Posted on 06/27/2008 6:10:34 AM PDT by Eddiehaskell7
Brace Yourselves.
“Thanks but Im not as well versed as you suggest. I actually am a long term investor and this is the first time I bailed out. It was just a hunch, one Ive had before but never as strong.”
Beautifully done! I don’t care whether you get it from a newsletter, a litle bird, tea leaves, or a feeling in your stomach! Congrats again!
We all are already concerned. We don’t need a vanity post to promote more gloom and doom.
If we didn’t need vanity posts about the doom and gloom, at least 50% of FR would disappear, between the economy, the terrorists, the rampant decadance in our society, etc.
I think people like doom and gloom...at least when it’s about the other side.
None.
Higher gas prices are due to China: enormous demand which is subsidized by the Chinese government at below-market prices using money which is externally undervalued. In other words - the Chinese central bank is having a distortive effect on fuel prices.
Food prices are driven higher by the enormous redirection of grains to alternative energy subsidies - since grains are inputs into cattlefeed and almost every processed food product (hydrogenated corn syrup, various fillers), the price of meat and dairy as well as baked and packaged goods has gone up.
“If we didnt need vanity posts about the doom and gloom, at least 50% of FR would disappear,”
Can’t argue with that!
The market rises, the market falls. Historically there is no ten year period when the market has not risen including the ten years before and after the Great Depression. Folks, what is there to complain about? Gas may be at 4 dollars but we don’ have lines and rationing like in Carter years. Interest rates are still low. Remember the late 70’s early 80’s when mortgages were 13-16%. Inflation is still in check. Again, late 70’s early 80’s...double digit inflation. 96% of all mortgages are being met and of the remaining 4%, most are arranged with the lenders to stay afloat.
Just because the MSM is trying to invoke panic does not mean we have to buy into it. Remember, this is an election year. EVERYTHING NEEDS to be bad otherwise this country might actually elect some (Evil) Republicans.
Oh, and one last little tidbit.
As a percentage of GDP defense spending, including Iraq and Afghanistan only total 2%. This is the smallest defense spending has ever been. Constitutionally speaking, defense is the only enumerate expenditure congress can make. Everything else is either unconstitutional, or extra-constitutional.
Oh BTW, its going on 4:40PM here in the east coast. The earth is still here. Everyone around me is talking about their weekend plans. (spend money spend money)
The sun is still shining. I am getting a little tired from “bracing” Can I let go now?
...and what about traffic? I have never road home in traffic during an apocalypse. Should I give myself a little more time to get home?
>>Seclorum is a Latin word that means "of or for the ages,"
seclorum
Word mod cl/cul
An internal 'cl' might be rendered by 'cul'
secul.orum N 2 2 GEN P N
seculum, seculi N (2nd) N [EEXCM] Later
world/universe; secular/temporal/earthly/worldly affairs/cares/temptation;
1 John 4:4
4 You, dear children, are from God and have overcome them, because the one who is in you is greater than the one who is in the world.
The Hegelian Dialectic is practiced by just about everyone these days in various fields. Left and Right.
secul.orum (seclorum)
secul- +(Latin: saecularis, pertaining to a generation or age; saeculum, saeclum, period of a man's life, generation; period of a hundred years)
secular1. Worldly rather than spiritual.
2. Not specifically relating to religion or to a religious body: "They were playing secular music instead of sacred hymns."
3. Relating to or advocating secularism.
4. Not bound by monastic restrictions; especially, not belonging to a religious order (a reference to the clergy).
5. Occurring or observed once in an age or century.
6. Lasting from century to century. 7. Etymology: it was used in early Christian texts for the "temporal world"; as opposed to the "spiritual world"; and that was the sense in which its derived adjective Latin saecularis passed via Old French seculer into English.The more familiar modern English "non-religious" meaning came into the language at about the 16th century.
secularism1. A doctrine that rejects religion and religious considerations.
2. A secular spirit or tendency; especially, a system of political or social philosophy that rejects all forms of religious faith and worship.
2. The view that public education and other matters of civil policy should be conducted without the introduction of a religious element.The fundamental principle of secularism is that, in his whole conduct, man should be guided exclusively by considerations derived from the present life itself. Anything that is above or beyond the present life should be entirely overlooked.
Whether God exists or not, whether the soul is immortal or not, are questions which at best cannot be answered, and on which consequently no motives of action can be based.
secularist1. An advocate of secularism; someone who believes that religion should be excluded from government and education.
2. Generally a reference to an ideology that promotes the secular; as opposed to the religious, particularly within the public sphere.secularistic1. Leaning toward religious skepticism or indifference.
2. The view that religious considerations should be excluded from civil affairs or public education.secularity1. The condition or quality of being secular.
2. Something secular.secularization1. The transfer of property from ecclesiastical to civil possession.
2. A procedure of changing something (art or education or society or morality etc.) so it is no longer under the control or influence of religion.
3. The process of becoming secular; the separation of civil or educational institutions from ecclesiastical control.Secularization is also defined by some as the process in which mystical, sacred, and otherworldly explanations, outlooks, beliefs, interests, and concerns are replaced by rational, critical evaluations and by pragmatic and utilitarian standards.
secularize, secularizing, secularized1. To transfer something from a religious to a nonreligious use, or from control by a religious body to control by the state or a lay body.
2. To remove the religious dimension or element from something, or otherwise make it secular.
3. To make secular; separate from a religious or a spiritual connection or influences.
4. To make worldly or unspiritual; to imbue with secularism.
>>The Hegelian Dialectic is practiced by
>>just about everyone these days in various
>>fields. Left and Right.
Yes, it is.
Chinese... Communist... Capitalists.
We’ve lost thousands of lives in Iraq. We need to at least get some cheap oil out of the deal.
A stable ME with a super-power in the middle might do this. We’ll have to bite it in the mean time.
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