this is all part of Osama's master plan
8/15/2007 7:32:59 PM
Eugh. I knew there was a reason I never come into soapbox. I'll just say ditto to everything Mr. Joshua said. Salisburyboy, your views on inflation are flawed to say the least.
8/15/2007 10:24:44 PM
I notice Salisburyboy is starting to use credible sources ... perhaps the US is on the verge of collapse.
8/15/2007 11:59:20 PM
8/16/2007 7:10:42 AM
8/16/2007 7:11:28 AM
Question -- why do you sometimes put the word "establishment" in quotation marks for no reason, and other times leave it normal?
8/16/2007 9:59:02 AM
Wow, GrumpyGOP, good psychological analysis; you've got salisburyboy dead to rights.
8/16/2007 10:07:19 AM
Here's a big collection of other disjointed thoughts I've been having about salisburyboy in view of his recent threads:What makes the salisburyboy-ites peculiar isn't the conspiracy thing -- lots of people much more mainstream than them believe a great many of the theories circulating. It's the bizarre tendency towards survivalism.Why the hell does this happen? It isn't just that they're afraid, or at least I think it isn't. Fear alone, one would think, would prompt them already be in some degree of hiding, certainly not out in public, vocally -- if anonymously -- talking about it. Some like them, I suppose, probably come to places like this and talk all this nonsense just so that we will argue with them and thus, in a perverse way, console them that their fears are unfounded.But not salisburyboy and his ilk. They are afraid, clearly -- at some level, fear is a basic element in all motivations like the one I am about to describe. But their fear, in combination with other factors, has caused them to arrive at the conclusion that the only way they will ever be OK is to be in charge of their world.Now, fortunately for us, the "world" of the average salisburyboy-ite is quite small, and can normally be contained effectively within, oh, I don't know, a compound. Of course, they are denied complete charge -- the only kind acceptable to them -- over even that so long as there is any government to speak of. Each individual is clearly incapable of destroying the government or even simply escaping it (see: Jonestown). So, they hope for -- and eventually come to believe in -- the collapse of the government of its own accord, or perhaps as the result of a much larger overthrow. However, they will never actually lead the overthrow -- that would entail working in a world that is simply to large to control. They may well not even fight in the revolution if they can help it, because then they control far too little, and besides, their personal involvement is unlikely to change the outcome of the war and would thus only serve to bring them honor, an unecessary accoutrement to someone who is already in control of his compound.And so salisburyboy wants his guns and his MRE's and his water purifiers, so that whenever that magical thing that doesn't involve him at all finally brings about an end to the government, he can segue straight into his own world, or rather, his own real world, instead of the largely imagined one he's had to construct in order for this outcome to seem remotely plausible.---In the end, for all his talk of how terrible the government is for using force, it is ultimately the only thing he understands. Perhaps that's why he talks about it so damn much. He wants guns and food because he understands how he can use those as leverage to control his world. He has no comprehension of how to do it with commerce or diplomacy -- and, because he doesn't understand them, he has attributed both realms to the arcane arts of Illuminati Jews or whatever.[Edited on August 16, 2007 at 11:00 AM. Reason : no homo]
8/16/2007 11:00:18 AM
So I actually read all this and here are my thoughts:1) Why hasn't anyone pointed out that the rising price of oil and housing are both related to shifts in the demand curve? China consumes more oil because its industrializing, D moves right and there you go, a new price point. Same thing with raw materials in the US housing market, more people bought homes, D goes right. Is the latter due to unsound lending practices? Yes. Will we all die? No.2) Gold and silver have no intrinsic value beyond their shininess and relative rarity. Eventually, someone will realize this.3)
8/16/2007 11:17:02 AM
8/16/2007 11:21:32 AM
Meh, you're agreeing with me fundamentally, but you brought up something I failed to account for in my logic and that is best summed up by P.T. Barnum's quote, "no one ever went broke underestimating the the American public."So I concede that gold and silver will probably hold some value as long as man is man.
8/16/2007 11:25:25 AM
8/16/2007 11:40:34 AM
Thank you for proving my point that the only thing you seem to understand is force.Really, you're a lot more Russian in your personality than I think you've ever guessed.
8/16/2007 12:38:33 PM
understand thishttp://www.mcclatchydc.com/227/story/18902.html
8/16/2007 1:01:40 PM
yes..milk and eggs are most certainly essentials
8/16/2007 1:12:25 PM
Has anyone noticed the big article on the front page of CNN.com about the Dow down 300 some-odd points along with the other markets?I think it's kinda hard to argue that the dollar buys a whole lot less now than it did 4 or 5 years ago. Gas and food are great examples. Those aren't the only ones, just the easiest to relate to.
8/16/2007 1:42:24 PM
^^^ You really pick and choose whenever you cite anything that isn't directly from prisonplanet. Funny how you never include anything that doesn't support you and generally miss the point of every news article.
8/16/2007 1:49:20 PM
8/16/2007 1:51:01 PM
That is true, but I think GrumpyGOP and I were both referring to its intangible value, not its industrial value. Plastics are far more versatile than gold, but since they are abundant, they are cheap. Gold's only value in the pre-industrial age was its rarity, it isn't a good material from which to make tools. In a way, it has value for the same reason paper money has value . . . we place faith in its usefulness as a store of value. In the ancient world, its possession was a symbol of power and affluence, so in that sense it had a psychological utility.Titanium is an especially poor example for what you're getting at. It is a relatively difficult material to work with and requires specialized equipment and skills. In a completely collapsed society . . . the kind where we're all subsistence farming, then it wouldn't have any intrinsic industrial value at first. I see what you are saying, but this all depends on how far we fall, what our immediate needs our, and post-apocalyptic markets.[Edited on August 16, 2007 at 2:02 PM. Reason : ,]
8/16/2007 2:01:51 PM
8/16/2007 2:21:39 PM
lol.
8/16/2007 2:29:01 PM
8/16/2007 3:00:37 PM
http://www.prisonplanet.com/articles/august2007/160807_economic_collapse.htm
8/16/2007 3:50:13 PM
World Markets PLungehttp://money.cnn.com/data/world_markets/index.htmlHeavy losses sweep world markets...http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/6948916.stm
8/16/2007 5:33:10 PM
I'm still waiting on proof of this massive inflation you keep talking about.
8/16/2007 5:49:07 PM
^^ So are you suggesting that this is more than just a correction, but is instead the beginning of an economic downturn from which there will not be a recovery?
8/16/2007 5:53:09 PM
salisburyboy thinks we're going to go back to subsistence agriculture in the coming decades. I believe we'll see amazing technological advances, such as human-level AI, personal nanofactories, and vastly improved virtual reality. Of course, a mint would be great for any would-be survivalists. As long as he or she could keep power and feed flow, of course.[Edited on August 16, 2007 at 6:17 PM. Reason : d]
8/16/2007 6:17:23 PM
8/17/2007 8:50:24 AM
Salisburyboy cannot be serious about anything he said in this thread.This is comical.
8/18/2007 1:22:20 AM
Many of the problems he notes are quite real. This doesn't mean the end of civilization is nigh.
8/18/2007 1:23:40 AM
8/18/2007 1:57:12 AM
Whats the deal with all the "fear" politics?On one end,you have Bush trying to scare the world into his (terror)agenda.On the contrary, you have the C. theorists tryin to scare their followers into their agenda. I have yet to hear 1 positive conpiracy theory.Everythings is so grimm and apocalyptic. I think that hurts their cause, in the long run.[Edited on August 18, 2007 at 2:04 PM. Reason : .]
8/18/2007 2:02:50 PM
Everyone wants an apocalypse. At least it'd be interesting. Luckily for us in the First World, virtual reality should be equally interesting.
8/18/2007 3:46:34 PM
salisbury is right.someone please embed the following as evidence:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AUwfhHhn-H8&mode=related&search=
8/18/2007 6:27:27 PM
Can I just say in addition to ^^ and ^^^, that regardless of what the real state of anything is.The goddamned crazies on the right and the goddamned crazies on the left are both scaring me fucking witless? One sides screaming terror the others screaming the end of the world.Me, personally, if i'm going to stock something i'm not stocking gold. Imma get me a still and stock the booze and the ability to make it. That said, would everybody get a goddamned grip and stop screaming about the world coming to an end and maybe oh i dont know, fucking do something?
8/19/2007 10:35:30 PM
Some "MSM" outlets are getting at the truth...http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/08/17/opinion/edvarzi.php
8/20/2007 1:10:40 PM
I have a rather simple question. If Jews rule the world, then why are they so dependent on Muslim oil?
8/20/2007 1:16:06 PM
This does beg the question...if the evil jews who are so good at controlling everything are really running the show. How come they didnt see this coming and do something to stop it??thats a serious question. Did the jews just blow it? did centuries of manipulation and control finally catch up to them?
8/20/2007 1:27:53 PM
8/20/2007 1:38:02 PM
How do I become Jewish banking elite? This sounds like a very well paying job.
8/20/2007 1:39:30 PM
8/20/2007 1:52:21 PM
You never answered my question about the non existent "massive inflation" you keep mentioning.Tell me kid. Do you actually come up with this crap yourself, or have you been indoctrinate by someone else.
8/20/2007 1:58:15 PM
This has to be one of the dumbest things i ever read.
8/20/2007 1:58:31 PM
8/20/2007 2:09:47 PM
Thanks for the econ 101 lesson. I know what inflation is, and I know it exists. It's the "massive" part I disagree about.
8/20/2007 2:11:28 PM
8/20/2007 2:12:29 PM
That does not equal massive inflation.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:US_Historical_Inflation.svghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Inflation_rate_world_2007.png[Edited on August 20, 2007 at 2:22 PM. Reason : I added a few links for you.]
8/20/2007 2:15:40 PM
Right. Keep telling yourself "there is no massive inflation" while housing prices have almost doubled over the past 8-10 years, and the price of gas has doubled over the past 5-6 years....and the prices of many other goods & services continue to skyrocket.
8/20/2007 2:30:36 PM
I showed you two pieces of data that say otherwise. Housing and gas prices going up does not equal massive inflation.
8/20/2007 2:33:15 PM
it's not JUST housing and gas prices, but many other goods and servicesprices are going up dramatically across the board
8/20/2007 2:34:06 PM