Sounds right.
On Sep 16, 7:40 am, James Lynch <[email protected]> wrote: > My mother in law went to school with Mike, said he was a jerk or > something like that. I thought it was a riot the way he showed our > hometown, a highschooler then. > > Elsewhere, Archytas mentions this being the only game in town and I > wonder facing the situational characterizations Moore lists what > options does one have? I mean we either play their game or lose, > period. Sure regions can begin to resist by conserving resources > through internal trade and services but in the end everybody has to > pay the tax man, tuition, fuel, etc. It makes me think we are all > under the spell of a mass narcotic. I would like to see the rise of a > dual economy come out of this disaster, one independent (the current > model) and one social (remove gov't assistance from the old and apply > to the new). The purpose of the social will be to fuel the improvement > of society as a whole through massive public works projects like > education, mentorship, health and care of those in need, removal of > poverty and mitigation of its effects through quality individualized > social reeducation programs beginning with relocation, therapeutic > exercise (learning/gaining skills) and exposure to positive > reinforcement. Sounds scary? > > On Sat, Aug 27, 2011 at 10:19 AM, ornamentalmind > > > > > > <[email protected]> wrote: > > Yes rigsy, the short lived US middle class is all but gone...and it is > > no accident. > > >http://www.commondreams.org/view/2011/08/06 > > > Hyperbole, perhaps. Directly applicable?... absolutely! > > > On Aug 27, 6:29 am, rigsy03 <[email protected]> wrote: > >> The middle class is shrinking- the class that drives an economy. > > >> Greece is not a good example. Libya is a wealthy country- sweet crude, > >> investments around the world=cash. Now the clean up crew will clean up > >> with new oil contracts and rebuilding a ruined infrastructure all in > >> the name of liberty and freedom as per the examples of Iraq and > >> Afghanistan plus we have "miles"/countries to go, as Frost put it. > > >> On Aug 27, 2:12 am, archytas <[email protected]> wrote: > > >> > Banks are lying about money laundering - > >> > seehttp://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/apr/03/us-bank-mexico-drug-gangs > >> > - as an example. They are also hiding losses illegally through > >> > massive false accounting that has been 'made legal'. The basic scam > >> > is similar to the alleged 'rogue trading' that brought down Barings - > >> > losses are being moved around through subsidiaries and the ability to > >> > 'mark to model' (instead of market) on assets - hence Bank of America > >> > is claiming to be worth $325 billion but is only trading at £65 > >> > billion on the exchanges. > >> > What we probably have is the near certainty of bank collapses. We are > >> > currently funding these bent operations instead of going to full > >> > employment and wealth redistribution to prevent recession. > >> > Banks have sprung up all around the European drug routes for no other > >> > explicable reason (just like Miami in the past). > > >> > There is no reason for a global recession, but that's different from > >> > whether one is being engineered. The Greeks are currently being > >> > pilloried as having wasted all the money 'we' lent them - but who made > >> > the decisions to pile money in there rather than into factories or > >> > whatever? Not only is cash hard to track as Rigsby says - one can't > >> > even track through bank accounts of their own assets, much of which > >> > are junk but claimed, via securitisation as 'real'. > > >> > On Aug 27, 1:31 am, "Howard Lee Mosely Jr." <[email protected]> > >> > wrote: > > >> > > people are at a point where there own person and security is for more > >> > > value is worth more than loyality to at state : or organizatoin : > >> > > morals and > >> > > manners discarded for more of a authorized control to ease a > >> > > subconcious > >> > > rebeling of a hibitaully slaved mindstate than the sence of being > >> > > govern > >> > > seems adverse to a widen culturaled soicity where humanity over powers > >> > > human error and misplaced hatreds for the presevation of all kind > >> > > humankind > >> > > ?? > > >> > > On Fri, Aug 19, 2011 at 6:12 AM, paradox <[email protected]> wrote: > >> > > > Recently, i read of an "authority" on institutional debt proclaim > >> > > > that > >> > > > a global recession was now inevitable. My first thought was that this > >> > > > was something of a curious "God like" statement, which was actually > >> > > > plain and simply wrong. There is actually next to no risk of a global > >> > > > recession. > > >> > > > How do they get away with stuff like this, i wonder? > > >> > > -- > >> > > Howard Lee Mosely Jr.- Hide quoted text - > > >> > - Show quoted text - > > -- > Please do not put me on forwarding lists or submit my address to cute > online greetings or anything else for that matter. If you must, please > forward me in BCC and send me a link to cute greetings. Many thanks!- Hide > quoted text - > > - Show quoted text -
