0
0

Thread for orphaned comments


 invite response                
2005 Apr 11, 5:00pm   191,721 views  117,730 comments

by Patrick   ➕follow (60)   💰tip   ignore  

Thread for comments whose parent thread has been deleted

« First        Comments 39,711 - 39,750 of 117,730       Last »     Search these comments

39711   Ceffer   2013 Nov 22, 8:34am  

Ditto, psychotic bot!

Welcome to Patnet, but you'll have to brush up on your personal insults.

39712   ttsmyf   2013 Nov 22, 8:56am  

WOW! The UNtrustworthy are certainly in control of what information is apparent to the people!

Say hey! This was in the Wall Street Journal on March 30, 1999. Note "... how much it will buy."

Holy cow/interesting/compelling ...!

And where is it up to date??? Right here ... see the first chart shown in this thread.
Recent Dow day is Friday, November 22, 2013 __ Level is 102.8

WOW! It is hideous that this is hidden! Is there any such "Homes, Inflation Adjusted"? Yes! This was in the New York Times on August 27, 2006:

And up to date (by me) is here:
http://patrick.net/?p=1219038&c=999083#comment-999083

WOW! The UNtrustworthy are certainly in control of what information is apparent to the people!

And http://patrick.net/?p=1230886

39713   everything   2013 Nov 22, 11:43am  

Many still are, but for the most part - they were, and most likely financing operations at great rates, they buy equipment that lasts a long time like your car/truck, etc. ;)

thunderlips11 says

Gold and Silver doesn't look too great. Caterpillar has reduced profits and expectations, Mining companies aren't expanding operations.

China will stack the gold at any price until the weight of it's reserves becomes king.

This all plays out over time, this gold rush that we are in, is fairly new, and was initially over blown by ZIRP.

It's going to be awhile yet, takes time for big bets like ZIRP to play out.

39714   ELC   2013 Nov 22, 9:56pm  

bgamall4 says

You would think it would take demand for houses down, but it appears to be taking supply for houses down unless the cuts to the growth of SS cause people to be forced to sell after a few years.

Ever hear of a reverse mortgage?

39715   upisdown   2013 Nov 23, 2:13am  

marco says

".....we end up with a Republican, a Rockefeller Republican in blackface,
with Barack Obama.... a black mascot of Wall Street oligarchs and a black puppet
of corporate plutocrats.”


Dr. Cornel West
Princeton University

Dr. West thanks you because before Obama was elected, you right wingers would never give him the time of day, and now you quote him if he lambasts Obama. Sucker, 'cause not only is he playing you, but he's used your own biased ideology to drastically elevate his income and exposure by playing you.

When you talk to a black stranger, do you tell him/her that you know a black person and then ask if they know them? LOL

39717   anotheraccount   2013 Nov 23, 4:32am  

egads101 says

Robot mining technology will drop the price to $600 an ounce, when combined with unwinding of irrational inflation fears.

that is my buy point.

The same robot technology will be able to build houses for 20K a pop.

As a hedge, if gold gets to $1000 it would be a great buy.

39718   HEY YOU   2013 Nov 23, 5:26am  

Death by E-coli!

39719   tatupu70   2013 Nov 23, 6:35am  

It's clear from this video that the biggest problem in the US is the fact that the bottom 25% of citizens don't pay any taxes.

39720   tatupu70   2013 Nov 23, 7:16am  

bgamall4 says

tatupu70 says



It's clear from this video that the biggest problem in the US is the fact that the bottom 25% of citizens don't pay any taxes.


Only to a madman. You apparently are going crazy.

It's called sarcasm

39721   HydroCabron   2013 Nov 23, 9:26am  

Can't we spare a three-burrito dump for this guy's face?

Notice how all the fixes, which always lump Social Security and Medicare together, even though only one of them is broken, are always about kicking the muddle class and below?

39722   mell   2013 Nov 23, 10:13am  

GS via ZH at http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2013-10-25/japan-drowns-food-energy-inflation-chinas-liquidity-tinkering-continues-does-shibor- on 10/25/13

The national core CPI (excluding fresh foods) was up 0.7% yoy in September. Despite slightly narrowing from +0.8% in August, the figure remained high. The breakdown continues to shows high positive contribution from energy costs, which were up 7.4% yoy (contribution: +0.64 pp), but the figure was slightly lower compared to August (+9.2% yoy; +0.78 pp).

Aside from energy costs, foods (excluding fresh foods) turned positive at +0.1% yoy (August: 0.0% yoy) for the first time since July 2012, while prices of clothing/footwear continued to rise steadily (September: +0.7%, August: +0.8%).

Cultural/recreational durables (e.g. TV), which has been a significant driver of price decline, rose 0.1% yoy in August for the first time since January 1992, and continued to rise in September, at +0.4%. The September core-core figure (excluding foods and energy) pulled out from the negative territory for the first time since December 2008, at 0.0% (August: -0.1%).

Now guess what has been inflating quite significantly? Energy and fresh foods.

39723   turtledove   2013 Nov 23, 12:09pm  

The sad part is that people have a tendency to look down the chain when determining the source of the problem. It's real easy to look at the folks who depend on government assistance and blame them for not contributing. It's an excellent distraction and keeps people from focusing their attention on the fact that we have billionaires who don't even come close to contributing their fair share. This type of government assistance goes all but unnoticed. All the pressure hits the middle. The powers that be like to pretend that people making $250 - 500k are the solution, as if this level of income is as high as it gets. However, many are just regular w-2 wage earners who find themselves too poor -- and too rich -- to be eligible for anything even resembling a break. So, they get to contribute the most, while those making a million a month enjoy laughably low effective tax rates. Speaking as a pretty conservative person, I think it's time we stop looking downward for solutions and instead look upwards. Try attacking the real problem rather than allowing ourselves to be distracted by an easy target who lives each day trying to keep his head above the poverty line. Just my 2 cents.

39724   Robert Sproul   2013 Nov 23, 12:21pm  

bgamall4 says

He is an evil hoarder.

This is very interesting.
Is Wealth Hoarding just as dysfunctional as any other kind of pathological, compulsive accumulation?
Hard to see the distinction between endless heaping up of money that will never be spent and any other isolating, paranoid hoarding behavior.
It is inarguably more harmful to the community than some house full of cats.

39725   Vicente   2013 Nov 23, 12:22pm  

turtledove says

It's an excellent distraction and keeps people from focusing their attention on the fact that we have billionaires who don't even come close to contributing their fair share.

It's worse than that, a growing proportion of tax revenues comes precisely from the lower classes. As corporate taxes have dropped to record lows, numerous other ways are found to attempt to make up for it from John & Jane Q. Public. Billionaires get as much and more protection of "American interests" when their corporations are troubled here or anywhere on the globe, but they pay less and less for it. Don't let any American Master of the Universe tell you, they get nothing for the taxes they pay, they get PLENTY.

39726   anonymous   2013 Nov 23, 1:11pm  

That's a cool video. As bad as the ACA rollout has been, I am pleased that the embedded taxes (net investment income tax, addt'l medicare tax) in the law will start to redistribute more of that wealth. The dividend and capital gains tax rates for the rich are a joke.

39727   HydroCabron   2013 Nov 23, 3:05pm  

tatupu70 says

It's clear from this video that the biggest problem in the US is the fact that the bottom 25% of citizens don't pay any taxes.

This is still better than the greatest possible outrage: a bracketed, progressive income-tax system.

(I need to vomit now - can't even think about it without becoming nauseated.)

39728   thomaswong.1986   2013 Nov 23, 3:07pm  

Call it Crazy says

Hitting close to home now.... I wonder if these aides will get waivers????

when 2014 and 2016 roll in .. they can vote on their disapproval

else suck it up like so many others... !

39729   BoomAndBustCycle   2013 Nov 23, 3:19pm  

If we really had a liberal media... They would be playing that video on loop 24/7 until America woke up to the problem and FOX news had to comment on it directly.

39730   HydroCabron   2013 Nov 23, 3:26pm  

Thanks.

This helps me keep up with the latest facts about Benghazicare that winger editorialists are making up.

39731   Ceffer   2013 Nov 23, 3:35pm  

What a dilemma. Too old to provide sexual favors to politicians, and too young for Medicare.

39732   Bellingham Bill   2013 Nov 23, 3:38pm  

No wage hyperinflation, no hyperinflation.

Weimar and Zimbabwe came about when the PTB started printing money to pay people while the shelves were empty.

We're not in any scarcity economy now. The hyperinflationists have to figure out how that comes to pass before the hyperinflation will actually arrive.

If anything, with the boomers turning 60 now we're going to be see more demand shock since old people don't consume like the young.

http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series/LNU00000060

At least I don't. My clothing expense for the past 3 years has been $100, total.

39733   Homeboy   2013 Nov 23, 3:40pm  

thomaswong.1986 says

when 2014 and 2016 roll in .. they can vote on their disapproval

Since it was Republican Chuck Grassley's idea to force Congress to buy their insurance from the exchange, I guess they would have to vote Democrat to voice their disapproval.

39734   Bellingham Bill   2013 Nov 23, 3:45pm  

tr6 says

The only place in the economy where I see serious inflation is in healthcare because it's been legislated by ACA

The trees can't grow to the sky.

My prediction is that the government will finance this inflation by subsidizing many policies next year for those with incomes between 30 and 60K

Yes, this is how ObamaCare works. Singles making $20k-30k and families of 4 making up to $90K get massive insurance subsidies.

Thing is, nobody really wants to go out and get medical care unless they need it, and health care is already such a massive wealth sink that even if it does grow it's not going to take over much more than it already has.

Now, Medicare is going to explode this decade and next. But you have to blame LBJ for that, not the Kenyan.

39735   Bellingham Bill   2013 Nov 23, 3:48pm  

mell says

Aside from energy costs

other than that Mrs Lincoln . . .

http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/?g=oPc

39736   thomaswong.1986   2013 Nov 23, 4:03pm  

Homeboy says

I guess they would have to vote Democrat to voice their disapproval.

We shall see! Thunderdome... two men enter one man leaves....

"But the federal government is the largest employer in the country. So Grassley's amendment means that the largest employer in the country is required to put some of its employees -- the ones working for Congress -- on the exchanges. But the exchanges don't have any procedures for handling premium contributions for large employers.

That's where the problem comes in. This was an offhand amendment that was supposed to be rejected. It's not clear that the federal government has the authority to pay for congressional staffers on the exchanges, the way it pays for them now in the federal benefits program. That could lead to a lot of staffers quitting Congress because they can't afford to shoulder 100 percent of their premiums. (There's also a smaller issue related to how retiree benefits might be calculated. But I'm only willing to go so far into the weeds here.)"

39737   fedwatcher   2013 Nov 23, 4:44pm  

This has nothing to do with Real Estate Patrick, so why is this story here?

39738   lostand confused   2013 Nov 23, 5:19pm  

fedwatcher says

This has nothing to do with Real Estate Patrick, so why is this story here?

The suspect could be a realtor.

39739   HydroCabron   2013 Nov 24, 1:15am  

The only options seem to be extermination, followed by mass freezing for post-collapse consumption, or letting them roam the streets freely to prey on the weak, who won't survive the transitional paradigm-shift anyway.

Freezing that much realtor for a few more months of civilization is just not cost-effective. Keep a couple in the big garage freezer, and cull more as needed, but for now just think of them as fat and protein storage for the coming lean times.

After the supermarkets close and the supply chains break down, they'll be everywhere, groveling and slavering at the slightest hint that you want to list. Invite one to inspect the finished basement - really a fully-equipped kill floor with freezers and meat hooks, and you've fed your household for another two weeks.

39740   mell   2013 Nov 24, 1:32am  

tr6 says

Japan's economy worked for such a long time because they had domestic savers that financed the debt. I am not sure US has the same capacity.

Correct and that has been changing slowly.

indigenous says

The reasons we are not seeing hyperinflation are that the credit market has shrunk to a fraction of it's size, the dollar is the reserve currency of the world, as fucked up as the US monetary policy is Europe's is worse, China is raising the value of the Yuan this forces the value of the dollar to be lowered, inflation is always realized at the crony level (insiders) first before it filters down to the middle class.

Agreed. Also to debate hyperinflation vs high inflation (>= 2%) or stagflation is moot IMO as all 3 forms are harmful and the US has been clearly suffering from high inflation in daily necessities for a while now. I agree that there was additional scarcity involved in Zimbabwe and Weimar to really hyperinflate the prices, which (scarcity) is not that easy to occur these days with the ease of modern transportation, technology and production and a highly globalized economy. Doesn't mean the middle class cannot suffer from continuous inflation/stagflation as it clearly has been.

39741   HydroCabron   2013 Nov 24, 1:38am  

I'm working with a Chinese manufacturer on a key lock box that opens using any four-digit combination and then unlatches a trap door in the entryway, covering a greased chute to the kill floor.

A captive-bolt pistol on a hydraulic robot arm then dispatches the prey, now hanging from the basement ceiling, and leaves it hanging for your convenience. A conveyor of the sort you'd see in a dry cleaners is possible here, leading to a walk-in freezer. This would cut out the need to lie in wait - you could take your spouse to dinner or a movie knowing the the freezer will stock itself while you're gone - but there is the problem of accumulating too many parked Audis if you leave the system on while you're away on vacation: depriving your neighbors of parking is an inexcusable moral breach.

39742   Bellingham Bill   2013 Nov 24, 1:54am  

One area that scarcity can hit is food.

Either we have to sell our food to China, switch to cash crops, and/or drought wipes us out.

Exports in general are inflationary, in that they give us money with nothing to show for it.

But even in this case i don't see high inflation coming necessarily, since without wage rises there can be no inflation, only reallocation.

There are tons of rents that can be reallocated in this economy.

As for Japan and their savers, what really happened is that they gave themselves tax cuts and called it savings, once their high-growth high-inflation days went away.

http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/?g=oPH

I think we're fucked more than they are, but it's difficult to figure out how things are going to fail here.

Clearly 3X GDP national debt is in our future, and clearly the $2.7T social security trust fund is going to be redeemed for printed (vice taxed) monies.

Like Japan, taxes have to double here to actually fix anything, and that's simply not going to happen.

You can argue spending cuts instead, but that's incredibly deflationary, since it rips income directly out of the paycheck economy, which is the most fucked element of the economy.

39743   HydroCabron   2013 Nov 24, 2:04am  

There are still some components to be filled in.

For example: how to discourage burglars and other normal people from stepping onto the trap door. We need a test with no false positives - I and my customers are uncompromisingly moral people.

In the early phases of design, a massive display of child pornography in the entryway was planned, being something that would repel humans but attract realtor, but it has come to our attention that there is documentary evidence, of sketchy provenance, that there actually exist pedophiles who are not realtors.

Since a non-realtor pedophile, if such exists, is actually a person with some hope of redemption, I can't take the chance that my machine might commit murder, no matter how fancifully chimerical the notion of a non-realtor pedophile seems.

39744   anotheraccount   2013 Nov 24, 2:05am  

Bellingham Bill says

One area that scarcity can hit is food.

A report came out earlier this year (I forgot whether it was Word Bank or someone else) that claims that we waste/throw away 50% of the food produced. I don't really see food as a scarcity if this report is true.

Bellingham Bill says

Like Japan, taxes have to double here to actually fix anything, and that's simply not going to happen.

There is no other way. For a start, have to make capital gains equal to wage taxes and corporations actually have to pay taxes.

39745   bg   2013 Nov 24, 2:48am  

turtledove says

It's an excellent distraction and keeps people from focusing their attention on the fact that we have billionaires who don't even come close to contributing their fair share.

EXACTLY.

Most of the population has been completely distracted from the actual problems when you throw in hatred of abortion, welfare, gay marriage and a black president. It is like a ridiculous reality show/soap opera has been piped in over reality.

39746   bg   2013 Nov 24, 2:49am  

APOCALYPSEFUCK is Comptroller says

At least you're honest enough to leave up a post of yourself doing the goofy. Good on you.

Ditto. Props to you :-)

39747   mell   2013 Nov 24, 2:54am  

Let's assume a flat tax system of 20% on any income/gains without any deductions/loopholes. Who can explain (now that the oracle is gone without profanity but with reason) why it is unfair that someone earning 50K pays 10K in taxes while somebody earning 5M pays 1M in taxes?

39748   Tenpoundbass   2013 Nov 24, 3:02am  

There were no pictures just a video.
That's the problem with this argument, those that make the loudest case. Don't really compare apples to apples. The problem isn't the business people and bankers, it's the people you assholes keep electing that give their power and monopolies. Fuck they even get millions to billions in grants and non payback loans.
Stop electing these bastards, and stop giving these companies billions of my tax dollars. Start there, then get back to me.

39749   tatupu70   2013 Nov 24, 3:49am  

mell says

Let's assume a flat tax system of 20% on any income/gains without any
deductions/loopholes. Who can explain (now that the oracle is gone without
profanity but with reason) why it is unfair that someone earning 50K pays 10K in
taxes while somebody earning 5M pays 1M in taxes?

I don't care about "fair". I want a tax structure that will lead to vibrant economy. A flat tax will not do that.

« First        Comments 39,711 - 39,750 of 117,730       Last »     Search these comments

Please register to comment:

api   best comments   contact   latest images   memes   one year ago   random   suggestions   gaiste