patches70 wrote:jgordon1111 wrote:Damn patches you didnt hold anything back did you, my suggestion to millinials, other less than prepared people would be find some Amish or real farmer's, learn to shut up and survive if this worse case scenario should happen, not saying it will, but look around and pay attention to what is happening
Mets and waauw think I don't care about the poor. This isn't true at all but they can think what they want I suppose. I just think the best way to help regular people is to let people keep what they earn, have a stable medium with which to convert one's labors into the goods and services they require to live a just, moral, productive and hopefully happy life.
What is really sad is that everything, and I mean every single thing produced today that people need to live, is cheaper now than ever in the history of the entire human species. Never has food been so cheap and plentiful, never has housing been so adequate and plentiful, never has there been more opportunity and hope than there is now, today. At least if you measure in anything
other than whatever fiat currency one is using. In fiat currency everything is more expensive than ever and hope is fading for the most vulnerable.
Fifty years ago an ounce of gold would buy you a hundred loaves or so of bread. Today and ounce of the exact same gold would buy you eight hundred loaves of bread. And it's the same for any other "thing" you could imagine to buy, priced in anything other than fiat currency. As things
should be cheaper. We are better at growing food, conserving resources, more efficient ways of doing things, mass production, better materials and knowledge etc etc.
How can one explain why everything is cheaper than ever before and yet too many people still can't afford the basic things they need to live a decent life?
And people think the politicians are going to fix this? The politicians caused this when they opted for the moral hazard that is fiat currency. Fiat currency has it's pro's that's for sure, but people tend to ignore or forget the inherent flaws in such a system.
And in the US and the euro it's not
just a fiat currency but it's a debt based fiat currency which is the biggest and longest running scam in human civilization that is rooted in outright fraud.
At least the Greenback and the Continental weren't debt based. But they failed as well because of the flaws in fiat currency.
It's so bad that the thing that the politicians and bankers, in the US and across the pond in the EU, fear the most is deflation. God forbid things got cheaper priced in currency. That could be a boon to the poor, if they could hold onto their meager jobs during a deflation cycle.
And it's always the same, the central banks fearing deflation start printing like fools trying to inject inflation and it gets out of control. It just keeps happening over and over again and no one seems to think "hey, maybe there is something fundamentally wrong with fiat currency systems".
The Ben Bernanke was before Congress and he was asked "What is the definition of a dollar?"
We all know what it is, A Federal Reserve Note is a note of a debt owed. A dollar represents what the government owes the Central Bank (most people don't realize that but that's what a Federal Reserve Note is, and that's what a euro is as well, a note of debt owed to the Central Bank). The Ben Bernanke answered that question with-
"A dollar is what you can buy with it". Haha! He went on about purchasing power, but that purchasing power is decided by arbitrary judgment by the Federal Reserve and it changes constantly and artificially contrary to market forces. And this is the basis upon which the politicians are supposed to fix the "wealth disparity"?
It's like trying to build a house on shifting sand, the house ain't gonna stand for very long. With such an arbitrary and shifting value of the very thing we use to buy things and with which we measure "wealth disparity" is it any wonder we have wealth disparity?