Japan’s The Tinder That Set The World’s Bad News On Fire

 

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  • #16330

    NPC US Geological Survey fire, F Street NW, Washington DC May 18 1913 I can do this in just about random order, the idea should still shine through, a
    [See the full post at: Japan’s The Tinder That Set The World’s Bad News On Fire]

    #16332
    Professorlocknload
    Participant

    No where to run, except to things that shine.

    Then figure on taking a sabbatical as the fiat currencies of the world blow up, and the tanks roll.

    #16333
    Professorlocknload
    Participant

    #16334
    Tulsatime
    Participant

    It’s almost as if they think the economy is a machine, and that doing X will always result in Y. That ridiculous image of pump priming from the 70’s comes to mind. But the patient has been on stimulants for so long now, it just waves it off. People and problems, individuals on a vast scale. We all read history, and we know this chapter is ending, along with the cheap oil. Will there still be nations when we are all back to firewood??

    #16335
    TonyPrep
    Participant

    Of course, there’s nothing wrong with living in Mom’s basement for any length of time. More “kids” need to do that.

    #16346
    John Day
    Participant

    Thius article posits, and rather well, that the global central banks are coordinating to create a financial crisis which will require the next step up the ladder of financial complexity, to Strategic Drawing Rights as the global reserve currency.
    https://philosophyofmetrics.com/2014/10/28/something-sdr-this-way-comes/
    Each important currency is being gutted through debasement, and we see the day approaching when the boy who cried “wolf” will not be able to spend his promissory notes any more.
    Of course this is the point of collapse, where complex systems collapse down to whatever level is inherently stable, like the feudal farming community.
    We have cut those rungs out of the ladder as we climbed, haven’t we?
    They have not been cut out everywhere.
    50% of the world’s food is still grown by small farmers, just not where we live/eat.
    Growing food on a human scale is really hard work, and unforgiving; no paid sick days…

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