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Other / Off-topic / Re: Answer the question above with a question.
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on: July 02, 2014, 07:32:47 AM
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Let me put it this way: have you ever felt the urge to join a monastery or the Foreign Legion, or undergo a change of sex operation, after reading something that you posted the night before?
Oh, my; that was some heavy drinking right there, wasn't it? I can't remember the last time I was that drunk, can you? I can remember being drunk, but how could I tell whether it was the last time I was so, rather than the next-to-last one?
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Other / Off-topic / Re: Answer the question above with a question.
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on: July 02, 2014, 06:19:47 AM
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Depending on one's frame of mind, either the liquor store or the pharmacy, right?
You know what usually happens when one posts while drunk, don't you? No, what? Turn Down for What?Let me put it this way: have you ever felt the urge to join a monastery or the Foreign Legion, or undergo a change of sex operation, after reading something that you posted the night before?
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Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion
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on: July 02, 2014, 05:56:52 AM
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Each rentier skimming from this chain drains off another fraction of the debt, which the public is obligated in theory to pay off one day. The result is a class system in which 0.1% of the population gains the bulk of the benefit of economic productivity gains and public spending, A shrinking middle class carries a rapidly increasing tax burden and debt load, and a rapidly growing underclass is kept placid with government benefits.
Things go on until they can't. Exponentially increasing debt in the presence of declining economic growth, ultimately, economic retraction, will end catastrophically, if it is not managed.
No question about the facts, but disagree about the predictions. Ther may be crises, but they will managed, so as no to kill the cow while it can still give some milk. They may starve it gradually out of greed, and thus end up hurting themselves; but at worst the world wil become a huge Bangladesh rather than a huge Somalia. The only way to manage this landing is calculated, systematic debt destruction.
Brazil has a huge public debt, that simply cannot be paid off. If it wasn't past my bedtime I would look for figures, but it passed a trillion dollars many years ago. Currently some 50-60% of the government's revenue goes into paying interest of that debt; but that is only part of the interest due, so that the principal just keeps growing. The last time the government actually borrowed money was perhaps in 1999, when the debt may have been 1/10 of today's, or less. Since then we have been paying all that interest to the banks in exchange of nothing, merely for their kindness in letting us give them only 60% of our taxes, instead of perhaps 90% or 120%. Indeed, the just and smart thing to do would be to destroy that debt: tell the banks 'fuck you, we already paid our debt with inerest many times over, we owe you nothing, rather you owe us'. That is what Argentina partly tried to do onec and is trying to do again, and you may have known the result. Unfortunately the banks effectively own the stealth bombers and nuclear missiles. When Lula ran for President in 2000, he had to pledge that he would honor the debt and not try to do what Argentina did. Lula and Dilma managed to convert some of the debt to less expensive loans, but that only slowed the rate of growth, not make it shrink. Dilma lowered the prime rate from 18% to 9% per year, but the bankers swore to overthrow her, and she was orced to backtrack and raise the rate again. And so on. The money is debt. It is made of debt. It is a token of debt. It is debt which can only be repaid by creating more debt. The money itself is the very root of the problem. Either the system implodes catastrophically, or it reforms itself. In either case, debt-based money will cease to exist as it does today.
Yeah, but why would it be different with crypto? If crypto gets widespread use in the economy, banks will create "virtual bitcoins" just like they now create "virtual dollars". Indeed I see already many budding factories of "virtual bitcoins" sprouting all over the place. MtGOX was an egregious example. But you are ignoring the bulk of the wealth held by society. Most of the value in society is in the interconnections between people, the transactions, transfers, obligations and acquitals which they make. Human capital is not just a matter of skills, but of relationships. Many of those relationships, often the most economically important ones, are mediated by money. Ignoring money would cause you to ignore much of the value in society.
Again, I admit that I was oversimplifying. But one could view the destruction of that "socail network value" as as consequence of the bad redistribution of wealth caused by the collapse of money system, rather than of the collapse itself. If the government destroyed all currency and all balances on account, I think half the people in the U.S. would be dead in a month. Supply chains would collapse, and under modern just-in-time inventory management practices, mass starvation, epidemics, and gang warfare would be pervasive.
In the late 1980s, the Brazilian government tried to stop runaway inflation by freezing the funds in all bank accounts above some ridiculous threshold. (Those frozen funds were relased only a year or two after.) The result, not surprisingly, was a deep economic crisis, perhaps the worst that the country ever had. The GNP dropped, comerce shrunk, people lost jobs, companies large and small closed (except the banks, of course). Fortunatey I wasn't in the country at that time, but I have friends who had just sold their home in order to buy another, and had their money trappped in the bank. Poverty increased, public services worsened, and crime increased -- but the country did not collapse, there was no mass starvation or pervasive gang warfare, not epidemics (at least not much worse than usual). People and companies found workarounds to the bank freeze, sold on credit or paid with cash, and the government was forced to compromises; so most of those social and economic interconnections did not get to be broken. Based on that and other examples, I believe that to get a complete collapse of the society one needs something much more powerful than merely messing with people's bank accounts. Like an invasion by a foreign power, external financing of domestic terrorism and sabotage, a civil war, or collapse of real economy iitself -- as perhaps happened in the Mayan civiization, the Roman Empire, or the USSR. I don't see any of those things happening in the US any time soon. I was in new York last year, for a couple of weeks, and now I wonder whether the doomsday prophets are perhaps posting from another planet....
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Other / Off-topic / Re: Answer the question above with a question.
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on: July 02, 2014, 04:06:59 AM
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Do you have fear of posting?
Ther may be medications for that condition, might there not? Where would one obtain said medications? Depending on one's frame of mind, either the liquor store or the pharmacy, right? You know what usually happens when one posts while drunk, don't you?
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Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion
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on: July 02, 2014, 01:46:40 AM
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So today we had two major retailers announce that they're taking bitcoin and we're now lower value than we were 24 hours ago. This market is brutal.
As many people have pointed out already, those major retailers announced that they are taking dollars -- that will come from the sale of bitcoins, mostly by bitcoin enthusiasts. So those news may give bitcoin more visibility, but it is questionable whether they will expand the number of bitcoin owners, and they imply more coins moving from hoards into the market. And, anyway, those news are irrelevant to the Chinese traders -- who seem to be leading the current drop.
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389
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Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion
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on: July 02, 2014, 12:40:23 AM
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It means only that one buyer with deep pockets was less greedy than all the others. They may all have bid at 475$, and he bid 480$ What makes you think that $475 was the second highest bid? First, I don't think that the winning bid was at 480$. (How many warning " " should I use when I am really trolling?) My real guess is that most bids were in the 550$ -- 600$ range, but I would not dare guess what the winning bid was, except that it must have been at least 600$. AFAIK, the only bid that has been revealed with some credibility was one by a certain Mr. Waters of CoinApex, for 403$. (I misremembered and rounded that up to 475$ in the trollpost) Have there been other disclosures after that?
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Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion
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on: July 01, 2014, 09:40:23 PM
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No matter how much money the government creates of derstroys, confiscates or gives away, the real weath of the country will not change. Fiddling with the finacial system, the currency, and the money supply can only change the distribution of wealth among the citizens Tragically, myopically, false. Wealth is not a static thing - it's a continually produced and consumed on a daily basis. The amount of wealth that is destroyed, or more accurately: never created, by bad policy decisions is vast. It's just not always obvious. Indeed, I oversimplified. Inflation, economic crises, and bad monetary decisions can of course cause much waste, and reduce the production of new wealth. Although one could argue that their primary effect is to redistribute ownership of wealth in the wrong ways, e.g. from domestic workers and good industries to bankers, foreign workers, and bad industries. The collapse in production then follows from that ba redistribution.
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Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion
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on: July 01, 2014, 09:06:10 PM
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One basic marketing tool of people who sell investment funds based in gold, silver, etc. -- or bitcoin -- is to paint an apocalyptic scenario for stocks, bonds, bank savings, real estate, etc. "Repent, the end is near, our fund is the only salvation." Surely there wil be more financial crises in the world and in the USA, there may be moreinflation, perhaps even hyperinflation But you can be sure the USA will survive (to the disappointment of many people outside it ) and so wll China, Russia, and Europe. Believe me: I have lived most of my life in a country with high inflation, sometimes hyperinflation, that periodically had to redefine the currency by dropping three zeros. (I still must have somehere coins whose nominal value today is a few pico- or femtodollars.) Inflation and hyperinflation are a big inconvenience, waste a lot of time, make things inefficient and stressful; but people can finda ways to adapt and survive, and the country continues to function without becoming a Mad Max world. The reason is because money (or bitcoin, or gold) is not real wealth, it is only a token that society will accept and exchange for real wealth. The exchange is so smooth and universal that, for personal or corporate finances, it is justifiable to treat money the same as wealth. But when considering a whole nation, or the world, one must ignore the money and focus only on the real wealth. No matter how much money the government creates of derstroys, confiscates or gives away, the real weath of the country will not change. Fiddling with the finacial system, the currency, and the money supply can only change the distribution of wealth among the citizens On the other hand, in economic crises and hyperinflation times, the austerity measures that neocons have convinced nations to use are precisely designed to trasfer wealth from ordinary citizens to the banks and big financial players. If such a crisis comes, can bitcoin (assuming it succeeds) save our wealth from being taken that way? I don't think that will work. For one thing among many, in a crisis most people need to take money out of investment funds and savings in order to survive; so the value of bitcoin is likely to drop, due to diminished demand, rather than increase.
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Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: US Marshall's Bitcoin Auction Results
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on: July 01, 2014, 02:52:58 PM
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I wonder if the people who made offers for $800+ were also trying to get multiple auction blocks. I'm not sure if that would even by allowed by the auction format, but that is the only "justification" I can make for buying blocks at $800+.
The bid form allowed one person to specify any number (0-9) of 3'000 BTC 'A' lots, all at the same price, and optionally the 2'655 BTC 'B' lot., at some other price. But a person could submit as many forms as he wanted, with different prices. Obviously if all his forms added to more than 9 A blocks and 1 B blocks, some of his bids would never win. Any rational person who believed that bitcoins were worth buying at 700$ each, and had some millions lying around, should be buying all he could the exchanges, independently of him entering the auction or not, until the market price reached 700$. Also, a rational person would not post a bid of several million dollars without having the full payment amount ready in the bank, because otherwise he would risk losing his 200 k$ deposit for nothing. So we can guess that bids well above market, if there were any, were not posted by rational persons.
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400
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Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: US Marshall's Bitcoin Auction Results
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on: July 01, 2014, 01:38:37 PM
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What the heck, if everybody is guessing on thin air, I may as well:
(1) There were a few bids by irrational individuals well above market price, say 800 $/BTC or more. (I say "irrational" not becaue of them valuing coins so much, but because they could buy the coins for less than that at the exchanges, with slippage and all, either directly or through brokers.)
(2) Most of the bids where by rational bidders, individualor corporate, who bid at about the current market price, or somewhat below that, say in the 550-630 range.
(3) Some of the bids were well below market price, by people who thought 'hey, why not try, I may win the lottery'.
(4) One or more of the highest bidders failed to send the full amount in time, and that is why the auction stalled -- the USMS had to notify the next bidder, and give him another day or two to pay.
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