#1 2008-03-20 02:17:36

Congrats Losers!  With the incredible leadership, the US of A is now officially #2 Dickwads!  I want to personally recognize:
Benzie
Phwedd
Dirckmanski
Zooks
and the various other Tards for their loyalty for a 2nd class act Administration which has deep-sixed the economy, just watch what happens in the next few months if you think we have plumbed the depths yet!

With the increased spending on weapons, and poor energy management it should be getting to be like Road Warrior fairly soon... or The Hills Have Eyes, depending on your local.

Not that I give a shit; I can't wait to see the Union dissolve at this point.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080314/ts_ … gIjLnv5rEF

Last edited by Dmtdust (2008-03-20 02:19:43)

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#2 2008-03-20 02:19:56

edit and fixed...

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#3 2008-03-20 02:53:18

http://img266.imageshack.us/img266/4871/eurobanknotesnz2.jpg

Soon we will have to bring back the 500 and 1000 note just to keep pace with the cost of goods from the rest of the world.

Both the Euro and the dollar are floating currencies which naturally result in wide varying exchange rates, particulary with each other. But it is notable that the Euro is now worth nearly twice what it was 7 years ago.

Last edited by Johnny_Rotten (2008-03-20 02:54:27)

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#4 2008-03-20 05:11:29

$500 and $1000?  You're more optimistic than I.

http://www.csmonitor.com/2007/0827/csmimg/OZIMNOW_P1.jpg

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#5 2008-03-20 07:33:59

I recall needing to carry a backpack in Venezuela just to accomodate currency needed for a three day stay in Canaima as it was way too bulky to fit in my pocket.  A few months later, the government began issuing currency in much larger denominations for that reason.   

Of course, our inflation rate is not a big problem,  unlike the continuing slide in the value of the dollar.  That will haunt us, no doubt.  As will finding a way to adjust to the three trillion dollar war.  That will be with us for more than a lifetime, and for what?  At best, a very vague and uncertain benefit.

On the trade imbalance, it is a sad comment that we now depend on exportation of raw materials to improve our position, more like a third world country than we would like to admit.

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#6 2008-03-20 07:44:33

http://b.imagehost.org/0293/Wastemoney.jpg

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#7 2008-03-20 08:33:32

Fled wrote:

I recall needing to carry a backpack in Venezuela just to accomodate currency needed for a three day stay in Canaima as it was way too bulky to fit in my pocket.  A few months later, the government began issuing currency in much larger denominations for that reason.   

Of course, our inflation rate is not a big problem,  unlike the continuing slide in the value of the dollar.  That will haunt us, no doubt.  As will finding a way to adjust to the three trillion dollar war.  That will be with us for more than a lifetime, and for what?  At best, a very vague and uncertain benefit...

Your kidding right. There is nothing vague and uncertain about the price of my Haliburtion stock.  In a move of cynicism I brought a small amount of both companies in the final competition for the no bid Iraq war contracts. Well to be fair I guess you can't really call it a competition for a no-bid contract.

It has done even better then the big oil companies. Its up 400 percent in 5 years!

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#8 2008-03-20 14:45:58

the combined GDP of the 15 countries which use the euro overtook that of the United States

Wow.  The combined GDP of 15 other countries overtook that of our one country.  There's a lot of shame in having an economy that is smaller than the combined economies of 15 other nations.  It's almost as embarrassing as that time in the third grade when a Mormon kid told me his 15 mothers could gang up  and kick my mom's ass...

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#9 2008-03-20 15:41:55

Wow.  Your in denial.

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#10 2008-03-20 16:00:25

Zookie - I'm afraid you miss the point.  Our economy, relative to other fully developed economies, is shrinking.  Our currency is in a very long term slide, and only that is preventing an equally long slide in balance of trade.  As a country, in contrast to Europe, we still haven't committed to an energy policy that has any hope of changing the dependency dynamic.  Politically we are stalemated.  We are mired in a bucket of shit and the flies are landing.  We deperately need something to change the dynamic.

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#11 2008-03-20 16:34:03

Fled wrote:

Zookie - I'm afraid you miss the point.

No, I get the point. My point is that the point was over-stated.  If the worse you can come up with is that our economy is no longer larger than the combined economies of 15 European nations that doesn't exactly have the sound of a four alarm fire.  Yes, things are sliding.  I remember when everyone was losing sleep about how much stronger the Yen was than the dollar.  We're in a slide now - no argument there.  But I'm not about to jump out of any windows just yet.

I know it makes me sound like a far-right extremist to say this but I just don't jump onto every "Our country SUCKS!" band wagon that rolls by.

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#12 2008-03-20 17:12:56

The US infrastructure as opposed to the Euro-Union structure?  Whoooa.

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#13 2008-03-20 17:15:24

Agreed.  No need to jump.  Part of this immediate slide is payback for the housing bubble, fueled as it was by zany mortgage lending.  The worm will turn once again.

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#14 2008-03-20 19:55:55

I vote for a sticky Up with People thread.

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#15 2008-03-20 20:06:45

Yes, but the days of Amurikan Ascendancy are done, completed, kaput.

If you view the European Union as one Unified Super Nation (which it is now as the EU) then it is the equiv of the "United States"...  How either of you missed the whole Federation thingy is beyond me.

The Amurikan Century is over... We will now see a mad retreat from Empire, as we lash out here and there until the Barbarians are finally at the gate, and owning you (I have an out, dual nationality with that EU thingy and all)  Stick a fork in the US's Ass and flip it over, it's done.  And thanks for voting for the guys who finished it off, filling the pockets of the corporate few.

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#16 2008-03-20 21:01:04

Dmtdust wrote:

Yes, but the days of Amurikan Ascendancy are done, completed, kaput.

If you view the European Union as one Unified Super Nation (which it is now as the EU) then it is the equiv of the "United States"...  How either of you missed the whole Federation thingy is beyond me.

The Amurikan Century is over... We will now see a mad retreat from Empire, as we lash out here and there until the Barbarians are finally at the gate, and owning you (I have an out, dual nationality with that EU thingy and all)  Stick a fork in the US's Ass and flip it over, it's done.  And thanks for voting for the guys who finished it off, filling the pockets of the corporate few.

While the EU is certainly a better planned union than the United States (mainly because the U.S. was not planned), a Unified Super Nation it is not. They bicker,  whine, and obstruct each other, like our politicians though I admit their conversations are smarter and actually aimed towards mutually agreeable, actual solutions to problems. I also freely admit that the last eight years are an unmitigated disaster that we will not soon recover from, no matter who takes over. That does not mean that the U.S. is descending into some sort of Weimar Germany scenario. The run to the middle by both parties, and the (comparitively) intelligent dicussion of issues in the news just lately makes me cautiously optimistic that we as Americans may have started to move beyond slogans, and are actually interested in making a sea change on key issues, and moving forward again. The U.S. is in a decline and probably will be for the next decade, but I wouldn't go so far as to stick a fork in our collective ass just yet. Especially since the EU has laughable military power, and Russia is breathing right down their necks, with Putin not so quietly consolidating lifetime control. 

However if Mad Max is our future, I have wisely taken advantage of my second amendment right to own high powered assault sporting rifles, and I am perfectly willing to declare myself high warlord of my sub-division. My troops shall feast on the flesh of my enemies...if it comes to that of course.

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#17 2008-03-20 21:18:26

Dmtdust wrote:

Yes, but the days of Amurikan Ascendancy are done, completed, kaput.

If you view the European Union as one Unified Super Nation (which it is now as the EU) then it is the equiv of the "United States"...  How either of you missed the whole Federation thingy is beyond me.

The Amurikan Century is over... We will now see a mad retreat from Empire, as we lash out here and there until the Barbarians are finally at the gate, and owning you (I have an out, dual nationality with that EU thingy and all)  Stick a fork in the US's Ass and flip it over, it's done.  And thanks for voting for the guys who finished it off, filling the pockets of the corporate few.

Don't have a hissy fit Dusty.  These things come and go.  If you've been listening to the American media, who, for the most part, are the public relations arm of the Democratic party, you're getting filled with enough propaganda to make you want to jump off a cliff, or hopefully vote for a Socialist.  Relax.

Last edited by phreddy (2008-03-20 21:18:56)

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#18 2008-03-20 21:52:26

Apparently many people here are basically clueless about the intricacies of the EU socialist bent, economic threat is not part of that equation.

Russia, India and China however are different stories.

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#19 2008-03-20 22:20:34

Emmeran wrote:

Apparently many people here are basically clueless about the intricacies of the EU socialist bent, economic threat is not part of that equation.

Russia, India and China however are different stories.

Thank You.  I feel sorry for Phwedd and others who are happy to have a socialist set up for the corporations, but not for the hoi poloi.

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#20 2008-03-20 22:30:31

Anymore, where's a prole to find a boojwa stink-free worker's paradise?

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#21 2008-03-20 23:51:27

Head to the Baltic's my son, t'eh Baltics...

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#22 2008-03-21 00:42:21

Dmtdust wrote:

If you view the European Union as one Unified Super Nation (which it is now as the EU) then it is the equiv of the "United States"...  How either of you missed the whole Federation thingy is beyond me.

Anyone who sees the EU as "one Unified Super Nation" is completely clueless.

Dmtdust wrote:

The Amurikan Century is over...

Yeah, just like it was after the Viet Nam War or the Iranian hostage debacle.  The EU will lead the world with France at it's head. I for one welcome our new frog-eating overlords!

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#23 2008-03-21 01:10:01

USA! USA! USA!

Ooh, that felt good.

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#24 2008-03-21 01:49:13

Harrumph. The wedge in American politics has been driven so deep, the term "liberal" villified beyond repair (thanks Michael Moore) and the education system being anything but, political discourse in America is dead. For sheer despair, try -

http://www.amazon.com/Deer-Hunting-Jesu … 436&sr=1-1

http://www.amazon.com/Gods-Own-Country- … 036&sr=1-2

When the people who ultimately decide the fate of the American political process believe the Apocolypse will happen within 50 years, only one line from a _Slayer_ song replays itself in my head -

"I am the AntiChrist, all hope is lost"

The American Taliban is more real than the Islamic one.

I guess the only true way to appreciate the horror is from the outside looking in. You are not governed by politicians, you are governed by pirates and looters. Were I not an atheist, I would pray for a special hole in Hell for Halliburton shareholders.

Felch

Last edited by felch (2008-03-21 02:13:05)

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#25 2008-03-21 08:05:07

phreddy wrote:

If you've been listening to the American media, who, for the most part, are the public relations arm of the Democratic party. . . .  Relax.

You really have bought a wheelbarrow full of oozing wet fertilizer. 

Now tell yourself that Jeebus will come down and fix everything up nice and tidy.  If not Jeebus, then the Invisible Hand.  The part you have right is Relax

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#26 2008-03-21 11:26:41

phreddy wrote:

If you've been listening to the American media, who, for the most part, are the public relations arm of the Democratic party

That's my favorite line from both sets of extremists; both liberal and conservative claim the media is nothing more than a propoganda machine for the other.

Fortunately the reality is something far more devious . . . . unbeknownst to population and pundits alike the media are secretly "for profit" businesses!!!!!

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#27 2008-03-21 14:04:11

Emmeran wrote:

unbeknownst to population and pundits alike the media are secretly "for profit" businesses!!!!!

*GASP*

But, then...who can I trust?!

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