Ok, so you've no doubt heard the hollering about the dollar crashing in the fall of 2015. Even Mr. Putin seems to have bought that line. That was before his own currency, the ruble, took a 50% dive. I've sifted through a handful of the gruesome financial predictions for our future and put them into four categories.
1. Religious prophecies (you know the type, generally justified by eschatological references)
2. Pseudo-religious predictions (also called the lunatic fringe)
3. Legitimate respected financial advisors with nothing to sell
4. The Federal Reserve and its media puppets
With few exceptions numbers 1 - 3 all agree that a crash of some sort is imminent. That's a little creepy if you ask me.
Only the Federal Reserve (which claims, BTW that gold and silver isn't money), and its puppet voice in the US media offer differing opinions. They tell us everything is coming up roses. This is downright scary, since all their statements rely upon trends and developments that are unreal, or nearly ready for deployment into the economy. That stuff reads like Hitler's promises of Victory weapons that would defeat Germany's enemies. Too little and too late for Adolph. Is the Federal Reserve confidence based on the same sort of mumbo-jumbo?
Hey, when the lunatic fringe sounds more reasonable than the chief private financial organization in the world, the Federal Reserve, its time to wonder if a major shift in our future is about to happen.
What say you, readers? If you've got some tasty documentation how about sharing?
1. Religious prophecies (you know the type, generally justified by eschatological references)
2. Pseudo-religious predictions (also called the lunatic fringe)
3. Legitimate respected financial advisors with nothing to sell
4. The Federal Reserve and its media puppets
With few exceptions numbers 1 - 3 all agree that a crash of some sort is imminent. That's a little creepy if you ask me.
Only the Federal Reserve (which claims, BTW that gold and silver isn't money), and its puppet voice in the US media offer differing opinions. They tell us everything is coming up roses. This is downright scary, since all their statements rely upon trends and developments that are unreal, or nearly ready for deployment into the economy. That stuff reads like Hitler's promises of Victory weapons that would defeat Germany's enemies. Too little and too late for Adolph. Is the Federal Reserve confidence based on the same sort of mumbo-jumbo?
Hey, when the lunatic fringe sounds more reasonable than the chief private financial organization in the world, the Federal Reserve, its time to wonder if a major shift in our future is about to happen.
What say you, readers? If you've got some tasty documentation how about sharing?