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March 26, 2008 at 10:20 AM in reply to: Vote for McCain to stop a massive bailout of the irresponsible! #176781March 26, 2008 at 10:20 AM in reply to: Vote for McCain to stop a massive bailout of the irresponsible! #176784
nostradamus
Participant15 of the 19 terrorists in the 9/11 attacks were from Saudi Arabia and were trained in Afghanistan. We know that the info about weapons of mass destruction and the supposed threat posed by Iraq was falsified. Can someone tell me why we’re in Iraq?
March 26, 2008 at 10:20 AM in reply to: Vote for McCain to stop a massive bailout of the irresponsible! #176790nostradamus
Participant15 of the 19 terrorists in the 9/11 attacks were from Saudi Arabia and were trained in Afghanistan. We know that the info about weapons of mass destruction and the supposed threat posed by Iraq was falsified. Can someone tell me why we’re in Iraq?
March 26, 2008 at 10:20 AM in reply to: Vote for McCain to stop a massive bailout of the irresponsible! #176881nostradamus
Participant15 of the 19 terrorists in the 9/11 attacks were from Saudi Arabia and were trained in Afghanistan. We know that the info about weapons of mass destruction and the supposed threat posed by Iraq was falsified. Can someone tell me why we’re in Iraq?
March 25, 2008 at 4:39 PM in reply to: Vote for McCain to stop a massive bailout of the irresponsible! #176168nostradamus
ParticipantI think it’s pretty safe to say that no matter who gets elected, American military presence in Iraq will be permanent (like Korea, Japan, Germany) and the investment banks will be getting bailed out as much as possible. All paid for by us.
The question is, how long are Americans going to take this? I for one am sick of being an ostrich. At least 1/3 of most people’s lifelong working career is dedicated to paying taxes, and those taxes are being used to enrich a privileged few. After sales tax and everything else we probably pay the equivalent of taxes in a socialist society but we don’t get any of the benefits of one (health care, retirement, etc).
Check this out, especially all the taxes and acts that led up to it. Please do not take this as incitement, rather just an historical observation of the similarities between then and now.
March 25, 2008 at 4:39 PM in reply to: Vote for McCain to stop a massive bailout of the irresponsible! #176522nostradamus
ParticipantI think it’s pretty safe to say that no matter who gets elected, American military presence in Iraq will be permanent (like Korea, Japan, Germany) and the investment banks will be getting bailed out as much as possible. All paid for by us.
The question is, how long are Americans going to take this? I for one am sick of being an ostrich. At least 1/3 of most people’s lifelong working career is dedicated to paying taxes, and those taxes are being used to enrich a privileged few. After sales tax and everything else we probably pay the equivalent of taxes in a socialist society but we don’t get any of the benefits of one (health care, retirement, etc).
Check this out, especially all the taxes and acts that led up to it. Please do not take this as incitement, rather just an historical observation of the similarities between then and now.
March 25, 2008 at 4:39 PM in reply to: Vote for McCain to stop a massive bailout of the irresponsible! #176526nostradamus
ParticipantI think it’s pretty safe to say that no matter who gets elected, American military presence in Iraq will be permanent (like Korea, Japan, Germany) and the investment banks will be getting bailed out as much as possible. All paid for by us.
The question is, how long are Americans going to take this? I for one am sick of being an ostrich. At least 1/3 of most people’s lifelong working career is dedicated to paying taxes, and those taxes are being used to enrich a privileged few. After sales tax and everything else we probably pay the equivalent of taxes in a socialist society but we don’t get any of the benefits of one (health care, retirement, etc).
Check this out, especially all the taxes and acts that led up to it. Please do not take this as incitement, rather just an historical observation of the similarities between then and now.
March 25, 2008 at 4:39 PM in reply to: Vote for McCain to stop a massive bailout of the irresponsible! #176528nostradamus
ParticipantI think it’s pretty safe to say that no matter who gets elected, American military presence in Iraq will be permanent (like Korea, Japan, Germany) and the investment banks will be getting bailed out as much as possible. All paid for by us.
The question is, how long are Americans going to take this? I for one am sick of being an ostrich. At least 1/3 of most people’s lifelong working career is dedicated to paying taxes, and those taxes are being used to enrich a privileged few. After sales tax and everything else we probably pay the equivalent of taxes in a socialist society but we don’t get any of the benefits of one (health care, retirement, etc).
Check this out, especially all the taxes and acts that led up to it. Please do not take this as incitement, rather just an historical observation of the similarities between then and now.
March 25, 2008 at 4:39 PM in reply to: Vote for McCain to stop a massive bailout of the irresponsible! #176618nostradamus
ParticipantI think it’s pretty safe to say that no matter who gets elected, American military presence in Iraq will be permanent (like Korea, Japan, Germany) and the investment banks will be getting bailed out as much as possible. All paid for by us.
The question is, how long are Americans going to take this? I for one am sick of being an ostrich. At least 1/3 of most people’s lifelong working career is dedicated to paying taxes, and those taxes are being used to enrich a privileged few. After sales tax and everything else we probably pay the equivalent of taxes in a socialist society but we don’t get any of the benefits of one (health care, retirement, etc).
Check this out, especially all the taxes and acts that led up to it. Please do not take this as incitement, rather just an historical observation of the similarities between then and now.
March 20, 2008 at 5:46 PM in reply to: What am I missing? Is that a train coming at me or am I Chicken Little? #173964nostradamus
Participantecho5 is no j6p. A monster train is coming and the securitization of subprime debt is driving it. In the engine car we have the fed, feeding the furnace with bushels of dollars at an ever-increasing speed that somehow never seems to keep pace with the train. In the caboose we find Joe 6-pack, discussing (during commercial breaks from Hee-Haw, American Idol, and Lost) what Obama’s pastor said or what Hillary’s husband did or where McCain was born or what Britney is up to these days.
Why not precious metals? Because they may be just as bubbly. What if someone, somewhere, discovers the mother-of-all-mother-lodes gold vein? What makes these metals “precious”? Just their rarity? I know gold is used in some semiconductors but silicon is much cheaper and precious IMO.
Anyhow, for some comfort you can look at past recessions to see how those panned out. There are some similarities to what’s going on now, but still we are in a never-before-seen situation here and nobody knows what will happen.
March 20, 2008 at 5:46 PM in reply to: What am I missing? Is that a train coming at me or am I Chicken Little? #174305nostradamus
Participantecho5 is no j6p. A monster train is coming and the securitization of subprime debt is driving it. In the engine car we have the fed, feeding the furnace with bushels of dollars at an ever-increasing speed that somehow never seems to keep pace with the train. In the caboose we find Joe 6-pack, discussing (during commercial breaks from Hee-Haw, American Idol, and Lost) what Obama’s pastor said or what Hillary’s husband did or where McCain was born or what Britney is up to these days.
Why not precious metals? Because they may be just as bubbly. What if someone, somewhere, discovers the mother-of-all-mother-lodes gold vein? What makes these metals “precious”? Just their rarity? I know gold is used in some semiconductors but silicon is much cheaper and precious IMO.
Anyhow, for some comfort you can look at past recessions to see how those panned out. There are some similarities to what’s going on now, but still we are in a never-before-seen situation here and nobody knows what will happen.
March 20, 2008 at 5:46 PM in reply to: What am I missing? Is that a train coming at me or am I Chicken Little? #174314nostradamus
Participantecho5 is no j6p. A monster train is coming and the securitization of subprime debt is driving it. In the engine car we have the fed, feeding the furnace with bushels of dollars at an ever-increasing speed that somehow never seems to keep pace with the train. In the caboose we find Joe 6-pack, discussing (during commercial breaks from Hee-Haw, American Idol, and Lost) what Obama’s pastor said or what Hillary’s husband did or where McCain was born or what Britney is up to these days.
Why not precious metals? Because they may be just as bubbly. What if someone, somewhere, discovers the mother-of-all-mother-lodes gold vein? What makes these metals “precious”? Just their rarity? I know gold is used in some semiconductors but silicon is much cheaper and precious IMO.
Anyhow, for some comfort you can look at past recessions to see how those panned out. There are some similarities to what’s going on now, but still we are in a never-before-seen situation here and nobody knows what will happen.
March 20, 2008 at 5:46 PM in reply to: What am I missing? Is that a train coming at me or am I Chicken Little? #174321nostradamus
Participantecho5 is no j6p. A monster train is coming and the securitization of subprime debt is driving it. In the engine car we have the fed, feeding the furnace with bushels of dollars at an ever-increasing speed that somehow never seems to keep pace with the train. In the caboose we find Joe 6-pack, discussing (during commercial breaks from Hee-Haw, American Idol, and Lost) what Obama’s pastor said or what Hillary’s husband did or where McCain was born or what Britney is up to these days.
Why not precious metals? Because they may be just as bubbly. What if someone, somewhere, discovers the mother-of-all-mother-lodes gold vein? What makes these metals “precious”? Just their rarity? I know gold is used in some semiconductors but silicon is much cheaper and precious IMO.
Anyhow, for some comfort you can look at past recessions to see how those panned out. There are some similarities to what’s going on now, but still we are in a never-before-seen situation here and nobody knows what will happen.
March 20, 2008 at 5:46 PM in reply to: What am I missing? Is that a train coming at me or am I Chicken Little? #174409nostradamus
Participantecho5 is no j6p. A monster train is coming and the securitization of subprime debt is driving it. In the engine car we have the fed, feeding the furnace with bushels of dollars at an ever-increasing speed that somehow never seems to keep pace with the train. In the caboose we find Joe 6-pack, discussing (during commercial breaks from Hee-Haw, American Idol, and Lost) what Obama’s pastor said or what Hillary’s husband did or where McCain was born or what Britney is up to these days.
Why not precious metals? Because they may be just as bubbly. What if someone, somewhere, discovers the mother-of-all-mother-lodes gold vein? What makes these metals “precious”? Just their rarity? I know gold is used in some semiconductors but silicon is much cheaper and precious IMO.
Anyhow, for some comfort you can look at past recessions to see how those panned out. There are some similarities to what’s going on now, but still we are in a never-before-seen situation here and nobody knows what will happen.
nostradamus
Participant$405k for a paired home a.k.a. townhome a.k.a. glorified condo… Yep, looks like sellers are still in denial.
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