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Reverse Engineer's Explanation of Markets and Investing

Discussions about the economic and financial ramifications of PEAK OIL

Re: Reverse Engineer's Explanation of Markets and Investing

Unread postby Heineken » Thu 11 Sep 2008, 17:22:55

Martin, I recommend you read "The Sorrows of Empire." Maybe those $300 hammers are gone, but they've been replaced by even worse abuses and squanderings.

Or, how about those ridiculous overcharges by military contractors in Iraq? The mysterious disappearances of millions of dollars?
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Re: Reverse Engineer's Explanation of Markets and Investing

Unread postby cube » Thu 11 Sep 2008, 18:04:24

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Heineken', 'G')o ahead, Cube. Give me the truth.
A modest proposal no matter how small will eventually grow into a beast as what we're seeing right now with all the gov. bailouts.

If we take your example, health care, sure it may be overwhelmingly popular.
But once you open the Pandora's box and create a gov. program that essentially takes money from Person A and gives it to Person B it's a slippery slope.
It's not going to take that long before someone else says, "Hey that sounds like a good idea. Maybe I should do the same thing too but this time make the money go into my pocket!" Now multiply this out over 100 years and you end up with what we have now. This is exactly what the founding fathers hoped to avoid.
A gov. "income redistribution" program rarely dies-off. It tends to just breed and spawn even more programs. It's best just to ask everybody to, "paddle their own canoe."

But of course this is all theoretical / wishful thinking, Libertarian governments (think of the USA back in the days) tend to NOT remain Libertarian very long.
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Re: Reverse Engineer's Explanation of Markets and Investing

Unread postby nobodypanic » Thu 11 Sep 2008, 19:51:34

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', ' ')In a bear market one does have not to try to make money, but to try to lose as little as possible relative to everyone else. Just keeping your job, a roof over your head and enough to eat may be enough to emerge from a recession/depression in tact, and may be considered a significant victory relative to those that lose everything.

well you certainly made me feel better about my situation. :lol:
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Re: Reverse Engineer's Explanation of Markets and Investing

Unread postby nobodypanic » Thu 11 Sep 2008, 19:59:41

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Heineken', 'M')artin, I recommend you read "The Sorrows of Empire." Maybe those $300 hammers are gone, but they've been replaced by even worse abuses and squanderings. Or, how about those ridiculous overcharges by military contractors in Iraq? The mysterious disappearances of millions of dollars?

dear H, i am quite sympathetic to your views; however, understand that certain things such $800 toilet seats (i am pulling the # out of my rear, but it was high) are for a specially designed product that had to function in submarines and were required to have certain specific attributes.

also, the DoD will try to 'hide' money in it's budget that gets funneled to fund things they want no one to know about, e.g., the hammer wasn't really $300, it was $10; the remainder went somewhere else. and yeah, there's also a bit of corruption and etc.

anyway, i think your overall point is sound, as i have seen much evidence of it myself. people focus on the fact that j6p may be getting over, while turning a blind eye to the real rape going on around them.
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Re: Reverse Engineer's Explanation of Markets and Investing

Unread postby Captain_Meh » Thu 11 Sep 2008, 21:05:55

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('cube', 'B')ut once you open the Pandora's box and create a gov. program that essentially takes money from Person A and gives it to Person B it's a slippery slope.

By and large, the slippery slope angle is one of the laziest, shortsighted and illogical arguments that one can hide behind. Its basically taking the concept of precedence to its absurd end.

I'll never forget some nimrod on Fox News applying the slippery slope argument within the same sex marriage debate to conclude that it would inevitably lead to condoning and legalizing cross-species marriages. No sh!t.
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Re: Reverse Engineer's Explanation of Markets and Investing

Unread postby Heineken » Thu 11 Sep 2008, 21:31:05

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('nobodypanic', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Heineken', 'M')artin, I recommend you read "The Sorrows of Empire." Maybe those $300 hammers are gone, but they've been replaced by even worse abuses and squanderings. Or, how about those ridiculous overcharges by military contractors in Iraq? The mysterious disappearances of millions of dollars?
dear H, i am quite sympathetic to your views; however, understand that certain things such $800 toilet seats (i am pulling the # out of my rear, but it was high) are for a specially designed product that had to function in submarines and were required to have certain specific attributes.
also, the DoD will try to 'hide' money in it's budget that gets funneled to fund things they want no one to know about, e.g., the hammer wasn't really $300, it was $10; the remainder went somewhere else. and yeah, there's also a bit of corruption and etc.
anyway, i think your overall point is sound, as i have seen much evidence of it myself. people focus on the fact that j6p may be getting over, while turning a blind eye to the real rape going on around them.

Plenty of hiding going on. According to "The Sorrows of Empire," huge amounts of the defense and espionage spending are in a black box. We don't know what it's spent on because we aren't allowed to know. This is in direct violation of the Constitution, which requires that the spending of every dollar be accounted for and publicly disclosed.

So God knows what's going on with our money. We'll never know.
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Re: Reverse Engineer's Explanation of Markets and Investing

Unread postby Heineken » Thu 11 Sep 2008, 21:37:38

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('cube', 'A') modest proposal no matter how small will eventually grow into a beast as what we're seeing right now with all the gov. bailouts. If we take your example, health care, sure it may be overwhelmingly popular. But once you open the Pandora's box and create a gov. program that essentially takes money from Person A and gives it to Person B it's a slippery slope.
It's not going to take that long before someone else says, "Hey that sounds like a good idea. Maybe I should do the same thing too but this time make the money go into my pocket!" Now multiply this out over 100 years and you end up with what we have now. This is exactly what the founding fathers hoped to avoid.
A gov. "income redistribution" program rarely dies-off. It tends to just breed and spawn even more programs. It's best just to ask everybody to, "paddle their own canoe."
But of course this is all theoretical / wishful thinking, Libertarian governments (think of the USA back in the days) tend to NOT remain Libertarian very long.

I'm willing to give up my health-care dreams if the government abandons all its other wasteful spending (which is to say, a big proportion of its spending).

As long as the money's being collected and wasted, I think some of it should be wasted on public health care. That's a real benefit for real people, and a program that I wouldn't WANT to ever "die off." People's need for health care doesn't go away, you know.

Just about every other Western nation provides this benefit for its citizens. Why are we the exception, especially when there's substantial consensus that our current private system is failing?

The answer is that the rich are in the driver's seat in the US, even more so than in other countries. It's a country of the rich, for the rich, and by the rich.
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Re: Reverse Engineer's Explanation of Markets and Investing

Unread postby the48thronin » Thu 11 Sep 2008, 21:57:34

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Mr Bill', 'I')n a bear market one does have not to try to make money, but to try to lose as little as possible relative to everyone else. Just keeping your job, a roof over your head and enough to eat may be enough to emerge from a recession/depression in tact, and may be considered a significant victory relative to those that lose everything.

worth reading the whole thread.
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Re: Reverse Engineer's Explanation of Markets and Investing

Unread postby MrBill » Fri 12 Sep 2008, 03:07:29

Hey, this turned into a great thread afterall. Thanks RR. Did I not read somewhere last week that elimating all 'earmarks' or whatever they are called in the US would save 'just' $18 billion? A large amount to be sure, but a drop in the US' annual operating budget. I get as mad as the next guy about a wasted $1 million here or there, but if we keep it all in context we have to keep our minds focussed on the really big ticket items that add up quickly. Believe me I come from a country that counts its nickels and dimes. But sometimes you can be penny wise and pound foolish. Focus on what's important and fund it properly. The rest is chump change.
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Re: Reverse Engineer's Explanation of Markets and Investing

Unread postby MrBill » Fri 12 Sep 2008, 03:38:21

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Byron100', 'J')ust one more thing I'd like to toss out there. Nothing, I repeat, *nothing* gets done without labor. Food doesn't get grown without labor, land doesn't become habitable without labor, gold in nice, shiny coins don't become that way without labor, and even stocks don't get traded without people actually doing the work performing the trades.
So why is it that labor is so undervalued in society...when it should be the most valuable commodity there is? Especially the kind of work that actually gets stuff done, such as harvesting crops or building houses, teaching children, etc. I'd love nothing more than to see everyone stop work for a full month...I do mean everyone. (Might actually happen someday if we get a bird flu pandemic or whatever.) Let's see what society thinks of the value of labor then. Just something for you folks to chew on, is all.

Labor is our most basic 'currency' unit. If you define 'money' as any liquid asset that can be used to measure the value of other assets relative to one another. The problem is that labor is a wasting asset and it has no intrinsic value.

As time is irreversible wasted labor has no value. So the value of labor is only derived by that work of external value that can be sold or exchanged for other goods and services.

You can either work for yourself and sell goods and services to others. Or you can work for someone else in return for money or some other kind of compensation. However, you cannot sell your labor to yourself.

So in essence the value of labor is directly proportional to what that labor can produce of value and the scarcity of that labor. In a world with 6.7 billion people labor is not that scarce. Not when one contemplates that most of the basics that we need like food, shelter, clothing and heat can be produced by a minimum of people, and everyone else's labor goes into producing luxury goods or services. In other words the market expands to include that excess labor, but it is not necessary to the running of the basic economy.

Our problem seems to more of finding productive uses for excess labor rather than not having enough labor. We may have a shortage of skilled labor in this or that specific field, but that is actually a shortage of those skills and not a shortage of labor per se. Unfortunately, unskilled and untrained labor may not be able to peform those skilled tasks even if they 'price' themselves into the market and agree to work for less.

On the other hand it is very hard for organized labor to demand $20 per hour plus benefits when someone, somewhere is willing to do the exact same job for $2 per hour and no benefits. If that organized labor is more productive and can produce more, but more cheaply, then there is an argument to pay extra for that labor.

If not, then it is really just a labor subsidy. That subsidy will be paid out of corporate profits and/or in the form of higher consumer prices. As a society that is a trade-off. Is that higher priced organized labor worth it or not? It is worth it if consumers are able and willing to pay higher prices for that subsidized labor. If not, then it comes out of corporate profits, which shareholders either will accept or not.

So you could say that labor has no intrinsic value. It is worth whatever we are willing to pay for it. High levels of unemployment are wasted labor. In comparison some labor we are apparently willing to pay a lot for like film stars, professional athletes and famous singers and performers. We assign that value to their labor each time we pay to see them perform or buy their films and music. Why they should earn more than a coal miner is not clear other than we have collectively decided it should be so.

As I listen to music, and know how to read and write, it should be possible to pen a half dozen Top 10 music hits in a day or so. If I could I would be able to live for the rest of my life without ever working again. It is not a question of my labor, but of my talent. Another wasting asset with no intrinsic value.
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Re: Reverse Engineer's Explanation of Markets and Investing

Unread postby ReverseEngineer » Fri 12 Sep 2008, 04:16:59

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', 'H')ey, this turned into a great thread afterall. Thanks RR. Did I not read somewhere last week that elimating all 'earmarks' or whatever they are called in the US would save 'just' $18 billion? A large amount to be sure, but a drop in the US' annual operating budget. I get as mad as the next guy about a wasted $1 million here or there, but if we keep it all in context we have to keep our minds focussed on the really big ticket items that add up quickly. Believe me I come from a country that counts its nickels and dimes. But sometimes you can be penny wise and pound foolish. Focus on what's important and fund it properly. The rest is chump change.


Before responding directly, besides the general apology for my preachiness and tendencies toward explosive arguments, I'll make a direct apology to you Mr Bill for losing my temper with you. As Heineken said, when you live alone you tend to lose some social skills, and some things will set me off quickly, I have a short fuse. Also a pretty good command of the written word far as spewing Napalm, I can get people very angry with me very quickly. I will try to keep it in check. Just to let you know what it really was that set me off here, I just didn't feel you were making direct answers to my questions or points, rather just demeaning the thinking process behind them. In more than one thread actually. Anyhow, hopefully we can reach a working level of discussion and not devolve into a Napalm contest.

Now, to the topic at hand regarding earmarked spending on some social welfare programs, and whether this is a good expenditure or not. Cash seems to view this as an ever increasing sinkhole with unreasonable moral hazard, it isn't right or fair to him that some folks should be able to live on the taxpayer dime. "Why should *I* pay for that lazy good for nothing to get a medical exam?"

Everybody should paddle their own canoe up the river, this is the philosophy I gather. If everybody lived alone in a cabin like I do, maybe you could live like this, but not in a society of more than 10 people probably. Everyone is interdependent on everyone else, if some people are hurting its going to come back to bite you in the ass. If they are too far below the poverty level of your society, they turn into thieves, murderers, whatever. You can't exclude members of your society from basic necessities of life like water, food, shelter and medical care, expect them to be hapy about it and obey the laws of your society, blame them for being lazy good for nothings when their basic survival is in question here. Its utterly unrealistic.

As the society grows in size, you have ever increasing demands on all to provide for the welfare of all. At a certain point in a capitalist system, some folks end up getting pushed off the boat. As you have said (I'll paraphrase hopefully closely to your meaning), whenever one asset goes up another goes down, and the smart trader puts himself on the winnning side. But of course this means that someone else in your society LOST as a result of your winning, and if they lost enough to put their own survival into question, what you have created here is a Criminal in your society. In Amerikan society, large as it is, we have entire CLASSES of people who are on the negative end of the trade bargain all the time, so DUH, they become criminals. There is a huge moral hazard here in making the wealth of the entire society pursuant to the market and to those who control the wealth.

Meaanwhile, up there in the stratospher of wealth, the Moral Hazard is even MORE astounding. As the wealth becomes ever more centralized and the power to control it falls into the hands of the few, there becomes a dichotomization of the needs of the wealthy versus the needs of the population at large. The amount of money it would have cost to maintain the entitle programs we actually have PALES in comparison to the corporate welfare we cough up to protect the assets of the wealthy, because the *system* is in danger, and the fall of any individual player in this system puts all the holders of wealth at risk. If indeed the CDS market starts tripping, it will suck up ALL the paper wealth generated through real production, you could never unwind the counterparty obligations and actually come out with some real money here. The end holders of those contracts do not have the moeny to pay off on them.

Anyhow, I am still looking for you to address the question of how you retain any wealth, how you invest wisely and in what to best protect yourself in the coming storm. What specifically would you invest in, and why? What retains value as the monetary system spins out of control and the *things* we built lose inherent value? How do you restart the engine of economics without extreme violence and a struggle to take through force any repositroy fo value that remains? How do you think this can be done?

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Re: Reverse Engineer's Explanation of Markets and Investing

Unread postby MrBill » Fri 12 Sep 2008, 04:56:05

RR wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')nyhow, I am still looking for you to address the question of how you retain any wealth, how you invest wisely and in what to best protect yourself in the coming storm. What specifically would you invest in, and why? What retains value as the monetary system spins out of control and the *things* we built lose inherent value? How do you restart the engine of economics without extreme violence and a struggle to take through force any repositroy fo value that remains? How do you think this can be done?


Well, I have spent the better part of three years over 5000 posts talking about these and related issues. And I must say, learning from others about their own areas of expertise. There is no way I can sum all that information up in one neat paragraph. And besides as asset classes change in value relative to one another it is a dynamic process and not a static one. As well what works for the individual or a small number of investors is not possible for everyone. Therefore, there are solutions to various problems whether they are individual, community, regional or national, but they are not the same.

I remember criticizing one commentator on Market Watch for advocating allowing Roth/IRA (?) holders to liquidate all their stock holdings now before the bear market wiped out 40-50-percent of their capital. Nevermind the financial crisis had already started and the market was already in bear territory (-20-25%) Then the government could take those taxes up front and solve its financial problems. While investors would save those $$-trillions. Such simplistic analysis obviously ignores the fact that if everyone is selling then no one is buying, and in fact you would lose that 40-50% that much more quickly. The only way that everyone could win would be for all American investors to sell, while foreign investors bought, and then at the bottom for all Americans to buy back, while all foreign investors sold. No, really, I am not making this stuff up. This was actually his plan. I will post the links if I can find them again. Absolutely ridiculous!

I mean I can understand people's frustration when they look for sound investment advice to protect their life savings and/or provide financial security in their old age and shills like that offer bogus advice shrouded in smoke and mirrors. Which is why I read everything. Cross reference what I read. Take away the points that make sense. And reject the rest. While making up my own mind. At the end of the day it is my money and I am responsible for managing it wisely.

So back to your point. There is no one strategy. It is very individual. It ranges from paying down debt, owning the roof over your head, to diversifying your savings in-line with what Big Tex has posted about having a balanced portfolio. No one asset class will outperfrom all other asset classes over time. Otherwise none of us would have to work. We would just buy gold or whatever and sit back and let it make us rich. Unfortunately, that is not the way the world works.

As you point out, there is no guarantee that just because I own land that someone cannot or will not take it away from me. I can count nominally on the laws of the land, but they are not an absolute guarantee. So I have to play the odds. What is likely to protect me? Is there a reason why my wealth or my land would be confiscated and no one else's? If everyone's is confiscated then am I any the worse off? It is hard for anyone to thrive while everyone else is struggling to survive. So I have to look at precidents and assign a probability to them. The Great Depression. The Weimar Republic. Rwanda. The collapse of the Soviet Union. Zimbabwe. Argentina. Etc. What happend? Who survived? Who thrived?

So as a result I have a Plan A, a Plan B and a Plan C. But what is right for me, may not be right for you or anyone else? I can say that my plans are different than other members of my family. Different starting points. Different skill sets. Different beliefs. Different outlooks on the future. My burden is knowing that if my most pessimistic scenarios come to pass that I will not just be taking care of myself, but of my family who have not made the same preparations as well. It is hard to turn your back on friends and family in times of need even if the lifeboat is only so large.

But as a full-time, professional trader/investor since 1985* I have lived through many market crashes and currency crisis. Especially as the bulk of my experience is living, working and studying in emerging markets that tend to blow-up more often. This past year has been as challenging as any even if some of those currency crisis took place much quicker or at times were more frantic. I really do consider this the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression. The only questions are could it get worse, will it get worse and will it be worse? That is also something that I cannot sum up in one neat little paragraph. I think we are living through History. Stay tuned! ; - ))

*my real education started much earlier when I went to work for my father when I was 6-years old as far as real estate, investing and construction, but that is another story for another time
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Re: Reverse Engineer's Explanation of Markets and Investing

Unread postby cube » Fri 12 Sep 2008, 08:46:48

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Captain_Meh', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('cube', '
')But once you open the Pandora's box and create a gov. program that essentially takes money from Person A and gives it to Person B it's a slippery slope.


By and large, the slippery slope angle is one of the laziest, shortsighted and illogical arguments that one can hide behind. Its basically taking the concept of precedence to its absurd end.
If you're trying to argue that government naturally likes to "contain" itself, then I can safely say I don't have to bother listening to you anymore because you absolutely have no common sense. If you cannot offer anything resembling an intelligent discussion you're wasting my time.

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Re: Reverse Engineer's Explanation of Markets and Investing

Unread postby Captain_Meh » Fri 12 Sep 2008, 09:30:18

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('cube', 'I')f you're trying to argue that government naturally likes to "contain" itself, then I can safely say I don't have to bother listening to you anymore because you absolutely have no common sense.

Ladies and gentlemen, I present to you a textbook example of the strawman fallacy.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('cube', 'I')f you cannot offer anything resembling an intelligent discussion you're wasting my time.

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Re: Reverse Engineer's Explanation of Markets and Investing

Unread postby Nano » Fri 12 Sep 2008, 09:34:38

Mr. Bill. I've seen several different people speculate that the mega-scale nationalisation of debt in de US is a prelude to an eventual debt default of the US government. The argument is that the US government is better able to default on debt than US individuals, and that the US is uniquely able to survive in economic isolation for long enough to introduce a new currency and rebuild international economic ties from scratch over the long term. What do you make of that line of thinking?

If this idea has any merit, what about the well-known line: "If goods do not cross borders, armies will."?

Is it even thinkable that a general US debt default would be the best option for US interests?
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Re: Reverse Engineer's Explanation of Markets and Investing

Unread postby MrBill » Fri 12 Sep 2008, 10:02:40

We have discussed it before. There are precedents. But none on the scale of the USA. It would be Argentina or Russia debt defaults x 10 or worse. You're right. You cannot petition a country into bankruptcy or easily sieze assets. Some overseas assets might be vulnerable, but even Russia, for example, managed to keep most of theirs after the 'selective' default in 1998.

One big problem is that the USA does not have different classes of debt like US treasury bonds denominated in US dollars AND eurobonds denominated in euro or yen, for example. Therefore, whereas Russia could default on local ruble bonds, while suspending payment and eventually restructuring payment in foreign bonds - or Argentina freezing foreign loans, while allowing local deposits in pesos to remain unaffected - the USA does not have at this time that differentiation between what is owned by domestic or foreign creditors. It could hardly discriminate without harming local banks for example.

These are technical issues, but always worth considering. Most conspiracy theories fall down under closer scrutiny on such banal details. That is not to say that many feel the US authorities are not at this very moment scrambling for their lives. Here is one quite reputable example about how desperate (and how clever) the powers that be may be:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')The move, which ultimately led to the Treasury taking control of Fannie and Freddie this week, touched off a chain-reaction of market events that culminated with the wrenching decline in commodities.

According to Mr. Coxe, the Fed's ultimate goal was to trigger a rally in financial stocks, which would, in theory, help banks hammered by the credit crisis raise fresh capital and repair their balance sheets. To accomplish this, the decision to support Fannie and Freddie was deliberately announced on a Sunday, which had the effect of maximizing the reaction from thinly traded financial stocks on overseas markets.

Because many hedge funds were using massive leverage to short financials and go long on commodities, when North American markets opened and banks initially rallied, the funds were forced to cover their short positions.

At the same time, the U.S. dollar was rallying because the risk of holding Fannie and Freddie paper had diminished. The rising dollar, in turn, made commodities less attractive, giving funds that were already scrambling to cover their financial shorts another reason to dump oil, grains and other commodities.

The losses were swift and dramatic. On the Friday before the July 11 announcement, crude oil closed at $145.18 a barrel. Over the following five days, it plunged 11 per cent. “Leverage was being unwound dramatically,” Mr. Coxe said on a conference call last week. “We had a true panic.”

source: The real reason commodities are tumbling

My own theory is that intervention works best when the market is a) at one extreme or another - either overbought or oversold - and b) when the underlying fundamentals support a reversal. Then it is easy for the central bank or Treasury to either intervene verbally - and use moral suasion - or get the desired effect with the minimum of direct intervention in the market - like the rally after Bear Stearns.

The problem with intervention - like disciplining your child - is diminishing returns. Try the same trick too often and it will often backfire - like when Soros and other speculators (myself included) took on the BOE (and the ERM) and won. Our collective pockets were deeper than the government's resolve. Something had to give because the fundamentals of defending an artificial peg (or range) were not sound. Then it is just pissing into the wind! ; - ))
Last edited by MrBill on Fri 12 Sep 2008, 10:23:27, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Reverse Engineer's Explanation of Markets and Investing

Unread postby Captain_Meh » Fri 12 Sep 2008, 10:09:52

Thanks for that link, Mr. Bill. I hadn't thought about last week's events in those terms.
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Re: Reverse Engineer's Explanation of Markets and Investing

Unread postby mmasters » Fri 12 Sep 2008, 10:48:35

Surprised more people can't see health care is one of the next things up for nationalization. When you look at it few at this point can reasonably afford it and that's not going to get any better. The positive aspect of it now is at least you have options. In a nationalized health care system there will be a standard procedure for everything.
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Re: Reverse Engineer's Explanation of Markets and Investing

Unread postby Captain_Meh » Fri 12 Sep 2008, 11:31:44

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mmasters', 'T')he positive aspect of it now is at least you have options.

That's ironic. In fact, that sentence reminds me of people who insist on substituting "opportunities" for "challenges" and "problems."

Hey, Mr. & Mrs. Downtrodden, cheer up: inaccessibility to affordable health care is an opportunity to, um, know what it feels like to be injured & sick, thus incentivizing you to avoid any future, um, injuries or maladies! Yay! Dysfunctional, corrupt governance gives me the warm fuzzies.

In any case, I'm not attributing this argument to mmasters; I know that I've launched off onto a fun tangent.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mmasters', 'I')n a nationalized health care system there will be a standard procedure for everything.

Eh, there's a middle ground. You can still construct a system that allows the upper crust to visit the most renowned and expensive orthopedist when their tennis elbows act up.
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Re: Reverse Engineer's Explanation of Markets and Investing

Unread postby cube » Fri 12 Sep 2008, 13:57:28

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Captain_Meh', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('cube', 'I')f you're trying to argue that government naturally likes to "contain" itself, then I can safely say I don't have to bother listening to you anymore because you absolutely have no common sense.

Ladies and gentlemen, I present to you a textbook example of the strawman fallacy.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('cube', 'I')f you cannot offer anything resembling an intelligent discussion you're wasting my time.
Hey pot, I'm kettle. Nice to meet you.

*read my signature Captain_Meh* waves good bye
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