10 results for "24e9b4bdf4c4535b9c3d25731310c965"
>>61196260
Fiat dollary doos are the scam. Thy go to work for $30 an hour when the government just prints up trillions every few months. What is even the point? The market cap of newly mined silver is only $45BN. That is a rounding error for the federal government. A federal government who can't take anywhere near enough to spend enough money into the economy when the debts are sucking so much out.
The system is ruined. Fortunately for me, I own silver. My wealth can't be stolen by dollar dilution of fiat funny-munny.
>>61139701
A $13,000 monster box seems too good to be true even now.
I used to compare my new car of $26,000 compared to my girlfriend's $36,000 car and marveling at the fact that $10,000 cash could be used so productively elsewhere to further your life. The cars both drive the same so what is even the point of forking over $10,000 of extra money as if you can't think of anything else you can do with it? Maybe a new roof on your house? That same $10,000 silver might pay for your next car in 10-15 years.
>>61120663
Solar Panel
>>61120691
I think mining stocks are great, but they are extremely dangerous and come with a lot of political risks. The number of foreign countries sitting on our debts are highly likely to nationalize their natural resources rather than honor the ownership claims of Americans who are defaulting on their debts via dollar dilution. I dip my toe in mining shares and ETFs, but I am on the pessimistic side of things and prefer to be more on the defensive side. The size of the derivatives market, the impossible size of the treasury market is far more concerning than people give credit. I think people most capable will be grabbing ownership with their money and opportunity (backed by legal prowess) far more efficiently than the tax cattle. I'll place some chips on the board and hope for the best, but I think it is prudent to be prepared for the worst. We've all been purposefully swindled by crooks so don't expect law and order to suddenly save you when you need it the most. I bet the courts will be so swamped you won't even be able to sue anyone even if you wanted to.
>>61109108
I saw that. The strength I am seeing in the mining shares is actually quite amazing.
I had a thought about the nature of the financing of mining. Mining equity is often constricted on the stock exchanges, and most mines actually operate by securing private financing at the cost of selling the metal at a discount. Mining equity never actually captures the true profits of their operations. Many royalty companies act as middlemen. They probably act as parasites in order to short and distort the equity, and then throw out "life lines" to the company to sell at minimal profit margins.
What is the point? The point is to keep investors away from the sector. If royalty financing is all the mining sector can get then their profits are massively capped. If the profits are capped then the shareprice and speculative investment in the mining sector will be tamped down.
This just sort of dawned on me. It's not that mining is unprofitable by the very nature of it. It's just that it is being constricted by parasites.
Take a look at UUUU. I've owned this since 2021. Bought at $3 and watched it touch $12 then go back under $4. The last 6 months it has run to $25... Quite abruptly. I stupidly sold calls on my shares too so I've already reached max-profit for myself. But everyone should take a look at that price action. Only professionals and lucky bastards can pick a stock like this. But when it runs, omfg it is a game changer.
I think the banks and government are bankrupt. This is why I keep my purchasing power in scarce and valuable materials. I will not be the victim of the fiat-fallout.
>>60894970
If it is a midwit trap then you can explain to me how the financial system is going to manage the bond market when half of all U.S. government tax receipts go to paying interest? Interest bearing debts are exponential functions so these numbers will be increasing. It's unsustainable and I believe the losses will be landing on the currency as the bond market is vital to the banks and government. The only thing that can fill the gaps is dilution of the currency.
Explain how I am wrong?
>ctrl f
>silver
>0 results

NGMI
>>60653785
It's called leverage. There is so much "borrowed money" that props up the value of all assets, including all sorts of service sector jobs, income statements, balance sheets, tax revenues etc. Alllll down the line you have every last little nook and cranny of the economy slammed with borrowed money that is distorting everything.
Well, what happens is all of these bad loans start to turn sour and there is a mad scramble for liquidity. Assets start being sold to get cash to pay back loans and then suddenly everyone starts to see the "true" value of their assets. As you endlessly toil your entire life, you now realize that all of those stocks you were buying, your insurance benefits, social security, pension, your house, etc. It's all a stinking pile of shit. The bank you put your money in is bankrupt and can no longer afford to lend. And suddenly you can't find anyone able to pay cash to buy your overpriced house. And the stocks that were backed by $0.05 of assets for every dollar you invested suddenly lose 90% of their value.
The issue is capital vs credit. Without endless loans you find out that everyone is broke. And the counterparty risk suddenly proves that what you thought was "wealth" was just a bogus IOU that someone else owed you money. But they couldn't pay you unless someone else paid them. A massive daisy chain of value that doesn't exist needs to flow through 10 different pockets before it reaches you. And you and I all of the rest of the tax cattle will be the ones to bear the brunt of the economic losses.
This is why you should buy real capital assets that have no counterparty risk.
>>60652523
Based Antelope Hill shopper
>continued
Note that on the 6th day just 0.8% of the pond is covered with lilies. You would not detect any problem on the sixth day, I suspect. More than 99% of the pond is open to the sky!

Now here's the nasty truth: If you're a fish you're halfway to being dead!

Wide awake yet? I hope so; let's continue.

On the seventh day 64 square feet are covered.
On the eighth, 128.
On the ninth, 256.
On the tenth, 512.

The pond is now 12.5% covered. More than 80% of the surface area is open to the sky. When you hear someone say "we have 80% of our resource left; we can't be in trouble", consider exactly where you are. Why? You'll see in a moment....

On the eleventh day, 1024 square feet are covered.
On the twelfth, 2048.
On the thirteenth day there is no surface open to the sky and every fish in the pond dies.

When did you figure out you're in trouble? Was it on the twelfth day? Well if so you had literally less than 24 hours to commit mass lilicide or you're all dead! You literally can't spend one day debating with your fellow fish even though you still have half the surface area open to the sky on that 11th day.

This is the nature of exponents folks.
>Thanks the the Market Ticker.org