SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: combjelly who wrote (340091)6/11/2007 3:58:42 PM
From: TimF  Respond to of 1573500
 
"We have free media. Its in many ways more open then they have been in the past. "

What ways might that be?


That there are more media sources. That there is greater diversity of media sources, and that its easier to become at least a minor media source.



To: combjelly who wrote (340091)6/11/2007 6:05:30 PM
From: longnshort  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1573500
 
Have they gotten to the bottom of the forged CBS letter from a Kinkos in Abilene trying to scam a federal election??

Have they gotten to the bottom of what what Sandy Burglar was destroying and who ordered him to do it ??



To: combjelly who wrote (340091)6/12/2007 3:52:34 PM
From: Road Walker  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1573500
 
Borrow-and-spend U.S. keeps Tue Jun 12, 6:20 AM ET


Over the past quarter-century, a generation of Americans has come of age without the crippling effects of stagflation - a stagnant economy coupled with high inflation. To this generation, double-digit jumps in consumer prices and double-digit unemployment rates are as unthinkable as the sun rising in the west.

Today's economy, after all, is supposed to be knowledge-based. Oil prices mean little to a Google or Goldman Sachs. Cheap imports can hold down prices. And labor costs can be kept in check by technology-driven efficiency gains or outsourcing jobs. Stagflation - like disco, leisure suits and the Ford Pinto - is a thing of the past.

Or is it? Rising prices around the world suggest the era of low inflation might be coming to an end. Countries as large as China and India are seeing higher labor costs. Meanwhile, prices for everything from gasoline to cellphones are being pushed up by robust demand. This year's projected inflation rate of 4.8% in the USA, based on the first four months of the year, would be the second highest since 1981.

Some inflation is inevitable. But, if it gets out of control, it erodes the value of savings, discourages long-term investments, causes interest rates to soar and often leads to recession. This makes the nation's fiscal policies all the more inexplicable.

President Bush and Congress are seemingly doing everything possible to ensure that inflation takes hold. They are pursuing what economists call "stimulative" fiscal policies. That is to say, they are borrowing like there is no tomorrow and plowing that money back into the economy in form of retirement benefits, defense contracts, bridges, government salaries, farm subsidies and more.

This year, the government is projected to spend about $244 billion more than it collects in taxes. Since 2002, it has overspent its income by $1.8 trillion. The numbers are actually a lot worse when the liabilities of Social Security and Medicare are factored in. These types of deficits constitute the kind of government pump-priming that might help in a deep recession, but not in today's economy.

To some degree, central banks and private debt markets can fight inflation by pushing up interest rates. Higher rates mean consumers have less money to spend on cars, homes and such. It also means that companies have less to invest. With less money sloshing around, demand for an array of products and services drops, which can curb price hikes.

But as anyone who tried to buy a house or run a business during the stagflation era knows, sky-high interest rates are undesirable shock therapy. With consumer prices, particularly energy costs, rising at worrisome levels, Washington policymaking looks like a bad rerun of That '70s Show.