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Strategies & Market Trends : Commodities - The Coming Bull Market -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: craig crawford who wrote (1268)4/28/2002 10:06:27 AM
From: Box-By-The-Riviera™  Respond to of 1643
 
wow, flash from the past. i took one of semmel's classes.

read his book: The Rise of Free Trade Imperialism. Cambridge U. Press



To: craig crawford who wrote (1268)4/30/2002 11:34:54 PM
From: Dan B.  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1643
 
Well, you have your adherents. I have mine.

You can worry about military consequences of trading with "enemies." I will consider the actual results of free trade, too...and they are simply great.

You have jumped to misrepresent history to attack my opinion when I've said free trade allowed the British people to better feed themselves. They simply were hurting with tariffs, and fared much better without them...all WW military concerns coming later aside. I simply spoke truth, and historical accounts posted concerning this confirm that I did.

I will have more to say about this. You spoke of the "conservative" party which voted mainly against Tariffs, but a quick look at history shows that this very party was the one which had long rejected rights for individuals, while the then "liberal" party in fact worked against imperial rule and FOR individual rights. Your knee-jerk view of history- anything to support you view- is greatly wanting on many counts. In fact Craig, the man who tried unsuccessfully(as you pointed out) to get this early "conservative" party to vote against tariffs, had a personal history of following the likes of Adam Smith's free trade ideas, ...and he(clearly supporting free trade) is called the father of the modern Conservative party.

Freedom Works,

Dan B



To: craig crawford who wrote (1268)5/10/2002 3:45:35 PM
From: High-Tech East  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1643
 
REQUEST ... I have been trading the S&Ps for almost two years and have taken two courses with Larry Williams ... I am interested in expanding my general knowledge base about the natural resource markets (metals, food, materials, energy, etc), BUT NOT in a technical trading knowledge sense (such as how to trade those markets) ... I would like to understand those markets and how they have changed in recent years, and what the future might bring in terms of supply and demand ... more of a geopolitical macroeconomic view ...

So far the only book that I have found that might be useful (although I have not purchased it yet) is a 1998 Wiley & Sons book called "Profits From Natural Resources" by Roland Jansen.

Do any of you have any ideas or suggestions?

Thank you.

Ken Wilson