With gold a fashionable hedge against turbulent times, one billionaire is doing everything he can to get his hands on the actual stuff
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In Gold We Trust?

Ok, so we know that taking on skynet was far easier than taking on calif's public unions. Here's how things stand, as they are:Now that Schwarzenegger is a certifiable lame duck (dead duck may be a more appropriate term) Schwarzenegger sees fit to take on public unions in a major way. It's too late now (for him) even as he speaks the truth.
Sounds more reasonable than forceful, eh? Read on. The force is in the implications of otherwise understated assertions of facts only.Recently some critics have accused me of bullying state employees. Headlines in California papers this month have been screaming "Gov assails state workers" and "Schwarzenegger threatens state workers."
I'm doing no such thing. State employees are hard-working and valuable contributors to our society. But here's the plain truth: California simply cannot solve its budgetary problems without addressing government-employee compensation and benefits.
550 bn. Of debt that must be repaid with interest. Ponder that a sec.Thanks to huge unfunded pension and retirement health-care promises granted by past governments, and also to deceptive pension-fund accounting that understated liabilities and overstated future investment returns, California is now saddled with $550 billion of retirement debt.
Wow. breathtaking only. 15% CAGR per yr for 10 yrs. Wow.The cost of servicing that debt has grown at a rate of more than 15% annually over the last decade.
And on and on it goes. read it all only. And wonder. Poor harburd historian niall bhai's frantic gesturing and alarmism about an impending loss of empire doesn't look so loony suddenly. Eh?This year, retirement benefits—more than $6 billion—will exceed what the state is spending on higher education. Next year, retirement costs will rise another 15%. In fact, they are destined to grow so much faster than state revenues that they threaten to suck up the money for every other program in the state budget.
Inflation protected obligations, eh? Wow. Hyperinflation too will have issues solving this one.Few Californians in the private sector have $1 million in savings, but that's effectively the retirement account they guarantee to public employees who opt to retire at age 55 and are entitled to a monthly, inflation-protected check of $3,000 for the rest of their lives.
OMG. Can't bear to read on and on. This will end ugly. No freakin' reason if I were a pvt sector calif employee, I would putup with this kinda BS. Good luck keeping the peace. The national guard may have to be called out in a few yrs if the current trajectory is maintained, I reckon.At the same time that government-employee costs have been climbing, the private-sector workers whose taxes pay for them have been hurting. Since 2007, one million private jobs have been lost in California. Median incomes of workers in the state's private sector have stagnated for more than a decade. To make matters worse, the retirement accounts of those workers in California have declined. The average 401(k) is down nationally nearly 20% since 2007. Meanwhile, the defined benefit retirement plans of government employees—for which private-sector workers are on the hook—have risen in value.
Didn't know these things were doable under WTO, but if this is legit, then I see no reason why Khanate etc. can't follow suit on collecting the equivalent of SS tax from imported services. So far the reason for shyness is the power of Sultan Gates and the other nobility of the Eye-Tee empires, but that may not hold much charm if they think through the dire predictions u guys have been posting above. Something has got to give, and surely the desi Eye Tee sultans are strangling the Goose-e-Golden-Eggs if they refuse.India to levy 10 pct import tax on power gear
12 Aug 2010 05:11:40 GMT
Source: Reuters
By Matthias Williams
NEW DELHI, Aug 12 (Reuters) - India will impose a 10 percent import tax on power equipment for big projects within weeks to help level the playing field between domestic and foreign firms jostling in what may soon be the world's biggest market. The tax would reverse a policy of zero import duty on equipment for mega projects introduced to meet India's urgent capacity shortages, said Arun Maira, a member of the government's Planning Commission who led a committee on equipment imports. Without enough local suppliers, India turned to China to help bridge a peak power shortage of 12 percent seen as an obstacle to matching its Asian neighbour's double digit economic growth.
Somehow, I doubt sri rahul mehta would be very proud.For a down-ballot category that even well-intentioned voters pay little attention to, judicial races are astonishingly expensive. In 2004, $9.3 million was spent in the race for a single seat (pdf) on the Illinois Supreme Court. That’s higher than the price tag of more than half the US Senate races in the nation that year. In 2006, three candidates for chief justice in Alabama raised $8.2 million combined.
But those sums could look paltry compared to the spending likely to be unleashed in the wake of the Supreme Court’s Citizens United ruling. In all, 39 states elect judges—and with the stakes including everything from major class actions to zoning and contract cases to consumer protection, workplace, and environmental issues, corporations have always taken a major interest in those races. The US Chamber of Commerce, Forbes reported in 2003, has devoted at least $100 million to electing judges sympathetic to its agenda. “No organization has had more success in the past 10 years of judicial elections,” says James Sample, a professor at Hofstra University who studies judicial reform issues. “Its winning percentage would be the envy of any sports franchise.” Citizens United has essentially wiped out not just federal restrictions on campaign spending, but many state-level regulations as well, Sample notes, and that’s “going to increase the ability of corporations, and to a much lesser extent unions, to engage in electioneering that is basically aimed at winning particular cases.” And given the low profile of these races, it may not take that much to sway that outcome, notes Bert Brandenburg, executive director of the advocacy group Justice at Stake. “A judicial election is a better investment for anyone spending money” than, say, a congressional campaign.
LOOK HOW STUPID OUR CUSTOMERS ARE! THEY BUY FROM US, AND THEY ARE GOING BROKE!
An obvious thing, that needs to be reiterated. Even if America loses its Empire, its poor will never be as poor as in Africa, Asia or Latin America. America has resources to take care of the basic needs. It has enough trees to make their houses, enough land to provide food and enough water to parch thirsty throats. Will they be able to feed acres & acres of Kentucky Blue grass lawns? Dunno. They have geographical isolation; all they need to do is control their Southern borders. Even with falling standards of living, America would be very inviting for the Latin Americans reeling under poverty & misery.Hari Seldon wrote:One admirable thing about the khanateis that however bad things get there (and they'll never get as desperately poor and obscene like us woeful SDREs with 80% of our popn earnng less than $2 a day and so on)
In reality there are no absolute standards of living, as it is all relative to something else you see in your daily life and hope to achieve for yourself. It is maya in that sense. Same as many people in India do not miss spanking 6-lane highways even when shown them on TV, until they get to ride on one. Hence, even if a vast majority of Indians do not live like Americans today even in the next 50 years or more, nothing will be amiss to most of them.Another obvious thing, even if India becomes one of the richest country, the GDP per capita is all rosy, the living style is not going to be similar to that of the America.
so"nityam cha shaashvatam shuddham dhruvam aksharam avyayam" from laghunyaasa (in Rudram)
"puNdarIkam param dhAma nityam aksharam avyayam"
Vishnu saharam slokA 12.....
The above from Chamakam....Agnis cha ma indras cha may, somas cha ma indras cha may,
Savithaas cha ma indras cha may, Sarswathi cha ma indras cha may,
Pooshaa cha ma indras cha may, Brahaspathees cha ma indras cha may,
Mithras cha ma indras cha may, varunas cha ma indras cha may,
Twashtaas cha ma indras cha may, Dhaathhas cha ma indras cha may,
Vishnus cha ma indras cha may, Aswinou cha ma indras cha may,
Maruthas cha ma indras cha may, Viswe cha ma indras cha may,
Prithvee cha ma indras cha may, Aanthareeksham cha ma indras cha may,
Fire and Indra,
Moon and Indra,
Sun and Indra,
Saraswathi and Indra,
Pooshaa and Indra,
Teacher of Gods and Indra,
Mithra and Indra,
Varuna and Indra,
Twashtaa and Indra,
Dhathaa and Indra,
Vishnu and Indra,
Aswini devas and Indra,
Marut devas and Indra,
Viswe devas and Indra,
Earth and Indra,
Atmosphere and Indra,
Heaven and Indra,
Four Directions and Indra,
The direction over head and Indra,
And Prajaa pathi and Indra.
Would bless me.
A nice song written by Kannadasan for the tamil movie Bhama Vijyam points this out precisely. Income: 8 annas, Expenses: 10 annas. End result: empty towel. Folks who understand tamil might enjoy the play of words there.Neshant wrote:
Ever since the idea of researching, developing, manufacturing and marketting real goods went out the window along with the notion of living within one's means, trust in the system began to erode.
Bailouts, passing on losses to suckers, money printing, interest rate arbitrage for banking crooks, fractional reserve, picking winners and losers are all hallmarks of rigged enterprise. In free enterprise, these entities would fail, the CEOs would be selling hot dogs on the streets and some might be hauled off to jail - especially the bribe taking liars at rating agencies which defrauded many pension plans & investors.enqyoob wrote:Obviously, the best efforts of law enforcement have been completely ineffective in moderating the behavior of those crooks whom you blame for the economic crisis. But that's Free Enterprise, hey?
None of these rating agencies could predict dot-com bubble, housing crisis, iceland or greek scenarios in advance while they continue to burden fiscally disciplined developing nations with inferior ratings to what they gave to iceland/greece once. Wonder why they are given so much credibility?Neshant wrote:especially the bribe taking liars at rating agencies which defrauded many pension plans & investors.
Bailouts, passing on losses to suckers, money printing, interest rate arbitrage for banking crooks, fractional reserve, picking winners and losers are all hallmarks of rigged enterprise.
We have seen ppl argue, correctly IMO, that allowing, say, AIG to fail would simply have destroyed the security of millions of people who have paid up insurance premiums for years, and cannot now qualify if they had to go take medical tests for new policies from new companies. So your recommendation there is completely against the "greater good". As for CEOs selling hot dogs, no way. There is a reason that Corporations are incorporated - it is to limit the liabilities of the entity, and protect the corporate officers. They are smart people (I am not saying "GOOD" people), and have carefully packaged Golden Parachutes etc. so if the corporation goes under, they may lose some stock options, but they are certainly not going to be poor.In free enterprise, these entities would fail, the CEOs would be selling hot dogs on the streets and some might be hauled off to jail
This in fact is something that struck me as something remarkable. WHY did they lie? (Yes, I know they did). They did it, because, according to them,- especially the bribe taking liars at rating agencies which defrauded many pension plans & investors.
Middlemen exist because their customers on both sides see fit to pay them. I go buy air tickets on Expedia or Orbix or whatever, or directly from the airline, because I see fit to avoid the Ace Consolidators Heart Attack Generators Travel Agents. I don't see that the travel agent's services are essential or valuable. Others do. Same way here.In a real free enterprise with honest money, middlemen industries which contribute no real value would not even exist in the first place.
Absolutely not in a FREE market system. In a FREE market system, as one real estate broker tried to hammer into our stupid brains,Debt would something one would think very carefully before taking on. Loans would only be based on savings and not created out of thin air.
YOU SHOULD NEVER UNDER-BUY!!
But that's exactly what FREE Enterprise does. No one can dictate that the middle man should be bypassed, if customers on both sides decide that s(he) is worth the money. You would need a diktatorial system to diktat that there should be no role for middlemen.Its not complicated at all. The only reason it is made complicated is to find ways and means of justifying the insertion of a parasitic middle man into the equation.
And that, IMO, comes straight out of Das Kapital or the Communist Manifesto. I am NOT disagreeing with it, just saying that it is as far as one gets from ideal Free Market/ laissez faire/chalta hai / Bhavitavyam Bhaveteva.I am suspicious of any move that separates a person from the fruits of his labor with a layer of confusion and bad money in between. Without a doubt, such a move ends up having only one purpose : to perpetuate fraud.
Excellent point!The lawyers are the ones that make the big bucks every time, so where are they now? Why have they not hounded these entities to prison, bankruptcy etc?
The only answer I can find is that what they did was not provably illegal.
Legal and illegal lose all meaning when govts are packed with cronies of the parasitic middle man industry. What was illegal becomes legal and vice-versa through legislation introduced by bribe seeking politicians. We have just been through a major crash due to fraud on a biblical scale yet not a single person has landed in jail. So I don't expect anything to be provably illegal no matter how obvioius the crime is. Financial crimes under the present setup carry with them huge rewards and little risk.The only answer I can find is that what they did was not provably illegal.
So your recommendation there is completely against the "greater good".
I use the word middle man as a shortened form of parasitic middle man in all these discussions. Certainly a middle man may have a useful role. But not a parasitic middle man - especially not one that is forcing itself upon the system. You would not want 50 parasitic middle men handing your paycheck each collecting a fee along the way claiming that's in the greater good of society.Middlemen exist because their customers on both sides see fit to pay them.
Have seen similar arguments before also. And they're quite valid too, IMHO. Their gist typically goes like this:Pulikeshi wrote: blah ^n
The point is not whether these "crooks" have been arrested by the government and charged - there of course the Corrupt NJBP Cabal Theory etc. can hold sway. The point is that self-interested disaster-chaser lawyers have not gone after these people (or maybe I am just not aware yet of them). If they are not going after them, that says that there is no substance to the allegation that there was wrongdoing or even actionably irresponsible behavior. I don't understand WHY the behavior of Standard & Poor was any better than that of the Pakistan cricket team, but then I don't understand a lot. Where are the ambuchaser lawyers?Legal and illegal lose all meaning when govts are packed with cronies of the parasitic middle man industry. What was illegal becomes legal and vice-versa through legislation introduced by bribe seeking politicians. We have just been through a major crash due to fraud on a biblical scale yet not a single person has landed in jail. So I don't expect anything to be provably illegal no matter how obvioius the crime is. Financial crimes under the present setup carry with them huge rewards and little risk.
Nothing. The issue was whether the govt. should stand by and let millions of paid-up insurance polices become worthless, just in the interest of Austrian Free Market religion. There is no way that this would have been responsible behavior from the government, so shoring up AIG was essential.Its profitable for any crook to have a system where the greater good is always framed with his greater profit motive in mind. That is to say if by perpetuating fraud, the system begins to crumble, he can always argue that the greater good requires money to be confiscated from someone else to shore up his fraud. That is the reason the federal reserve exists. The greatest (never mind greater) good is in getting rid of the parasitic middle man. Towards that end, just about anything that will lead to his demise is good even if it hurts the people in the interm.