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Thread: Impending Doom

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    Quote Originally Posted by MisLed View Post
    Let the world slide to marxist hell.
    Loved the irony in this comment. Its Marxism that allows us to appreciate crisis theory and therefore provide a rationale behind any "impending doom" of a capitalist economy
    And the ship we sail, and the flag she flies; It is the Herald of Free Enterprise

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  3. #312

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    Quote Originally Posted by MisLed View Post
    Worldwide impending doom. The downside to pushing this stupid policy of a one world economy/government onto Americans.

    Let the world slide to marxist hell. Americans don't have to participate.
    The world economy, or global economy, generally refers to the economy, which is based on economies of all of the world's countries, national economies. Also global economy can be seen as the economy of global society and national economies – as economies of local societies, making the global one. It can be evaluated in various kind of ways. For instance, depending on the model used, the valuation that is arrived at can be represented in a certain currency, such as 2006 US dollars.
    http://www.ask.com/wiki/World_economy
    ....you cannot teach a pig to sing. It is a waste of your time, and annoys the pig....
    "When you hold the hammer, everything looks like a nail......" quote from title song
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  4. #313

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    Quote Originally Posted by dujac View Post
    you obviously don't understand where the burden of proof falls
    Diversion tactic. I posted a video that uses raw numbers to explain its point. It's up to others to dispute it with facts.
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    Quote Originally Posted by onalandline View Post

    Diversion tactic. I posted a video that uses raw numbers to explain its point. It's up to others to dispute it with facts.
    you posted a video of flimsy political rhetoric, done by a biased hack

    anyone that compares greece's economy to the united states', doesn't know what he's talking about

    here's an article by two qualified economists, explaining why comparing greece's economy to the united states' isn't a valid comparison



    Why the United States Is Not Greece

    BY JOHN MILLER AND KATHERINE SCIACCHITANO

    For almost two years, we’ve been hearing a new battle cry in the war against government spending: unless the United States slashes deficits we will become Greece, Europe’s poster child for fiscal insolvency and economic crisis. The debt crisis in the eurozone, the 17 European countries that share the euro as their common currency, is held up as proof positive of the perils that await the United States if it continues its supposedly fiscally irresponsible ways.

    Take the Heritage Foundation, the Washington-based think tank that specializes in providing red meat for anti-government pro-market arguments. Heritage introduces its 2011 chart on the rising level of government debt (to GDP) with this dire warning: “Countries like Greece and Portugal have suffered or are anticipating financial crises as a result of mounting debt. If the U.S. continues federal deficit spending on its current trajectory, it will face similar economic woes.”

    Even for those who understand that cutting deficits right now will only weaken a still-fragile recovery, and that weakening the recovery will only increase deficits, getting past the argument that “a eurozone crisis is on its way” is no easy task.

    What follows is a self-defense lesson on why the United States is not Greece—or Europe. The U.S. economy is far larger and more productive than Greece. The United States has many more tools in its macro-economic policy box than countries in the eurozone. And while calls for austerity have kept the United States from undertaking government spending and investment large enough to support a robust economic recovery, at least thus far, the United States hasn’t undertaken the same self-defeating austerity measures Europe has. If we learn the right lessons from what is happening in the eurozone now, we never will.

    continued at
    http://www.dollarsandsense.org/archi...acchitano.html

  6. #315

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    Quote Originally Posted by dujac View Post
    there's no one world economy
    that is what Europe was working toward. And so are many in the US. So it is in the minds and plans of many people. Hell. Watch kid's tv. The intention is making kids citizens of the world. This morning i heard.....Afreeeca, my Afreeca sung by a bunch of little yellow, red and white cartoon kiddies. Better yet. Make a visit to one of your local grade schools and see the propaganda on the hallway walls. It's repulsive.
    l
    RIP:
    Judson "Warpig" Germany, III 12-5-10
    Kenneth 'Badnews' Simpson 3-13-12

  7. Default

    Quote Originally Posted by MisLed View Post

    that is what Europe was working toward.
    grow a brain, they're not going to get there

  8. #317

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by dujac View Post
    you posted a video of flimsy political rhetoric, done by a biased hack

    anyone that compares greece's economy to the united states', doesn't know what he's talking about

    here's an article by two qualified economists, explaining why comparing greece's economy to the united states' isn't a valid comparison



    Why the United States Is Not Greece

    BY JOHN MILLER AND KATHERINE SCIACCHITANO

    For almost two years, we’ve been hearing a new battle cry in the war against government spending: unless the United States slashes deficits we will become Greece, Europe’s poster child for fiscal insolvency and economic crisis. The debt crisis in the eurozone, the 17 European countries that share the euro as their common currency, is held up as proof positive of the perils that await the United States if it continues its supposedly fiscally irresponsible ways.

    Take the Heritage Foundation, the Washington-based think tank that specializes in providing red meat for anti-government pro-market arguments. Heritage introduces its 2011 chart on the rising level of government debt (to GDP) with this dire warning: “Countries like Greece and Portugal have suffered or are anticipating financial crises as a result of mounting debt. If the U.S. continues federal deficit spending on its current trajectory, it will face similar economic woes.”

    Even for those who understand that cutting deficits right now will only weaken a still-fragile recovery, and that weakening the recovery will only increase deficits, getting past the argument that “a eurozone crisis is on its way” is no easy task.

    What follows is a self-defense lesson on why the United States is not Greece—or Europe. The U.S. economy is far larger and more productive than Greece. The United States has many more tools in its macro-economic policy box than countries in the eurozone. And while calls for austerity have kept the United States from undertaking government spending and investment large enough to support a robust economic recovery, at least thus far, the United States hasn’t undertaken the same self-defeating austerity measures Europe has. If we learn the right lessons from what is happening in the eurozone now, we never will.

    continued at
    http://www.dollarsandsense.org/archi...acchitano.html
    I don't care about the Greek comparison. The more important point is that expenditures far exceed revenue, and something drastic needs to be done.
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    Quote Originally Posted by onalandline View Post

    I don't care about the Greek comparison. The more important point is that expenditures far exceed revenue, and something drastic needs to be done.
    you should stop falling prey to politically biased rhetoric and take some economics classes

  10. #319
    usa us new york
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    Quote Originally Posted by dujac View Post
    you should stop falling prey to politically biased rhetoric and take some economics classes
    I concur. Fiscal policy and economics is not solely about accounting. There is no need for both sides of a T-account to equal each other.
    The New Age Politician: Representing the greatest number of ideologies, constituents, and solutions.

  11. #320

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    Quote Originally Posted by dujac View Post
    you should stop falling prey to politically biased rhetoric and take some economics classes
    You should start looking at the numbers.
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