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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: TobagoJack who wrote (3568)1/18/2006 9:46:54 AM
From: Maurice Winn  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 218029
 
<the most outrageous, as i had mentioned to you many times, is always saved for the end>

The denouement. Like a great game of chess, the forces build, the pressure develops, a few pawns here and there are sacrificed, leverage gradually evolves, a gambit here and a fork in the road there and suddenly the carnage is everywhere and one or the either is overwhelmed, or both are beaten to pulp and call a truce in exhaustion.

Yet the scene seems so quiescent and orderly in the beginning, with everyone happily enjoying rank and file position in a balanced, harmonious cosmos.

Though unlike chess, in financial relativity theory there is never an end. While one group are ending their consciousness, another are evolving more, refilling the void before the other leaves the stage.

While labour is becoming obsolete, unemployed and miserable, those requiring services are becoming happier to have many people clamouring to perform services at reasonable rates. The process of gloomy end is paradoxically and simultaneously the process of joyful new beginnings.

Moving one's consciousness from the one to the other is a good thing to avoid being denouemented. Aztecs had their day in the sun. In 1979 it seemed they were having their day again ... ooops, no and not for quarter of a century and still not by comparison with then. It's a new world now.

Mqurice



To: TobagoJack who wrote (3568)1/18/2006 10:24:31 AM
From: Maurice Winn  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 218029
 
Speaking of gold, and atavistic Aztecs. Emergency, sell your gold and production mines before the denoument Message 22065977

Gold will go DOWN, not up when shirts are being lost. It's in good times, such as now, that gold goes up in price. Gold goes down in bad times. It spikes to a peak at the peak of the good times when, for example, oil goes to huge prices as demand is huge. Check out 1979 1980, for example.

Mqurice