Credit Crisis Review: ARMed for Failure [View article]
Who cares if things go to shit? There is no social mobility in the US. So what's wrong with "crooks" giving a half-assed attempt to get rich? Decorate it however you want.
As Banks Opt Out, What is the Real Purpose of Paulson's Super-SIV Plan? [View article]
Perhaps the wars in the Middle East were mostly an attempt to secure equities sufficient to cover the under-wraps debts at the critical banks of the system. Invading weaker countries in the Middle East and stealing their oil would theoretically provide the big banks- the financial identity of the US empire- with something to back the IOU. These IOUs mount to nearly $100 billion with Citi alone, if I read it correctly. The rich are the recipients of the initial debt principle, and the American slaves are trapped in the US Dollar system to cover some equity obligations. But if the capitalist system has already reached its expiration date, there's only so much you can do to torture slaves into working to place equity on the unpaired capital (the capital due to receive adequate equity by the debt's terms). But if the merit-poor rich simply can't push the capital-poor workers hard enough to cover the nasty debts, then wars are the last option to cripple other foreign lands into servitude to the ailing US system. In this case, either pipeline the oil out of the Middle East and steal it for ourselves or at least make a second Israel out there where they provide the US with proceeds from the oil. This would cover for the systemic debts incurred over periods of time where the rich robbed the poor more freely to only worry about the cost later on.
As Banks Opt Out, What is the Real Purpose of Paulson's Super-SIV Plan? [View article]
Every day of work I've surrendered to the system seems like a lost piece of my life. Now that I know so much about America, I feel that any good I do for the individual clients I see is trumped by the feeling I screwed out of a day of my life and whatever proceeds I generated from helping somebody went to benefit an evil system in the business of wars and crimes against humanity.
That's a lot of debt at Citi. I know the US system is very violent now. Very desperate and violent. The war activities might be a representation of how desperately weak the system's currency of oppression is. These are big banks in the business of managing an expiring power from the heirs of that power against the innocent victims of birth to capitalist society.
It's hard to be anything but negative about life in America if you understand enough about the world. I'd have to reduce my intelligence by one half to say that life and work in America is a good thing. It all goes to evil causes that betray even your own self.
As Banks Opt Out, What is the Real Purpose of Paulson's Super-SIV Plan? [View article]
Nobody knows where all the purchased debt is. I think it's where it's not supposed to be. Like, off balance sheet or in some otherwise sturdy retirement portfolio. My peeve is the greed of capitalists.
I think I'd feel better holding up a huge bank than by working for money. I've poured blood, sweat, and tears into trying to make a living for myself. The system owes me, and it just seems everything I do is unappreciated and stolen from me. I just don't feel quite right about a hard honest day's work like I used to. I feel like committing crimes to get money. I've already paid my equity dues to this society.
Apparently, the best way to get rich is to hook up with a big bank big wig and sell bad debt but hide it from the balance sheet until you've gotten away with it. Why the hell should I work for money if crime is the only thing that pays?
CIBC: High LTV Prime Loans Vulnerable, Citi Most Exposed [View article]
Capitalists got too greedy (pronounced "desperate"). So they warped the financial situation so that those healthy and able to work were worked finger-to-bone in a race against death with severe underpayments no matter what the occupation. What you earn is not a valid indicator of your worth as an individual. This has finally caught up to the FICO system. They'd rather enslave an engineer than look ahead 5 years.
Citigroup Fighting for Its Financial Life [View article]
Yeah they are. They really are. Probably too big, so they had some huge exposure to something they had to bury somewhere else in the huge corp. If Citi blows up, then my question is what's the next domino to topple down after the fall?
The Banking Industry: It's What We Don't Know that Really Matters [View article]
That's insane. Completely unbelievable. It just blows my mind. Welp, the workers of the US are productive and innovative enough to survive on sheer ingenuity, because neither the banks nor any other founded financial infrastructure will be able to help the equity economy in its responsibility to bear life for the working people of America. A number here a number there, it's just money. Well yah, this time. Prior to now, capital was more important than life itself. But now it's really just money, just a number. Money can't do any right, and it's just entertaining to see it all go. Maybe when I get my Clay Math prize $1 million will be worth less than $10,000 in 2004 bucks. Unlikely. Maybe deflation will kick in. Maybe a big bank will die cold and leave a vacuum, and all that electronic credit will expire and the monetary supply will reduce by half.
Prince's Departure, Recovery Potential, Make Citi a Long-Term Buy [View article]
If you own anything in the US, until its demise you'll be the last one holding anything if you're holding onto shares of US banks. Might want to find something immaterial to hold onto, though. Just because US law says you're entitled to ownership of something doesn't mean you'll end up keeping it. That jack doesn't work one way, and it doesn't work the other way, either.
Bank of America Must Know Something [View article]
The concept of a social company is popular now (workers own the company). That's more competitive than workers being enslaved by a company. When I started some recently, I talked with my contact at The Company Corporation, my agent filing service, and asked him about recent activity. He said right now a lot more people are "taking the plunge." People out of work are just starting companies. They see how easy it is to simply find a niche, produce equity for their niche, and sell it. You just need to put your mindset on producing it all yourself and then offering it to the public. So there are a lot of startups picking up some production slack as the US Dollar dies and loses its ability to import what goods and services the rest of the US economy needs to continue operations.
Memo to Citigroup's Eddie Lampert: Watch Out! [View article]
I'd say that the big banks are indeed big. They make the rest of the US appear almost small. HSBC, B of A, Citigroup, Morgan-Stanley/Chase. The more I think about it, the more I believe they are in charge of a lot of stuff. Connections to the arab world alone have already proven to get quite a lot done.
Credit Crisis Review: ARMed for Failure [View article]
As Banks Opt Out, What is the Real Purpose of Paulson's Super-SIV Plan? [View article]
As Banks Opt Out, What is the Real Purpose of Paulson's Super-SIV Plan? [View article]
That's a lot of debt at Citi. I know the US system is very violent now. Very desperate and violent. The war activities might be a representation of how desperately weak the system's currency of oppression is. These are big banks in the business of managing an expiring power from the heirs of that power against the innocent victims of birth to capitalist society.
It's hard to be anything but negative about life in America if you understand enough about the world. I'd have to reduce my intelligence by one half to say that life and work in America is a good thing. It all goes to evil causes that betray even your own self.
So yes, Citi is in the crapper.
As Banks Opt Out, What is the Real Purpose of Paulson's Super-SIV Plan? [View article]
I think I'd feel better holding up a huge bank than by working for money. I've poured blood, sweat, and tears into trying to make a living for myself. The system owes me, and it just seems everything I do is unappreciated and stolen from me. I just don't feel quite right about a hard honest day's work like I used to. I feel like committing crimes to get money. I've already paid my equity dues to this society.
Apparently, the best way to get rich is to hook up with a big bank big wig and sell bad debt but hide it from the balance sheet until you've gotten away with it. Why the hell should I work for money if crime is the only thing that pays?
CIBC: High LTV Prime Loans Vulnerable, Citi Most Exposed [View article]
Citibank's Rapidly Deteriorating Situation [View article]
Citigroup Fighting for Its Financial Life [View article]
The Banking Industry: It's What We Don't Know that Really Matters [View article]
Prince's Departure, Recovery Potential, Make Citi a Long-Term Buy [View article]
Five Days of Misery For Financials [View article]
Citigroup's Weakness Drags Down Financials; Tech Continues Strong [View article]
Bank of America Must Know Something [View article]
Memo to Citigroup's Eddie Lampert: Watch Out! [View article]