A Strong U.S. Dollar Isn't in Anyone's Best Interest [View article]
“A strong dollar is in our national interest,” still echoes through the air in the District of Columbia. Never mind that the strong dollar was largely responsible for the housing boom that led to the current bust."
WHAT! The Dollar was falling fast during the Boom, cheap money and a weak Dollar is what drove housing prices so high. How can a strong Dollar drive prices up?
Nope, I can't solve the worlds problems in 5 minutes but the robbery is in clear sight. The money won't be paid back, if these companies had the ability to pay the money back they never would of needed it in the first place.
The Fed purchased $300 billion in bonds today..where did that money come from? It came from the existing money in your pocket and bank account.
the U.S is BROKE, it is a bankrupt country. We do not have a viable Economy. We do not have the ability to cover our obligations without increasing our money supply. We can not cover our Foreign Debts without inflating our money supply. When you increase the money supply you ROB the people. When you increase taxes to pay for the bailouts you are ROBBING the people.
It does not take a Genius to see that we're being taken to the cleaners.
Wake up
and if Lawson Heals up I'm picking the Tar Heels to take it
On Mar 18 11:00 PM CJJ wrote:
> You haven't been robbed. Please back up your silly statements. <br/> > > When the banks pay back the TARP money and the US(Thats YOU Abag) > makes 5-10% on money when you can't get that yield on money anywhere > these days...Are you going to be back on here telling us how bad > that is. > > Why don't you add up all the money the US has proposed in the past > 12 months, shout out a lofty number like 10-14Trillion and feel satisfied > with yourself. But please be prepared to start subtracting that when > it is paid back. > > I forgot, 12345 and everyone here are geniouses. They could step > into the fray and solve the worlds ills in about 5 minutes and still > have time to get home for dinner. > > Do you want to tell me your NCAA picks, since you obviously know > it all. > > On Mar 18 08:43 PM 12345 wrote:
A Strong U.S. Dollar Isn't in Anyone's Best Interest [View article]
WHAT! The Dollar was falling fast during the Boom, cheap money and a weak Dollar is what drove housing prices so high. How can a strong Dollar drive prices up?
What's Another $1.15 Trillion? [View article]
The Fed purchased $300 billion in bonds today..where did that money come from? It came from the existing money in your pocket and bank account.
the U.S is BROKE, it is a bankrupt country. We do not have a viable Economy. We do not have the ability to cover our obligations without increasing our money supply. We can not cover our Foreign Debts without inflating our money supply. When you increase the money supply you ROB the people. When you increase taxes to pay for the bailouts you are ROBBING the people.
It does not take a Genius to see that we're being taken to the cleaners.
Wake up
and if Lawson Heals up I'm picking the Tar Heels to take it
On Mar 18 11:00 PM CJJ wrote:
> You haven't been robbed. Please back up your silly statements. <br/>
>
> When the banks pay back the TARP money and the US(Thats YOU Abag)
> makes 5-10% on money when you can't get that yield on money anywhere
> these days...Are you going to be back on here telling us how bad
> that is.
>
> Why don't you add up all the money the US has proposed in the past
> 12 months, shout out a lofty number like 10-14Trillion and feel satisfied
> with yourself. But please be prepared to start subtracting that when
> it is paid back.
>
> I forgot, 12345 and everyone here are geniouses. They could step
> into the fray and solve the worlds ills in about 5 minutes and still
> have time to get home for dinner.
>
> Do you want to tell me your NCAA picks, since you obviously know
> it all.
>
> On Mar 18 08:43 PM 12345 wrote:
What's Another $1.15 Trillion? [View article]
Applaud the move? You've just been ROBBED
On Mar 18 04:48 PM Respirate wrote:
>
> "This is insane." Maybe. I applaud the Fed's bold move, and believe
> that it will help spur economic activity over the coming months.