I think Obama will be re-elected or we will face riots.

On Aug 6, 4:48 pm, Don Johnson <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hm. I disagree with describing the times as febrile. Stagnate is more like
> it. Perhaps the day traders are febrile but I have no respect or sympathy
> for them. The 500 pt. drop on the DOW represents a run to cash. Motivated
> less by fear, I think, then exasperation with a President and a Congress
> that fail to see the gravity of the situation and have the guts to do
> something about it. A government unwilling to even take half-measures to
> begin a recovery. In short, a response to cowardice and ineptitude. The
> deficit most trying us now isn't that of GDP to revenue it's lack of
> competent leadership. Instead we have a 'leader' completely blaming one
> branch of the government for all the problems as if 6 straight years of
> Democratic control of Congress had nothing to do with our current problems.
> It shouldn't be that hard to admit there's plenty of blame to share between
> all the branches including the Federal Reserve. Less partisanship and more
> focus please.
>
> Unfortunately for us too much attention has been on deliberately increasing
> the role of government in people's lives. It's expensive and it's
> inefficient. I understand TARP. I understand spending your way out of a
> recession. Perhaps it would be a good time to step up road repair and bridge
> building and whatever infrastructure we might need in the next few years and
> just borrow and get it done NOW. More importantly though we need a clear and
> honest effort to reign in the reckless spending on entitlements. Our future
> depends on it. Too much has been promised and the hard decisions on how to
> break those promises have to be made but clearly they won't be by Barack
> Obama or this Congress. Hard times are coming; ya'll ain't seen nothing yet.
>
> Vote change in 2012.
>
> dj
>
>
>
> On Sat, Aug 6, 2011 at 12:10 PM, paradox <[email protected]> wrote:
> > I hear you, rigsy.
>
> > Considering markets are often way ahead of the economic cycle, caution
> > might have best described the market lethargy prior to the fear driven
> > "correction" of the past week, all considered. The global economy has
> > gradually but steadily been absorbing higher commodities pricing, re-
> > configuring economic value space, and re-balancing global growth. It's
> > curious and unusual to see the markets well behind the curve, and
> > thats the work of naked fear, and opportunistic speculation (no
> > criticism, just observation).
>
> > The S&P action, unfortunate in its timing, is more a political rebuke
> > than a meaningful statement of financial "risk"; and yes, it's
> > significance is disproportionate; these are febrile times.
>
> > On Aug 6, 2:10 pm, rigsy03 <[email protected]> wrote:
> > > I would correct the term fear to caution which is a natural component
> > > of foresight. Some might call it a sizing up. For some reason, I am
> > > thinking of Ulysses- Homer's, not Grant. Perhaps the purpose of the
> > > Boy Scout motto, "Be Prepared"? Of course we cannot control all the
> > > factors that affect us in life but that brings to mind the over-
> > > controlled life versus one that adapts and is flexible- the extremes
> > > of being set in one's ways and the dewy naif who trusts all-
> > > everything and everybody.
>
> > > I find it troubling that the lead headline is S&P's rating versus the
> > > loss of our Special Forces.
>
> > > I have long thought that many survival/social instincts begin in the
> > > nursery among siblings as they vie for attention, position within the
> > > family- like children seem to hop on their own branch on the family
> > > tree in order to be unique or special. Those "skills" carry forward
> > > into school cliques and later work and social roles.
>
> > > Some have commented that S&P has no business rating anything since it
> > > is a private company or that the USA can carry any debt it pleases
> > > since it is the SuperPower above and beyond ordinary rules and
> > > policies.
>
> > > On Aug 5, 6:43 pm, paradox <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > > I recall an earlier post in which rigsy suggested an enduring adaptive
> > > > value to the emotion of Fear; i was thinking about this today in the
> > > > context of the global market gymnastics this week, akin to a neurotic
> > > > on steroids; nothing fundamental or new in global economic terms has
> > > > changed this week, no new notable insights of structurally significant
> > > > proportions; in short, nothing new. Yet, we're 10%+ and 3 trillion
> > > > dollars worse of on Friday than we were this time last week. Was this
> > > > not essentially what we developed Foresight to counterbalance, i
> > > > wonder?- Hide quoted text -
>
> > > - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -

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