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faterikcartman
Participant[quote=sobmaz]It is not about Wal-Mart or Home Depot raising prices it is about your dollar being worth less.
Gold is not up, the value of your dollar is down so it takes more dollars to buy the same gold.
When you hear the terms Quantitative easing spouted by the FED just remember it is another term for PRINTING MONEY.
Those with savings are being robbed blind, those with massive debts, like the Federal Government are making out like bandits. Banks are doing pretty good too. Money lent to banks at zero percent is lent to the public for 5 to 23 percent. And the looming inflation will help the banks with their realestate, eventually.
If you have wealth, don’t keep it in cash.[/quote]
Yes, yes, and yes; but where should the cash go? Use it to buy an expensive asset with a lot of debt and pay the debt off with inflated dollars? What asset won’t depreciate? Or what is the alternate answer?
faterikcartman
Participant[quote=sobmaz]It is not about Wal-Mart or Home Depot raising prices it is about your dollar being worth less.
Gold is not up, the value of your dollar is down so it takes more dollars to buy the same gold.
When you hear the terms Quantitative easing spouted by the FED just remember it is another term for PRINTING MONEY.
Those with savings are being robbed blind, those with massive debts, like the Federal Government are making out like bandits. Banks are doing pretty good too. Money lent to banks at zero percent is lent to the public for 5 to 23 percent. And the looming inflation will help the banks with their realestate, eventually.
If you have wealth, don’t keep it in cash.[/quote]
Yes, yes, and yes; but where should the cash go? Use it to buy an expensive asset with a lot of debt and pay the debt off with inflated dollars? What asset won’t depreciate? Or what is the alternate answer?
faterikcartman
Participant[quote=sobmaz]It is not about Wal-Mart or Home Depot raising prices it is about your dollar being worth less.
Gold is not up, the value of your dollar is down so it takes more dollars to buy the same gold.
When you hear the terms Quantitative easing spouted by the FED just remember it is another term for PRINTING MONEY.
Those with savings are being robbed blind, those with massive debts, like the Federal Government are making out like bandits. Banks are doing pretty good too. Money lent to banks at zero percent is lent to the public for 5 to 23 percent. And the looming inflation will help the banks with their realestate, eventually.
If you have wealth, don’t keep it in cash.[/quote]
Yes, yes, and yes; but where should the cash go? Use it to buy an expensive asset with a lot of debt and pay the debt off with inflated dollars? What asset won’t depreciate? Or what is the alternate answer?
faterikcartman
Participant[quote=sobmaz]It is not about Wal-Mart or Home Depot raising prices it is about your dollar being worth less.
Gold is not up, the value of your dollar is down so it takes more dollars to buy the same gold.
When you hear the terms Quantitative easing spouted by the FED just remember it is another term for PRINTING MONEY.
Those with savings are being robbed blind, those with massive debts, like the Federal Government are making out like bandits. Banks are doing pretty good too. Money lent to banks at zero percent is lent to the public for 5 to 23 percent. And the looming inflation will help the banks with their realestate, eventually.
If you have wealth, don’t keep it in cash.[/quote]
Yes, yes, and yes; but where should the cash go? Use it to buy an expensive asset with a lot of debt and pay the debt off with inflated dollars? What asset won’t depreciate? Or what is the alternate answer?
faterikcartman
ParticipantI may as well add the observation that in law school most of the cases you read in contracts and property law involve close family members trying to screw each other. Good luck and be careful.
faterikcartman
ParticipantI may as well add the observation that in law school most of the cases you read in contracts and property law involve close family members trying to screw each other. Good luck and be careful.
faterikcartman
ParticipantI may as well add the observation that in law school most of the cases you read in contracts and property law involve close family members trying to screw each other. Good luck and be careful.
faterikcartman
ParticipantI may as well add the observation that in law school most of the cases you read in contracts and property law involve close family members trying to screw each other. Good luck and be careful.
faterikcartman
ParticipantI may as well add the observation that in law school most of the cases you read in contracts and property law involve close family members trying to screw each other. Good luck and be careful.
faterikcartman
ParticipantAnyway, look for where pipes come into the house. What about from garage to house? And any vent holes in your roof and eaves. Use the heaviest gauge steel wool to stuff in small holes and cracks and wire mesh for large openings.
faterikcartman
ParticipantAnyway, look for where pipes come into the house. What about from garage to house? And any vent holes in your roof and eaves. Use the heaviest gauge steel wool to stuff in small holes and cracks and wire mesh for large openings.
faterikcartman
ParticipantAnyway, look for where pipes come into the house. What about from garage to house? And any vent holes in your roof and eaves. Use the heaviest gauge steel wool to stuff in small holes and cracks and wire mesh for large openings.
faterikcartman
ParticipantAnyway, look for where pipes come into the house. What about from garage to house? And any vent holes in your roof and eaves. Use the heaviest gauge steel wool to stuff in small holes and cracks and wire mesh for large openings.
faterikcartman
ParticipantAnyway, look for where pipes come into the house. What about from garage to house? And any vent holes in your roof and eaves. Use the heaviest gauge steel wool to stuff in small holes and cracks and wire mesh for large openings.
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