Posted on 03/20/2011 12:31:21 PM PDT by Kaslin
"We're mad as hell, and we're not going to take it anymore!"
I have Dish Network basic service for $27 month. If not for a few christian channels I sometimes watch I would dump it too if I wasn’t employed.
Also have Verizon FIOS and landline costing $77 month which is a rip off. Same would apply.
Only 4 people live here and I added a fifth small flat screen next to my computer only to quickly learn that I'm not much of a "multi tasker" anymore. I can't be on the comp and pay attention to the tv at the same time, so the newest one gathers dust.
Dontcha know that it's the epitome of freeperdom to claim not even to own a tv?
As if that could ever happen.
I really liked your entire post a lot.
Thanks.
I never quite understood the "TV in the bathroom" thing.
We ditched cable completely 4 years ago when we moved.
Actually, we ditched the TV about 20 years ago but then our condo wired the building and it was part of the condo fee so we did have cable for a few years.
Now we watch netflicks and Hulu.
No, we are doomed as a species.
Hi there. I am the epitome...23 years and no tv.
Although you will be heartened to know that I am considering converting a room into a home theatre. Still no broadcast though.
I’m a bad FReeper for sure.
I have CNBC and FoxBiz on all day during the week
and a lot of sports on the weekends
No TV since 1978. When others were asking “Who shot JR?” we were asking, “Who IS JR?” and then we found out he was only Captain Nelson from I Dream of Jeanie with a makeover. We watch Hulu and Netflix, too. And Stumble Upon video. We grew up saturated with TV but haven’t missed it over these 30 plus years.
Foolaide dispenser.
“...because States will need to be much more self-sufficient if the dollar becomes unstable or worthless.”
>As if that could ever happen.
Truthfully, I’m foreseeing a real economic oddity, a currency split in the dollar.
To explain, right now it is obvious that parts of the government and the FED believe they can “print” as much money as they want to with little or no repercussions. For them, money is just numbers on a computer. However, some of the markets, like “derivatives”, have gone far beyond even this, in creating money out of thin air, supposedly a factor beyond the entire GDP of the world.
In effect, a man has walked into a casino, makes a bet and loses it, but instead of paying off, he doubles down, using his debt as a weird form of collateral. Then he keeps losing, and doubling, until his wager is more than the value of the casino. But he keeps wagering for 10x and even 100x the value of the casino. Both his and the casino’s theory is as long as they agree to his doubles, they can accept his bets forever.
Obviously, something has to happen to upset the apple cart.
Well, that is one situation. But the other situation is just as odd.
Real money. Paper money and coins. If you took every bit of it that exists, it is still less than 5% of the value of America’s daily retail sales.
The US Bureau of Engraving and Printing has only two high security printing offices in the US, one in Forth Worth and the other in Washington, D.C. Working at 100% capacity, they can barely maintain this level of 5% paper currency. The vast majority of the bills they print are $1 bills.
The highest denomination bill they print is $100, and so few of them that they *can’t* even print $500 bills, because nobody could make change for them. There aren’t enough $100 bills to do so.
So no matter what, paper money and coins are in effect 95% deflated right now. Only because the public accepts the notion that their virtual money can be redeemed as paper money, that virtual money is *equal* to paper money, has stopped our vast amounts of imaginary virtual money and our real money from splitting already.
What could break this confidence? Either a problem with virtual money, in which retailers decide they no longer will accept credit or debit, or bank checks, or anything but cash; and/or there is a “cash run” on the banks, emptying every bank branch in the US within an hour, and leaving people with lots of virtual money that nobody wants.
And here’s the zinger. Only paper money and coins are “legal tender”. No virtual instrument is legal tender, good for debts, public and private. Only the real thing.
Nobody has to sell anyone anything. But if they have already sold something, by law, cash must be accepted as a means to resolve that debt.
Bottom line: It would be very, very good to have “mattress money” at home, in a safe place. Banks can have holidays, and virtual instruments might be invalidated, so only cash in hand is guaranteed to be yours, when you want it.
I shall never forget my visit to the “Bureau of Printing and Engraving” when I was 14 years old or so. That was just about at the time of the Chicago Democrat Convention that we all have heard so much about.
They were printing money. It was amazing. I so wanted to work there because someday I might just be able to obtain some for myself.
Since then I have followed Courses in Economics and Finance and lots of stuff especially back in my University Daze.
Nowadays, I just read a lot.
I recognize that I cannot offer much to you regarding these insights, but I am quite appreciative of what you are posting (at least on this thread.)
I do read a lot, and I may at times be clearly ignorant, but I am not stupid.
Feel free to Ping me whenever you are sharing your poignant insights.
If there is NPR radio silence, and 300,000,000 paid for it, but never listened to it, would they notice it?
Same with PBS.
And BTW, all television (as all television is now) needs to go.
It is in your nature to destroy yourselves.
No, we aren’t.
something we can agree on — the wife and I have lived without tv for years now and we have so much more time. yes, dvds sometimes, but the rest of the time is spent on talking, reading, playing musical instruments, listening to music, going out, walking, sports, dancing etc.
a suggestion — get rid of cable completely. No television broadcasts at all. The news via the net and radio is better and you can choose. Entertainment? Pick a book, play a board game, play some sports, talk to family.
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