dow jones

Up In Smoke

Well-Known Member
It may be digital gold. A lot of crypto currency needs to disappear and leave a few legitimate ones. I do wonder if the Fed will get it outlawed so as to not compete with their own digital dollar.
That's not free market capitalism, let everyone with a better mouse trap bring it to market. The strong will survive, the weak be eaten.
 

vantexan

Well-Known Member
QUOTE="Up In Smoke, post: 5315637, member: 79702"]
That's not free market capitalism, let everyone with a better mouse trap bring it to market. The strong will survive, the weak be eaten.
[/QUOTE]I agree. But we aren't being run by free market capitalists. And a government digital currency will give them a lot of control.
 

DELACROIX

In the Spirit of Honore' Daumier
That's not free market capitalism, let everyone with a better mouse trap bring it to market. The strong will survive, the weak be eaten.

Really disappointing because if the election went the other way a lot of us would of been better off with our investments. There is no way anybody will convince me otherwise..

Proof is in the pudding...
 

UnionStrong

Sorry, but I don’t care anymore.
Really disappointing because if the election went the other way a lot of us would of been better off with our investments. There is no way anybody will convince me otherwise..

Proof is in the pudding...
That’s what happens when you switch from a man with business acumen and the willingness to do what’s necessary to make America strong and vital, to a decrepit, imbecile who can’t tie his own shoes and his clown show of incompetence.
 

Up In Smoke

Well-Known Member
Really disappointing because if the election went the other way a lot of us would of been better off with our investments. There is no way anybody will convince me otherwise..

Proof is in the pudding...
Our government subsidies have been cut by nearly 60% over the last two years. So, are we a government driven economy or a capitalist economy??
 

DELACROIX

In the Spirit of Honore' Daumier
@PT Car Washer laugh, but it’s true. Don’t feel bad you backed an imbecilic old :censored2: bag, you don’t know any better, just like the rest of the loons.

Recently saw a short video of Biden at the G7 summit meeting walking with some way younger world leaders, all of them in their 40's or early 50's. It was clear as day...Biden walking behind them in his usual style as they were talking to each other discussing the matters of the day, they did not even try to include him in their conversation or make eye contact, it was obvious that they were totally ignoring him, kind of sad.

and we got 2 more years...:zombismiley: of this...:nobrainzombis:
 

UnionStrong

Sorry, but I don’t care anymore.
Recently saw a short video of Biden at the G7 summit meeting walking with some way younger world leaders, all of them in their 40's or early 50's. It was clear as day...Biden walking behind them in his usual style as they were talking to each other discussing the matters of the day, they did not even try to include him in their conversation or make eye contact, it was obvious that they were totally ignoring him, kind of sad.

and we got 2 more years...:zombismiley: of this...:nobrainzombis:
He’s an absolute embarrassment to this country. I watch how world leaders react to him also, they waiting for him to keel over. But the morons with TDS can’t admit he’s unfit to lead.
 

Wally

BrownCafe Innovator & King of Puns

Michael J. Wilson at Morgan Stanley, one of Wall Street’s most vocal bears, says the S&P 500 needs to drop another 15% to 20% to about 3,000 points for the market to fully reflect the scale of economic contraction. For Peter Garnry, head of equity strategy at Saxo Bank A/S, the bottom is about 35% below January’s record high, implying further declines of about 17%.
 

Wally

BrownCafe Innovator & King of Puns

Michael J. Wilson at Morgan Stanley, one of Wall Street’s most vocal bears, says the S&P 500 needs to drop another 15% to 20% to about 3,000 points for the market to fully reflect the scale of economic contraction. For Peter Garnry, head of equity strategy at Saxo Bank A/S, the bottom is about 35% below January’s record high, implying further declines of about 17%.
Buy at 25,000? That's pretty much predictions form the beginning of the correction.
 

Wally

BrownCafe Innovator & King of Puns
1657029304637.png
 

Thebrownblob

Well-Known Member
This is the part of the roller coaster when you’re right at the top and you can hear the chain clanking as it pulls you to the top and then all of a sudden it stops and then you go straight down. Everyone put your hands in the air and scream loudly
 
Top