On Jul 6, 11:42 am, Don Tiberone <s_knig...@my-deja.com> wrote: On Jul 5, 9:18 pm, Vide...@tcq.net wrote: The time period fits in with the gold standard being broken. Coincidence? bullshit. ignorance is not a excuse. we lived thru a rolling recession depression from 1870-1895, the gold standard never stopped it. the great depression happened under the gold standard
On Sun, 06 Jul 2008 09:42:29 -0700, Don Tiberone wrote: On Jul 5, 9:18 pm, Vide...@tcq.net wrote: The time period fits in with the gold standard being broken. Coincidence? bullshit. ignorance is not a excuse. we lived thru a rolling recession depression from 1870-1895, the gold standard never stopped it. the great depression happened under the gold standard.
On Jul 5, 9:18 pm, Vide...@tcq.net wrote: The time period fits in with the gold standard being broken. Coincidence? bullshit. ignorance is not a excuse. we lived thru a rolling recession depression from 1870-1895, the gold standard never stopped it. the great depression happened under the gold standard. conservative spent money like drunken sailors in the 1920's. a liberal
On 26 May 2008 01:53:38 GMT, D Murphy <spamto154@comcast.net> wrote: <snip> what makes you think that recessions cause prices to rise? <snip> ======= Its called "stagflation," and it appears to be mutually reinforcing. for some historical background from the 1970s click on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stagflation http://www.investopedia.com/terms/s/stagflation.asp http://economics
On Wed, 14 May 2008 20:56:39 -0700 (PDT), CanopyCo <Junk74020@aol.com> wrote: And this is my problem...how? Your ignorance is not my problem. You are the one who will suffer from it (as you will miss out on substantial parts of the market and trade, because of your Luddite refusal to use or learn about precious metal currency). Not if I am using a barter item that 70%%