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7/25/2025, 6:08:01 PM
>>511310769
>conspiracy brain must feel fantastic, you are special because you have all this hidden knowledge... meanwhile we have donor lists and kick representatives out for cheating on less than a days wage
Other anon is right, democracy is just shadow oligarchy
>conspiracy brain must feel fantastic, you are special because you have all this hidden knowledge... meanwhile we have donor lists and kick representatives out for cheating on less than a days wage
Other anon is right, democracy is just shadow oligarchy
ID: Fu4acw2F/biz/60628632#60630965
7/15/2025, 2:26:02 PM
>Here is a little story illustrating exponents in the real world.
There happens to be a particular species of pond lily that is extremely prolific. In fact it grows so fast that it doubles in size through both growth and reproduction in just one day.
We will start with a pond of a surface area of 4096 square feet, or about 64 feet square. We will place within that pond one lily with an area of of one square foot; that is, a lily that is a square of 12 x 12".
This pond contains fish, which would like to live in symbiosis with the algae and other growing plant material within the pond. In order to do some part of the pond's surface must be exposed to the air so that oxygen and carbon dioxide can be exchanged, and some part of the pond's surface must be open to the sun, or the algae that make up a good part of the food the fish eat (we will assume they do not eat the lilies directly) can survive. The lilies will conveniently consume the urea (nitrogen) that the fish excrete, preventing the pond water from becoming poisonous. So long as this symbiosis is maintained all is fine. But if this symbiotic relationship fails all the fish will die.
We are the fish, incidentally, and the lilies are debt.
Now here's the question: Will the fish inevitably die and if so how long, in days, will pass before they perish?
That's easy.
On the first day there is 1 square foot of pond that is covered.
On the second, 2
On the third, 4.
On the fourth, 8.
On the fifth, 16.
On the sixth, 32.
There happens to be a particular species of pond lily that is extremely prolific. In fact it grows so fast that it doubles in size through both growth and reproduction in just one day.
We will start with a pond of a surface area of 4096 square feet, or about 64 feet square. We will place within that pond one lily with an area of of one square foot; that is, a lily that is a square of 12 x 12".
This pond contains fish, which would like to live in symbiosis with the algae and other growing plant material within the pond. In order to do some part of the pond's surface must be exposed to the air so that oxygen and carbon dioxide can be exchanged, and some part of the pond's surface must be open to the sun, or the algae that make up a good part of the food the fish eat (we will assume they do not eat the lilies directly) can survive. The lilies will conveniently consume the urea (nitrogen) that the fish excrete, preventing the pond water from becoming poisonous. So long as this symbiosis is maintained all is fine. But if this symbiotic relationship fails all the fish will die.
We are the fish, incidentally, and the lilies are debt.
Now here's the question: Will the fish inevitably die and if so how long, in days, will pass before they perish?
That's easy.
On the first day there is 1 square foot of pond that is covered.
On the second, 2
On the third, 4.
On the fourth, 8.
On the fifth, 16.
On the sixth, 32.
ID: FIwhL4YR/biz/60611148#60611480
7/11/2025, 8:44:08 PM
ID: wwcHU0fq/biz/60577585#60582522
7/4/2025, 10:58:59 PM
>>60582510
Banks recapitalize themselves by revaluing gold. Silver and gold will steal all of the worlds purchasing power when people cease taking bank credit for payment.
Banks recapitalize themselves by revaluing gold. Silver and gold will steal all of the worlds purchasing power when people cease taking bank credit for payment.
ID: 52woF0se/biz/60513597#60520437
6/18/2025, 11:19:57 PM
>>60520279
Yea, that is correct. The level amount of pent up demand locked away in credit investments dwarfs the actual economy by such a magnitude that people don't even realize how quickly everything could get bought up if people start to flee stocks and bonds.
A hypothetical is this: Imagine if every time you went to the grocery store, you bought 18 eggs, but you only received 12 eggs and then a coupon for 6 free eggs. The coupons actually accrue interest so if you don't cash them in, they pay you 2 extra eggs per year. People like the idea of free eggs so they stop using the coupons. They constantly buy 18 eggs, eat 12 and just leave their coupons at home. This little game goes on for SIX MILLION years and suddenly the egg coupons are creating enough free eggs that the global chicken population can't keep up. More coupons exist for free eggs than can be produced. But people continue on stacking the coupons. And then suddenly, one day a panic sets in. So many coupons are being redeemed that egg supplies are all gone. People have enourmous amounts of wealth tied up in that they desperately try to unload them for ANYTHING they can get their hands on. The store has long stopped selling eggs because everyone stopped paying for them due to the coupons. Here is the credit bubble in a nutshell. You defer present consumption for basis points and the end-game is always the rugpull. Those who cashed in their coupons for something else were able to profit the most. Those who held on too long ate the losses. Just like a ponzi scheme. Just like our current monetary system: A multigenerational grift that few have the practical and historical knowledge to see past the normalcy bias.
Yea, that is correct. The level amount of pent up demand locked away in credit investments dwarfs the actual economy by such a magnitude that people don't even realize how quickly everything could get bought up if people start to flee stocks and bonds.
A hypothetical is this: Imagine if every time you went to the grocery store, you bought 18 eggs, but you only received 12 eggs and then a coupon for 6 free eggs. The coupons actually accrue interest so if you don't cash them in, they pay you 2 extra eggs per year. People like the idea of free eggs so they stop using the coupons. They constantly buy 18 eggs, eat 12 and just leave their coupons at home. This little game goes on for SIX MILLION years and suddenly the egg coupons are creating enough free eggs that the global chicken population can't keep up. More coupons exist for free eggs than can be produced. But people continue on stacking the coupons. And then suddenly, one day a panic sets in. So many coupons are being redeemed that egg supplies are all gone. People have enourmous amounts of wealth tied up in that they desperately try to unload them for ANYTHING they can get their hands on. The store has long stopped selling eggs because everyone stopped paying for them due to the coupons. Here is the credit bubble in a nutshell. You defer present consumption for basis points and the end-game is always the rugpull. Those who cashed in their coupons for something else were able to profit the most. Those who held on too long ate the losses. Just like a ponzi scheme. Just like our current monetary system: A multigenerational grift that few have the practical and historical knowledge to see past the normalcy bias.
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