tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2970975545475697571.post8082430866437191405..comments2024-03-28T03:57:20.041-04:00Comments on Eaton Rapids Joe: InflationEaton Rapids Joehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09102166969915526172noreply@blogger.comBlogger9125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2970975545475697571.post-66373884703105475922022-09-19T09:54:49.968-04:002022-09-19T09:54:49.968-04:00I am able to create $45 per hour to complete a few...I am able to create $45 per hour to complete a few jobs on a home computer. I've never thought that it's even achievable but my closest mate earned $10.5k in only five weeks simply working on this leading project & she had convinced me to join Discover extra details by going to the following link.. <a href="http://www.profit97.com" rel="nofollow"><b> Www.Profit97.Com </b></a>Sarah Elizabethhttp://www.profit97.comnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2970975545475697571.post-24969376433233575692022-09-18T07:09:55.281-04:002022-09-18T07:09:55.281-04:00I believe that what you say is probably true at th...I believe that what you say is probably true at this time.<br /><br />I also believe that "Dominion" voting software was also cleaner than human counting when it was first adopted.<br /><br />I am not smart enough to understand how any software system can be secured against being corrupted from the inside. I do know that there is a temptation to code in a few back-doors just-in-case. What is sold as a hermetically sealed system is likely not.<br /><br />Or so I believe.Eaton Rapids Joehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09102166969915526172noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2970975545475697571.post-45690298603103597452022-09-18T06:13:53.869-04:002022-09-18T06:13:53.869-04:00All good points Joe and I agree. The one that con...All good points Joe and I agree. The one that concerns me the most is the last concerning being robbed. With a community being invaded with more newcomers than locals all sense of community evaporates. A local Realtor told me last week that about 70% of all houses for sale in this area for the past year have been bought by out of the area buyers. And an employee of the title company I used to own said that so far this year they have done closings for buyers from 32 other states. And we are hearing that phrase "livin' off the land" used by new residents and cabin buyers. Back in the '50s and '60s my grandparents generation used to talk about the theft of food out of their gardens and even cows out of their barns back in the 1930s and that was in rural communities. I have no doubt it is going to get really bad, especially for us older people who will be attacked first. ---ken coyoteken48https://www.blogger.com/profile/06182514695395380561noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2970975545475697571.post-8010303444125616332022-09-18T02:58:08.649-04:002022-09-18T02:58:08.649-04:00There are many reasons to doubt the wisdom of inve...There are many reasons to doubt the wisdom of investing significantly in crypto, but:<br /><br /><br />Most crypto *cannot* be "created or destroyed at will". I'm not intimately familiar with them all, but for bitcoin, I am, so I will use it as reference.<br /><br /><br />Bitcoin *cannot* be destroyed, but you can accomplish the same thing by placing it in a wallet, and then destroying (forgetting) the wallet's public key.<br /><br /><br />Bitcoin can only be created by mining (proof of work), and the difficulty in doing so continually increases. Further, once 21M bitcoins have been created, no more can be created, and mining only earns the "fee" that people choose to pay (and that you choose to accept) for registering a transaction in the blockchain.<br /><br /><br />These things are so because the software the miners run forces these things to be so. It's math. It cannot change, unless the software changes. Any miner who changes their software effectively removes himself from the blockchain. The *only* way to change the software is to get greater than 50% of the miners to *all* change their software at the same time, and in exactly the same way.<br /><br /><br />While fiat currency (us $) can be created by the FED at will, and by banks through fractional reserve banking, this is *not* true of bitcoin. You are *trusting* the FED when you hold US$, you are trusting *math* (and a majority of the miner's processor power) when you hold bitcoin.<br /><br /><br />Other than these issues, I fully agree with everything else you assert. Choose an asset you can *know* will be valued in future.Fidohttps://dog.cat.comnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2970975545475697571.post-41463853564087158322022-09-17T23:20:21.229-04:002022-09-17T23:20:21.229-04:00The only difference between cryptocurrency and a U...The only difference between cryptocurrency and a US cash dollar is you can hold the dollar in your hand. BOTH are intrinsically worthless, can be created or destroyed at will or on a whim and the only inherent value they have is based on the holders faith in the honesty of the issuer. In essence both are worthless. Want REAL money. For thousands of years the ONLY actual real money has been gold/silver. These days an investment in lead/brass is likely to be as valuable as holding gold/silver. But converting your money from dollars to some other currency is just changing who you think is trustworthy. And NO government issuing currency, either paper or digital, is trustworthy.Dannoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2970975545475697571.post-35130756855040595382022-09-17T20:01:29.165-04:002022-09-17T20:01:29.165-04:00I too have read When Money Dies, have a copy right...I too have read When Money Dies, have a copy right here. It's why I looked up my relatives who survived the Great Depression and listened to their stories.<br /><br />A very common factor in their stories was that more folks lost their farms-homes due to inability to get enough coin of the relm to pay taxes. Often enough local debts were paid in services or in kind (like meat, firewood etc.) but Uncle Sam wanted US Dollars and the bankers guarded by the sheriffs would sell your home on the courthouse steps for pennies on the dollar for back taxes.<br /><br />Many well to do families lost their homes thusly.<br /><br />Families and friends often closed ranks putting 3 generations in the same home as everybody helped the family survive. Otherwise, they would be homeless folks searching for work. <br /><br />Kids might help neighbors with gardening chores to bring home some food or other trade item (like old clothing-shoes) Grandparents helped watch the house and babysit-nursing the ill.<br /><br />Silver and gold are nice AFTER you have eliminated your debts, set aside a couple of years tax money, a couple of years food and other critical needs. Skills are awesome BUT without the tools and supplies not so much.<br /><br />From my experience working in Bosnia as a Medic I found that the trade value of a gold ring or watch was not nearly what you would think. Everybody needed Food, Firewood, Antibiotics, guns and ammo. Trying to trade black market with Uncles old gold watch was risky at best.<br /><br />I bring this up because I suspect that the Powers that Be who are pushing for electronic Dollars will make trading outside the "Official E-Dollar" a felony and thus a risky black-market event.<br /><br />During the Great Depression Clothing became very expensive, repairing them and keeping folks in shoes was an ongoing issue.<br /><br />Shoe Goo might be worth more ounce for ounce than .999 Gold, just saying.Michaelhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05329176313885665469noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2970975545475697571.post-83826180925510084322022-09-17T19:24:13.889-04:002022-09-17T19:24:13.889-04:00ERJ, Crypto remains for me an interesting concept ...ERJ, Crypto remains for me an interesting concept (and one I do not fully understand) but risky. It assumes a lot of things - like regular power, for example. In terms of other hard currencies, I am frankly a doubter of the concept of gold and silver being adopted as currency to any great extent. Maybe during the Great Depression, but now we live in an age where many do not carry cash at all, let alone precious metals.<br /><br />To your points, skills and the ability to make/supply items readily needed are probably the best investment.Toirdhealbheach Beucailhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14872794169534403463noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2970975545475697571.post-65897872372922421122022-09-17T17:00:00.559-04:002022-09-17T17:00:00.559-04:00For most, their only real resource will be skills....For most, their only real resource will be skills. Over time, those can be built up, and barring dementia/disability, they're hard to take from you. Be the guy who knows how to solve *likely* problems, that no one else can solve.<br /><br />If you have renewable resources, (productive land) you should aquire the skills and *tools* to produce product from those resources: food, firewood, lumber, furniture, wagons Skills: blacksmithing, textiles, wood/metal milling/machining, rudimentary chemistry, distillation, medicine, engine repair/retrofitting, boilermaking, etc.Fidohttps://dog.cat.comnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2970975545475697571.post-46846232542900007652022-09-17T16:53:54.201-04:002022-09-17T16:53:54.201-04:00We have a habit of making sure there is someone mi...We have a habit of making sure there is someone minding the homestead before leaving to go somewhere . Criminal activity is increasing across the board . Exponentially ! Fentanyl and cartels are nationwide now that the borders are wide open . Crack heads driving around looking to junk your stainless steel McCormick-Deering cream separator that would have fetched 5 to 7 hundred at auction . They'll get $25 bucks at the junkyard . Ask me how I know . Heh . robehr orinskynoreply@blogger.com