Impossible! The deficit is falling as well as unemployment Obama wrecking economy

tokeprep

Well-Known Member
Minor aside about the bolded. I once was told by an Indian expat, and I independently read, that for traditionalist Indians the two are the same. You wore your wealth. cn
That could certainly be the case, but how should I interpret the wearing of wealth? Are they wearing it as a status symbol--this shows how wealthy I am!--or are they were wearing around a physical investment that they're going to cash in for retirement? I would think the former, which would mean it's really not an investment. If you bid the price up because you were so eager to obtain it and the primary goal is to wear it, that seems to suggest ambivalence about value, especially if the stuff is rarely liquidated. But perhaps your Indian expat had some insight on these questions as well?
 

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
That could certainly be the case, but how should I interpret the wearing of wealth? Are they wearing it as a status symbol--this shows how wealthy I am!--or are they were wearing around a physical investment that they're going to cash in for retirement? I would think the former, which would mean it's really not an investment. If you bid the price up because you were so eager to obtain it and the primary goal is to wear it, that seems to suggest ambivalence about value, especially if the stuff is rarely liquidated. But perhaps your Indian expat had some insight on these questions as well?
I meant it in the latter sense. It really was the 401(k) on the wife's forearms. Of course, in the past 30 years India has globalized so much that the former sense must have made huge inroads. But among the many hundreds of millions of Indians who haven't ridden the sleighride into the middle class, gold remains the trusted repository of wealth, the kind that takes one through hard times or marrying off daughters.

From what i remeber, it was a very liquid investment with a narrow bid/ask spread and numerous points of trade. So selling gold for need only to buy more later didn't have the sort of barriers a less liquid investement, like land, migh have imposed. Fwiw. cn
 

NoDrama

Well-Known Member
Things shouldn't cost less just because we have more of them.
I will probably have to remind you of the very simple basic rule of economy. Supply and Demand.

Things SHOULD cost less because we have more of them. If everyone and their dog had 15 tons of pure gold, gold would be worthless.

When you say things like this it completely undoes every argument you have.

in 1913 most people could make a living on less than $100 a year. Now most people are debt slaves and have to live in small prisons called apartments crammed all together in crime infested cities. All of these prisoners are inundated daily with the most powerful propaganda tools ever devised.

Most don't even realize they are prisoners.

By design.
 

NoDrama

Well-Known Member
I don't work in economics, banking, or finance (I don't work in anything, for that matter), and I own no financial assets. I am solely interested in facts and in mathematical reality.
Someone tells you that the Inflation numbers don't jive with reality.

You use the inflation numbers to try and make your "Math" look correct.

You don't seem to understand the flaw here.

***Wonders when Captain Obvious will make an appearance***
 

NoDrama

Well-Known Member
That could certainly be the case, but how should I interpret the wearing of wealth? Are they wearing it as a status symbol--this shows how wealthy I am!--or are they were wearing around a physical investment that they're going to cash in for retirement? I would think the former, which would mean it's really not an investment. If you bid the price up because you were so eager to obtain it and the primary goal is to wear it, that seems to suggest ambivalence about value, especially if the stuff is rarely liquidated. But perhaps your Indian expat had some insight on these questions as well?
the entire point of gold. Cash price of gold is really meaningless to an Indian, because the GOLD IS THE WEALTH. People are so biased by their life as a US Wage slave that they fail to understand that in other countries, if you want to buy a home, you just give the seller some gold.

GOLD IS MONEY AND NOTHING ELSE!

Gold has the least marginal utility of just about anything. It is nearly useless. Except as money.
 

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
the entire point of gold. Cash price of gold is really meaningless to an Indian, because the GOLD IS THE WEALTH. People are so biased by their life as a US Wage slave that they fail to understand that in other countries, if you want to buy a home, you just give the seller some gold.

GOLD IS MONEY AND NOTHING ELSE!

Gold has the least marginal utility of just about anything. It is nearly useless. Except as money.
Until electronics. As a microcontact material, it is head and shoulders above the alternatives. cn
 

NoDrama

Well-Known Member
Until electronics. As a microcontact material, it is head and shoulders above the alternatives. cn
Well I would agree with you and disagree with you. Most of the gold used for electrical contacts gets recycled back into electrical contacts. Hence the reason that only 10 tons or less of gold is ever used for industrial applications in aggregate over the entire world.

Gold is mined at the rate of about 2,500 tons per year.

Making industrial use of gold a .04% proposition. 99.96% of gold is NOT used for industry.

Unlike Silver which is 60-70% industrial, of which the only substitute in most of those products that require it is Gold, perhaps Platinum.

70% of Platinum is used for industry.

Platinum means "Little Silver."

Platinum is actually a better anti corrosion contact material than gold, but since its 20 times as rare, not used so much except where high temperature performance is needed.
 

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
Well I would agree with you and disagree with you. Most of the gold used for electrical contacts gets recycled back into electrical contacts. Hence the reason that only 10 tons or less of gold is ever used for industrial applications in aggregate over the entire world.

Gold is mined at the rate of about 2,500 tons per year.

Making industrial use of gold a .04% proposition. 99.96% of gold is NOT used for industry.

Unlike Silver which is 60-70% industrial, of which the only substitute in most of those products that require it is Gold, perhaps Platinum.

70% of Platinum is used for industry.

Platinum means "Little Silver."

Platinum is actually a better anti corrosion contact material than gold, but since its 20 times as rare, not used so much except where high temperature performance is needed.
The platinum metals are aces, and until we snag an asteroid they're too scarce. Maybe in a century iridium will be as cheap as, say, indium*. Yeeeehawww! cn

*I own a kilo of indium. If I owned a kilo of iridium, I'd be fat&happy. I ain't fat, and I leave the other as an exercise to the reader. ~giggle~ cn
 

NoDrama

Well-Known Member
The platinum metals are aces, and until we snag an asteroid they're too scarce. Maybe in a century iridium will be as cheap as, say, indium*. Yeeeehawww! cn

*I own a kilo of indium. If I owned a kilo of iridium, I'd be fat&happy. I ain't fat, and I leave the other as an exercise to the reader. ~giggle~ cn
I agree. All the noble metals will be good plays in the future IMO.

Don't forget Rhenium.

I myself could stand to lose 30 pounds.

I am pretty pissed with myself that i didn't buy that kilo of rhenium when i could afford it. i was building a gonzo hands-on periodic table. You should see my tantalum sample. cn
 

Mr Neutron

Well-Known Member
The Fed is already subject to multiple audits every year. The GAO already has the authority to poke around and review thing; the Board's statements are audited by a major independent accounting firm; each of the regional banks' statements are audited by a major independent accounting firm; and the Board itself reviews the statements of each regional bank.
Who got the $16B? http://www.forbes.com/sites/traceygreenstein/2011/09/20/the-feds-16-trillion-bailouts-under-reported/

If you don't believe what the Fed reports about itself, I don't see why you would believe any other government statistic. But maybe you already don't. In that case, why are you so focused on auditing the Fed? Why don't we audit the whole government?
OK!

The Fed's own web site says PCE, not core PCE. http://www.federalreserve.gov/faqs/economy_14419.htm.

Here's another article that says "The Fed's preferred measure of inflation," except it reports the straight PCE number, not core PCE. http://www.forbes.com/sites/afontevecchia/2013/04/29/the-feds-favorite-measure-of-inflation-continues-to-fall-qe-is-here-to-stay/.
PCE, CPI, CPE, PCI, KMA... whatever the acronym of the day is, if you don't figure in fuel and food, what good is it to you and me?

You asked for it and you got it.

The average wage in 1913 was 25 cents an hour; now it's $13 an hour. If you want to talk about how the value of $1 has declined so much, you need to consider that average wages have increased by 520%. 25 cents in 1913 = $5.87 today; $13 today = $13 today. Where is that huge decline in purchasing power at?
I think I have discovered the problem. 25 cents to $13 is not a 520% increase, check your math.
But that is not the real issue, anyway. The measurements we use are from 100 years of debt issued fiat currency/inflation. We cannot use the numbers that would exist if we had NOT started this madness. Statistics are like a bikini, they show a lot but they don't show everything and what they don't show is often more revealing than what they DO show.
Where would we be economically if we had taken the high road and said NO to the Creature from Jekyll Island? There is no way to be certain but I suspect that the wealth gap would not be nearly what it is and that prosperity (and the freedom from the IRS crawling up your ass on a yearly basis) would be greater than in any time in out history.
 

twostrokenut

Well-Known Member
Lincoln was the high water mark for introducing fiat currency to this country again after it had been smacked down with a vengange.....just like libs today...print money, use it for their agenda, make you pay for it in the form of inflation..........let's not forget labels are different today then they were.....republicans are not now what they were....a liberal today is not a liberal of old that braved the Atlantic to start a new country, now they just whine a lot.
Yep, uh huh....Lincoln made it a mission to undo what Andrew Jackson just finished doing, killing the National Bank....he (Jackson) was targeted for assassinations that failed which earned him the name "Old Hickory".....btw Lincoln was a Whig....a member of the Whig party in the guise of a Republican, like Ron Paul is a libertarian but runs as a Republican...don't get hung up on labels.

The National Bank allows for political manipulation, period, end of story. Vote for me and I'll give you this....vote for me and I will give you that........They take your wealth through inflation then make you fight over their table scraps, this is only possible with paper money.

But hey at least Greenbacks, that is, Untied States Notes, were drawn from the United states and interest free......meaning the debt didn't have interest, like borrowing money from your grandpa and he just wants the principal back....today our notes are drawn on the Fed, with interest....our coins are interest free, since they're drawn on the Treasury....should I go on?

Point is we all disagree about shit and what we should do to fix it libs fighting with conservatives, neocons waging wars...all of them no matter what their affiliation are arguing about how to spend more money that doesn't exist...which is why we are in the mess we're in. I like to fuck "the system" too but that system that keeps us all down is not Capitalism or America republicans or democrats....it's the Fed...it's English royalty and we are still serfs, surely we could unite on that.
The claim was that the only price fluctuations were due to the Banks of the United States, but the largest price fluctuations occurred during the Civil War. I searched that term in the thread but got no results.
Didn't show up in my search either but there it is.....kinda serves to show you aren't reading everything posted here.
 

NoDrama

Well-Known Member
I agree. All the noble metals will be good plays in the future IMO.

Don't forget Rhenium.

I myself could stand to lose 30 pounds.

I am pretty pissed with myself that i didn't buy that kilo of rhenium when i could afford it. i was building a gonzo hands-on periodic table. You should see my tantalum sample. cn


LOL You somehow edited MY POST!!!

OMG the Internet just went WACKO!!
 

twostrokenut

Well-Known Member
Things shouldn't cost less just because we have more of them.
Your opinion of this simply doesn't matter....just like the central planners opinion on this doesn't matter. It is the law, not because it's written on paper....just like gravity....... and if manipulated the correction comes on with a VENGANCE. You are missing the point of gold/silver vs paper investments....paper might pay better if someone's grandpa were to invest but gold/silver has no risk of loss as a long term investment because its value is compared to our current fiat currency. You have yet to address this.

tokeprep said:
See China driving up the cost of building materials. We're paying more than we used to in order to put buildings up, but that's not a matter of inflation. There's only so much iron in the world, and only so much steel fabrication capacity, until we build more.
See how that works? We pay more because the supply is shorter? If we could simply build more silver/gold fabrication capacity wouldn't we have already? Fiat currency is not produced in the core of a Supernova explosion......it is produced in the mind and this is why it is unstable when people "lose faith" in it. People produced the modern world DESPITE fractional reserve lending holding them back.


Why don't we just increase the minimum wage to whatever we want to make everything awesome? Let's make it $100 per hour and solve the world's problems that should work right?
 

Dr Kynes

Well-Known Member
I've never said any such thing. Individual dollars have lost value; individual purchasing power has not lost value--it's increased substantially since the Federal Reserve was created.

Why are you so obsessed with the value of an individual dollar if that value doesn't meaningfully reflect the purchasing power people have?


You're going to have to explain the Honda thing to me. I visited several car web sites and couldn't find a price for a DX model in 2013; I'm going to use a 2.4 LX 4dr Sedan because it's the next lowest priced car common to 2003 and 2013. The MSRP of that car in 2003 was $19,200; the MSRP of that car in 2013 was $21,680. I get $21,680 - $19,200 = $2,480 more expensive in 2013. How did you get a 300% increase?
dont be deliberately obtuse, the DX badge was disciontinued a few years ago, the base model LX is now what the DX used to be. i should think you would be able to figure out what Base Model means, even if they shuffle the letters about.
http://www.cargurus.com/Cars/1990-Honda-Accord-Price-c2164

1990 Honda accord DX: $12,145 (Base Model)

http://automobiles.honda.com/accord-sedan/price.aspx

2013 honda accord LX : $21,680 (base Model)

so thats pretty close to 2x the price, but by your own logic the 1990 accord was bought using 1990 dollars,, while the 2013 accord must be bought using the new, more plentiful and less valuable 2013 Obama-Bucks

you cannot have it both ways.

further, 2013 accord LX in california costs $22470 + taxes (higher than 1990) dealer prep (higher than 1990) registration (higher than 1990) etc etc etc.

http://melraptonhonda.uptracs.com/inventory/new.html?manufacturer=Honda&model=Accord&start_index=1


so the car costs nearly 2x more than it did in 1990, for the same base model. are entry level clerical workers making 2x more now than they were in 1990?
are janitors making 2x more now than they were in 1990?
are teachers making 2x more now than they were in 1990?

your patently obvious math games are unconvincing, under your deliberately deceptive arithmetic acrobatics, the dollar is MORE powerful now than it was in 1990, and buys MORE shit, and that is clearly untrrue since the treasury and the fed have a TARGET of 3% loss of value every fucking year for the dollar
 

NoDrama

Well-Known Member
Your opinion of this simply doesn't matter....just like the central planners opinion on this doesn't matter. It is the law, not because it's written on paper....just like gravity....... and if manipulated the correction comes on with a VENGANCE. You are missing the point of gold/silver vs paper investments....paper might pay better if someone's grandpa were to invest but gold/silver has no risk of loss as a long term investment because its value is compared to our current fiat currency. You have yet to address this.



See how that works? We pay more because the supply is shorter? If we could simply build more silver/gold fabrication capacity wouldn't we have already? Fiat currency is not produced in the core of a Supernova explosion......it is produced in the mind and this is why it is unstable when people "lose faith" in it. People produced the modern world DESPITE fractional reserve lending holding them back.


Why don't we just increase the minimum wage to whatever we want to make everything awesome? Let's make it $100 per hour and solve the world's problems that should work right?
Just the right amount of sarcasm, good job!
 

tokeprep

Well-Known Member
I meant it in the latter sense. It really was the 401(k) on the wife's forearms. Of course, in the past 30 years India has globalized so much that the former sense must have made huge inroads. But among the many hundreds of millions of Indians who haven't ridden the sleighride into the middle class, gold remains the trusted repository of wealth, the kind that takes one through hard times or marrying off daughters.

From what i remeber, it was a very liquid investment with a narrow bid/ask spread and numerous points of trade. So selling gold for need only to buy more later didn't have the sort of barriers a less liquid investement, like land, migh have imposed. Fwiw. cn
My later Google searches didn't find much additional information, but what I did find seemed to go both ways (adding the idea that some people see it as an emergency fund). That leads me to think the truth is somewhere in the middle, or maybe it just depends on exactly how high your social class is.

Whatever the case, if one of the largest buyers of the commodity buys a lot less, that doesn't bode well for the price. If you make the real price of gold more expensive in India, that probably will temper demand.
 

tokeprep

Well-Known Member
I will probably have to remind you of the very simple basic rule of economy. Supply and Demand.

Things SHOULD cost less because we have more of them. If everyone and their dog had 15 tons of pure gold, gold would be worthless.

When you say things like this it completely undoes every argument you have.
At least when you make a strategic cut like that. Here's the paragraph in context: "Things shouldn't cost less just because we have more of them. In 1913...a couple hundred million people...use[d] all of the resources that existed in the world. Today, there are several billion people using the same amount of resources. You should expect that those resources are going to be more expensive, relatively, even though supplies increased, because demand outpaced those supply increases."

When supply is matched with demand, prices don't decrease.

in 1913 most people could make a living on less than $100 a year. Now most people are debt slaves and have to live in small prisons called apartments crammed all together in crime infested cities. All of these prisoners are inundated daily with the most powerful propaganda tools ever devised.

Most don't even realize they are prisoners.

By design.
What's your basis for saying most people could live on less than $100 a year in 1913?
 

tokeprep

Well-Known Member
Someone tells you that the Inflation numbers don't jive with reality.

You use the inflation numbers to try and make your "Math" look correct.

You don't seem to understand the flaw here.

***Wonders when Captain Obvious will make an appearance***
Do you not recall the last discussion we had about inflation numbers? You explained how they worked to everyone, and then we figured out that you were totally wrong. The result you predicted, based on your understanding of how inflation was calculated, was directly contradicted by the result BLS calculated (your estimate was no inflation in a category, while the BLS actually showed 100% inflation, or something like that).

Indeed, I seem to recall you never replying at all to that post. Maybe you ought to dredge it up if you want to talk about incorrect math.
 
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