I came across the following in a newsletter and decided to post it here to see what sort of comments it might generate. Since this section of the BB is called "General Mayhem" I thought this was the appropriate place for it. What do you folks think of this?:
"How come the year-after-year double-digit increases in house prices, or stock prices, or the prices of oil, or commodities, or the rapidly rising prices of anything, is not enough to get the Fed to try and cool down the white-hot asset sector? The answer is obvious, once you remember that this Fed is the most inept, corrupt, ridiculously pompous and smugly arrogant bunch of clueless weenies in US history. They are worried about deflation, which is now defined as when something, even things that are already so grossly overpriced, goes down in price. Like stocks. And bonds. And houses. You know: Everything that that is currently waaayyyyy overpriced.
And why do they want to prevent this deflation in preposterously overpriced things? Wouldn't the US consumer, namely you and me, be better off if things were cheaper? Wouldn't it be a big benefit to us pathetic bozos out here in the real world when our paltry incomes buy a bigger basket of things on payday? Without waiting for your answer, I answer my own question and say, "Yes, it certainly would be a benefit!" But Greenspan does not WANT us to be better off. Why? Because the whole US economy is now totally dependent on things NOT going down in price. In fact, the whole US economy is now dependent on overpriced things being more and more and MORE overpriced! Namely, stocks, bonds and real estate. Weird, huh?"
Taken from "Game Over, Player One" by The Mogambo Guru (Richard Daughty)
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http://www.dailyreckoning.com/home.cfm?loc=/body_headline.cfm&qs=id=3746)
P.S. For some reason, the link doesn't seem to work quite right ("/body_headline.cfm&qs=id=3746" is not included) so you need to cut and paste the URL. Brian, do you now why the software omits everything after the "="?