Working people with little disposable cash who are nervous about the condition of the global economy can hedge against instability, systemic risk and currency
debasement by acquiring a small allocation of silver.
Not exact matches
A potential US equity bubble would be driven, in my mind,
by a growing and near historic sense of «nowhere else to go» with global capital (that is scared of
debasement and confiscation).
She and her co-author Rabbi Shmuley Boteach wrote that the «experiment in mass
debasement» is damaging culture, adding «we have often warned about pornography's corrosive effects on a man's soul and on his ability to function as husband and,
by extension, as father.»
By playing up the maudlin aspects like the
debasement of Mister's mother or going for poverty clichés like ketchup sandwiches, the filmmakers seem reluctant to trust their picture to their strongest asset: their young actors.
But queerness has never looked so bland, and for a film about a sexual revolution, pleasurable sex is conspicuously absent: Indeed, most of the shockingly few sex scenes result in the protagonist, the white, all - American, conspicuously attractive Danny (Jeremy Irvine), so ashamed
by his apparent
debasement — he briefly resorts to tricking for cash — that he's literally brought to tears while having his dick sucked.
The Fed's role will be to get the cash hoarders back into speculating on the newly de-toxified MBS
by scaring the beejesus out of them with a knock out combination of fiat currency
debasement and near zero yields.
A potential US equity bubble would be driven, in my mind,
by a growing and near historic sense of «nowhere else to go» with global capital (that is scared of
debasement and confiscation).
But you have to wonder if that will be offset
by higher inflation, currency
debasement and / or other unintended consequences?
[5] Thus, financial repression is most successful in liquidating debts when accompanied
by inflation and can be considered a form of taxation, [6] or alternatively a form of
debasement.
As Edward Abbey pointed out two decades ago, «It should be clear to everyone
by now that crude numerical growth does not solve our chronic problems of unemployment, welfare, crime, traffic, filth, noise, squalor, the pollution of our air, the corruption of our politics, the
debasement of the school system (hardly worthy of the name «education»), and the general loss of popular control over the political process — where money, not people, is now the determining factor.»
And today a Washington Post column
by Dana Milbank illustrates one of the big problems that Buchanan sought to solve: the temptation of legislatures to spend money with little regard for what two of his students called «deficits, debt, and
debasement.»
«
By aggressively mitigating the effects of the 2008 financial crisis via unparalleled global monetary
debasement extending for nearly a decade, central banks have brought us today's «bubbles everywhere» investment landscape.»
Whatever its stated purpose, its effective purpose is to create a mechanism of deficit spending
by politicians, through the insidious invisible taxation of monetary
debasement (aka inflation).»