by Zero-point » Fri 02 Jan 2009, 10:45:41
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('notill', '.')I agree with Simmons. I've been in agriculture and cattle for about as long as he's been in oil, and could change a few words in his presentation and describe the cattle business pretty well.
but there's something else at play here. All persons in the US, and elsewhere, consume resources, or wealth. But relatively few contribute to the creation of that wealth. I don't mean to be critical of anyone, but in the questions' starkest form, what are the non productive going to do to earn, or use to barter for, their food, homes, and fuel?
I fear we've long ago maxed out on direct and indirect taxing of productive economic activity, thus discouraging all but the most productive projects.
I think you are wrong about that. People in the US do participate in creating real wealth. However there are a few people who create "artificial wealth". That artificial wealth is called derivatives and they cause bubbles and bursting bubbles which create major economic crisis. Then those artificial wealth creators like JP Morgan Chase are bailed out by robbing the "real wealth" of the middle class in order to pay for non-existent wealth of the international banks and that is how those banks acquire the real wealth in this country and around the world.
Basically those banks live off the people and those banks produce NOTHING for society kind of like vampires.