Home › Forums › Financial Markets/Economics › The Fourth Turning
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November 5, 2012 at 3:58 PM #20246November 5, 2012 at 5:30 PM #753776The-ShovelerParticipant
Wow, now that was uplifting !!
Makes me want to go down a beer or maybe a 12 pack.Although I could see the inflation thing and most likely Europe going down in flames, I seriously doubt things will get that bad in the U.S.A.
Besides I am still counting of SS to fund that small hut on a third world beach that has a fridge filled with cold beer.
I will add that I do think that they have been holding European union together with duct tape until after the elections and that the world is counting on the U.S.A. to get back in the game big time.
If the U.S.A is not in full recovery mode when the worlds real largest economy (The EU) goes down, things could get very messy.November 5, 2012 at 6:23 PM #753780CA renterParticipantWish I could be as optimistic as you, Shoveler. Unfortunately, I think theory posited above is much closer to reality.
We are in deep poo, and too few people seem to realize **why** we are here (due to deliberate propaganda and deflection techniques used by those who control us and the MSM), resulting in their demanding more of what ails us.
November 5, 2012 at 6:53 PM #753782svelteParticipantI’ve noticed how humans get too caught up in the minutiae to see the big picture, the grand scale of things. Look at what all we’ve done to Mother Earth in the last couple hundred hears in comparison to how long she’s been around.
I like that 80 year theory…not only does it match up to a human lifespan it matches up with a lot of key events in American History:
1789-1809 Spring
1809-1829 Summer
1829-1861 Fall – Ends with Civil War
1849-1869 Winter
1869-1889 Spring
1889-1909 Summer – Industrialization
1909-1929 Fall – WWI, ends with Stock Market Crash
1929-1949 Winter – Great Depression, WWII
1949-1964 Spring
1964-1984 Summer
1984-2008 Fall – Ends with Wall Street collapse
2008-2028 Winter
I’ll have to think about it more, but the author may be on to something…
November 5, 2012 at 7:50 PM #753784scaredyclassicParticipantThe Wheel
by William Butler Yeats
(1865-1939)Through winter-time we call on spring,
And through the spring on summer call,
And when abounding hedges ring
Declare that winter’s best of all;
And after that there s nothing good
Because the spring-time has not come —
Nor know that what disturbs our blood
Is but its longing for the tomb.November 5, 2012 at 8:00 PM #753786citydwellerParticipantI don’t get too caught up in the “overall” picture. Life is great for me, and for everyone I know and love (maybe because we all live in this amazing country). Everyone I know has a roof over their head, enough food and clothing to be comfortable, indoor plumbing, electricity, transportation, entertainment (even if that entertainment is just going for a walk through Balboa Park or reading books they’ve borrowed from the library).
The only thing that causes the suffering of winter is the belief that things still aren’t good enough, thinking that “I need more!”
I hope Obama wins reelection, but if he doesn’t I am not worried that my life will be thrown into some kind of greedy, capitalistic hell. At heart we are all kind, caring people – doing the best we can. I don’t believe that any politician is out to cause suffering, they all just have different views on what will make them (and others) happy.
November 5, 2012 at 8:03 PM #753787citydwellerParticipant[quote=squat250]The Wheel
by William Butler Yeats
(1865-1939)Through winter-time we call on spring,
And through the spring on summer call,
And when abounding hedges ring
Declare that winter’s best of all;
And after that there s nothing good
Because the spring-time has not come —
Nor know that what disturbs our blood
Is but its longing for the tomb.[/quote]Awesome poem squat, thanks for posting. It’s not just our generation who has dealt with “Well, I’ll be happy when…
November 5, 2012 at 8:20 PM #753788SD RealtorParticipantAgreed with you CAR. These few paragraphs provide the most incisive summary:
Federal government spending in 2007 was $2.73 trillion. Federal government spending today is $3.8 trillion, a 39% increase in five years. GDP in 2007 was $14.2 trillion. Today GDP is $15.8 trillion, an 11% increase in five years. Approximately 25% of the GDP increase is due to increased government spending.
Government entitlement transfers totaled $1.7 trillion in 2007. Today they total $2.4 trillion, a 41% increase in five years. Interest income paid to senior citizens and savers totaled $1.25 trillion in 2007. Today interest income totals $985 billion, a 21% decrease in five years. Wall Street bankers needed the money to pay themselves bonuses, so Ben Bernanke obliged.
The annual deficit in 2007 totaled $161 billion. Today, the annual deficit is $1.1 trillion. We add $3 billion per day to the national debt as a gift to unborn generations.
The national debt in 2007 was $9 trillion. Today the national debt is $16.3 trillion, an 81% increase in five years. The national debt will reach $20 trillion during the next presidential term. Normalization of interest rates to 2007 levels would result in annual interest expense of $1 trillion, or 40% of current government revenues.
There is nothing normal about our current economic situation. The unfunded liabilities at the Federal, State and local levels of government accumulate to over $200 trillion. Do the facts detailed above lead you to believe we can return to pre-2007 normal in the near future, or ever? Not only has the economic situation of the country deteriorated enormously, the very culprits who created the disaster are more powerful than they were before the global catastrophe caused by their criminal risk taking. The largest Wall Street banks control 74% of all the deposits in the country, up from 66% in 2007, and double the levels from the mid-1990’s.*******************
It is simply not sustainable. Things will change. People are happy now, but when things do change most of them will hurt. Hard to do anything tangible about it unless you want to prep for doomsday.
November 5, 2012 at 8:37 PM #753789citydwellerParticipant” Things will change. People are happy now, but when things do change most of them will hurt. ” Quote – SDR
How do you describe “hurt”? Will they be starving, living in tents? Or will they have to give up their high speed internet and stainless steel appliances?
I’m sorry to sound flippant, but I think a lot of people have lost sight of what happy means.
November 5, 2012 at 9:03 PM #753790scaredyclassicParticipant[quote=citydweller][quote=squat250]The Wheel
by William Butler Yeats
(1865-1939)Through winter-time we call on spring,
And through the spring on summer call,
And when abounding hedges ring
Declare that winter’s best of all;
And after that there s nothing good
Because the spring-time has not come —
Nor know that what disturbs our blood
Is but its longing for the tomb.[/quote]Awesome poem squat, thanks for posting. It’s not just our generation who has dealt with “Well, I’ll be happy when…[/quote]
thank you citydweller. positive feedback is very important to squat250. he lives for it. this is my favorite poem, and I actually memorized it. and i was so excited when it seemed to actually fit in this thread. and even more thrilled to receive your positive feedback.
November 5, 2012 at 9:17 PM #753791svelteParticipantOld man wanna be rich
Rich man wanna be king
And a king’s not satisified til he rules everything.And if you can’t be with the one you love honey, love the one you’re with.
There’s nothing you can’t learn from a rock song. 🙂
November 5, 2012 at 9:45 PM #753793SD RealtorParticipantI cannot tell you how people will hurt because I do not know.
However what I do know is what unsustainable is. You are not being flippant, you are being normal.
One thing that we cannot really comprehend is something we have never experienced. None of us can comprehend death because none of us have experienced it. We cannot comprehend poverty, starvation, lack of resources, lack of energy, fuel, food or anything like that.
Your argument about happiness and a roof over your head and all your friends being happy is not anything I am arguing about. However you conveniently failed to even acknowledge the facts that I reprinted from the original post.
The cold hard fact, mathematically, economically, and logically is that our current fiscal situation cannot and will not be maintained. Overall things will change for the worse. It may be in our lifetime and if not it will certainly be in our childrens lifetime. My definition of hurt implies a steady degradation of the quality of life. Statistically speaking your children will not enjoy the wealth you have. They are already saddled with about 50k per person. This is at our current interest rate. Think of what that debt load will be when (not if) rates go up.
The premise of the article is that major upheavals occur on a certain timeline. I am not sure about the timeline part however I agree with the premise that at some point, when a system ceases to function major upheaval occurs. The good news is that on the other side of upheaval, quality of life improves. However going through it all generally means things get bad for the majority of the population.
Like you I am doing well and happy with life as are my friends. I am slowly trying to take some precautions for myself and children but am not as preoccupied as the doomsday preppers on television.
A quick study of history shows it is perfectly natural for civilizations to rise and fall. The populace suffers or hurts during the fall. It is simply logical that the timelines/periodicity of the rise and falls of civilizations will compress as technology advances.
Obviously you feel things are fine and possibly getting better for everyone. I do not. I see a slow erosion, more poverty, a middle class that is shrinking and those in that middle class are also seeing a slow loss of wealth compared to the recent past.
I guess we will see how it all turns out for our kids.
Personally I very much hope you are right and I am wrong.
November 5, 2012 at 9:48 PM #753792citydwellerParticipantI read a great short story once (can’t remember where), but it starts with a homeless man, camped out next to a bank in N.Y. city. He’s very envious of the doorman who wears a clean, warm jacket everyday and gets to spend his days inside the warm, clean bank. Then it goes to the doorman who is very envious of the bank teller, who has his own apartment and doesn’t have to live with his parents, then the bank teller who is very envious of the loan officer who is buying a condo and is engaged to be married. But it turns out the loan officer is very envious of the bank manager who has already paid for his home, is happily married and has his children in college.
It turns out the bank manager is very unhappy because he has had to do some “creative” bookkeeping to keep the bank appearing profitable in order for him to keep his children in college and his wife happy with designer clothes, fancy home, fancy dinner parties, etc.
The final chapter has the bank manager receiving news that his bank is being audited and he realizes that his days at the bank are numbered, all is about to be revealed. He becomes very distressed at the thought of disappointing his wife and children, and at the thought of his social embarrassment. As he leaves the bank he catches sight of the homeless man, sheltered under his pile of blankets and eating a discarded sandwich, and becomes very envious of the simplicity of this mans life.November 5, 2012 at 10:49 PM #753794flyerParticipantTotally agree with you SD Realtor.
As many of you have mentioned, I’d have to say that, at this point in time, every dream our family has ever had has pretty much come true, and that has also been true for our children, who are now in their 20’s, so, of course, we are “happy.”
However, there are elements, as outlined in the OP that may, and most likely will, negatively change the lives of present and future generations, in ways we never imagined.
I also agree the decline will come as a slow erosion, with more and more people experiencing increasing levels of poverty, and a standard of living far below that of previous generations.
Look no further than the shock you create, when you mention to someone how much it’s going to cost them to retire. When you look at the stats, 95% of the population is living in denial about this one issue alone.
In addition, the decline is, even now, becoming more and more evident, and is also clearly illustrated via statistics, that reveal at least 50% of college grads are finding it extremely difficult to find jobs of the financial magnitude that will enable them to create lives of their own, apart from their parents. I have also seen this firsthand with my kid’s peers.
IMHO, and in light of all of this, I honestly believe all each of us can do is live life to the max each day, and come up with a plan to allow ourselves and our heirs to continue our lives at the highest level possible for as long as possible. At least, that’s what we are doing.
November 5, 2012 at 11:08 PM #753795citydwellerParticipantSD R, I think that where our philosophies diverge is that you equate wealth with quality of life. I believe that once basics are met (shelter, food, love), happiness is up to the individual. You can choose to be happy with what you have, or you can choose to believe that you do not have enough yet.
I spent the first 50 years of my life waiting for “just one more thing” before I would allow myself to be happy. But it seemed like there was always one more thing after that.
Maybe it’s just part of growing older (and wiser? lol) but now I am just so happy with all that I have, and I no longer worry about “oh my god!, what if the economy gets worse, what if interest rates go up (or down), what if a republican or democrat gets elected president.
We can choose to worry about the future for our children, but I can remember some of the coolest times of my 20’s and 30’s was sharing a small apartment with my fellow, struggling, retail/fast food cashier friends, and “surviving” on curry rice and hamburger helper. Sometimes we would splurge and go to the video store and rent a movie.
What I’m trying to say is that it’s so important to not get caught up into believing that we need “things” (beyond food, shelter, love) in order to be happy. There is no contest, no points scored for having the best stuff.
Do I totally sound like a liberal??
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