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Crisis of capitalism

Discussions about the economic and financial ramifications of PEAK OIL

Re: Crisis of capitalism

Unread postby Cid_Yama » Sun 21 Aug 2011, 17:26:37

Please. You guys live in some alternate reality that is not supported by the polls. (I'm talking independent polls, not right-wingers asking only right-wingers, conducted by Fox or some right-wing think tank.)

Come next election, the Republicans will be swept out by a tidal wave. And the best thing about it, is that you haven't got a clue. You've been lying to yourselves for so long, you're believing your own nonsense.

Oh, and all that talk about eliminating Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid, food stamps and other programs, eliminating minimum wage and crushing Unions, keep doing that.

You're doing a good job, and everyone supports you.

That bit about changing the child labor laws in Maine. The Republican Governor of Maine was brilliant to come up with that one. You need to take that national before the next election.
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Re: Crisis of capitalism

Unread postby americandream » Sun 21 Aug 2011, 17:28:10

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Cid_Yama', 'S')uch nonsense.


Agreed Cid. But it will happen. The shift from territorial mercantilism to global capitalism has been relentless and it is in that context that I write. I am all for the needs of the people being paramount, but as I have said all along, this process is unyielding as the underlying dynamic for optimisation of profit MUST clear all obstacles to its full realisation. And nation states in essence act as hurdles to the free flow of speculation.
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Re: Crisis of capitalism

Unread postby vision-master » Sun 21 Aug 2011, 17:31:17

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Cid_Yama', 'P')lease. You guys live in some alternate reality that is not supported by the polls. (I'm talking independent polls, not right-wingers asking only right-wingers, conducted by Fox or some right-wing think tank.)

Come next election, the Republicans will be swept out by a tidal wave. And the best thing about it, is that you haven't got a clue. You've been lying to yourselves for so long, you're believing your own nonsense.


Obama will win the next election, as the Republicans won't have a winning candidate.

To much division within the upside down stars party right now..
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Re: Crisis of capitalism

Unread postby AgentR11 » Sun 21 Aug 2011, 17:49:18

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Cid_Yama', 'P')lease. You guys live in some alternate reality that is not supported by the polls. (I'm talking independent polls, not right-wingers asking only right-wingers, conducted by Fox or some right-wing think tank.)


Even lefty funded polls are showing Obama in the tank. Be realistic. Not saying he can't win of course, Wall Street will not look kindly upon some of the grenade throwers the Republicans are running; but to use words like "swept out" or "tidal wave" is beyond being supported by any kind of poling data out there. But there is a thread here already about the elections to come in 2012.

Of course, we stray from the point of the thread on capitalism of course....

So back to the thread, would something bad happen to capitalists if the Democrats won? Last time they won, all they did was bail out a most vulnerable variety of them (health insurance companies). They did provide some minor nuisance to power and energy companies, but I suspect they'll manage just fine. I don't see any carbon tax. I don't see a personal property tax. All I see is some gibberish about raising income tax rates on the wealthy, as if they would be all terribly horrified by the government taking a nibble from their annual income, that when compared to their net worth and valuation of controlled assets and trusts, is miniscule. The Democrats are every bit as beholden to the wealthy as the Republicans are; and will do nothing that would harm the net worth of those individuals.
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Re: Crisis of capitalism

Unread postby vision-master » Sun 21 Aug 2011, 17:55:26

The Republicans are great at payen the blame game. The 'no new taxes' they banter about is a scam, most ppl are wise to this. Of course you are from a Red State, so you only see your little bubble.

FYI: our Dem Gov won by only around 9,000 votes + - last election...
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Re: Crisis of capitalism

Unread postby AgentR11 » Sun 21 Aug 2011, 17:57:22

All politicians are great at playing the blame game, as well as the game of claiming credit for anything good.

Its in the job description.
If they weren't any good at it; they'd never get elected.
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Re: Crisis of capitalism

Unread postby vision-master » Sun 21 Aug 2011, 18:04:31

The problem is, those freshman have signed a contract 'no new taxes' period!

There is NO middle ground with them, it's my-way or no-way.
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Re: Crisis of capitalism

Unread postby AgentR11 » Sun 21 Aug 2011, 18:15:06

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('vision-master', 'T')he problem is, those freshman have signed a contract 'no new taxes' period!
There is NO middle ground with them, it's my-way or no-way.


Its what their electorate wanted at the time, and may still want. There was more than just a little bit of teaparty side disappointment that they raised the debt ceiling at all.

OTOH, I don't recall Boehner making that pledge, and if the supercommittee comes back with a solid package that has entitlement cuts and tax increases, he may be able to pass it with majority of his caucus and a majority of the Dems, with Senate support. If the Dem's won't support, then I'd suspect it won't pass, and the auto-cuts with no new taxes will go into effect. Those cuts are entirely acceptable to the teaparty variety, so don't get your hopes up about them objecting to the deep DoD cuts.
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Re: Crisis of capitalism

Unread postby dissident » Sun 21 Aug 2011, 18:30:46

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Cid_Yama', 'P')lease. You guys live in some alternate reality that is not supported by the polls. (I'm talking independent polls, not right-wingers asking only right-wingers, conducted by Fox or some right-wing think tank.)

Come next election, the Republicans will be swept out by a tidal wave.


You are being way too optimistic. The sheeple will follow the lead of the mass media, to which they give the benefit of the doubt. Here in Canuckistan we elected Harper with a majority even though he acted like a dictator as minority Prime Minister after 2006. He prorogued parliament twice. Sabotaged parliamentary investigations of abuses and engaged in smear of the opposition unlike any government before him. But the media sided with this clown and he got a majority. He didn't even promise really big tax cuts.

Public opinion is a manufactured entity. Most people don't pay enough attention to remember what happened three days ago, let alone several years ago. Without some agitation from the press there are no scandals. You don't even know there was any wrong doing to start with. Any policy decision simply does not have the direct and traceable impact on people's lives for them to wake up.

The Harper regime has hired 5500 new prison guards and is building $10 billion in new jails (this is huge by Canadian standards, we are only 10% of the US). This was supposedly for "unreported crimes" (Orwellian newspeak if ever there was any). But it is really about mandatory sentencing and the creation of the prison industrial complex in Canada. After the taxpayer pays for the prisons they will be privatized in the name of efficiency and small government (LOL). The crime rate in Canada has been going down since the 1990s and has not been really high in half a century at least.

At the same time Harper has gutted Environment Canada. This agency is like the EPA in that it did pollution emissions monitoring (but never had the teeth of the EPA). Harper thinks he is going to ride the tar sands to greater glory, the nitwit. According to him Canada is an oil superpower. Yet another megalomaniac.
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Re: Crisis of capitalism

Unread postby Cog » Sun 21 Aug 2011, 19:12:47

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Cid_Yama', 'P')lease. You guys live in some alternate reality that is not supported by the polls. (I'm talking independent polls, not right-wingers asking only right-wingers, conducted by Fox or some right-wing think tank.) ...
That bit about changing the child labor laws in Maine. The Republican Governor of Maine was brilliant to come up with that one. You need to take that national before the next election.

I could go back and find your post before the 2010 elections where you said the exact same thing. And we know how that turned out for the progressives.
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Re: Crisis of capitalism

Unread postby vision-master » Sun 21 Aug 2011, 19:16:39

Blah'man wants to remove minimum wage laws - work for all - yippie......
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Re: Crisis of capitalism

Unread postby Cid_Yama » Sun 21 Aug 2011, 22:16:15

Nonsense Cog. Go find it if you think it's there. It's not.
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Re: Crisis of capitalism

Unread postby prajeshbhat » Sun 21 Aug 2011, 22:40:29

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Agent11', '
')
Gold is not credit, even when used as money. It is a compact store of value, just as coffee and rice are non-compact stores of value.

Granted, in our modern world we just electronically pay with ebits for Dollars and ebits for Reals and even ebits for ETF Gold. But even in the absence of our electronic paradise, this trick works just fine, and did work just fine in times past with physical gold and silver.

Gold is simply a commodity that is compact enough to where its value density makes it suitable to conduct commerce.

From the other side, credit can do what gold can not, it can leverage and it can work on margin. With 1 ounce of gold, I have control of 1 ounce of gold. With $1000, I can control $5000 in assets, magnifying my potential for profit or loss by a factor of 5 (or more). That is the power of credit.


I think money has been around for so long people have forgotten what money really is. Money is a promise that has to be fulfilled in the future. I hear a lot of fascinating definitions of money. Medium of exchange, store of value, claim on labor, unit of accounting. These are the derived uses of money that developed over the millennia. Money fundamentally is a promise. And that is why money only works in a growing system. Because only in a growing system, there is a good chance that both parties will believe that a promise will be fulfilled.
Credit is money And that is why it is accepted so easily in circulation. Because as long as the system is growing, there is a good chance that credit will get you something valuable in future.

Don't believe me? Go deep in to the jungles of Africa and ask the tribals if they will exchange their food in return of gold (medium of exchange). If there is a worldwide famine( shrinking system), what will happen to the price of food with respect to gold(no inflation with gold standard).

I was trying to counter Oakley's assertion that money and freedom can coexist. To me the tribals in Africa are truly free. They don't make promises and they don't owe anybody anything. The "civilized" on the other hand......

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')f I sail my boat to Brazil, I can trade roughly an ounce of gold for a ton of coffee beans. I sail said beans back to Houston and sell them to Bob the Warehouse Guy for some amount of local currency, which I then use to buy more gold than I used to buy the beans in Brazil. No credit is involved in those transactions. I make a profit, Bob makes a profit, and the growers and sellers in Brazil made a profit... yet there was no credit involved.



No credit involved? Think a little harder.
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Re: Crisis of capitalism

Unread postby Loki » Sun 21 Aug 2011, 22:49:12

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Oakley', 'I') totally agree that we do not have freedom, but why? You seem to think that we need an even stronger central government, yet it is the collusion between government and corporations that has brought us to this point in history where freedom has been destroyed. The powerful corporations and the government have found a mutuality of interests. An government is more powerful and more pervasive than ever before in the history of the US. At the beginning it was hardly 5% of what it is today.

It is a simple fact that the government that was established to protect our liberties, has turned into the chief enemy of those freedoms; as it operates today, the more government we have the less freedom we have, so I think you call for more powerful government is exactly the opposite of what will bring us freedom.

I agree that Big Government and Big Business go hand in hand. Yet you focus exclusively on the first half of that equation. This is my main problem with so-called conservatives, who rail against Big Government as the source of all evils, while giving a pass to the sociopathic behavior of Big Business in this country. The problem is concentration of power, not government per se. Walmart is a far greater threat to middle class America than the EPA.
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Re: Crisis of capitalism

Unread postby AgentR11 » Sun 21 Aug 2011, 23:07:13

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('prajeshbhat', '[')b]Credit is money

I think my post clearly indicates that Credit is money.
My point, is that gold is not credit. Credit can be money, without all money being credit. Gold is money, only in the sense that it is an asset that it easy to drag around and trade to other people. But because it is SO easy to drag around, and SO easily recognized for what it is, it becomes broadly accepted.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'D')on't believe me? Go deep in to the jungles of Africa and ask the tribals if they will exchange their food in return of gold (medium of exchange). If there is a worldwide famine( shrinking system), what will happen to the price of food with respect to gold(no inflation with gold standard).

1. There can be no gold standard, so why even go there.
2. Why would someone be in proximity of the tribals, in Africa, with gold, no food, but also not being one of the tribe members? Seems a *very* convoluted situation.... You wouldn't go to them to trade using gold, and definitely not for food; if anything, Africa being Africa, you'd be bringing food or other consumables to sell to the tribals for gold, diamonds, or whatnot.
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Re: Crisis of capitalism

Unread postby Oakley » Sun 21 Aug 2011, 23:33:50

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('prajeshbhat', '
')
I think money has been around for so long people have forgotten what money really is. Money is a promise that has to be fulfilled in the future. I hear a lot of fascinating definitions of money. Medium of exchange, store of value, claim on labor, unit of accounting. These are the derived uses of money that developed over the millennia. Money fundamentally is a promise. And that is why money only works in a growing system. Because only in a growing system, there is a good chance that both parties will believe that a promise will be fulfilled.
Credit is money And that is why it is accepted so easily in circulation. Because as long as the system is growing, there is a good chance that credit will get you something valuable in future.

Don't believe me? Go deep in to the jungles of Africa and ask the tribals if they will exchange their food in return of gold (medium of exchange). If there is a worldwide famine( shrinking system), what will happen to the price of food with respect to gold(no inflation with gold standard).

I was trying to counter Oakley's assertion that money and freedom can coexist. To me the tribals in Africa are truly free. They don't make promises and they don't owe anybody anything. The "civilized" on the other hand......


The use of gold and silver as money arose out of barter. People do benefit from trade because it allows some to acquire from others what they cannot directly acquire from nature, but which others can. I might be a good hunter and you a good farmer and we can exchange directly, through barter. Gold and silver were found or mined by some and they used it themselves for whatever they pleased or traded it to others who could use it for some purpose that was of value to them. Somewhere along the line, it was discovered it was convenient to accept it in trade even if you didn't want it to use, because it was easy to pass on part or all of it to someone else who for something you actually wanted.

Gold and silver were first usable commodities in their own right before they acquired additional value as a medium of exchange. It is not a promise because the one who gives it in trade or receives it in trade promises nothing. The ones who mine it or mint it promise nothing. A promise is an obligation, but gold and silver coins are not obligations of anyone. The value of the coins may go up or down in relationship to goods and services and they retain only what value the mutual judgement of people making trades are willing to assign to them. If the output of the economy increases because there is more efficiency in production, perhaps because of energy discoveries then the value of the existing gold and silver coins increase relative to the value of the increased production (things cost less). If the output of the economy decreases because there is less production, perhaps because of less available energy, then the value of the gold and silver coins in existence goes down relative to the available supply of goods and services (things cost more). Of course there are other factors which influence the value of gold and silver coins such as mining of new gold and silver which increases the supply, but since mining requires considerable resources, the increase will be slow. Gold and silver work just fine in either a growing or a contracting system; their value in trade just adjusts in the market place.

Your remark about "no inflation with gold standard" confuses inflation, increases in the money supply, with price increases. Prices increases can be caused by increased in the money supply that exceed increases in production. If there is a famine and food prices increase, but the money supply stays stable, there is no inflation but there is a price change because the supply of food dramatically dropped. Inflation and deflation are monetary terms which refer to the increase or decrease in the supply of money.

Gold and silver coins as money involves no promise. But if someone issues bills of credit, or scrip which were pieces of paper that promised to give gold or silver coins at some future date or on demand, then they have issued money that does involve a promise. If someone accepts gold and silver coins for safekeeping in their vault, and issues a certificate (warehouse receipt) like silver and gold certificates that circulated as money then these certificates are promises to turn over the gold or silver coins on demand.

The current money supply in the US, if you use the M2 definition is composed of currency in circulation, checking accounts, savings accounts, CD's and travelers checks in circulation. All these are bank credit and redeemable at the banks in nothing other than a different form of bank credit. If you want currency (debts of the Federal Reserve Bank) instead of a checking account balance (debt of your local bank) you cash a check, but you can't get anything else from the bank, hence the current promises of the banks are in reality promises that cannot be redeemed. And this bank credit was created out of thin air and loaned to the public at interest with the purpose of indenturing (enslaving) the public to the banks. The side effect was first boom and then bust as each cycle of expansion was driven by the demand expressed in spending the newly created money and then the lack of demand as repayment of the debts to the banks caused contraction. This is why the current debt based monetary system is predatory, unstable and unsustainable, and is inconsistent with freedom. Free people are those who have not been captured by indenture agreements issued by governments to banks on behalf of the public (government bonds) when the banks gave nothing in return but their own promise to pay nothing (M2 money supply).

Gold and silver coins are not instruments of slavery. In any society that trades on a large enough scale to need a medium of exchange, gold and silver are neutral and favor neither the buyer or seller of goods and services. They are not promises; they are commodities.

Your assertion that gold and silver are promises I see as incorrect. You assertion that gold and silver only work in an expanding economy I see as incorrect. You assertion that money and freedom cannot coexist I see as incorrect if that money is gold and silver coinage. You assertion that money and freedom cannot coexist is correct if that money is fiat, scrip, real bills, bills of credit, or any other bank credit without 100% gold and silver coinage as reserves against the banks deposit liabilities.
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Re: Crisis of capitalism

Unread postby Oakley » Sun 21 Aug 2011, 23:58:22

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Loki', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Oakley', '
')I agree that Big Government and Big Business go hand in hand. Yet you focus exclusively on the first half of that equation. This is my main problem with so-called conservatives, who rail against Big Government as the source of all evils, while giving a pass to the sociopathic behavior of Big Business in this country. The problem is concentration of power, not government per se. Walmart is a far greater threat to middle class America than the EPA.


If I went into all the details of my views, I would be writing a book rather than a post, and I already post long winded statements.

One of the major group of corporations that fleeces the US public are the commercial banks and Federal Reserve, which operate the current financial scam we call our monetary system. I have railed against this in many posts on this site.

A corporation does not exist without either the federal of a State government creating it by granting it a charter. This is a grant of privilege. And one of the characteristics of a corporation in law is that the owners (stockholders) are not liable for the misdeeds of the corporation. (As a practical matter the corporation is not itself fully liable for its misdeeds because of collusion between the corporations and government.) In a free society, governments should not be permitted to grant corporations charters, so the forms of businesses would be limited to sole proprietorships and partnerships where the owners are fully liable.

I would do away with corporations as legal entities. It was the government creation of corporations that allowed for huge concentrations of wealth into corporations. Without corporate structures the size, market influence, and political influence of businesses would be limited, and without the thousands of laws that inhibit free trade the free market could actually work its magic.

If you look at the history of corporations, they originally were grants by kings of exclusive trading territories. The British East Indies Company was an early corporation established by King George III of England with many of the members of the British Parliament as shareholders. It had exclusive trading rights with the British Colonies in America, which gave rise to much resentment among Colonial business men who ofter resorted to smuggling to trade with the Dutch instead. There were poor business conditions prior to the American Revolution causing the price of tea to drop, and the British East Indies Company had warehouses full of tea. To help the company financially, a tax on tea was instituted and the British East Indies Company was allowed to keep the tax, all of which gave rise to the Boston Tea Party. The monopoly on trade that this early corporation had in the Colonies was one of the principle causes of the American Revolution.

Perhaps the current fascist (corporate / government economic collusion) system will give rise to the next American Revolution. The more and more I look at conditions today I am reminded of the conditions that gave rise to the American Revolution and the French Revolution. Plunder and control of the majority for the benefit of the few.
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Re: Crisis of capitalism

Unread postby prajeshbhat » Mon 22 Aug 2011, 00:33:53

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Oakley', 'G')old and silver coins as money involves no promise. But if someone issues bills of credit, or scrip which were pieces of paper that promised to give gold or silver coins at some future date or on demand, then they have issued money that does involve a promise. If someone accepts gold and silver coins for safekeeping in their vault, and issues a certificate (warehouse receipt) like silver and gold certificates that circulated as money then these certificates are promises to turn over the gold or silver coins on demand.

The current money supply in the US, if you use the M2 definition is composed of currency in circulation, checking accounts, savings accounts, CD's and travelers checks in circulation. All these are bank credit and redeemable at the banks in nothing other than a different form of bank credit. If you want currency (debts of the Federal Reserve Bank) instead of a checking account balance (debt of your local bank) you cash a check, but you can't get anything else from the bank, hence the current promises of the banks are in reality promises that cannot be redeemed. And this bank credit was created out of thin air and loaned to the public at interest with the purpose of indenturing (enslaving) the public to the banks.


Gold used as money involves no promise? Really. Why use gold at all? Why not just barter your goods?
Banks can only charge interest on fiat money? Show me a bank that will lend you gold without charging interest.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'Y')our assertion that gold and silver are promises I see as incorrect. You assertion that gold and silver only work in an expanding economy I see as incorrect.


OK. Let me put it this way. There is an armegeddon. And you are holding the last morsel of food. How much gold will you trade it for?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'Y')ou assertion that money and freedom cannot coexist I see as incorrect if that money is gold and silver coinage. You assertion that money and freedom cannot coexist is correct if that money is fiat, scrip, real bills, bills of credit, or any other bank credit without 100% gold and silver coinage as reserves against the banks deposit liabilities.


Then how come hierarchies and slavery existed in the Roman empire. Back then actual gold and silver were used as money. And they manged to inflate gold by mixing copper with it for 2 centuries. So if your assertion that slavery cannot exist in gold money system is correct, this shouldn't have happened.
The fact is all money, including gold gravitate towards people who are perceived have the best chance of fulfilling promises.Why? Because money is a promise to begin with. Inflation happens when people make too many promises that are not fulfilled.
Back in those days, it was the emperors. These days it is banks and corporate oligarchs.
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Re: Crisis of capitalism

Unread postby AgentR11 » Mon 22 Aug 2011, 00:48:55

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('prajeshbhat', 'O')K. Let me put it this way. There is an armegeddon. And you are holding the last morsel of food. How much gold will you trade it for?


Last morsel of food is honestly worthless. Food is only meaningful if there is a reasonable expectation of continually more later. It couldn't add but seconds to your lifespan. But this is also true of the gold you might have in your pocket at the time. If there is no more food, death will arrive within a month of few regardless of your wealth, or lack thereof. In addition, this is also true of any other form of trade you might wish to make at that point; they all become worthless.

To answer the question, if it was a pretty gold coin, I might trade the food for it, if not, I'd just eat the food. It won't make any difference either way.
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Re: Crisis of capitalism

Unread postby Cog » Mon 22 Aug 2011, 01:10:14

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Cid_Yama', 'N')onsense Cog. Go find it if you think it's there. It's not.


Sure it is where you said:

post1016638.html#p1016638

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')hat a childish argument. Please.

The numbers have shifted. The Democrats aren't losing either house.

For a Pole, you seem extremely involved in American politics.

Democrats like to keep our elections free of foreign influence, unlike the Republicans. All they care about is the money.


Posted in response to EnergyUnlimited post just before where he said.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'b')y EnergyUnlimited » Wed Oct 20, 2010 4:23 pm

Cid_Yama wrote:
You seem to use the word whining alot. You must not understand it's meaning since no one has been whining in the cases where you have used it.

Perhaps it is you who are whining and you don't realize it.

Nope.
It is you who are whining while you contemplate Democrats losing Congress in coming elections.

You are also refusing to accept that Liberal America is not sustainable.

Tough luck.


I have an excellent memory of failed predictions made by you.
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