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


To: nonrev who wrote (32682)4/9/2008 7:50:33 AM
From: Rolla Coasta  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217669
 
TJ is a Nostradamous 2012 believer

youtube.com

December 12, 2012 is the doomsday to reset everything on earth by extreme religious thoughts

12-12-2012 = 666 x 2

At that moment, CDMA will be gone forever.



To: nonrev who wrote (32682)4/9/2008 9:11:55 AM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 217669
 
It all starts and ends with the destruction of the usd as reserve currency, i figure.

The usd destruction is premised on the fact that it is a deceit wrapped in a fraud served up on spin and enforced through terror, and that it is paper, backed by full faith of 80 million baby boomers with average nav of less than 190k of which a whole lot is actually illiquid abode that backs a debt-puffed 14 tril gdp and also supports a notional 450 tril derivatives bomb, while at same sorry time is obligated to 55 tril of social payments.

Being basically a fellow of math, student of science, observer of history, and warrior in on-line unreal tournament last man standing death match, i figure it will be game over for player 1.

As new sovereigns rise, and bigger rockets can be manufactured everywhere at 10 cents on the dollar, and policing institutions such as imf go tits up, the terror is written off, spin go hollow, fraud unravels, and deceit can no longer be.

As the schema of fraud unwinds, the debt-puffed gdp will tend to argentine devolution via default, even as zimbabwe solution is tried, real money rises against everything else, and so will be first denigrated, then attacked, penultimately outlawed, and ultimately and inexorably rise to extreme and unimaginable highs.

In such enviroment, industry wastes, agriculture go sterile, education go untended, thrift go out of window, savings go negative, and society breakdown, unions split asunder, and order go entrophy max.

Figure it, tens of millions of debt-loaded middle class gurgle under and come to realize the nature of the fraud, unable to progress into their golden years without the gold, politics go dirty and philosophies go extreme, false leaders rise, scapegoats hunted, first one group, then another, folks of means decamp, folks without shoes surge forth ...

Then, obviously, the mexicans will want to do a tibet in texas and southern states, and connecticut will want to seal the border, as resources go empty and breaded circuses go silent.

I do not write the script. I read it.

How else can a fraud end? How did all paper money frauds end?

Only difference this episode is planetary in scale, based on one reserve, and a patch work of light duty framework, very fragile, based on the usual and fickle confidence.

what do you think?



To: nonrev who wrote (32682)4/9/2008 2:43:42 PM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 217669
 
Credit inflows used to be the largest, and most stable, source of financing in the US balance of payments, but there has been an unprecedented structural break that has clearly affected the dollar, says Jens Nordvig, senior global markets economist at Goldman Sachs.

View of the day: US dollar
Jens Nordvig, Goldman Sachs

Published: April 9 2008 18:03 | Last updated: April 9 2008 18:03

Credit inflows used to be the largest, and most stable, source of financing in the US balance of payments, but there has been an unprecedented structural break that has clearly affected the dollar, says Jens Nordvig, senior global markets economist at Goldman Sachs.

“Since July 2007, the dollar’s trade-weighted index has weakened at an annualised rate of around 10 per cent,” says Mr Nordvig. “This is the fastest rate of depreciation in this dollar weakening cycle that started in 2002.”

Mr Nordvig says the rate of dollar depreciation picked up when credit flows started to weaken. Goldman uses US Treasury capital flows data to quantify the shift. Cumulative foreign inflows into US credit products amounted to $101bn between July 2007 and January 2008, compared with $301bn in the same period in the year before. This equates to an annualised shortfall of $342bn, or 2.4 per cent of gross domestic product.

However, Mr Nordvig highlights the recent improvement in credit markets, with investment grade spreads narrowing and a significant spike in new IG issuance, indicating foreign demand may be returning. “Given that weak capital flows into the US over the past 10 months played a key role in generating an accelerated dollar weakening, it does mean that it is risky to extrapolate the trend into the second quarter if credit market conditions are improving.”