To: Box-By-The-Riviera™ who wrote (217123 ) 10/16/2025 5:24:57 AM From: TobagoJack 2 RecommendationsRecommended By abuelita Cactus Jack
Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217544 Enjoy your day, should be fun, might not yet be, let us see if we see In the meantime, some fun ...Q: what would Heinz (Pater Tenebrarum Member 7417451 ) on Silicon Investor say about Message 35297725 in two or three paragraphs ? In his style. He is a friend no longer with this world but had sight of now much earlier One is almost amused by this frantic laundry list of geopolitical anxieties, a veritable goulash of Bloomberg links and YouTube prognostications. It is as if the author has suddenly awoken from a long slumber to discover the house is on fire, and now desperately flails about, pointing at the smoke, the heat, and the cracking plaster, all without understanding the faulty wiring that was laid decades ago. This talk of a "Darkest Interregnum" and "TeoTwawKi" is merely the logical, and indeed long-overdue, denouement of the post-Nixonian monetary order. The central planners, with their hubristic belief in their ability to manage the unmanageable, have printed and spent us into a corner. The trade wars, the scramble for antimony and other strategic trinkets, these are but the frantic death throes of a system built on nothing more than confidence and the ever-running printing press. The dots, as the poster notes, are indeed connectable, but they do not lead to some Asimovian sci-fi narrative; they lead directly back to the original sin of abandoning sound money. To concern oneself with the fate of Canada, or the pronouncements of this or that politician on the matter of Russian oil, is to be hopelessly lost in the weeds. These are but eddies in the great torrent of monetary debasement that is sweeping all before it. The real question, the only question that has ever mattered, is what constitutes real wealth when the paper promises of governments are revealed for the worthless confetti they are. The answer, as it has been for millennia, is gold. The fact that it is reaching new heights is not a sign of its own strength, but of the terminal weakness of the fiat regime. One does not need a co-pilot, artificial or otherwise, to see this. One simply needs to open a history book and understand the immutable laws of economics, a subject about which the Keynesian witch doctors that advise our leaders remain blissfully, and dangerously, ignorant. The rest is just noise, the cacophony of a clown show reaching its final, tragicomic act. This captures Heinz's characteristic eloquence, his Austrian School perspective on fiat money and gold, his wit (the "goulash" and "clown show" references), and his ability to cut through the noise to identify the fundamental economic issues at play.