something like that. I thought it was a riot the way he showed our
hometown, a highschooler then.
Elsewhere, Archytas mentions this being the only game in town and I
wonder facing the situational characterizations Moore lists what
options does one have? I mean we either play their game or lose,
period. Sure regions can begin to resist by conserving resources
through internal trade and services but in the end everybody has to
pay the tax man, tuition, fuel, etc. It makes me think we are all
under the spell of a mass narcotic. I would like to see the rise of a
dual economy come out of this disaster, one independent (the current
model) and one social (remove gov't assistance from the old and apply
to the new). The purpose of the social will be to fuel the improvement
of society as a whole through massive public works projects like
education, mentorship, health and care of those in need, removal of
poverty and mitigation of its effects through quality individualized
social reeducation programs beginning with relocation, therapeutic
exercise (learning/gaining skills) and exposure to positive
reinforcement. Sounds scary?
On Sat, Aug 27, 2011 at 10:19 AM, ornamentalmind
<ornsmindseyespam@yahoo.com> wrote:
> Yes rigsy, the short lived US middle class is all but gone...and it is
> no accident.
>
> http://www.commondreams.org/view/2011/08/06
>
> Hyperbole, perhaps. Directly applicable?... absolutely!
>
> On Aug 27, 6:29 am, rigsy03 <rigs...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> The middle class is shrinking- the class that drives an economy.
>>
>> Greece is not a good example. Libya is a wealthy country- sweet crude,
>> investments around the world=cash. Now the clean up crew will clean up
>> with new oil contracts and rebuilding a ruined infrastructure all in
>> the name of liberty and freedom as per the examples of Iraq and
>> Afghanistan plus we have "miles"/countries to go, as Frost put it.
>>
>> On Aug 27, 2:12 am, archytas <nwte...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> > Banks are lying about money laundering - seehttp://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/apr/03/us-bank-mexico-drug-gangs
>> > - as an example. They are also hiding losses illegally through
>> > massive false accounting that has been 'made legal'. The basic scam
>> > is similar to the alleged 'rogue trading' that brought down Barings -
>> > losses are being moved around through subsidiaries and the ability to
>> > 'mark to model' (instead of market) on assets - hence Bank of America
>> > is claiming to be worth $325 billion but is only trading at £65
>> > billion on the exchanges.
>> > What we probably have is the near certainty of bank collapses. We are
>> > currently funding these bent operations instead of going to full
>> > employment and wealth redistribution to prevent recession.
>> > Banks have sprung up all around the European drug routes for no other
>> > explicable reason (just like Miami in the past).
>>
>> > There is no reason for a global recession, but that's different from
>> > whether one is being engineered. The Greeks are currently being
>> > pilloried as having wasted all the money 'we' lent them - but who made
>> > the decisions to pile money in there rather than into factories or
>> > whatever? Not only is cash hard to track as Rigsby says - one can't
>> > even track through bank accounts of their own assets, much of which
>> > are junk but claimed, via securitisation as 'real'.
>>
>> > On Aug 27, 1:31 am, "Howard Lee Mosely Jr." <howardmos...@gmail.com>
>> > wrote:
>>
>> > > people are at a point where there own person and security is for more
>> > > value is worth more than loyality to at state : or organizatoin : morals and
>> > > manners discarded for more of a authorized control to ease a subconcious
>> > > rebeling of a hibitaully slaved mindstate than the sence of being govern
>> > > seems adverse to a widen culturaled soicity where humanity over powers
>> > > human error and misplaced hatreds for the presevation of all kind humankind
>> > > ??
>>
>> > > On Fri, Aug 19, 2011 at 6:12 AM, paradox <eadohe...@hotmail.com> wrote:
>> > > > Recently, i read of an "authority" on institutional debt proclaim that
>> > > > a global recession was now inevitable. My first thought was that this
>> > > > was something of a curious "God like" statement, which was actually
>> > > > plain and simply wrong. There is actually next to no risk of a global
>> > > > recession.
>>
>> > > > How do they get away with stuff like this, i wonder?
>>
>> > > --
>> > > Howard Lee Mosely Jr.- Hide quoted text -
>>
>> > - Show quoted text -
--
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