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59   indigenous   2016 Jan 24, 2:35pm  

thunderlips11 says

Not that bullshit again.

Just because you disagree does not mean it is not true. The key is objective rather than the subjective gibberish you subscribe to.

60   turtledove   2016 Jan 24, 2:36pm  

indigenous says

production creates the demand NOT the other way around.

What if no one wants what you are producing?

61   MisdemeanorRebel   2016 Jan 24, 2:39pm  

indigenous says

Just because you disagree does not mean it is not true. The key is objective rather than the subjective gibberish you subscribe to.

I love a guy who puts a priori logic over data, observation, quantification, and general empiricism, talk about subjective vs. objective.

62   indigenous   2016 Jan 24, 2:45pm  

turtledove says

What if no one wants what you are producing?

Then you have to change your name to "government".

The key to success in the economy is choosing to produce a product/service that is wanted. E.G. A GP in the flyover part of the country makes way less than a plastic surgeon in Hollywood. Another example is over-investment where many people were fooled by low interest rates into investing in oil fracking. Oil is always valuable was the assumption. In this situation the entrepreneurs then have to reevaluate what is valuable.

63   indigenous   2016 Jan 24, 2:47pm  

thunderlips11 says

I love a guy who puts a priori logic over data, observation, quantification, and general empiricism, talk about subjective vs. objective.

Back at ya. Got any of that data to prove your contention?

64   FortWayne   2016 Jan 24, 2:48pm  

tatupu70 says

My point wasn't that Trump couldn't or wouldn't create jobs--just that building hotels doesn't give him any great insight.

Trump is much more likely to be great president who could make economy go. Sanders or Hillary can't do it, they don't know how it even works. Sanders is just smarter than Hillary, because he learned that to win Democratic nominee you have to go all the way to the left and scream for communistic ideology.

65   indigenous   2016 Jan 24, 2:54pm  

Reality check the only Prez who really got out of the way was the GREAT Coolidge. We need another Coolidge the only one close would have been Ron (not Rand) Paul.

66   NDrLoR   2016 Jan 24, 2:59pm  

indigenous says

We need another Coolidge

Along with the wonderful music. Everything is the 20's was memorialized in music, including Coolidge's famous statement--I've heard that Spike Jones (born in 1911) was greatly influenced as a young man in his late teens in the late 20's by the madcap antics of Harry Reser's Six Jumping Jacks.

www.youtube.com/embed/KSAZPVhtZVI

67   tatupu70   2016 Jan 24, 3:01pm  

FortWayne says

Trump is much more likely to be great president who could make economy go. Sanders or Hillary can't do it, they don't know how it even works. Sanders is just smarter than Hillary, because he learned that to win Democratic nominee you have to go all the way to the left and scream for communistic ideology

I think Trump has some good ideas w.r.t. international trade and H1Bs But building a hotel or golf course didn't give any great insight.

You're being ridiculous about Sanders--unlike Clinton, he hasn't moved left for the primaries. He's stayed true to himself

68   turtledove   2016 Jan 24, 3:02pm  

indigenous says

choosing to produce a product/service that is wanted

So if demand influences production, how can production create demand?

69   indigenous   2016 Jan 24, 3:04pm  

Thanks, that is what I call High Fidelity, and the music isn't bad either.

70   tatupu70   2016 Jan 24, 3:09pm  

Ironman says

I'm STILL waiting for you to tell me what he's actually accomplished in his past 3 decades in Congress. You know, PAST proof, facts and results, not FUTURE promises.

Past performance usually gives you good insight in Future accomplishments.

Just like looking at investment funds. Do you buy them based on "sales pitches" or based on past performance?

Here's the thing--you're trying to penalize Sanders for having idiots in Congress with him. He voted against the Iraq War. He voted to break up the banks. He led the fight to get rid of NAFTA.

It's not his fault that the other Congressman and woman value campaign contributions over their constituents.

71   indigenous   2016 Jan 24, 3:19pm  

turtledove says

So if demand influences production, how can production create demand?

The way I think of this is to think of a barter economy. In this situation the seller has to produce something that someone will buy before there is any demand. I.E. you can't say I want to trade for this if you don't have anything to trade.

To prove my point Japan has made money easier and easier to get for over 20 years yet their economy still languishes.

Another example is in this country, the Fed had QE for 7 or 8 years with the velocity of money (DEFINITION of 'Velocity Of Money' The rate at which money is exchanged from one transaction to another, and how much a unit of currency is used in a given period of time.) is at historic lows.

BTW this is where the mutts get confused because Keynesian economics says demand is everything. This is why Japan has tried to create economic growth for over 2 decades without success as has this country since the housing bust.

72   tatupu70   2016 Jan 24, 3:31pm  

Ironman says

No, I'm trying to penalize him for BEING an idiot

Well, you're doing a piss poor job. I just provide 3 key pieces of legislation that he was 100% correct on and his colleagues were 100% wrong. If Sanders were President and could have vetoed them, the country would be a helluva lot better off.

73   tatupu70   2016 Jan 24, 3:40pm  

Ironman says

You're missing the point.... again..

I don't want to hear about legislation he piggy backed on and was a FOLLOWER..

I want you to provide proof of something HE proposed and got passed, there's a BIG difference.

No, I'm not. I'm saying bills he proposed didn't get passed because of the other idiots in Congress. And looking back, he was right.

74   tatupu70   2016 Jan 24, 3:47pm  

Ironman says

Cop out..

They didn't get passed because they were poorly written bills.

If a bill has wide sweeping benefits to ALL the American people (not just a D or R), do you really think they don't get passed?

I'll repeat it again, what bills did he sponsor that had benefits to ALL were signed into law during his 3 decade career in Congress?

Give me a break. You think Republicans would have voted for Glass Steagall if the bill had been written better??? Are you kidding me?

75   MisdemeanorRebel   2016 Jan 24, 3:59pm  

indigenous says

Back at ya. Got any of that data to prove your contention?

Nah, not in the mood. I'll spend fifteen minutes to half an hour putting shit up like I always do. Then I'll realize I've already done it 10x with you and the other Austrian on this board. Then you'll dismiss it by referring to Thomas Aquinas or some Thomas Woods XIII bullshit.

76   tatupu70   2016 Jan 24, 4:08pm  

Ironman says

Think about that for a minute or an hour.

As a congressman, he can't get the other members of congress on board with his proposals.

But somehow, you think as President, he'll have better results in congress?? Really?

Are you naïve enough to think that Congressmen vote yea or nay based on the persuasive powers of the bill sponsor?? Well, if so, let me dispel you of that notion quickly.

The good thing is that, as President, Sanders would have much more power by using the bully pulpit to pressure Congressmen. And, even better, he can veto the crappy legislation that are proposed by neoliberals. That is a HUGE difference.

If Sanders had been President rather than Clinton/Bush, we wouldn't have had a housing bubble, nor would have gone to Iraq.

Much different history, don't you agree?

77   indigenous   2016 Jan 24, 4:26pm  

thunderlips11 says

Nah, not in the mood.

That's fine, just don't say that you put anything up but conjecture.

Once again for anyone who is not a mutt, 20+ years and 7+ year of Keynesian's trying to stimulate the economy, in Japan and the US, by trying to increase demand through monetary and fiscal means has been a complete failure.

Now the Wogster will come in with his usual blather 5,4,3,2,1

78   indigenous   2016 Jan 24, 5:08pm  

This explains a bit further regarding Say's law:

Because all movements between supplying and demanding have to take place through the medium of money, it is somewhat oversimplified to say that production is the source of demand. Actually demanding products requires the possession of money, which in turn requires a previous act of supply. We sell assets or labor services for money, which we then use to demand. Money is an intermediate good that enables us to buy the things we ultimately desire. However, we have to be careful to remember that what enables us to purchase is not the possession of money, per se, but the possession of productive assets that can fetch a money’s worth on the market. When we sell that asset (or our labor services) we receive wealth in the form of money. As we spend that money, we demand from the wealth our production created.

Unlike Keynesian critics of Say’s Law of Markets who saw deficient aggregate demand resulting from various forms of market failure as causing economic downturns, we have argued that a more accurate understanding of Say’s Law suggests that there is no inherent flaw in the market that leads to deficient aggregate demand, nor is the existence of real-world recessions a refutation of the Law. Rather, once we understand the role of money in making possible the translation of our productive powers of supply into the ability to demand from other producers, we can see that the root of macroeconomic disorder is most likely monetary, as too much or too little money will undermine that translation process. Despite having been dismissed in the onslaught of the Keynesian revolution, Say’s Law, when properly understood both in its original meaning and its relationship to the banking system, remains a powerful insight into the operations of a market economy.

If you can understand this, you are ahead of the mutts in understanding economics.
.
http://fee.org/freeman/understanding-says-law-of-markets/

79   anonymous   2016 Jan 24, 5:10pm  

You mutts are screwed now HE CAME WITH SAYS LAW!!!

80   indigenous   2016 Jan 24, 5:13pm  

errc says

You mutts are screwed now HE CAME WITH SAYS LAW!!!

Dammit errc tomorrow is a workday and you are still baked...

81   lostand confused   2016 Jan 24, 5:19pm  

errc says

You mutts are screwed now HE CAME WITH SAYS LAW!!!

82   indigenous   2016 Jan 24, 9:57pm  

thunderlips11 says

Nah, not in the mood.

BTW your new avatar is the worst. No matter how hard Sanders tried to fuck things up he would be hard pressed to do a fraction of what that asshole did.

83   indigenous   2016 Jan 25, 7:06am  

Say's law and Hayeks Triangle are sound principles.

And a day later:

www.youtube.com/embed/K8E_zMLCRNg

84   FortWayne   2016 Jan 25, 7:21am  

tatupu70 says

You're being ridiculous about Sanders--unlike Clinton, he hasn't moved left for the primaries. He's stayed true to himself

If you want to win Democratic nominee you have to go all the way to the left, Obama did it during primaries vs Clinton, Sanders is doing that too now.
Republican nominee requires you to go far right, Romney did it, now Trump is doing it.

I'm just saying, they learned the system. It's just a big dog and pony show. It'll be fun to watch them all come back to the center for general election after nomination.

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