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PeakOil is You

PeakOil is You

Reverse Engineer's Explanation of Markets and Investing

Discussions about the economic and financial ramifications of PEAK OIL

Re: Solutions to Global Monetary System Meltdown

Unread postby MrBill » Wed 17 Sep 2008, 09:48:11

I am always curious about people's views on fractional banking. I mean a system that has been around since the sixteenth century. Interest is the time value of money. Banks charge interest. If banks did not charge interest they could not pay interest to depositors. Without fractional banking banks would have no money - except their own - to lend. Without banks there could only be organic growth from own savings. No one would loan anyone money if that money did not carry a rate of interest to compensate them for the time value of money and the risk of not being repaid.

Far from being somehow democratic this would simply concentrate capital in the hands of the rich. The rich in turn would only spend money on those projects they thought would benefit themselves or bring them personal pleasure. Whereby the common man would not have the capital to invest in anything, like a house or a farm, nor could they borrow from anyone that did have capital. Someone with capital might fund an expedition by supplying the ship and provisions, but only by demanding a large share of any future profit or revenue from that voyage. Similarily if you needed capital or seed money to plant your field the lender would demand a large portion of the harvest as compensation for the risk that the crop failed.

Even if you get rid of paper money you still have the problems of risk and the time value of money. And without fractional banking you would have to pay banks to safeguard your wealth. You could not earn interest. You could only really live in the present. The future would be too uncertain. Sustainable development and stewardship of the environment would be abstract concepts for the masses with no stake in the future. No sense in worrying about an uncertain future. Live for today. Consume what is at hand. Talk about Darwinism.
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Re: Solutions to Global Monetary System Meltdown

Unread postby Specop_007 » Wed 17 Sep 2008, 09:51:05

If I'm reading you right MrBill you appreciate fractional banking as much as I do and realize its just about the only successful form of banking and in truth the only way you can build a thriving civilization.

Paper currency just makes for easy exchange or movement of money. Who wants to haul around rocks or stones?

Well.....In restrospect, maybe thats what our fat American asses need! :lol:

And yes, since I quit smokin in Feb I'm put on a few extra pounds too.... :oops:
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Re: Solutions to Global Monetary System Meltdown

Unread postby mattduke » Wed 17 Sep 2008, 10:24:23

Fractional reserve banking means multiple property titles to the same property. Like Cuba. If you see no inconsistency, we cannot have a logical discussion.
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Re: Solutions to Global Monetary System Meltdown

Unread postby MrBill » Wed 17 Sep 2008, 10:50:45

Since mid-May we have lost hundreds of millions in marked to market losses and I have made hundreds of millions of dollars worth of margin calls in cash and collateral. Plus now I have lost probably another several hundred million dollars in liquidity through the loss of counterparts like Lehman and Merrill as well as the disappearance of others through mergers like Dresdner and Commerzbank as well as ABN Amro and RBS. While other banks have dramatically curtailed loans, raised rates and asked for larger haircuts.

Clearly this has been a difficult time for us. And we have a very strong balance sheet and dependable shareholders. I can only imagine that for many others that are not nearly as strong that it is even worse. But the thing is that these global imbalances have been building up for a long-time. Many of us saw this coming. So I am surprized that so many seem to be caught unawares by this financial storm. The signs and the symptoms were there for all to see.

Well, in any case, when you're on top of a mountain in a white-out you can either argue about who's fault it is that you are up there or you can spend your time trying to figure out how to get down safely without falling off a cliff. I am not sure if the calm I feel at the moment is a false sense of security or not, but I still feel that our financial architecture is a lot more robust than some of us or our policy makers give it credit for. This too shall come to pass.

Unfortunately, our financial problems are a distraction from our energy and environmental issues that are no less pressing and urgently need our attention, but never the less seem distant in the current roar of market turmoil. But despite it all I have never felt the system was broken. Abused, but not broken. We are now corecting some of that mispricing of risk and letting assets fall towards their true value as well as seeing a flight to simplicity.
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Re: Solutions to Global Monetary System Meltdown

Unread postby dohboi » Wed 17 Sep 2008, 11:08:51

Congratulations on your successfully giving up cigs, spekop!

Many here seem to be asking deeper questions than you or Mr.Bill are responding to. Given the global ecological mess that our "civilization" has created, should we be encouraging systems--fiat currency and fractional banking--that nourish it?

I don't pretend to have a "system" that could replace the current one, but the discussion has to start with what the underlying goals are. The usual assumption has been that we want to maximize humans and human potential. But maybe, given our track record, systems should aim to limit humans and especially to limit their impact on the non-human world.
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Re: Solutions to Global Monetary System Meltdown

Unread postby ReverseEngineer » Wed 17 Sep 2008, 12:49:47

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('dohboi', 'C')ongratulations on your successfully giving up cigs, spekop!

Many here seem to be asking deeper questions than you or Mr.Bill are responding to. Given the global ecological mess that our "civilization" has created, should we be encouraging systems--fiat currency and fractional banking--that nourish it?

I don't pretend to have a "system" that could replace the current one, but the discussion has to start with what the underlying goals are. The usual assumption has been that we want to maximize humans and human potential. But maybe, given our track record, systems should aim to limit humans and especially to limit their impact on the non-human world.


Thank you for bringing the thread back to topic Dohboi.

Clearly some form of currency is needed to facilitate trade. Where you run into problems is with the concept of interest, betting on growth and using money to make more money. Which of course is why you find that provision in the Bible against Usury, which seems to be thoroughly ignored by all people involved in banking who claim to be followers of the principles written therein.

Unless you limit this process, you explode into unsustainable levels of growth in a variety of Ponzi schemes which periodically bust. If you did limit this, you could not have traders pushing around billions every day trying to make more money by betting on what is going up and what is going down. This of course is the antithesis of what the spiritual heirs of the Rothschilds have been doing since the dawn of this particular system.

Whatever the currency of the future is, the loaning of money has to be based on a generosity of spirit and the urge to help one's neighbor succeed, not to charge interest on the money so you can make more money based on the labor of others. Since a generosity of spirit is generally in short supply among human beings, this would quite effectively limit growth to sustainable levels.

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Re: Solutions to Global Monetary System Meltdown

Unread postby mattduke » Wed 17 Sep 2008, 13:07:21

Loan me your car then.
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Re: Solutions to Global Monetary System Meltdown

Unread postby ReverseEngineer » Wed 17 Sep 2008, 13:14:33

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mattduke', 'L')oan me your car then.


If you can find gas for it, you can HAVE my car.

In any event, I am not going to give away something I personally need for survival until the survival of all is in doubt. If I have EXCESS wealth, as in your example in the form of more than one car for myself, if you were in need of a car I would loan it to you. If I owned more than one shelter and you needed shelter, I would loan it to you on no interest.

That is as long as I thought you were of value to the community.

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Re: Solutions to Global Monetary System Meltdown

Unread postby Snowrunner » Wed 17 Sep 2008, 13:22:38

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', 'I') am always curious about people's views on fractional banking. I mean a system that has been around since the sixteenth century. Interest is the time value of money. Banks charge interest. If banks did not charge interest they could not pay interest to depositors. Without fractional banking banks would have no money - except their own - to lend. Without banks there could only be organic growth from own savings. No one would loan anyone money if that money did not carry a rate of interest to compensate them for the time value of money and the risk of not being repaid.


What is the concern? That some people sit on all the money because they don't get anything for it in return?

What about the idea that money loses it's value if it is not in circulation, I read an abstract a few months ago about a system like that which was proposed. Essentially if you keep sitting on your money you have to "buy stamps" to retain the "full" value of the currency, thus forcing a portion of your money back into the system every month.

A system like this wouldn't allow for debt or mass hording of money, but I am not sure it would be working in the real world either, at least not with the current mindset that we have.
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Re: Solutions to Global Monetary System Meltdown

Unread postby Specop_007 » Wed 17 Sep 2008, 13:26:34

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('dohboi', 'C')ongratulations on your successfully giving up cigs, spekop!

Many here seem to be asking deeper questions than you or Mr.Bill are responding to. Given the global ecological mess that our "civilization" has created, should we be encouraging systems--fiat currency and fractional banking--that nourish it?

I don't pretend to have a "system" that could replace the current one, but the discussion has to start with what the underlying goals are. The usual assumption has been that we want to maximize humans and human potential. But maybe, given our track record, systems should aim to limit humans and especially to limit their impact on the non-human world.


Thanks. Better living through chemistry I say. I took Chantrix (Or however its spelled) and damn did it work wonders. :)

Well, ecological messes and economic messes are two very different things. One generally exists without strong correlation to the other. If anything fractional banking encourages responsible stewardship of the environment. With fractional reserve banking your population isnt fighting over the same fixed amount pool of money.

To put it in REAL simple terms with a commodity based currency you have a real fixed size of pie and everyone fights over that. If you get a slightly larger size of pie someone else HAS to lose some. Fractional reserve banking allows everyone to have a slice of pie. The pie itself expands and contracts based on certain economic trends but it has the flexibility to allow everyone to get a slice.

How that would apply to ecological stewardship is through allowing companies to grow. With a fixed pool for currency its more a race to the bottom then a growth to the top. The more companies or people that come about the less pie that is available. It becomes a case of being so cut throat no one cares about the environment. Get enough people fighting for a loaf of bread and people will start killing the competition with little regard. Allowing the baker to make more loaves as needed means everyone can still act responsibly and think beyond their own immediate needs, in this case not abusing the environment to extremes.

This isnt to say they always will protect the earth. But to think fractional reserve banking leads to abuse of the environment is in my opinion quite a stretch. Regardless of the banking system in place there will be those who abuse the environment.

Thats my opinion on it anyways.
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Re: Solutions to Global Monetary System Meltdown

Unread postby Quinny » Wed 17 Sep 2008, 13:26:35

Interesting - I interviewed a post grad last year who was researching Sharia Banking where they don't agree with the concept of interest. He said that the way it basically works, is that when money is loaned, the bank appoints a director / worker who then monitors the project to help its success. The bank then charges the customer for time spent. In his opinion/experience he said that because of this closer involvement, projects had a much higher success rate.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ReverseEngineer', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('dohboi', 'C')ongratulations on your successfully giving up cigs, spekop!

Many here seem to be asking deeper questions than you or Mr.Bill are responding to. Given the global ecological mess that our "civilization" has created, should we be encouraging systems--fiat currency and fractional banking--that nourish it?

I don't pretend to have a "system" that could replace the current one, but the discussion has to start with what the underlying goals are. The usual assumption has been that we want to maximize humans and human potential. But maybe, given our track record, systems should aim to limit humans and especially to limit their impact on the non-human world.


Thank you for bringing the thread back to topic Dohboi.

Clearly some form of currency is needed to facilitate trade. Where you run into problems is with the concept of interest, betting on growth and using money to make more money. Which of course is why you find that provision in the Bible against Usury, which seems to be thoroughly ignored by all people involved in banking who claim to be followers of the principles written therein.

Unless you limit this process, you explode into unsustainable levels of growth in a variety of Ponzi schemes which periodically bust. If you did limit this, you could not have traders pushing around billions every day trying to make more money by betting on what is going up and what is going down. This of course is the antithesis of what the spiritual heirs of the Rothschilds have been doing since the dawn of this particular system.

Whatever the currency of the future is, the loaning of money has to be based on a generosity of spirit and the urge to help one's neighbor succeed, not to charge interest on the money so you can make more money based on the labor of others. Since a generosity of spirit is generally in short supply among human beings, this would quite effectively limit growth to sustainable levels.

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Re: Solutions to Global Monetary System Meltdown

Unread postby Specop_007 » Wed 17 Sep 2008, 13:36:45

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Quinny', 'I')nteresting - I interviewed a post grad last year who was researching Sharia Banking where they don't agree with the concept of interest. He said that the way it basically works, is that when money is loaned, the bank appoints a director / worker who then monitors the project to help its success. The bank then charges the customer for time spent. In his opinion/experience he said that because of this closer involvement, projects had a much higher success rate.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ReverseEngineer', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('dohboi', 'C')ongratulations on your successfully giving up cigs, spekop!

Many here seem to be asking deeper questions than you or Mr.Bill are responding to. Given the global ecological mess that our "civilization" has created, should we be encouraging systems--fiat currency and fractional banking--that nourish it?

I don't pretend to have a "system" that could replace the current one, but the discussion has to start with what the underlying goals are. The usual assumption has been that we want to maximize humans and human potential. But maybe, given our track record, systems should aim to limit humans and especially to limit their impact on the non-human world.


Thank you for bringing the thread back to topic Dohboi.

Clearly some form of currency is needed to facilitate trade. Where you run into problems is with the concept of interest, betting on growth and using money to make more money. Which of course is why you find that provision in the Bible against Usury, which seems to be thoroughly ignored by all people involved in banking who claim to be followers of the principles written therein.

Unless you limit this process, you explode into unsustainable levels of growth in a variety of Ponzi schemes which periodically bust. If you did limit this, you could not have traders pushing around billions every day trying to make more money by betting on what is going up and what is going down. This of course is the antithesis of what the spiritual heirs of the Rothschilds have been doing since the dawn of this particular system.

Whatever the currency of the future is, the loaning of money has to be based on a generosity of spirit and the urge to help one's neighbor succeed, not to charge interest on the money so you can make more money based on the labor of others. Since a generosity of spirit is generally in short supply among human beings, this would quite effectively limit growth to sustainable levels.

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Regardless of how it is charged, there absolutely must be SOME fee associated with the loaning of money.
Otherwise why loan? It completely skews the risk / reward ratio.

If you arent allowed to charge to loan monet the problem is the BEST case scenario is the return of your money. Worst case, you lose it all?

"Break even" isnt suitable reward for the risk involved. In todays system the reward is the interest charged. The risk is assessed as the rate at which the money is loaned....ie...if your a high risk you'll have a high interest rate. If your a low risk you get a low interest rate.
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Re: Solutions to Global Monetary System Meltdown

Unread postby ReverseEngineer » Wed 17 Sep 2008, 13:55:45

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Specop_007', '
')Regardless of how it is charged, there absolutely must be SOME fee associated with the loaning of money.
Otherwise why loan? It completely skews the risk / reward ratio.

If you arent allowed to charge to loan monet the problem is the BEST case scenario is the return of your money. Worst case, you lose it all?

"Break even" isnt suitable reward for the risk involved. In todays system the reward is the interest charged. The risk is assessed as the rate at which the money is loaned....ie...if your a high risk you'll have a high interest rate. If your a low risk you get a low interest rate.


You just identified precisely the reason you see the system in failure. You are looking for a "reward" for risking YOUR capital on some adventure that is tangible, so that you can further enrich yourself.

As Mr Bill puts it, "Society is a wonderful invention where everyone lives at the expense of someone else". That is the underlying nature of charging interest on money you loan, again why Usury is forbidden in the Bible.

Our "system" is BASED on this principle. You have to LET GO of this idea of trying to enrich yourself in physical terms by loaning out excess wealth you have. If you want to loan out excess wealth, do so but EXPECT nothing in return. You might get something if the person you loaned to was a good person and hard worker, he might benefit your community. Enriching yourself however as the goal here is just plain wrong, and you see the results of that right now.

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Re: Solutions to Global Monetary System Meltdown

Unread postby Specop_007 » Wed 17 Sep 2008, 13:58:56

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ReverseEngineer', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Specop_007', '
')Regardless of how it is charged, there absolutely must be SOME fee associated with the loaning of money.
Otherwise why loan? It completely skews the risk / reward ratio.

If you arent allowed to charge to loan monet the problem is the BEST case scenario is the return of your money. Worst case, you lose it all?

"Break even" isnt suitable reward for the risk involved. In todays system the reward is the interest charged. The risk is assessed as the rate at which the money is loaned....ie...if your a high risk you'll have a high interest rate. If your a low risk you get a low interest rate.


You just identified precisely the reason you see the system in failure. You are looking for a "reward" for risking YOUR capital on some adventure that is tangible, so that you can further enrich yourself.

As Mr Bill puts it, "Society is a wonderful invention where everyone lives at the expense of someone else". That is the underlying nature of charging interest on money you loan, again why Usury is forbidden in the Bible.

Our "system" is BASED on this principle. You have to LET GO of this idea of trying to enrich yourself in physical terms by loaning out excess wealth you have. If you want to loan out excess wealth, do so but EXPECT nothing in return. You might get something if the person you loaned to was a good person and hard worker, he might benefit your community. Enriching yourself however as the goal here is just plain wrong, and you see the results of that right now.

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No, the system is failing because of unsound lending practices. Simply put.
Greed.

I mean come on, no income verification mortgages? I dont care WHO you ask their going to say thats a BAD idea.

Simple greed is what ruined the system. It seems to have worked very, very well for the past few centuries. These occasional depressions and collapses are nothing more then very small blips on an otherwise very successful radar screen. Obviously that doesnt make it any easier for those who suffered through them.......

But to address your idea.... Why on earth should I RISK my money when the only REWARD is a return of it? I mean come on, I'm all for helping someone but I wont risk my own well being in doing so!
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Re: Solutions to Global Monetary System Meltdown

Unread postby ReverseEngineer » Wed 17 Sep 2008, 14:10:23

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Specop_007', '
')No, the system is failing because of unsound lending practices. Simply put.
Greed.

I mean come on, no income verification mortgages? I dont care WHO you ask their going to say thats a BAD idea.

Simple greed is what ruined the system. It seems to have worked very, very well for the past few centuries. These occasional depressions and collapses are nothing more then very small blips on an otherwise very successful radar screen. Obviously that doesnt make it any easier for those who suffered through them.......

But to address your idea.... Why on earth should I RISK my money when the only REWARD is a return of it? I mean come on, I'm all for helping someone but I wont risk my own well being in doing so!


I never asked you to risk your own well being, I said if you WANT to risk EXCESS capital you have to help someone out, feel free to do so. If you barely have enough to survive yourself, obviously you cannot risk any of that capital, or you would be foolish to gamble with it that way.

Your motivation to risk excess capital in Biblical terms is to help others, not to enrich yourself further. Take what you need from the world to survive, but no more. If you accumulate excess, help others with it. The helping of others is the underlying reward, not self-enrichment.

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Re: Solutions to Global Monetary System Meltdown

Unread postby MrBill » Thu 18 Sep 2008, 03:03:04

We have to be very careful about using the term Sharia lending as there are many varieties of such lending and religous scholars depending on their stripe argue amoungst themselves about which products meet such a test. But basically the lender is still compensated for the time value of money and the risk of default.

For example, Malaysia issues Sharia bonds and non-Sharia (or traditional) bonds. If I look at the characteristics of the Sharia bonds they look like a normal treasury bill to me? They are issued at a price discount and they mature at par. Say issued at 95 and mature at 100 in one-year. So technically that is capital appreciation and not interest income. But don't fool yourself that is the same as issuing a normal one-year bond at par that carries a 5% coupon. So it is just financial engineering. Creating a debt-like instrument that has equity-like characteristics. You are still compensating the lender for the time value of money and the risk of default.

Lending money and usery are two different things. Usery/usury is charging interest on top of interest. Or charging an exorbitant or unlawful rate of interest. Attempting to literally translate the Bible is very difficult because different passages often contradcit one another. Especially between the Old Testament and the New Testament. Nevermind what has gotten lost in translation between Assyrian, Hebrew, Latin and later English translations of the original scripts. Who are we to know 'exactly' what God said to Moses or Christ said to His disciples? It happened thousands of years ago and was often only written down years and decades after the fact.

So if you were to interpret Genesis literally then you would have to conclude that the world is less than 6000 years old and was created in six days. There is also the uncomfortable bit in the Bible of how we all sprung from two adults that had two sons. Hmm? So please hold off the sermons on the wickedness of lending money.

Money is an asset like any other asset. It needs to be deployed in an efficient manner. To generate a positive rate of return. To be put to work to create value. Working capital for a firm is as important as its stock of machinery or the skills of its workers.

It is a complete waste of time to address serious economic and environmental problems like peak oil and climate change by having these arguments. We need to address the underlying problems and not fix the symptoms. And we need workable solutions to these problems now without having to reinvent the wheel from scratch by ditching a currency system that has been refined by trial and error over hundreds of years of practical experience. Go with what we know works. The market economy has served us very well. Better than anything else yet tried and found wanting.
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Re: Solutions to Global Monetary System Meltdown

Unread postby ReverseEngineer » Thu 18 Sep 2008, 04:04:40

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', '
')Lending money and usery are two different things. Usery is charging interest on top of interest. Attempting to literally translate the Bible is very difficult because different passages often contradcit one another. Especially between the Old Testament and the New Testament. Nevermind what has gotten lost in translation between Assyrian, Hebrew, Latin and later English translations of the original scripts. Who are we to know 'exactly' what God said to Moses or Christ said to His disciples? It happened thousands of years ago and was often only written down years and decades after the fact.


In the other thread on Global Bubonic Plague, I already indicated that you do not take everything literally from the Bible, nor do you really even need to accept it as the Word of God to get some valuable information out of it.

Anyhow, in terms of charging interst on interest, or going to a second level of loaning, how would you describe the derivatives market? Isn't also a bet on failure a Gamble, and isn't gambling a sin ALSO?

I do not want this to devolve into an argument over interpretation of the Bible, rather its the moral questions I am trying to flesh out here. Market trading is INHERENTLY gambling, although you couls make the case that gambling on the success of a company is slightly more moral than betting on it to fail ;-) A little late in the game here and to no real effect, shrot sellers are supposedly being restricted, but I don't believe it for a minute. Its the only way you could possibly make money if the EVERY company is losing its value, which they all are.

Beyond this moral question is the fact that in taking profit on the trading level, you always take it at the expense of someone else or the environment, you say so yourself in your coda. Now, in a time of resource depletion, how does taking proift at the expense of the environment or someone else actually help anyone? The only way to help anyone is to actually PRODUCE real wealth, which I am all for. Trading in the market and utilizing interest as a way to multiply up money does not in itself produce real wealth, and it especially does not do so when it becomes a big betting game on who is winning and who is losing.

The Big Traders are consolidating out here, its economic cannabalism we are witnessing, they are eating each other up. Its Texas Hold 'Em, and the game is not over until one player holds all the chips. All the rest of the players in the game go bankrupt.

What are all the Chips WORTH though to that player? In this case, a lot of NOTHING, unless you can find some way to redistribute out the chips and reboot, to play another game.

All I did was design another game which does not allow for you to profit on trade or loaning money. Your have to actually PRODUCE something yourself to gain wealth. Of course I am not the first person advocating this. Jesus Christ advocated it also.

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Re: Solutions to Global Monetary System Meltdown

Unread postby mos6507 » Thu 18 Sep 2008, 04:18:27

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ReverseEngineer', '
')You just identified precisely the reason you see the system in failure. You are looking for a "reward" for risking YOUR capital on some adventure that is tangible, so that you can further enrich yourself.


As far as I'm concerned there is a symbiotic relationship between the lender and the lendee. Both parties are trying to enrich themselves in different ways.

I think you should work through your utopian vision a little more thoroughly.
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Re: Solutions to Global Monetary System Meltdown

Unread postby Quinny » Thu 18 Sep 2008, 04:19:27

Sounds to me a bit like the central tenet of Marxism.$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ReverseEngineer', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', '
')Lending money and usery are two different things. Usery is charging interest on top of interest. Attempting to literally translate the Bible is very difficult because different passages often contradcit one another. Especially between the Old Testament and the New Testament. Nevermind what has gotten lost in translation between Assyrian, Hebrew, Latin and later English translations of the original scripts. Who are we to know 'exactly' what God said to Moses or Christ said to His disciples? It happened thousands of years ago and was often only written down years and decades after the fact.


In the other thread on Global Bubonic Plague, I already indicated that you do not take everything literally from the Bible, nor do you really even need to accept it as the Word of God to get some valuable information out of it.

Anyhow, in terms of charging interst on interest, or going to a second level of loaning, how would you describe the derivatives market? Isn't also a bet on failure a Gamble, and isn't gambling a sin ALSO?

I do not want this to devolve into an argument over interpretation of the Bible, rather its the moral questions I am trying to flesh out here. Market trading is INHERENTLY gambling, although you couls make the case that gambling on the success of a company is slightly more moral than betting on it to fail ;-) A little late in the game here and to no real effect, shrot sellers are supposedly being restricted, but I don't believe it for a minute. Its the only way you could possibly make money if the EVERY company is losing its value, which they all are.

Beyond this moral question is the fact that in taking profit on the trading level, you always take it at the expense of someone else or the environment, you say so yourself in your coda. Now, in a time of resource depletion, how does taking proift at the expense of the environment or someone else actually help anyone? The only way to help anyone is to actually PRODUCE real wealth, which I am all for. Trading in the market and utilizing interest as a way to multiply up money does not in itself produce real wealth, and it especially does not do so when it becomes a big betting game on who is winning and who is losing.

The Big Traders are consolidating out here, its economic cannabalism we are witnessing, they are eating each other up. Its Texas Hold 'Em, and the game is not over until one player holds all the chips. All the rest of the players in the game go bankrupt.

What are all the Chips WORTH though to that player? In this case, a lot of NOTHING, unless you can find some way to redistribute out the chips and reboot, to play another game.

All I did was design another game which does not allow for you to profit on trade or loaning money. Your have to actually PRODUCE something yourself to gain wealth. Of course I am not the first person advocating this. Jesus Christ advocated it also.

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Re: Solutions to Global Monetary System Meltdown

Unread postby ReverseEngineer » Thu 18 Sep 2008, 04:32:57

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mos6507', '
')As far as I'm concerned there is a symbiotic relationship between the lender and the lendee. Both parties are trying to enrich themselves in different ways.

I think you should work through your utopian vision a little more thoroughly.


The Borrower is usually just trying to survive, if his company is failing he has to borrow to keep it running. The Lender is betting if he lends the money to the needy borrower, he might make a profit on it. However, both have a moral problem, if the borrower does not succeed, his obligation to the lender remains and he essentially sold himself into slavery. We sort of eliminated that with the bankruptcy concept, but its coming back to haunt us now in a big way. The Lender has the moral problem that since he expected return and now the borrower cannot payback, he OWNS the borrower. You lend money, you end up buying slaves. You don't see a moral problem with that?

Far as working through my "utopian" ideas, that is the whole purpoes of the threads I pursue here, to discuss with others the ideas and work through them. If you have good insights, you should share them, not simply criticize mine. Naysaying me all the time without presenting alternative ideas of your own gets a little old. At least MrBill presents alternative ideas to hash out.

Besides which, my ideas are HARDLY "Utipian" Utopia suggests a wonderful existence for all, in perpetutiy. I don't see that as an end result at all. Life is a struggle, its hard work all the way. In the post Peak Oil world, nothing comes for free, no entitlements. As Cora Munro said in The Last of the Mohicans, "They do not live their lives "by your leave"! They hack it out of the wilderness with their own two hands, bearing their children along the way! "

At least its not another Tom Joad coda ;-)

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