😂😂😂
BREAKING 🚨: Short Sellers
— Barchart (@Barchart) November 22, 2023
Hedge Fund short sellers sustained losses of approximately $43 billion over the past few days pic.twitter.com/k2FXpsY0cZ
What Art Degree Monetarist wouldn’t be short into this:
You’d have to be…
Lesson learned?
ReplyDeleteAn ideologue and an idiot meet in the pub
ReplyDeletehttps://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2023/nov/23/dining-across-the-divide-sean-paul
You wonder why humanity is in the state it is in.
“Lesson learned?”
ReplyDeletePoint out to me where that is in the Socrates playbook?
Here..
ReplyDeleteIf: wrong
Then: make adjustment
Point out to me where Socrates says to do this..
Socrates never lost 43 billion...
ReplyDeleteYou wonder why humanity is in the state it is in.
ReplyDeleteAt least they're able to sit down and have a chat.
"An ideologue and an idiot meet in the pub"
ReplyDeleteThe question is, how do we get through to them that they are both wrong?
The question is, how do we get through to them that they are both wrong?
ReplyDelete1. Tell them they are wrong. Tell them to do their homework.
2. You can provide them with homework, but you can't do it for them.
3. Move on to the next delinquent.
Couldn't have happened to a nicer bunch.
ReplyDeleteCOMIC RELIEF
ReplyDeleteMany people cope with real crises by worrying about fake crises like “climate change” or the “national debt crisis.”
For example, the Zero Hedge blog claims that the sky is falling…
“Interest on the federal debt is now so immense that it’s consuming 40% of all personal income taxes. If federal finances continue on their current path, we are only a few years from the entirety of income taxes being needed to finance the debt…”
https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/quinn-crash-will-be-spectacular
Ignorant clowns have been claiming that the national debt is a “ticking bomb” since the USA was founded. It means that the world will end tomorrow -- just like with “climate change.”
Federal tax revenue does not pay for any aspect of Federal Reserve spending or US government spending. It is effectively destroyed upon receipt. The "national debt" is simply money that various parties have deposited into Fed savings accounts. The U.S. government wants the "national debt" to go much higher, since it means that US dollars remain sufficiently popular and in-demand that people continue to deposit them into Fed savings accounts. This is one reason why the Fed is keeping interest rates so high. It props up the yield on Treasury securities, making them attractive, and thereby sustaining demand for dollars in a de-dollarizing world.
If you try to explain to these clowns why the U.S. national debt can never be a crisis, they become angry. They prefer to cling to their imaginary “crisis” like a security blanket.
Everyone knows the world cannot end until a fat lady sings.
ReplyDelete“The question is, how do we get through to them that they are both wrong?”
ReplyDeleteIncarcerate or make the ideologues drink hemlock and then properly educate the uneducated idiots …
Lose 43 billion, lose your life in a televised hemlock party.
ReplyDelete“ If you try to explain to these clowns why the U.S. national debt can never be a crisis, they become angry. They prefer to cling to their imaginary “crisis” like a security blanket.”
ReplyDeleteIt’s typical Art Degree vanity…
“vain we’re they made in their dialogues” Rom 1:21
These Platonist morons are made too vain to be able to make an adjustment…
Just look at the MMT Art degree people…. someone busts their ass earning Science degree in Finance and Accounting and they think those disciplines are “just adding and subtracting!”…
Meanwhile their Art Degree discipline is the one with the people going all around saying “we’re out of money! We’re out of money!”…
Infested with vanity…
I have a vanity in the bathroom. What would I do without it?
ReplyDelete