Home › Forums › Financial Markets/Economics › griffin federal reserve
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October 11, 2010 at 2:06 PM #18060October 11, 2010 at 2:31 PM #615952daveljParticipant
[quote=investor]People fighting griffin’s ideas just don’t want to question their own firmly held beliefs and get angry when you do. So what. Close mindedness is never appealing risk…[/quote]
Pot calls kettle black.
You Conveniently disappeared for a few months after you last brought up Griffin and I pointed out in clear prose – using his own words – that this man does not even understand the basics of banking. Please feel free to pick up the thread.
http://piggington.com/do_you_know_what_the_federal_reserve_is?page=4
October 11, 2010 at 2:31 PM #616038daveljParticipant[quote=investor]People fighting griffin’s ideas just don’t want to question their own firmly held beliefs and get angry when you do. So what. Close mindedness is never appealing risk…[/quote]
Pot calls kettle black.
You Conveniently disappeared for a few months after you last brought up Griffin and I pointed out in clear prose – using his own words – that this man does not even understand the basics of banking. Please feel free to pick up the thread.
http://piggington.com/do_you_know_what_the_federal_reserve_is?page=4
October 11, 2010 at 2:31 PM #616593daveljParticipant[quote=investor]People fighting griffin’s ideas just don’t want to question their own firmly held beliefs and get angry when you do. So what. Close mindedness is never appealing risk…[/quote]
Pot calls kettle black.
You Conveniently disappeared for a few months after you last brought up Griffin and I pointed out in clear prose – using his own words – that this man does not even understand the basics of banking. Please feel free to pick up the thread.
http://piggington.com/do_you_know_what_the_federal_reserve_is?page=4
October 11, 2010 at 2:31 PM #616713daveljParticipant[quote=investor]People fighting griffin’s ideas just don’t want to question their own firmly held beliefs and get angry when you do. So what. Close mindedness is never appealing risk…[/quote]
Pot calls kettle black.
You Conveniently disappeared for a few months after you last brought up Griffin and I pointed out in clear prose – using his own words – that this man does not even understand the basics of banking. Please feel free to pick up the thread.
http://piggington.com/do_you_know_what_the_federal_reserve_is?page=4
October 11, 2010 at 2:31 PM #617021daveljParticipant[quote=investor]People fighting griffin’s ideas just don’t want to question their own firmly held beliefs and get angry when you do. So what. Close mindedness is never appealing risk…[/quote]
Pot calls kettle black.
You Conveniently disappeared for a few months after you last brought up Griffin and I pointed out in clear prose – using his own words – that this man does not even understand the basics of banking. Please feel free to pick up the thread.
http://piggington.com/do_you_know_what_the_federal_reserve_is?page=4
October 11, 2010 at 2:46 PM #615972daveljParticipant[quote=investor]Bon Appetite. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CCjuXQOVurc&feature=related%5B/quote%5D
Money quotes begin at 3:55. “It’s [his book] not really about money and banking and theory and accounting and all of that sort of thing… It’s a whodunnit… It makes it more interesting.”
Well, at least he admits it. He doesn’t understand squat about banking, theory or accounting. Now, how one can purport to write a relevant book on the Federal Reserve System without understanding these things is beyond me. But clearly it didn’t stop Griffin. But, in Griffin’s defense, it sounds to me like “relevance” wasn’t his goal – it was making it “interesting.” That’s straight from the horse’s mouth. Clearly he succeeded for many on that count.
October 11, 2010 at 2:46 PM #616059daveljParticipant[quote=investor]Bon Appetite. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CCjuXQOVurc&feature=related%5B/quote%5D
Money quotes begin at 3:55. “It’s [his book] not really about money and banking and theory and accounting and all of that sort of thing… It’s a whodunnit… It makes it more interesting.”
Well, at least he admits it. He doesn’t understand squat about banking, theory or accounting. Now, how one can purport to write a relevant book on the Federal Reserve System without understanding these things is beyond me. But clearly it didn’t stop Griffin. But, in Griffin’s defense, it sounds to me like “relevance” wasn’t his goal – it was making it “interesting.” That’s straight from the horse’s mouth. Clearly he succeeded for many on that count.
October 11, 2010 at 2:46 PM #616613daveljParticipant[quote=investor]Bon Appetite. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CCjuXQOVurc&feature=related%5B/quote%5D
Money quotes begin at 3:55. “It’s [his book] not really about money and banking and theory and accounting and all of that sort of thing… It’s a whodunnit… It makes it more interesting.”
Well, at least he admits it. He doesn’t understand squat about banking, theory or accounting. Now, how one can purport to write a relevant book on the Federal Reserve System without understanding these things is beyond me. But clearly it didn’t stop Griffin. But, in Griffin’s defense, it sounds to me like “relevance” wasn’t his goal – it was making it “interesting.” That’s straight from the horse’s mouth. Clearly he succeeded for many on that count.
October 11, 2010 at 2:46 PM #616733daveljParticipant[quote=investor]Bon Appetite. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CCjuXQOVurc&feature=related%5B/quote%5D
Money quotes begin at 3:55. “It’s [his book] not really about money and banking and theory and accounting and all of that sort of thing… It’s a whodunnit… It makes it more interesting.”
Well, at least he admits it. He doesn’t understand squat about banking, theory or accounting. Now, how one can purport to write a relevant book on the Federal Reserve System without understanding these things is beyond me. But clearly it didn’t stop Griffin. But, in Griffin’s defense, it sounds to me like “relevance” wasn’t his goal – it was making it “interesting.” That’s straight from the horse’s mouth. Clearly he succeeded for many on that count.
October 11, 2010 at 2:46 PM #617041daveljParticipant[quote=investor]Bon Appetite. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CCjuXQOVurc&feature=related%5B/quote%5D
Money quotes begin at 3:55. “It’s [his book] not really about money and banking and theory and accounting and all of that sort of thing… It’s a whodunnit… It makes it more interesting.”
Well, at least he admits it. He doesn’t understand squat about banking, theory or accounting. Now, how one can purport to write a relevant book on the Federal Reserve System without understanding these things is beyond me. But clearly it didn’t stop Griffin. But, in Griffin’s defense, it sounds to me like “relevance” wasn’t his goal – it was making it “interesting.” That’s straight from the horse’s mouth. Clearly he succeeded for many on that count.
October 11, 2010 at 3:23 PM #615987AnonymousGuestC’mon, we know the Fed is about bigger things than money and banking.
Story of the Fed:
It’s a secret conspiracy of bankers with the purpose of becoming the richest and most powerful men in the world.
They hatched their plan in 1913, but in order to keep it a secret, they didn’t move on it right away.
They quietly waited, allowing others to become fabulously wealthy, so as not to reveal that bankers were really pulling the strings.
So the decades passed, and while men like Rockefeller, Carnegie, Ford, Getty, DuPont, Hughes, Sloan, and Gates amassed more wealth than anyone, the bankers kept a low profile.
Although the banker’s plan was to ultimately destroy the US economy, they first let it grow faster than any in history, decade after decade, so that their intentions could be kept hidden.
But now the trap is sprung! The conspirators of 1913 will now destroy the economy and take over the world.
October 11, 2010 at 3:23 PM #616074AnonymousGuestC’mon, we know the Fed is about bigger things than money and banking.
Story of the Fed:
It’s a secret conspiracy of bankers with the purpose of becoming the richest and most powerful men in the world.
They hatched their plan in 1913, but in order to keep it a secret, they didn’t move on it right away.
They quietly waited, allowing others to become fabulously wealthy, so as not to reveal that bankers were really pulling the strings.
So the decades passed, and while men like Rockefeller, Carnegie, Ford, Getty, DuPont, Hughes, Sloan, and Gates amassed more wealth than anyone, the bankers kept a low profile.
Although the banker’s plan was to ultimately destroy the US economy, they first let it grow faster than any in history, decade after decade, so that their intentions could be kept hidden.
But now the trap is sprung! The conspirators of 1913 will now destroy the economy and take over the world.
October 11, 2010 at 3:23 PM #616627AnonymousGuestC’mon, we know the Fed is about bigger things than money and banking.
Story of the Fed:
It’s a secret conspiracy of bankers with the purpose of becoming the richest and most powerful men in the world.
They hatched their plan in 1913, but in order to keep it a secret, they didn’t move on it right away.
They quietly waited, allowing others to become fabulously wealthy, so as not to reveal that bankers were really pulling the strings.
So the decades passed, and while men like Rockefeller, Carnegie, Ford, Getty, DuPont, Hughes, Sloan, and Gates amassed more wealth than anyone, the bankers kept a low profile.
Although the banker’s plan was to ultimately destroy the US economy, they first let it grow faster than any in history, decade after decade, so that their intentions could be kept hidden.
But now the trap is sprung! The conspirators of 1913 will now destroy the economy and take over the world.
October 11, 2010 at 3:23 PM #616748AnonymousGuestC’mon, we know the Fed is about bigger things than money and banking.
Story of the Fed:
It’s a secret conspiracy of bankers with the purpose of becoming the richest and most powerful men in the world.
They hatched their plan in 1913, but in order to keep it a secret, they didn’t move on it right away.
They quietly waited, allowing others to become fabulously wealthy, so as not to reveal that bankers were really pulling the strings.
So the decades passed, and while men like Rockefeller, Carnegie, Ford, Getty, DuPont, Hughes, Sloan, and Gates amassed more wealth than anyone, the bankers kept a low profile.
Although the banker’s plan was to ultimately destroy the US economy, they first let it grow faster than any in history, decade after decade, so that their intentions could be kept hidden.
But now the trap is sprung! The conspirators of 1913 will now destroy the economy and take over the world.
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