 wrote:I have done a lot of thinking about this and been involved in many discussions on the topic. The most likely short-term scenario is a flight to the dollar, as bubbles burst and people around the world are forced to either pay back their US-dollar denominated debt or default. This will likely send precious metals very low, and would be a great time to buy (so long as you have enough liquidity to get by). Once the US-dollar denominated debt has unwound, there will be no further reason for the world to use the dollar, and foreign governments will sell off their dollar holdings. That is when we'll get major price inflation here, as all of those dollars that were sitting idly by suddenly enter the market and bid prices up; hyperinflation may also occur, if folks lose all faith in the dollar as a store of value (you'd think losing 98% of its value over a century would be enough evidence).
Right, 98% and going on 99...
Audit the Fed.
End the Fed.
Copper Catcher wrote:I was wondering what the group as a whole felt? Why has it not crashed by now? We are buying our own debt, they are pumping more money into the system with no end in sight. They will likely raise the debt limit. At what point will all this implode and what will likely happen after this? What say you?
moparal7 wrote:shinnosuke wrote:brian0918 wrote:I have done a lot of thinking about this and been involved in many discussions on the topic. The most likely short-term scenario is a flight to the dollar, as bubbles burst and people around the world are forced to either pay back their US-dollar denominated debt or default. This will likely send precious metals very low, and would be a great time to buy (so long as you have enough liquidity to get by). Once the US-dollar denominated debt has unwound, there will be no further reason for the world to use the dollar, and foreign governments will sell off their dollar holdings. That is when we'll get major price inflation here, as all of those dollars that were sitting idly by suddenly enter the market and bid prices up; hyperinflation may also occur, if folks lose all faith in the dollar as a store of value (you'd think losing 98% of its value over a century would be enough evidence).
Right, 98% and going on 99...
Audit the Fed.
End the Fed.
Kennedy tried to bypass the fed by having the treasury print US Notes and look where that got him.
argent_pur wrote:...We'll get used to a lower standard of living, which will come in the form of less gov't assistance (which almost everyone receives in some form).
68Camaro wrote:argent_pur wrote:...We'll get used to a lower standard of living, which will come in the form of less gov't assistance (which almost everyone receives in some form).
That's the big lie, which encourages ever-increasing acceptance of socialism. My family receives zero government assistance, and I know many others also. Unfortunately we are too few, and we're getting fewer by the month. We are the goose that laid the golden egg, and we are slowly being strangled...
We are, at best, in the last 10 years of "America" as I knew it in my youth, that which had a firm connection with the founding fathers. The new America that is being formed (and which really is already all around us) is some other country that I will be forced to remain in because - unfortunately, unlike 400 years ago - there is no other better, freer, place to go to. Not sure which is more sad - the end of America, or the absense of other reasonable options. I don't see a happy end to any of this.
68Camaro wrote:As a slight aside, and noting that you are from Texas (as are many here) - at this point I regret that Texas lost it's ability to legally secede when it had to re-write its constitution to rejoin the union. At the state level, there are a number of states that are redeemable; it's at the federal level that this has all fallen apart. Texas is certainly the most prominant of the still-functional states. (Florida is hanging in there, but by a thread and it could easily go either way.) I wish you all well there, and hope you can retain all the positives of Texas that you have been in the past. I'm tempted to move over and join you...
PolishPunisher wrote:Everyone receives "government assistance". You have a car? Then your roads and gasoline are heavily subsidized by tax payers at large. Did you ever go to public school or public university? Then you are receiving government assistance. I understand that "government assistance" to you may mean welfare, food stamps and the like, but that is not how I would define it. I don't think the problem is that the government has spent too much money in the current recession (since 2007). The much greater problem was our inability to keep the size of government in check during periods of strong economic growth.
I completely disagree with you, but I will coin another term so as not to cause unnecessary argument about terminology.68Camaro wrote:
68Camaro wrote:There is too much cognitive dissonance over the term "the government's money". It's not the government's money. It's my money that the (largely) federal politicians are taking from me, without my agreement, doing so irresponsibly, and wasting on programs designed to enslave people and ensure votes so those same politicians can remain in power.
John_doe wrote:I don't think it will completely crash unless the Chinese sell off all US treasuries. This second dip on the housing market may raise some eyebrows, and a double dip recession seems to be more viable.
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