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drunkle
Participantuco:
i’m not really concerned about political or financial stability at this point, i do believe the economic systems of “developed” countries are resilient enough. japan has yet to dissolve, right? but in the context of chris’ post, i didn’t agree that his tone was necessary with regards to the op.
as to “stability”, he *is* in a far better position than i to prognosticate on the situation, so if a “total collapse” is in the cards, i will take his word for it.
as a layman, i agree with everything else you wrote. to add, i’m not as concerned about “getting the guilty” as they were certainly acting within the bounds of the law. enough so, anyway, that it wasn’t a big deal at the time. but planning for the future… as you say, homes are assets. home builders to re agents, we’ve had enough of unregulated “free trade”.
drunkle
Participantunless you have cute girls with frosty nipples at your house, your ac sucks.
course, if you don’t have frosty man nipples either, you might be +1.
drunkle
Participantunless you have cute girls with frosty nipples at your house, your ac sucks.
course, if you don’t have frosty man nipples either, you might be +1.
drunkle
Participantunless you have cute girls with frosty nipples at your house, your ac sucks.
course, if you don’t have frosty man nipples either, you might be +1.
August 17, 2007 at 5:48 PM in reply to: Are we gonna experience the same Japanese Housing Burst at 1991? #77273drunkle
Participantthere is the defense industry. and boeing. and lawyers. and hippies. exporting hippies and importing techies doesn’t sound that bad.
August 17, 2007 at 5:48 PM in reply to: Are we gonna experience the same Japanese Housing Burst at 1991? #77394drunkle
Participantthere is the defense industry. and boeing. and lawyers. and hippies. exporting hippies and importing techies doesn’t sound that bad.
August 17, 2007 at 5:48 PM in reply to: Are we gonna experience the same Japanese Housing Burst at 1991? #77420drunkle
Participantthere is the defense industry. and boeing. and lawyers. and hippies. exporting hippies and importing techies doesn’t sound that bad.
drunkle
Participanthow is a bailout contributing to stability? gaming the system means more and more people who play by the rules becoming discontent. stability is only achieved by making the masses content, tilting things against the masses only results in political upheaval.
a meltdown in the *current* financial system means there will be chaos. people will get hurt. but as it is, people are still getting hurt anyway, it’s just a matter of who you consider are “people”.
things are apparently quite fubar. saving the current system in order to perpetuate a fubar system is a farce. seriously, what is the long term plan? what is the remediation? there is none, only day to day hand to mouth. keep things going until i get mine, then off to the caymans.
the op is merely having a revelation about How Things Work. he certainly wasn’t plotting to get rich on the situation. but, there are plenty of examples in the past of people who did indeed get rich off the misery of others. it’s a fundamental strategy, buy low sell high. be prepared and take your opportunities as they come. in the end, if the system fails, it wont matter either way. but in the face of adversity, do you damn best. lemonade, glass half full, etc.
hell, the only potential solution to the crisis is indeed betting against the house. inflation will kill your mattress backed securities, stock/bond markets around the globe are in distress, commodities are just as vulnerable not to mention, nobody actually buys physical gold…
drunkle
Participanthow is a bailout contributing to stability? gaming the system means more and more people who play by the rules becoming discontent. stability is only achieved by making the masses content, tilting things against the masses only results in political upheaval.
a meltdown in the *current* financial system means there will be chaos. people will get hurt. but as it is, people are still getting hurt anyway, it’s just a matter of who you consider are “people”.
things are apparently quite fubar. saving the current system in order to perpetuate a fubar system is a farce. seriously, what is the long term plan? what is the remediation? there is none, only day to day hand to mouth. keep things going until i get mine, then off to the caymans.
the op is merely having a revelation about How Things Work. he certainly wasn’t plotting to get rich on the situation. but, there are plenty of examples in the past of people who did indeed get rich off the misery of others. it’s a fundamental strategy, buy low sell high. be prepared and take your opportunities as they come. in the end, if the system fails, it wont matter either way. but in the face of adversity, do you damn best. lemonade, glass half full, etc.
hell, the only potential solution to the crisis is indeed betting against the house. inflation will kill your mattress backed securities, stock/bond markets around the globe are in distress, commodities are just as vulnerable not to mention, nobody actually buys physical gold…
drunkle
Participanthow is a bailout contributing to stability? gaming the system means more and more people who play by the rules becoming discontent. stability is only achieved by making the masses content, tilting things against the masses only results in political upheaval.
a meltdown in the *current* financial system means there will be chaos. people will get hurt. but as it is, people are still getting hurt anyway, it’s just a matter of who you consider are “people”.
things are apparently quite fubar. saving the current system in order to perpetuate a fubar system is a farce. seriously, what is the long term plan? what is the remediation? there is none, only day to day hand to mouth. keep things going until i get mine, then off to the caymans.
the op is merely having a revelation about How Things Work. he certainly wasn’t plotting to get rich on the situation. but, there are plenty of examples in the past of people who did indeed get rich off the misery of others. it’s a fundamental strategy, buy low sell high. be prepared and take your opportunities as they come. in the end, if the system fails, it wont matter either way. but in the face of adversity, do you damn best. lemonade, glass half full, etc.
hell, the only potential solution to the crisis is indeed betting against the house. inflation will kill your mattress backed securities, stock/bond markets around the globe are in distress, commodities are just as vulnerable not to mention, nobody actually buys physical gold…
drunkle
Participantthe Ac. banks have the best ac.
drunkle
Participantthe Ac. banks have the best ac.
drunkle
Participantthe Ac. banks have the best ac.
drunkle
Participantthat’s rich. literally. preach “responsibility” to the poor while denouncing your own.
“it’s poor people’s fault there’s pollution! what? nevermind my landfills, poor people suck!”
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