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


To: carranza2 who wrote (144454)12/5/2018 8:22:48 PM
From: TobagoJack1 Recommendation

Recommended By
elpolvo

  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 217615
 
moolah manager friends quitting enmass

all say the same as you noted

recognition of truth is 1/2 step there

gold to the moon shall be consolation prize

that otherwise be a bad bad day

have reserved rental of factory space for christmas break, to enjoy life and spend quality time

darn the torpedos, full rush forward

everything will work out

nothing matters

love it

we are free



To: carranza2 who wrote (144454)12/6/2018 9:03:19 AM
From: ggersh  Respond to of 217615
 
Corporations/Monopolies have crapified everything

of course after 08 crapified money

caucus99percent.com



To: carranza2 who wrote (144454)12/6/2018 6:35:28 PM
From: marcher2 Recommendations

Recommended By
elpolvo
ggersh

  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 217615
 
yet still the beauty of humanity shines through:
youtube.com

some say 'new' art always leads culture and its politic.
and this 'darkest interregnum' stuff is all tj's fabrication.

--vbg--



To: carranza2 who wrote (144454)12/7/2018 2:44:36 PM
From: TobagoJack1 Recommendation

Recommended By
dvdw©

  Respond to of 217615
 
Re <<what’s going on>>

Suggest it all depends on who is looking for what, etc

zerohedge.com

What Do China And Goldman Sachs Have In Common? Via Jesse's Cafe Americain blog,

Gold is not only flowing from West to East.

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It is also flowing into the house account at Goldman Sachs. Or at least the paper claims for it in New York.

Below is the monthly report showing the large amounts of physical gold which have been steadily flowing through the Shanghai markets into strong hands in China.

[url=][/url]

Few commentators are talking about this.

What is less familiar, and what I have not read about much, is the very large amount of gold that Goldman Sachs has been taking delivery on the Comex this month.

Below are a few of the clearing reports below.

[url=][/url]

[url=][/url]

[url=][/url]

[url=][/url]

Notice that the big takers are the house account at Goldman, and some presumably large customer at JPM.

What's up with that?



To: carranza2 who wrote (144454)12/8/2018 8:05:40 AM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217615
 
Had annual boyz Saturday lunch. All either verbalise or agreed w/ sentiment as you noted.

All interested to engage w/ a safe 4% yield. Safe is defined as “nothing Russian or Turkish, Brazilian or Argentinian”

Lunch was good. Salad w/o dressing, and only flavours of whatever salad bits. Duck terrine w/ poached apple. Ravioli w/ truffles. 14-hrs cooked beef w/ kumquat. Dessert to swim in.

No one talked much macro. All voiced opinion re specific projects and approaches.











Dinner at home was for redemption, comprised of tofu, scrambled egg, and veggies




To: carranza2 who wrote (144454)12/17/2018 6:58:50 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 217615
 
Re <<I don’t understand what’s going on anymore>>

(1) C2, of course you understand, but just being circumspect.

(1-i) Let me be direct, and I reckon we are smack in the middle of this script, that which we did not imagine could last as long as it indubitably did, since 1999



(1-ii) I used to worry about society in general, and for the greater good, and now am concerned about mine, self, family and friends
(1-iii) Used to watch Japan's money experiment w/ academic interest, and now, everywhere is the experiment, and we are the lab rats. Worse, we have been the lab critters for a long time already.

(1-iv) Gathered last night w/ yet another friend, say of the middle class flavour, now compelled to offload home, and disgorge gold

(1-v) Got news from a close friend, say of the lower upper class, already hit the rocks, wife and a pre-college daughter moved in w/ her parents, college daughter on student loan / financial aid, and he is resetting, visiting financial industry contacts, holding down a driving gig, and living in a hostel situation provided by charity

(2) Below article goes better w/ a tune


(2-i) and charlie is wrong, now capital will go down as well

(2-ii) zerohedge.com

"Yellow Vests" & The Downward Mobility Of The Middle Class Authored by Charles Hugh Smith via OfTwoMinds blog,

Capital garners the gains, and labor's share continues eroding. That's the story of the 21st century.

The middle class, virtually by definition, is not prepared for downward mobility. A systemic, semi-permanent decline in the standard of living isn't part of the implicit social contract that's been internalized by the middle class virtually everywhere:living standards are only supposed to rise. Any decline is temporary.

Downward mobility is the key context in the gilets jaunes "yellow vest" movement in France. Taxes and prices rise inexorably while wages/pensions stagnate. The only possible outcome of this structural asymmetry is a decline in the standard of living.



This structural decline in the standard of living of the middle class is complex.One of the definitive identifying characteristics of the middle class is that is supposed to be largely immune to the insecurity and precariousness that characterize much of the working class.

In other words, this isn't supposed to happen to us. This is especially true in nations with longstanding generous social welfare programs: should the unexpected happen and a household's income declines, the state is supposed to step in and fill the gap with subsidies, unemployment insurance, cash payments, etc. until the household recovers its previous standard of living.

None of that is happening. The erosion of middle class standards of living is not abrupt enough to qualify for social welfare programs; the erosion is gradual, via the higher taxes and living costs the "yellow vests" are highlighting.

State benefits aren't as generous as they're cracked up to be. Lower-income pensioners in France are called sans dente, without teeth, as France's universal healthcare program doesn't provide much in the way of dental care, hence the poor with missing teeth.

Part of downward mobility is becoming politically invisible, a topic I discussed in France in a Nutshell: "The Government Stopped Listening to the People 20 Years Ago"(December 12, 2018).

The protesters rightly perceive that they are politically invisible: the ruling class, regardless of its ideological flavor, doesn't believe it needs the support of the politically invisible to rule as it sees fit. The ruling class has counted on the cultural elites to marginalize and suppress the politically invisible by dismissing any working-class dissent as racist, fascist, nationalistic and other words expressly intended to push dissent into the political wilderness.

Many commentators have listed the systemic sources of the erosion in standards of living and financial security: the loss of cheap, plentiful oil to fuel "growth" at rates that lift all boats; the financialization of the economy, which favors capital over labor; globalization, which increases corporate profits via labor, social welfare and pollution arbitrage (move production where these costs are the lowest), and the corruption of the political machinery via pay-to-play (favoring the corporations and super-wealthy) and the concentration of financial and political power in the hands of the few at the expense of the many.

Another way to understand this downward mobility is: the elites no longer need a vibrant middle class to hold power and increase their wealth. The real money is in globalized capital flows, access to central bank credit and ownership of debt. The role of the middle class has largely been reduced to being compliant, passive debt-serfs who can borrow money to fill the yawning gap in their standard of living and make the payments.

For an example of how this works, please read I've Paid $18,000 To A $24,000 Student Loan, & I Still Owe $24,000 (via Maoxian).

Since the political machinery serves the oligarchy, there's no real need to pander to the middle class or the working class. Being tossed in with the politically invisible hurts the pride of the middle class, as does being expendable, but as we see in this chart, the top .01% have skimmed the vast majority of whatever wealth and income have been generated over the past decade.

Whatever crumbs fell to the middle class must have been sufficient, as they're still paying their mortgages, student loans, auto loans, etc.



The general decline in living standards tracks the general decline in labor's share of the economy:


Capital garners the gains, and labor's share continues eroding. That's the story of the 21st century.

* * *

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