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On January 10 2010 07:37 StorkHwaiting wrote: Thanks, Econ 101. When you get to Econ 401, maybe you can come back and have this conversation over again.
Cool, no argument, just an insult. Thanks for showing that I'm right.
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On January 10 2010 07:56 SnK-Arcbound wrote:Show nested quote +On January 10 2010 07:37 StorkHwaiting wrote: Thanks, Econ 101. When you get to Econ 401, maybe you can come back and have this conversation over again. Cool, no argument, just an insult. Thanks for showing that I'm right.
You can't even differentiate between liquidity of an asset and liquidity of the financial market lol.
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On January 10 2010 06:20 7Strife wrote:Show nested quote +On January 09 2010 12:38 StorkHwaiting wrote: And, personally, on the issue of currency I'm a strong believer in money backed by some real good. Be it gold, oil, whatever. There need to be reserves that the currency can be redeemed for. Fiat currency is artificial and that's why it can be manipulated so heavily. It has no basis in reality. I agree with you, there needs to be innovation in currency. It is illegal in the US and most of the world to use different types of currency. There should be no restriction on the government deciding what has value and what doesn't. We need to rethink the idea of currency for the digital age, where you can have competing trusted organizations that can virtually represent rarity. We once used gold, silver, or sea shells because they were finite scalable substances in demand that we gave value, but data in the form of base ten digits on protected servers could do the same thing. PayPal already does this but that is further backed by the dollar, or whatever it might be in that country. There has to be a lot of competition within the market and proper safeguards (that we all can understand) enacted but it will work. Then you won't have governments or organizations flooding and inflating their currencies out of greed.
That's a pretty interesting concept and it does bring a greater amount of competitiveness than we currently have.
My issue with it is that it's still another form of fiat currency. As long as currency is fiat, then its value can be manipulated arbitrarily.
Then again, that's kind of the reason they invented fiat currency in the first place. So governments could manipulate their currencies for economic gain. It can be argued that it helps modulate volatility, but it's a tool that the American gov't (and many other gov'ts with fiat currency) have chosen to abuse in unethical fashion.
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On January 10 2010 07:58 StorkHwaiting wrote: You can't even differentiate between liquidity of an asset and liquidity of the financial market lol.
Liquidity isn't how accessible cash is in a market, read it's definition. Liquidity: the ability or ease with which assets can be converted into cash. There is no other definition of liquidity, unless you're reading someone making it up (read: You).
On January 10 2010 07:56 SnK-Arcbound wrote: Cool, no argument, just an insult. Thanks for showing that I'm right.
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SnK-Arcbound please browse some financial dictionaries on what liquidity means in reference to the market. Further contention over the term when your position is downright incorrect wastes your own time.
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On January 10 2010 08:17 SnK-Arcbound wrote:Show nested quote +On January 10 2010 07:58 StorkHwaiting wrote: You can't even differentiate between liquidity of an asset and liquidity of the financial market lol. Show nested quote +Liquidity isn't how accessible cash is in a market, read it's definition. Liquidity: the ability or ease with which assets can be converted into cash. There is no other definition of liquidity, unless you're reading someone making it up (read: You). Show nested quote +On January 10 2010 07:56 SnK-Arcbound wrote: Cool, no argument, just an insult. Thanks for showing that I'm right.
Jesus Christ.
How much simpler can I make this for you?
Liquidity = ease with which assets can be converted into cash.
If there's NO cash in the market, how liquid does an asset become?
You're sitting here looking at the asset end and totally failing to understand the concept that you could lower the price of a house to $1 and you still won't sell it when nobody has $1 to spend. There are two sides to liquidity. BUYERS and SELLERS.
Therefore, when someone talks about market liquidity, they're talking about how many buyers/sellers are available in the market. When nobody has money, guess how many buyers there are in the market?
You, unfortunately, can't seem to grasp this extremely simple concept. And somehow, you think the entire financial industry, which quite often refers to market liquidity, must be wrong as well. Since, apparently, you can quote definitions of liquidity.
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Its good to see there are still some intelligent people running in the US, I just wish the general public would stop being ignorant so that we can get people like this into high level government positions.
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Oh crap a politics thread. Question: If the government is a failed business, shouldn't it be dissolved as well? Anarcho-capitalist detected. Boooom! ...just some food for thought.
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this guy keeps claiming hyperinflation will take over and send us into an apocalypse... but it's just not going to happen. hyperinflation = an inflation rate over at least 50 percent.
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On January 10 2010 10:24 d_so wrote: this guy keeps claiming hyperinflation will take over and send us into an apocalypse... but it's just not going to happen. hyperinflation = an inflation rate over at least 50 percent.
Hyperinflation will occur when the Fed runs out of other nations willing to buy our bonds and continues to print money to pay for government deficit spending. A prospect that's increasingly likely with the way both parties are running the country.
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On January 10 2010 10:24 d_so wrote: this guy keeps claiming hyperinflation will take over and send us into an apocalypse... but it's just not going to happen. hyperinflation = an inflation rate over at least 50 percent. Hyperinflation is 10% edit: a year.
On January 10 2010 09:12 StorkHwaiting wrote: Jesus Christ.
How much simpler can I make this for you?
Liquidity = ease with which assets can be converted into cash.
If there's NO cash in the market, how liquid does an asset become?
You're sitting here looking at the asset end and totally failing to understand the concept that you could lower the price of a house to $1 and you still won't sell it when nobody has $1 to spend. There are two sides to liquidity. BUYERS and SELLERS.
Therefore, when someone talks about market liquidity, they're talking about how many buyers/sellers are available in the market. When nobody has money, guess how many buyers there are in the market?
You, unfortunately, can't seem to grasp this extremely simple concept. And somehow, you think the entire financial industry, which quite often refers to market liquidity, must be wrong as well. Since, apparently, you can quote definitions of liquidity.
How many people own dogs if no dogs exist. None, wow amazing! That's a nice strawman you built there.
Money always exists in a market. The only thing you are creating by printing money is inflation. There are always buyers, and there are always sellers. We are at a fake, impossible, nonexistant high for houses. If you try and slow down the fall, you are merely keeping houses up with another bubble. Sure, print money if you want another bubble, what a brilliant idea, put easy money into the market to solve the problem that easy money created.
You aren't solving the problem, you are feeding it. Inflation as a solution for a recession, great idea. Inflation as the solution for debt, great idea. You mix your own personal feelings in with minimal historical evidence to try and reach your predetermined conclusion that you solve the problem the same way you created it.
You think that the bailouts were good. Peter Schiff doesn't. Peter Schiff has been right for the past 20 years. Now should we believe you mister economy student, or someone who has accurately predicted the economy for 20 years?
Here's the quote of the day from StorkHwaiting:
College's aren't businesses
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On January 10 2010 10:56 SnK-Arcbound wrote:Show nested quote +On January 10 2010 10:24 d_so wrote: this guy keeps claiming hyperinflation will take over and send us into an apocalypse... but it's just not going to happen. hyperinflation = an inflation rate over at least 50 percent. Hyperinflation is 10% edit: a year. Show nested quote +On January 10 2010 09:12 StorkHwaiting wrote: Jesus Christ.
How much simpler can I make this for you?
Liquidity = ease with which assets can be converted into cash.
If there's NO cash in the market, how liquid does an asset become?
You're sitting here looking at the asset end and totally failing to understand the concept that you could lower the price of a house to $1 and you still won't sell it when nobody has $1 to spend. There are two sides to liquidity. BUYERS and SELLERS.
Therefore, when someone talks about market liquidity, they're talking about how many buyers/sellers are available in the market. When nobody has money, guess how many buyers there are in the market?
You, unfortunately, can't seem to grasp this extremely simple concept. And somehow, you think the entire financial industry, which quite often refers to market liquidity, must be wrong as well. Since, apparently, you can quote definitions of liquidity. How many people own dogs if no dogs exist. None, wow amazing! That's a nice strawman you built there. Money always exists in a market. The only thing you are creating by printing money is inflation. There are always buyers, and there are always sellers. We are at a fake, impossible, nonexistant high for houses. If you try and slow down the fall, you are merely keeping houses up with another bubble. Sure, print money if you want another bubble, what a brilliant idea, put easy money into the market to solve the problem that easy money created. You aren't solving the problem, you are feeding it. Inflation as a solution for a recession, great idea. Inflation as the solution for debt, great idea. You mix your own personal feelings in with minimal historical evidence to try and reach your predetermined conclusion that you solve the problem the same way you created it. You think that the bailouts were good. Peter Schiff doesn't. Peter Schiff has been right for the past 20 years. Now should we believe you mister economy student, or someone who has accurately predicted the economy for 20 years? Here's the quote of the day from StorkHwaiting:
I'm not an economy student. I majored in creative writing lol. I don't think the bailout was good at all. I think it was a band-aid for a failing system. What I did say was that it brought liquidity to a system that needed it. If you actually read anything I wrote you'd see that I think the entire system should be abolished.
Edit: P.S. Money doesn't always exist. Peep the Great Depression.
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I just want to point out how funny it is that many of the same people who absolutely fear government power when it comes to military issues are suddenly willing to trust the government all the way when it comes down to economic issues.
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When I went to get my M.Ed. I took a course in adult education, which was basically best practices for teaching people high-school age and up. It turned out that half of the class was about actual teaching practices, and the other half was about trends in colleges and universities business plans, and the pressures that colleges and universities business models are increasingly placing on professors.
Sorry, but colleges/universities ARE businesses. They fit a unique role within our society and so disguise themselves as irreplaceable social institutions, but they shouldn't be exalted beyond what they actually are.
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On January 10 2010 15:07 monolith94 wrote: When I went to get my M.Ed. I took a course in adult education, which was basically best practices for teaching people high-school age and up. It turned out that half of the class was about actual teaching practices, and the other half was about trends in colleges and universities business plans, and the pressures that colleges and universities business models are increasingly placing on professors.
Sorry, but colleges/universities ARE businesses. They fit a unique role within our society and so disguise themselves as irreplaceable social institutions, but they shouldn't be exalted beyond what they actually are.
OK, I'll state that I was wrong and should have worded what I meant differently. What I should say is that I don't think universities should be run as businesses because they fail as such. Instead, I think universities should be FURTHER subsidized so that the focus can be on education/research and not money-making.
Universities are one of the biggest drivers of research in the United States. They're also one of the most important social institutions for training and directing our labor force. To NOT provide subsidization and government funding to such an important facet of our society would be a net loss for our country in my opinion.
Now, I'm nowhere near as adamant on this subject as I am on some of the other economic issues brought up in this thread. I'll be the first to admit that I don't know anywhere near enough about the education system to comment in any meaningful way. So I probably shouldn't have started that debate and I apologize for saying dumb things.
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I personally think that we have developed a culture of collegiate and university level exuberant excess. So many of the buildings at these colleges and universities are inflated in price so as to increase the aesthetic appeal and thus the prestige of the college. Colleges and universities DO have additional funding needs if they're heavy into science and math, but most humanities departments shouldn't be driving up the cost of college excessively.
Alternatively, we could just sit around and wait for the singularity to solve this whole messy problem…
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On January 10 2010 15:24 StorkHwaiting wrote:Show nested quote +On January 10 2010 15:07 monolith94 wrote: When I went to get my M.Ed. I took a course in adult education, which was basically best practices for teaching people high-school age and up. It turned out that half of the class was about actual teaching practices, and the other half was about trends in colleges and universities business plans, and the pressures that colleges and universities business models are increasingly placing on professors.
Sorry, but colleges/universities ARE businesses. They fit a unique role within our society and so disguise themselves as irreplaceable social institutions, but they shouldn't be exalted beyond what they actually are. OK, I'll state that I was wrong and should have worded what I meant differently. What I should say is that I don't think universities should be run as businesses because they fail as such. Instead, I think universities should be FURTHER subsidized so that the focus can be on education/research and not money-making. Universities are one of the biggest drivers of research in the United States. They're also one of the most important social institutions for training and directing our labor force. To NOT provide subsidization and government funding to such an important facet of our society would be a net loss for our country in my opinion. Now, I'm nowhere near as adamant on this subject as I am on some of the other economic issues brought up in this thread. I'll be the first to admit that I don't know anywhere near enough about the education system to comment in any meaningful way. So I probably shouldn't have started that debate and I apologize for saying dumb things. The agricultural sector is the biggest supplier of food in the United States. To NOT provide subsidization and goverment funding to such an important facet of our society would be a net loss for out country. The supermarkets is the biggest business model that sells food in the United States. It is vital to provide food for people. To NOT provide subsidization and goverment funding to such an important facet of our society would be a net loss for out country. The construction sector is the biggest supplier of houses. To NOT provide subsidization and goverment funding to such an important facet of our society would be a net loss for out country. Blablabla into ad nauseum... The same argument could be used for essentially everything sooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo glhf
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On January 11 2010 11:13 ArmChairCritic wrote:Show nested quote +On January 10 2010 15:24 StorkHwaiting wrote:On January 10 2010 15:07 monolith94 wrote: When I went to get my M.Ed. I took a course in adult education, which was basically best practices for teaching people high-school age and up. It turned out that half of the class was about actual teaching practices, and the other half was about trends in colleges and universities business plans, and the pressures that colleges and universities business models are increasingly placing on professors.
Sorry, but colleges/universities ARE businesses. They fit a unique role within our society and so disguise themselves as irreplaceable social institutions, but they shouldn't be exalted beyond what they actually are. OK, I'll state that I was wrong and should have worded what I meant differently. What I should say is that I don't think universities should be run as businesses because they fail as such. Instead, I think universities should be FURTHER subsidized so that the focus can be on education/research and not money-making. Universities are one of the biggest drivers of research in the United States. They're also one of the most important social institutions for training and directing our labor force. To NOT provide subsidization and government funding to such an important facet of our society would be a net loss for our country in my opinion. Now, I'm nowhere near as adamant on this subject as I am on some of the other economic issues brought up in this thread. I'll be the first to admit that I don't know anywhere near enough about the education system to comment in any meaningful way. So I probably shouldn't have started that debate and I apologize for saying dumb things. The agricultural sector is the biggest supplier of food in the United States. To NOT provide subsidization and goverment funding to such an important facet of our society would be a net loss for out country. The supermarkets is the biggest business model that sells food in the United States. It is vital to provide food for people. To NOT provide subsidization and goverment funding to such an important facet of our society would be a net loss for out country. The construction sector is the biggest supplier of houses. To NOT provide subsidization and goverment funding to such an important facet of our society would be a net loss for out country. Blablabla into ad nauseum... The same argument could be used for essentially everything sooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo glhf
Good points. But was the sooooooo really necessary?
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On January 11 2010 11:21 StorkHwaiting wrote:Show nested quote +On January 11 2010 11:13 ArmChairCritic wrote:On January 10 2010 15:24 StorkHwaiting wrote:On January 10 2010 15:07 monolith94 wrote: When I went to get my M.Ed. I took a course in adult education, which was basically best practices for teaching people high-school age and up. It turned out that half of the class was about actual teaching practices, and the other half was about trends in colleges and universities business plans, and the pressures that colleges and universities business models are increasingly placing on professors.
Sorry, but colleges/universities ARE businesses. They fit a unique role within our society and so disguise themselves as irreplaceable social institutions, but they shouldn't be exalted beyond what they actually are. OK, I'll state that I was wrong and should have worded what I meant differently. What I should say is that I don't think universities should be run as businesses because they fail as such. Instead, I think universities should be FURTHER subsidized so that the focus can be on education/research and not money-making. Universities are one of the biggest drivers of research in the United States. They're also one of the most important social institutions for training and directing our labor force. To NOT provide subsidization and government funding to such an important facet of our society would be a net loss for our country in my opinion. Now, I'm nowhere near as adamant on this subject as I am on some of the other economic issues brought up in this thread. I'll be the first to admit that I don't know anywhere near enough about the education system to comment in any meaningful way. So I probably shouldn't have started that debate and I apologize for saying dumb things. The agricultural sector is the biggest supplier of food in the United States. To NOT provide subsidization and goverment funding to such an important facet of our society would be a net loss for out country. The supermarkets is the biggest business model that sells food in the United States. It is vital to provide food for people. To NOT provide subsidization and goverment funding to such an important facet of our society would be a net loss for out country. The construction sector is the biggest supplier of houses. To NOT provide subsidization and goverment funding to such an important facet of our society would be a net loss for out country. Blablabla into ad nauseum... The same argument could be used for essentially everything sooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo glhf Good points. But was the sooooooo really necessary? It was essential.
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On January 11 2010 11:13 ArmChairCritic wrote:Show nested quote +On January 10 2010 15:24 StorkHwaiting wrote:On January 10 2010 15:07 monolith94 wrote: When I went to get my M.Ed. I took a course in adult education, which was basically best practices for teaching people high-school age and up. It turned out that half of the class was about actual teaching practices, and the other half was about trends in colleges and universities business plans, and the pressures that colleges and universities business models are increasingly placing on professors.
Sorry, but colleges/universities ARE businesses. They fit a unique role within our society and so disguise themselves as irreplaceable social institutions, but they shouldn't be exalted beyond what they actually are. OK, I'll state that I was wrong and should have worded what I meant differently. What I should say is that I don't think universities should be run as businesses because they fail as such. Instead, I think universities should be FURTHER subsidized so that the focus can be on education/research and not money-making. Universities are one of the biggest drivers of research in the United States. They're also one of the most important social institutions for training and directing our labor force. To NOT provide subsidization and government funding to such an important facet of our society would be a net loss for our country in my opinion. Now, I'm nowhere near as adamant on this subject as I am on some of the other economic issues brought up in this thread. I'll be the first to admit that I don't know anywhere near enough about the education system to comment in any meaningful way. So I probably shouldn't have started that debate and I apologize for saying dumb things. The agricultural sector is the biggest supplier of food in the United States. To NOT provide subsidization and goverment funding to such an important facet of our society would be a net loss for out country. The supermarkets is the biggest business model that sells food in the United States. It is vital to provide food for people. To NOT provide subsidization and goverment funding to such an important facet of our society would be a net loss for out country. The construction sector is the biggest supplier of houses. To NOT provide subsidization and goverment funding to such an important facet of our society would be a net loss for out country. Blablabla into ad nauseum... The same argument could be used for essentially everything sooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo glhf
For the sake of discussion, and education, I have a few questions:
If the supermarket and agriculture are the largest domestic markets for producing/selling food, and construction for housing, if you need to subsidize them doesn't that immediately imply that they're not operating properly? Isn't the entire idea of -successful- business to provide a net gain or at the least diversify and break-even? If these models aren't working to the degree that they require funding to be sustainable, isn't that in essence already operating at a net loss, in addition to acquiring debt? Especially for this particular instance?
If a country that doesn't export nearly as much it imports can't even sustain a profit in the most critical of markets to the survival of the population doesn't this mean that your going to be operating at a net loss anyway?
Also, if I am correct and these models aren't "performing properly" then wouldn't it be absolutely batshit insane to sustain them as such? Particularly when bust isn't the only option?
EDIT: Also, Wouldn't a reduction in the standard of living be exactly what we need in debtor nation that is already living above the means it can afford?
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