Also, I am not visiting until the Hunter Biden Crack Pipe and Art collection exhibits open.
Best POTUS evah!
Opps, sorry I didn't get it.annie88 said:I'm sure it is sarcastic, I was talking about Biden and the reporter that thanked him for walking away without saying *****richardag said:Could that be a sarcastic tweet, considering the name Dr. Jebra Faushay?annie88 said:
This SOB had to go poop and pump up the dementia drugs.
And then some idiot thanks him.
Seriously, **** Joe Biden.This 👏🏿 is 👏🏿 leadership👏🏿 pic.twitter.com/TR20pbyCN8
— Dr. Jebra Faushay (@JebraFaushay) March 13, 2023
I honestly don't know.
Well, SJL (now AOC) has to get her votes somewherefka ftc said:
My bad. Giving myself 15 social demerits.
Never seen somebody have impossibly wrong takes on such a wide range of topics.
Sarcasm duly noted. Each claim was bull*****Stat Monitor Repairman said:
fka ftc said:
I think the big hurt is going to come to some of the most deserving people. SVB seems to have been pretty friendly in loaning money to paper startups. That VC capital is going to both dry up and get massively expensive.
Those who followed the "learn to code" instruction from Biden may want to get their hard hats and workbelts out of storage.
From my perspective, cheaper labor and a more plentiful workforce would be a welcome change. But I think Biden will kill any hope of a positive outcome by bailouts and handouts, from the bottom up and the middle out,
richardag said:Sarcasm duly noted. Each claim was bull*****Stat Monitor Repairman said:
richardag said:Opps, sorry I didn't get it.annie88 said:I'm sure it is sarcastic, I was talking about Biden and the reporter that thanked him for walking away without saying *****richardag said:Could that be a sarcastic tweet, considering the name Dr. Jebra Faushay?annie88 said:
This SOB had to go poop and pump up the dementia drugs.
And then some idiot thanks him.
Seriously, **** Joe Biden.This 👏🏿 is 👏🏿 leadership👏🏿 pic.twitter.com/TR20pbyCN8
— Dr. Jebra Faushay (@JebraFaushay) March 13, 2023
I honestly don't know.
2000 mini recession again. See websites.Nanomachines son said:fka ftc said:
I think the big hurt is going to come to some of the most deserving people. SVB seems to have been pretty friendly in loaning money to paper startups. That VC capital is going to both dry up and get massively expensive.
Those who followed the "learn to code" instruction from Biden may want to get their hard hats and workbelts out of storage.
From my perspective, cheaper labor and a more plentiful workforce would be a welcome change. But I think Biden will kill any hope of a positive outcome by bailouts and handouts, from the bottom up and the middle out,
Tech is going to get hit with the same funding issue that brought down the shale boom in oil and gas. Money being thrown around continuously and zero profit to show for it outside of future potential is not a good combination when any downturn hits.
You're going to see VC money be way more leery about investments in this arena soon.
cone said:
update
US Treasury Yields are making history now, posting their biggest 2-day drop since 1987!
— The Kobeissi Letter (@KobeissiLetter) March 15, 2023
Investors are lining up to buy government treasuries, one of the safest assets out there.
Meanwhile, oil prices are down 50% from their highs and 7% today.
The flight to safety has begun.
Nanomachines son said:fka ftc said:
I think the big hurt is going to come to some of the most deserving people. SVB seems to have been pretty friendly in loaning money to paper startups. That VC capital is going to both dry up and get massively expensive.
Those who followed the "learn to code" instruction from Biden may want to get their hard hats and workbelts out of storage.
From my perspective, cheaper labor and a more plentiful workforce would be a welcome change. But I think Biden will kill any hope of a positive outcome by bailouts and handouts, from the bottom up and the middle out,
Tech is going to get hit with the same funding issue that brought down the shale boom in oil and gas. Money being thrown around continuously and zero profit to show for it outside of future potential is not a good combination when any downturn hits.
You're going to see VC money be way more leery about investments in this arena soon.
Maybe Richard Branson could sell Necker Island to raise some funds. Or wait for a federal bailout?bmks270 said:Virgin Orbit furloughed all workers today. Looks like they're out of money.Nanomachines son said:fka ftc said:
I think the big hurt is going to come to some of the most deserving people. SVB seems to have been pretty friendly in loaning money to paper startups. That VC capital is going to both dry up and get massively expensive.
Those who followed the "learn to code" instruction from Biden may want to get their hard hats and workbelts out of storage.
From my perspective, cheaper labor and a more plentiful workforce would be a welcome change. But I think Biden will kill any hope of a positive outcome by bailouts and handouts, from the bottom up and the middle out,
Tech is going to get hit with the same funding issue that brought down the shale boom in oil and gas. Money being thrown around continuously and zero profit to show for it outside of future potential is not a good combination when any downturn hits.
You're going to see VC money be way more leery about investments in this arena soon.
richardag said:Maybe Richard Branson could sell Necker Island to raise some funds. Or wait for a federal bailout?bmks270 said:Virgin Orbit furloughed all workers today. Looks like they're out of money.Nanomachines son said:fka ftc said:
I think the big hurt is going to come to some of the most deserving people. SVB seems to have been pretty friendly in loaning money to paper startups. That VC capital is going to both dry up and get massively expensive.
Those who followed the "learn to code" instruction from Biden may want to get their hard hats and workbelts out of storage.
From my perspective, cheaper labor and a more plentiful workforce would be a welcome change. But I think Biden will kill any hope of a positive outcome by bailouts and handouts, from the bottom up and the middle out,
Tech is going to get hit with the same funding issue that brought down the shale boom in oil and gas. Money being thrown around continuously and zero profit to show for it outside of future potential is not a good combination when any downturn hits.
You're going to see VC money be way more leery about investments in this arena soon.
Necker Island is basically a desert, no source of freshwater, relies on desalination. Supposedly used as a safe haven for endangered species, Madagascar lemurs and some tortoises, damn near wiped out by a hurricane that shut down the desalination facility. Safe haven my ass, way to dupe very wealthy idiots to this paradise to vacation.
Stat Monitor Repairman said:
SVB was failure by design.
A week in, and that's where I'm at with this.
Reginald Cousins said:richardag said:Maybe Richard Branson could sell Necker Island to raise some funds. Or wait for a federal bailout?bmks270 said:Virgin Orbit furloughed all workers today. Looks like they're out of money.Nanomachines son said:fka ftc said:
I think the big hurt is going to come to some of the most deserving people. SVB seems to have been pretty friendly in loaning money to paper startups. That VC capital is going to both dry up and get massively expensive.
Those who followed the "learn to code" instruction from Biden may want to get their hard hats and workbelts out of storage.
From my perspective, cheaper labor and a more plentiful workforce would be a welcome change. But I think Biden will kill any hope of a positive outcome by bailouts and handouts, from the bottom up and the middle out,
Tech is going to get hit with the same funding issue that brought down the shale boom in oil and gas. Money being thrown around continuously and zero profit to show for it outside of future potential is not a good combination when any downturn hits.
You're going to see VC money be way more leery about investments in this arena soon.
Necker Island is basically a desert, no source of freshwater, relies on desalination. Supposedly used as a safe haven for endangered species, Madagascar lemurs and some tortoises, damn near wiped out by a hurricane that shut down the desalination facility. Safe haven my ass, way to dupe very wealthy idiots to this paradise to vacation.
Weird rant.
The Federal Reserve’s emergency loan program may inject as much as $2 trillion of funds into the US banking system and ease the liquidity crunch, according to JPMorgan Chase, $JPM.
— unusual_whales (@unusual_whales) March 16, 2023
will25u said:
Hello INFLATION... How you doing?
ETA: It says loan...The Federal Reserve’s emergency loan program may inject as much as $2 trillion of funds into the US banking system and ease the liquidity crunch, according to JPMorgan Chase, $JPM.
— unusual_whales (@unusual_whales) March 16, 2023
aggielostinETX said:will25u said:
Hello INFLATION... How you doing?
ETA: It says loan...The Federal Reserve’s emergency loan program may inject as much as $2 trillion of funds into the US banking system and ease the liquidity crunch, according to JPMorgan Chase, $JPM.
— unusual_whales (@unusual_whales) March 16, 2023
Hopefully bank liquidity won't lead to inflation. But I don't know.
cgh1999 said:aggielostinETX said:will25u said:
Hello INFLATION... How you doing?
ETA: It says loan...The Federal Reserve’s emergency loan program may inject as much as $2 trillion of funds into the US banking system and ease the liquidity crunch, according to JPMorgan Chase, $JPM.
— unusual_whales (@unusual_whales) March 16, 2023
Hopefully bank liquidity won't lead to inflation. But I don't know.
Bank liquidity is shrinking because they pulled money from the economy with QT. Instead of sitting here for a bit and letting everyone deal with indigestion, we are just going to put the money back.
Inflation, come on down.
This is a tough call. Money that are kept 'inside' the banking system doesn't really seem to cause inflation in the way consumers see it via CPI increases to goods and services (that's more the 'outside' money like helicopter drops or direct covid payments into checking accounts). But that inside money, in my opinion, stabilizes (increases?) the prices of financial assets. So when you wonder why stocks, bonds, real estate, even cryptos prices rose after 2012 its because all those banks that survived needed a place to put those excess dollars and then lent them out to other players within the banking system or investment them internally with the constraints of Basel III.aggielostinETX said:will25u said:
Hello INFLATION... How you doing?
ETA: It says loan...The Federal Reserve’s emergency loan program may inject as much as $2 trillion of funds into the US banking system and ease the liquidity crunch, according to JPMorgan Chase, $JPM.
— unusual_whales (@unusual_whales) March 16, 2023
Hopefully bank liquidity won't lead to inflation. But I don't know.
tysker said:This is a tough call. Money that are kept 'inside' the banking system doesn't really seem to cause inflation in the way consumers see it via CPI increases to goods and services (that's more the 'outside' money like helicopter drops or direct covid payments into checking accounts). But that inside money, in my opinion, stabilizes (increases?) the prices of financial assets. So when you wonder why stocks, bonds, real estate, even cryptos prices rose after 2012 its because all those banks that survived needed a place to put those excess dollars and then lent them out to other players within the banking system or investment them internally with the constraints of Basel III.aggielostinETX said:will25u said:
Hello INFLATION... How you doing?
ETA: It says loan...The Federal Reserve’s emergency loan program may inject as much as $2 trillion of funds into the US banking system and ease the liquidity crunch, according to JPMorgan Chase, $JPM.
— unusual_whales (@unusual_whales) March 16, 2023
Hopefully bank liquidity won't lead to inflation. But I don't know.
Remember back in the first months and years of QT, we wondered where the inflation was? I would argue it was there but seen in the prices of financial asset prices. It didn't impact CPI because the prices of goods and services weren't as impacted. (Yes it did affect real estate prices and thus rents, as RE is basically a financial product but that was kind of the point of QT, to bolster the RE market.) We may see that again.
Quote:
The only thing more scarce than Bitcoinis critical thinking.
Abundance in money creates scarcity. Scarcity in money creates abundance.
This is what it is. How it is not more obvious to others boggles my mind.Stat Monitor Repairman said:
SVB was failure by design.
A week in, and that's where I'm at with this.
fka ftc said:This is what it is. How it is not more obvious to others boggles my mind.Stat Monitor Repairman said:
SVB was failure by design.
A week in, and that's where I'm at with this.
Its failure proved opportune, convenient for the right people and it was torpedoed to bail out a bad bank, to punish political enemies and to call for more rules.
Quote:
It's a big club, and you ain't in it.
-George Carlin