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January 29th, 2011 | #21 | |
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Hogs, OTOH, convert waste to pork. You can feed them anything -- apple cores, potatoe peels, chicken bones, milk that has gone bad, corn cobs and other such garden waste, and they convert it to pork. Last edited by Marse Supial; January 29th, 2011 at 10:30 AM. |
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January 29th, 2011 | #22 | |
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Cattle are cheaper to raise than hogs. Cattle are ruminants that convert cheap cellulose protein into meat. Hogs cannot convert cellulose protein into meat, you must feed a hog expensive human digestable protein, so why not just cut out the middle man and eat the protein you would feed the hog, yourself? |
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January 29th, 2011 | #23 | |
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The point I was making about hogs is that no matter how careful you are, you will generate waste food products -- apple cores, pea or bean hulls, potato peels -- garbage that would either be composted or wasted completely, that a pig turns into meat. |
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April 27th, 2011 | #24 | |
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Inflation is on now. One economist expects tremendous deflation to follow. A report I heard last night says that China's annualized inflation is 60%. The Chinese won't allow that to fester if they don't have to since inflation can lead to "social unrest" which is what the government there really fears.
The link below is for Jim Puplava's site. His audio files on the site feature some pretty interesting interviews covering energy, financials, etc. I would describe Puplava as a moderate doomtard. Quote:
Also, this thread needs a bump. Alex posted some articles seem to be right on the money, so to speak.
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March 1st, 2012 | #25 |
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Your Rotten Monetary Policy Is Destroying This Country
by Ron Paul Before the United States House of Representatives Committee on Financial Services, Hearing on 'Monetary Policy and the State of the Economy,' 2/29/2012 Mr. Chairman, thank you for holding this hearing on monetary policy and the state of the economy. I believe that now, more than ever, the American people want to hold the Federal Reserve accountable for its loose monetary policy and want full transparency of the Fed's actions. While the Fed has certainly released an unprecedented amount of information on its activities, there is still much that remains unknown. And every move towards transparency has been fought against tooth and nail by the Fed. It took disclosure requirements enacted within the Dodd-Frank Act to get the Fed to provide data on the its emergency lending facilities. It took lawsuits filed by Bloomberg and Fox News to provide data on discount window lending during the worst parts of the financial crisis. And it will take further concerted action on the part of Congress, the media, and the public to keep up pressure on the Fed to remain transparent. Transparency is not a panacea, however, as a fully transparent organization is still capable of engaging in all sorts of mischief, as the Federal Reserve does on a regular basis. Ironically, one of the Fed's more egregious recent actions, adopting an explicit inflation target, was hailed by many as another wonderful example of transparency. Yet if you think about what this supposed 2% inflation target actually is, you realize that it is an explicit policy to devalue the dollar and reduce its purchasing power. Two percent annual price inflation means that prices rise 22% within a decade, and nearly 50% within two decades. Indeed, if you look at the performance of the consumer price index (CPI) under Chairman Bernanke's tenure, prices have risen at a rate of 2.25% per year. Many, perhaps even most, economists would consider this a modest rise, an example of sober, cautious monetary policy. Some economists of Paul Krugman's persuasion might even argue that this is too tight a monetary policy. However, 2.25% is not too far off from the Fed's new 2% target. Now look at the performance of the US economy since February 1, 2006, the date Chairman Bernanke took the mantle from Alan Greenspan. Trillions of dollars have been wasted on bailouts, stimulus packages, and other feckless spending. Millions of Americans have lost their jobs and have lost hope of ever regaining employment. The national debt has risen to more than 100% of GDP, as the federal government continues to rack up trillion-dollar deficits, aided and abetted by the Fed's policies of quantitative easing and zero percent interest rates. And we are supposed to believe that a 2% inflation rate, similar to what has prevailed during the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression, is the cure for what ails this economy. This explicit 2% target also fails to take into account that whatever measure is used to determine price inflation, be it CPI, core CPI, PCE, etc., will always be chosen with an eye towards underreporting the true rate of inflation and price rises. Pressure will be exerted on those calculating the price indices, so as not to alarm the public when prices begin to accelerate. One need only look at what is taking place in Argentina today, where the government publishes an official CPI figure that is often less than half that reported by private sources. A similar situation exists in this country, where economists calculating CPI according to the original basket of goods have determined that price inflation has increased 9.5% per year since 2006, rather than the 2.25% reported by the government. Even the government's own data reports price rises of nearly 7% per year since 2006 on such consumer goods as gasoline and eggs. Bread, rice, and ground beef have increased by nearly 6% per year, while bacon and potatoes have increased nearly 5% per year. This means that in a little over half a decade, prices on staple consumer goods have increased 30-50%, all while wages have stagnated and millions of Americans find themselves out of work and without a paycheck. Of course, government officials claim that price increases do not affect the average American because they can always buy hamburger instead of steak, or have cereal instead of bacon. But the American people can see how they are suffering because of the Federal Reserve. The government’s claims that the official statistics show no reason to be concerned about inflation is Marxist – as in Groucho, who famously said: "Who are you going to believe, me or your own eyes?" The Federal Reserve continues to keep interest rates low in the hopes of boosting lending and consumption. But keeping interest rates at zero discourages saving, particularly as the rate of price inflation continues to rise. Why stick money in a savings account earning 0.05% if it is guaranteed to lose at least 2% of its value every year? And this is a guarantee, as the Fed has promised a 2% rate of increase in price inflation, while also guaranteeing a zero percent federal funds rate through 2014. Retirees living on fixed incomes, dependent on savings, or on interest income from investments will see their savings drawn down as they are forced to consume principal. Young people, hard hit by the recession and struggling to find jobs, will fail to see the virtue of thrift. Saving or investing is an exercise in futility, as parking money in the bank or in CDs will guarantee a loss, while investing in stocks, bonds, or mutual funds will net at best paltry gains, and at worst massive losses in this continuing weak economy. The longer the Federal Reserve keeps interest rates low and discourages savings and investment, the more societal attitudes will change from being future oriented to present oriented. The Federal Reserve and its policies already served to stimulate and prioritize consumption over saving, creating the largest debt bubble the world has ever known. The extended zero interest rate policy only serves to promote more consumption and debt now, eviscerating thrift and savings – the true building blocks of prosperity. This present-oriented mindset has become pervasive especially among politicians, putting the government in dismal financial shape as Congressmen and Presidents over the years have taken to heart Louis XV's famous saying: "Après moi, le déluge." If the American people follow the same path in their own lives, this country will be ruined. Capital will be depleted, infrastructure will fall into disrepair, and the United States will be a mere shadow of its former self. It is well past time to end the failed monetary policy that encourages this mistaken preference for cheap money now. http://lewrockwell.com/paul/paul794.html |
March 1st, 2012 | #26 | |
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There has been a real need to accurately gauge inflation. Using a metric such as housing prices is totally inaccurate, because you don't buy a house every day, or even every year. Even if the price of housing is cut by half, that doesn't mean your mortgage is cut by half. You are completely cut off from this "benefit". No one but a first time house buyer gets to enjoy the benefit of deflation in this area, and that's just once in a lifetime. But, deceptive inflation indexes would put that into the calculation and tell you there is deflation.
Same goes for computers. Sure the price of a byte of memory has gone down, but who's going to buy a 90's 166 MHz Gateway to "enjoy" the deflation that has occurred in the computer field? Things like housing and computer prices artificially reduce the inflation numbers in a way that doesn't translate into a consumer's everyday experience. Thus, there is a need for "truth in inflation statistics". So, it seems someone has finally come up with an answer: The Everyday Product Index http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-505144_1...-as-you-think/ Quote:
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March 1st, 2012 | #27 |
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March 1st, 2012 | #28 |
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true inflation revealed
Inflation is not really rising prices. Inflation is increase in money supply. Inflation (dilution/adulteration) of money causes rising prices. Therefore let us look at money., One of the better is M3, but no longer reported. We can look at M2 (M1, a measure of the money supply; includes currency in circulation plus demand deposits or checking account balances), M2= measure of the money supply; M1 plus net time deposits (other than large certificates of deposit).
Here at Economagic: http://www.economagic.com/em-cgi/data.exe/frbH6/t0102 Year-----M2 annual % change 2012----9765------6.6 2007----7104------5.4 2002----5454------7.3 1997----3829------2.5 1992----3383------6.7 1987----2447------6.7 1982----1770------8.7 1977----1165-----10.2 1972----718-------8.3 1967----482-------7.4 1962----340---------- 1962 to 2012 average per year: 6.95% compounded So the last five years are near the 50 year average. To REALLY keep up with inflation one should earn 28.7 times as much as in 1962 (9765 divided by 340). Gold has kept up OK. Parenthetically- Doctor Friedman was calling for rates of adulteration of 3 to 5 percent for a stable price level (The inflation [funny munny] would be soaked up by rises in productivity of around 4%). The actual rate of adulteration (6.95%) is almost 3 percent more than mrs. friedman called for. We got no stable price level. I wonder if there are any rises in productivity since the seventies. Last edited by Rick Ronsavelle; March 1st, 2012 at 09:44 PM. |
March 2nd, 2012 | #29 | |
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March 2nd, 2012 | #30 | |
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Only a small percentage of the White population are thinking people. Of the thinking Whites, most do not know about the Rothschilds or the Jewish control of the international banking elites. About the masses... As long as the refrigerators are full and the ball games are on TV, a gradual decline is hardly noticeable. I wish i could be more positive and provide a solution. |
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March 14th, 2013 | #31 |
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What is likely to happen besides a nuke war ?
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March 14th, 2013 | #32 |
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March 23rd, 2013 | #33 |
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"Rally Cheers Goldman; Banksters Optimistic"
After the big run-up, prices will "crash." Itz the same old story. Last edited by littlefieldjohn; March 24th, 2013 at 12:03 PM. |
March 25th, 2013 | #34 |
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Are there any recent examples of massive deflation occurring in an economy, and how it affected everyday living for average folks?
I'd take a guess that inflation is almost always worse due to the working class feeling the effects. But I could see how deflation could possibly lead to layoffs at companies/businesses. Many States have labor laws saying you can't give someone a pay cut. But you can still fire them for any reason you want to. |
March 25th, 2013 | #35 | |
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March 25th, 2013 | #36 |
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Selgin and co. (2010) cite an interesting study by Atkeson and Kehoe showing no correlation between deflation and depression :
Historically, benign deflation has been the far more common type. Surveying the 20th-century experience of 17 countries, including the United States, Atkeson and Kehoe (2004, p. 99) find “many more periods of deflation with reasonable growth than with depression, and many more periods of depression with inflation than with deflation.” Indeed, they conclude “that the only episode in which there is evidence of a link between deflation and depression is the Great Depression (1929-1934).” http://mises.org/community/forums/p/31149/488313.aspx ". . .But I could see how deflation could possibly lead to layoffs at companies/businesses. Many States have labor laws saying you can't give someone a pay cut. But you can still fire them for any reason you want to. . ." Exactly correct. The deflation (deflation is a reduction in money supply) raises the value of each unit of money. If wages don't fall, they will be forced above the market level, causing unemployment. The New Deal folks tried to "keep wages up"- meaning above the market clearing level. This to keep purchasing power up. But a small drop in wages leads to even larger hiring and more purchasing power, keeping the economy in balance. (Technically this means the demand for labor is elastic) The Keynesians think deflation or falling wages will result in a death spiral. Low wages mean less to spend. Other firms must lay off workers due to low sales. These workers don't have money to buy from still other firms. The way out is more purchasing power- gained by government spending- as "obviously" the market wouldn't provide it. But the market wasn't there. Government was used to CAUSE unemployment, even though they claimed they were trying to reduce it. (Great Depression). Deflation can be survived rather easily if no attempt is made to force wages above the market rates. |
March 25th, 2013 | #37 |
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True, but say a farmer borrowed to buy equipment and a mortgage when wheat was going for $4 a bushel, and the price drops to $1 , so his wage didn't cover interest payments to the banker. Back then a lot of people, what they did was still work the land.
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March 31st, 2013 | #38 |
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What factors do they use to determine the value of the dollar? Where do they get their prices? From what products? The reason I ask, is that there is a vast difference in pricing, depending on what you buy, and where you buy it.
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April 1st, 2013 | #39 | |
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April 2nd, 2013 | #40 |
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