Unlimited federal money: Many people in power actually believe in it – The Dialogue: Episode 4

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someone
4 years ago

They open everyone elses pockers but their OWN!

The Paraclete
4 years ago

For many years these same people have watched multiple administrations produce money out of thin air for aircraft carriers, submarines, trips to the moon and multitude of lunatic weapons. Now it’s time to give back. It’s that simple minded!

Ex Illini
4 years ago

Many people in power are idiots. Our President clearly has cognitive capacity issues. Seems the Dems think that’s okay.

JimBob
4 years ago

It doesn’t help that Paul Krugman and David Brooks have bought in to the printing press principle. We already see the predictable inflation. Cui bono? Debtors for one. Pay off dollar debts with dollars that buy less. Pension funds? States and municipalities will have more federal “COVID relief” dollars to contribute. 3% COLA won’t keep up … and that could be beneficial if the legislative branch doesn’t increase the percentage. If home values increase (provided interest rates stay low) then property taxes will follow. Are worker shortages temporary? Higher wages will drive higher prices. It begins to look like Weimar… Read more »

Freddy
4 years ago
Reply to  JimBob
JimBob
4 years ago
Reply to  Freddy

Hadn’t encountered him before and didn’t have time this AM to listen to his full presentation. But I intend to learn what he has to say — the comment about the quantity of money vs the velocity of money (more cash but less spending) is quite interesting. Thanks.

Rick
4 years ago

Crypto currency can’t come soon enough. American money is on a trajectory to be valueless.

Richard Broberg
4 years ago
Reply to  Rick

What is it about crypto currency that will keep it from becoming worthless.

Hackers are just waiting for the moment when they can create their own money.

Susan
4 years ago

The successful use cases of various crypto projects are just beginning to be noticed in mainstream life.
Try thinking of many Crypto projects as employee-owned businesses, in which the coin of the realm was used to incentivize those who built and maintain the successful project, as well as customers of the project who make it a success (somewhat like loyalty points on a credit card).

Richard Broberg
4 years ago
Reply to  Susan

Would you please translate that into English?

Susan
4 years ago

Blockchain is the basis of most projects. It keeps immutable (uncensorable) record of transactions. These records are open for anyone to see (the opposite of bank records which are kept private). Bitcoin uses “proof of work” to incentivize users, but most other projects now use “proof of stake” or other methods which do not entail high energy usage. Projects (like for one example digital cloud file storage mechanism Filecoin) are built to be decentralized autonomous organizations, in that the users, and those who keep the network operating, are running the project. Think of tokens as loyalty points on credit cards… Read more »

Richard Broberg
4 years ago
Reply to  Susan

This is all based on the theory that the supply of bitcoin will remain fixed.
Good luck with that.
I think stocking up on spirits and cigarettes is probably a good way to prepare for a barter economy. Whether above ground or underground. 

Admin
4 years ago

Richard, that’s a fundament issue about cryptos that perhaps one of their supporters can explain to me: Its value depends heavily on its scarcity, but how do we know how scarce it will be? What’s all this stuff about “mining” cryptos that puts more of them into circulation, and is that a rational way to impact how much of it is in circulation?

Last edited 4 years ago by Mark Glennon
Susan
4 years ago
Reply to  Mark Glennon

Many but not all cryptos state at the inception the maximum number of coins (tokens) which can be minted. BTC transactions -from inception and every fractional transaction thereafter–are recorded on an open ledger on blockchain for all to see. All the activities of the network are encoded as the law of that crypto project. When inevitable disagreements occurred or transactions slowed due to network traffic, the solution has involved a “fork”. BTC has forked several times, and issued new different tokens (each with its own pre-stated structure and governance), such as BCH. There are 21 million bitcoins maximum to exist.… Read more »

Susan
4 years ago
Reply to  Mark Glennon

Think of any crypto project like the formation of a system like America. Concensus mechanisms let users in a distributed system agree on tolerable user behavior. In America, our Constitution served this purpose, until 2 years ago. In what appears similar to a Sybil attack (counterfeit bots created to simulate consensus and perform 51% attack), unthinking Americans abrogated the personal liberties associated with individual identities like mindless bots… and a malicious act of Constitutional Rights Cancelation has occurred. Monetary policy is a concensus mechanism, in which Americans had agreed to empower their government to behave without malice for the benefit… Read more »

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