busybody..
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Jul 28, 2002
- Posts
- 149,503
Is it just me or is Vette barely trying these days?
Hey NIGGERPOONZANDI tell us about teh Summers memo's
I know, IM ON IGGY.........Yeah, RIGHT
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Is it just me or is Vette barely trying these days?
Is it just me or is Vette barely trying these days?
He hasn't been the same since he discovered he was a homo.
Yeah, Rob's been sentenced to an eternal fruitless search for kindred spirits. He loves to ascribe to others behaviors and personality disorders near and dear to his heart. In this particular case, his asshole. Judging by the number of foul and gaseous posts he emits, I'd have to surmise his has probably been plundered and torn asunder to the point of failure.![]()
Even when you have me on ignore you can't stop talking about me.
Must be part of that new homo lifestyle of yours.
No less than three logical fallacies above.
- They don't use inflation-adjusted dollars.
- They use a stacked-deck of data (relevance of first-three-years-of-presidency-aggregation vs. last year of Bush?)
- They cherry pick just the items that have shown the greatest price increases.
Wrap it all up and you have one tailor-made poutrage for pathetic sons-of-bitches like Koalabear and Vetteman.
Also, Vetteman cybered a dude.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-...will-remain-low-until-at-least-late-2014.htmlIn a separate statement of its long-range goals and strategy, the FOMC specified a 2 percent goal for inflation, as measured by the annual change in the price index for personal consumption expenditures.
“Communicating this inflation goal clearly to the public helps keep longer-term inflation expectations firmly anchored, thereby fostering price stability,” the panel said in a statement. It also enhances “the committee’s ability to promote maximum employment in the face of significant economic disturbances.”
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-...will-remain-low-until-at-least-late-2014.html
If you want to see the inflation, just look to the stock market as the "free" money pours into it well in excess of the actual "growth rate" which is not even a decent replacement rate for natural population growth.
When the economy actually takes off and that money starts working its way into the economy, the inflation is going to be even higher and more noticeable as manufacturers and merchants begin to compete for the freshly printed and newly available dollars knowing that their future raw material prices are going to rise as well as labor costs to reflect the effects of fiat inflation.
You see, the problem here is that the fiat theory is that in bad times, inflation is a good thing that can be pulled back in good times, the problem being that when good times come, no one wants to trigger a bear market, so you get permanent low interest rates and permanent inflationary policy which helps only those closest to the point of inflation and punishes the consumer-voter who tends to get more and more angry, and then, eventually (for Patrick), to lose confidence in the commodity known as money.
Notice how he mentioned your asshole... it probably gave him a hard on.
He's almost cute... If he'd just make that final push and come out of he closet, he could become a respectable member of society finally, rather than sneaking around at the glory hole.
...
I don't know what evidence you have for future 'permanent low interest rates and permanent inflationary policy'. In the last 30 years this has not been the case. Why do you think it will be so in the future?
Patrick
New home sales fall in December
New single-family home sales unexpectedly fell in December for the first time in four months and the median home price dropped, dampening some of the hopes the housing sector will boost the economy this year.
The Commerce Department said on Thursday sales decreased 2.2 percent to a seasonally adjusted 307,000-unit annual rate.
Economists polled by Reuters had forecast sales at a 320,000-unit rate. November's sales pace was revised slightly lower.
http://money.msn.com/business-news/article.aspx?feed=OBR&date=20120126&id=14730386
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20120127/D9SH6KT82.htmlThe economy likely grew at annual rate of 3 percent in the October-December quarter, according to a survey by FactSet. The Commerce Department will release the actual figure Friday.
The gain would represent modest improvement from this summer, when the economy grew just 1.8 percent. However, even with the strong finish, economists believe the economy expanded just 1.7 percent for the whole year - roughly half the growth in 2010.
And growth is expected to slow in the first three months of this year. A key reason is wages have failed to keep pace with inflation. That will likely force many consumers to pull back on spending after splurging over the holidays.
Consumer spending is important because it makes up 70 percent of economic activity.
Businesses are also expected to reduce spending in the first quarter after building up their stockpiles in the final months of 2011.
Richard DeKaiser, a senior economist at Parthenon Group, expects just 2 percent annual growth in the January-March quarter. But Kaiser says that should be the weakest quarter. He expects the economy to gain strength in each quarter and grow 2.6 percent for the entire year.
The year is off to a good start. Companies invested more in equipment and machinery in December. The unemployment rate fell to 8.5 percent last month - the lowest level in nearly three years - after the sixth straight month of solid hiring.
People are buying more cars, and consumer confidence is rising. Even the depressed housing market has shown enough improvement to make some economists predict a turnaround has begun.
Still, many economists worry that a recession in Europe could dampen demand for U.S. manufactured goods, which would slow growth. And without more jobs and better pay, consumer spending is likely to stagnate.
With all central-control schemes, the first efforts at taming the business cycle happen during comparatively good economic times and are, as per Keynes et. al., kept short in duration and according to theory, but as the theory's continued requisite intervention grinds to its inescapable conclusion, the times become successively more dire until you get what we got the other day, the Fed saying that the recovery event horizon is at least three years away, but like the Great (American) Depression and Japan's Lost Decade, someday never comes, it's alway tomorrow, it's only a day away...
![]()
![]()
![]()
Relatively low compared to what?
We have set our thermostat to 60° to keep the bill at last year's level and it's been a mild winter.
$3.65 a gallon? Really man?
![]()
![]()
Johnny, you can shoot me all the links you want to prove the point.
I'm still paying more.
I have proof.
The bill.
OH NO MR. BILL!
Johnny, you can shoot me all the links you want to prove the point.
I'm still paying more.
I have proof.
The bill.
*shrugs*
Your anecdotal evidence doesn't negate the facts.
Maybe you should concentrate on conservation![]()