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March 2, 2009 at 9:45 PM in reply to: Dr. Doom Roubini is scared – economy worse than predicted #358944March 2, 2009 at 9:45 PM in reply to: Dr. Doom Roubini is scared – economy worse than predicted #359245
gandalf
ParticipantParamount, just curious what you know about the energy industry, O&G research and exploration, supply and production, pricing, costs, delivery models, risk management, multiplier effects?
What do you know?
Family business on my side, relative in upper echelons of the O&G industry. Things have changed course and the drivers are economics and national security.
Hippy?
You’re a fucking loser.
Same with that sad-sack republican party of yours, shipwreck in slow-motion. Not dem but it sure was satisfying to watch them kick you bums in the proverbial nuts last November. You ignorant clowns.
Depression economy, Islamic fundamentalism, peak oil and climate change — and SIMPLETON RETARDS like you ridicule efforts to re-tool our economy?
What a fucking loser.
March 2, 2009 at 9:45 PM in reply to: Dr. Doom Roubini is scared – economy worse than predicted #359388gandalf
ParticipantParamount, just curious what you know about the energy industry, O&G research and exploration, supply and production, pricing, costs, delivery models, risk management, multiplier effects?
What do you know?
Family business on my side, relative in upper echelons of the O&G industry. Things have changed course and the drivers are economics and national security.
Hippy?
You’re a fucking loser.
Same with that sad-sack republican party of yours, shipwreck in slow-motion. Not dem but it sure was satisfying to watch them kick you bums in the proverbial nuts last November. You ignorant clowns.
Depression economy, Islamic fundamentalism, peak oil and climate change — and SIMPLETON RETARDS like you ridicule efforts to re-tool our economy?
What a fucking loser.
March 2, 2009 at 9:45 PM in reply to: Dr. Doom Roubini is scared – economy worse than predicted #359424gandalf
ParticipantParamount, just curious what you know about the energy industry, O&G research and exploration, supply and production, pricing, costs, delivery models, risk management, multiplier effects?
What do you know?
Family business on my side, relative in upper echelons of the O&G industry. Things have changed course and the drivers are economics and national security.
Hippy?
You’re a fucking loser.
Same with that sad-sack republican party of yours, shipwreck in slow-motion. Not dem but it sure was satisfying to watch them kick you bums in the proverbial nuts last November. You ignorant clowns.
Depression economy, Islamic fundamentalism, peak oil and climate change — and SIMPLETON RETARDS like you ridicule efforts to re-tool our economy?
What a fucking loser.
March 2, 2009 at 9:45 PM in reply to: Dr. Doom Roubini is scared – economy worse than predicted #359527gandalf
ParticipantParamount, just curious what you know about the energy industry, O&G research and exploration, supply and production, pricing, costs, delivery models, risk management, multiplier effects?
What do you know?
Family business on my side, relative in upper echelons of the O&G industry. Things have changed course and the drivers are economics and national security.
Hippy?
You’re a fucking loser.
Same with that sad-sack republican party of yours, shipwreck in slow-motion. Not dem but it sure was satisfying to watch them kick you bums in the proverbial nuts last November. You ignorant clowns.
Depression economy, Islamic fundamentalism, peak oil and climate change — and SIMPLETON RETARDS like you ridicule efforts to re-tool our economy?
What a fucking loser.
March 2, 2009 at 8:31 PM in reply to: Off Topic: “Buffett says U.S. Treasury bubble one for the ages” #358904gandalf
ParticipantGood post, John. IMHO, this is ‘Question of the Year’.
We’ve got tremendous fiscal stimulus in the short term, immediate attempts at stabilization and also mitigation of unemployment — then collapse of the currency in the longer-term, debasement of debt and ‘reset’ of the economy, possibly with broader geopolitical consequences. Only way out as I see it.
Dollar savers will get screwed. And housing won’t come back for 20 years, not in real terms. I suspect housing price appreciation will lag inflation for a number of years to come. Property financed on a fixed rate might be a winner. What else? Gold? Commodities? Stocks?
March 2, 2009 at 8:31 PM in reply to: Off Topic: “Buffett says U.S. Treasury bubble one for the ages” #359206gandalf
ParticipantGood post, John. IMHO, this is ‘Question of the Year’.
We’ve got tremendous fiscal stimulus in the short term, immediate attempts at stabilization and also mitigation of unemployment — then collapse of the currency in the longer-term, debasement of debt and ‘reset’ of the economy, possibly with broader geopolitical consequences. Only way out as I see it.
Dollar savers will get screwed. And housing won’t come back for 20 years, not in real terms. I suspect housing price appreciation will lag inflation for a number of years to come. Property financed on a fixed rate might be a winner. What else? Gold? Commodities? Stocks?
March 2, 2009 at 8:31 PM in reply to: Off Topic: “Buffett says U.S. Treasury bubble one for the ages” #359349gandalf
ParticipantGood post, John. IMHO, this is ‘Question of the Year’.
We’ve got tremendous fiscal stimulus in the short term, immediate attempts at stabilization and also mitigation of unemployment — then collapse of the currency in the longer-term, debasement of debt and ‘reset’ of the economy, possibly with broader geopolitical consequences. Only way out as I see it.
Dollar savers will get screwed. And housing won’t come back for 20 years, not in real terms. I suspect housing price appreciation will lag inflation for a number of years to come. Property financed on a fixed rate might be a winner. What else? Gold? Commodities? Stocks?
March 2, 2009 at 8:31 PM in reply to: Off Topic: “Buffett says U.S. Treasury bubble one for the ages” #359384gandalf
ParticipantGood post, John. IMHO, this is ‘Question of the Year’.
We’ve got tremendous fiscal stimulus in the short term, immediate attempts at stabilization and also mitigation of unemployment — then collapse of the currency in the longer-term, debasement of debt and ‘reset’ of the economy, possibly with broader geopolitical consequences. Only way out as I see it.
Dollar savers will get screwed. And housing won’t come back for 20 years, not in real terms. I suspect housing price appreciation will lag inflation for a number of years to come. Property financed on a fixed rate might be a winner. What else? Gold? Commodities? Stocks?
March 2, 2009 at 8:31 PM in reply to: Off Topic: “Buffett says U.S. Treasury bubble one for the ages” #359487gandalf
ParticipantGood post, John. IMHO, this is ‘Question of the Year’.
We’ve got tremendous fiscal stimulus in the short term, immediate attempts at stabilization and also mitigation of unemployment — then collapse of the currency in the longer-term, debasement of debt and ‘reset’ of the economy, possibly with broader geopolitical consequences. Only way out as I see it.
Dollar savers will get screwed. And housing won’t come back for 20 years, not in real terms. I suspect housing price appreciation will lag inflation for a number of years to come. Property financed on a fixed rate might be a winner. What else? Gold? Commodities? Stocks?
gandalf
ParticipantThat’s funny…
Great post.
gandalf
ParticipantThat’s funny…
Great post.
gandalf
ParticipantThat’s funny…
Great post.
gandalf
ParticipantThat’s funny…
Great post.
gandalf
ParticipantThat’s funny…
Great post.
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