Pirocco said:In 2008 some people swapped their silver to King Cash $9 in the anticipation of $5.
They should have stayed in cash and not bought at $21 in March of that year.
Pirocco said:In 2008 some people swapped their silver to King Cash $9 in the anticipation of $5.
I do not see SHTF scenarios as Apocalyptic, others do.swoydaz said:When the never to occur SHTF scenario eventuates, will we then buy our groceries with silver?
BeHereNow said:I do not see SHTF scenarios as Apocalyptic, others do.swoydaz said:When the never to occur SHTF scenario eventuates, will we then buy our groceries with silver?
This is one of those broad, nebulas terms, no unified meaning that I have seen.
I would be interested in what it means to you.
I do not see myself in a barb wire enclosure, armed guards at the doors, scavenging at night, bartering food for fuel, giving PM for winter coats.
I can see myself behind locked doors, ammo safely secured, personal protection at the ready, all family members well trained in their use, municipal services rationed, or not available, government employees paid by barter, as they refuse to accept IOUs. That would be the extreme. not quite mob rule, but close - strong neighbor hood watch groups, etc.
In the U.S. governments are all going broke. Little community governments - fire departments closing, police departments consolidating, city officials leaving office a decade early, small communities having no one run for prestigious political offices, water companies needing big money to comply with EPA, state governments the same, and the Feds bring up the rear.
I am retired from state service, had over 12 years in the last state.
I listed my net wages, after medical insurance, all taxes and mandatory deductions from my pay, and compared that to a 23 year old, mentally disable (so not required to work) mother of three on welfare, and her net - what the government was giving her directly, or directly paying vendors who gave her services (not things like administrative costs) - was greater than mine.
In virtually all states, every welfare caseworker has families on their caseload making more than the college educated, trained and experienced worker administering their benefits.
Six years with no pay increase for the ones working, eroded benefits due to increased health care costs, while benefits increase for the ones who choose to not work.
Not sustainable, IMO.
For damage control, ALL states are going to a new eligibility and welfare disbursement system, which has all of the signs of call centers in some developing country.
The governments of this country are running out of money, and the FED can run the printing press overtime and that will not change.
I suspect it is similar in other countries.
The masses are clueless.
I look around and see a house of card, and trees in the distance are blowing in the wind. I want to be prepared.
I am one who says we will probably survive another 100 years, but maybe not.
What I am guessing - speculation - is some nations will start to lose faith in their currency.
Sellers will lose faith in the paper currency, and take offers of PM for purchases, at some mutually agreed rate.
This could occur even with government bans on such things.
Once this starts, I speculate a snowball effect.
This would spread globally.
Those in power would try to normalize things, and have an established exchange rate fiat>PM.
There is currently a one world - faith based -fiat system. The currency changes, the system remains.
Many things might cause people to lose faith, and if they do, SHTF follows.
What is new this time around is social media, and how interdependent all nations are, even those who do not care for the other's political beliefs.
This fiat system, with the banking system, and the international stocks, has all nations tied together.
I can't say if this is a bad thing, or not, but it changes the dynamics of anything we have experienced before.
One large government could do things that seem reasonable to them, but starts an avalanche that can't be stopped.
Four million dollar per ounce silver just means that people ceased to accept dollars as payment/money.swoydaz said:There are people who (appear to) think the global financial system will collapse and silver will go to four million dollars an ounce the minute this happens.
My problem is ... who the kcuf is going to pay me for the gnikcuf silver if they don't have fiat, for skcuf sake.
And if they don't have fiat, what pray tell will they pay me with? Silver?
And the other scenario ... apocalyptic war ... the "opposition" invades Australia turning us all into Swiss Cheese and / or fluorescent bowls of jelly. And out from the blood stained glowing green slime we all spring, waving our 1/10 th ounce Libertads screaming "here you bastards, you want my silver ... give me your money, your guns, your Marlboro cigarettes and your Swiss Army Knives and kcus my kcoc".
Really?
That's what I'm trying to say![]()
Swapping silver to King Cash $9 is selling silver for $9. Quite simple I thought, but you talk about not buying?Aureus said:Pirocco said:In 2008 some people swapped their silver to King Cash $9 in the anticipation of $5.
They should have stayed in cash and not bought at $21 in March of that year.
swoydaz said:There are people who (appear to) think the global financial system will collapse and silver will go to four million dollars an ounce the minute this happens.
My problem is ... who the kcuf is going to pay me for the gnikcuf silver if they don't have fiat, for skcuf sake.
tolly_67 said:If you come to the conclusion that the stock market is currently one of the lowest risk investments capable of absorbing enormous amounts of capital then you will then understand that the stock market is not going to crash.
Of course it will have a correction now and again...say twenty percent....
Pirocco said:Swapping silver to King Cash $9 is selling silver for $9. Quite simple I thought, but you talk about not buying?Aureus said:Pirocco said:In 2008 some people swapped their silver to King Cash $9 in the anticipation of $5.
They should have stayed in cash and not bought at $21 in March of that year.
Agree. IMHO investors that can't swallow the concept of sitting on the sidelines, can't comprehend the idea because they cease to be investors, and suddenly become savers. This is often frowned upon as being embarrassingly socially unsophisticated, especially at trendy inner city lunches within a circle of metro-mates.Aureus said:Pirocco said:Swapping silver to King Cash $9 is selling silver for $9. Quite simple I thought, but you talk about not buying?Aureus said:They should have stayed in cash and not bought at $21 in March of that year.
yeah, if you're that weak minded that you panic sell at the very bottom then what are you doing investing in something?
That has to be the definition of complete stupidity surely?
And on that, I know a few people who seriously hurt themselves financially in 2008 (6 digit losses) and all of them, upon reflection, blame themselves. This idea that your money needs to work for you 100% of the time is ludicrous, but you'd be surprised how many investors cannot grasp the concept of going 100% in cash.
It makes sense more times than any of them care to admit.
wrcmad said:Agree. IMHO investors that can't swallow the concept of sitting on the sidelines, can't comprehend the idea because they cease to be investors, and suddenly become savers. This is often frowned upon as being embarrassingly socially unsophisticated, especially at trendy inner city lunches within a circle of metro-mates.Aureus said:Pirocco said:Swapping silver to King Cash $9 is selling silver for $9. Quite simple I thought, but you talk about not buying?
yeah, if you're that weak minded that you panic sell at the very bottom then what are you doing investing in something?
That has to be the definition of complete stupidity surely?
And on that, I know a few people who seriously hurt themselves financially in 2008 (6 digit losses) and all of them, upon reflection, blame themselves. This idea that your money needs to work for you 100% of the time is ludicrous, but you'd be surprised how many investors cannot grasp the concept of going 100% in cash.
It makes sense more times than any of them care to admit.
I've often done very well by sitting in cash and waiting for the right opportunity to pounce.
tolly_67 said:You need to appreciate where the capital is coming from....and more importantly the amount.
It is very difficult for an average wage earner to come to grips with world capital flows and the decisions behind them.
Out of stocks and into??????
Panic sell?Aureus said:Pirocco said:Swapping silver to King Cash $9 is selling silver for $9. Quite simple I thought, but you talk about not buying?Aureus said:They should have stayed in cash and not bought at $21 in March of that year.
yeah, if you're that weak minded that you panic sell at the very bottom then what are you doing investing in something?
That has to be the definition of complete stupidity surely?
And on that, I know a few people who seriously hurt themselves financially in 2008 (6 digit losses) and all of them, upon reflection, blame themselves. This idea that your money needs to work for you 100% of the time is ludicrous, but you'd be surprised how many investors cannot grasp the concept of going 100% in cash.
It makes sense more times than any of them care to admit.
Capital never disappears. During crises / stock market crashes you often read in newspapers that X billion dollars were destroyed/vaporized on the stock market.trew said:There is no out of stocks and into anything.
The capital just disappears - up in a puff of smoke.
Then the place the capital came from asks for it's money back - oops