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Letum
09-10-08, 10:45 AM
HERE (http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-9050474362583451279&ei=QqjHSPjHG4u2iALIufHTAg&q=money+as+debt)

Is a simple economic animation. I highly recommend it.

Sailor Steve
09-10-08, 01:46 PM
Scary stuff.

UnderseaLcpl
09-10-08, 07:28 PM
Economy is everything.

Platapus
09-10-08, 08:12 PM
I have always believed that if you truly want to understand the world you need to study three subjects

Physics
Chemistry
Economics

Pretty much covers all the important questions.

The problem is that the first two make sense and the third is hard to follow :damn:

Letum
09-11-08, 05:52 AM
I have always believed that if you truly want to understand the world you need to study three subjects

Physics
Chemistry
Economics

Pretty much covers all the important questions.

The problem is that the first two make sense and the third is hard to follow :damn:


Nah, Nah

History,
Economics
and Phillosophy
with a bit of physics thrown in.

Koondawg
09-11-08, 06:46 AM
That makes me wanna club something....say where dat seal go?


KD

kurtz
09-11-08, 12:37 PM
I have always believed that if you truly want to understand the world you need to study three subjects

Physics
Chemistry
Economics

Pretty much covers all the important questions.

The problem is that the first two make sense and the third is hard to follow :damn:

Reminds me of the physicist, the chemist and the ecnomist washed up with a tin of beans on a desert island. there's no tin opener so the physicist says,"we could heat a stick up in the fire so the point becomes hard and we can pierce the tin with it". This is tried and fails so the chemist says,"we can just put the tin in the fire and the pressure will burst the lid off the can". This was tried so the two of them look at the economist who says,"First of all assume there is a tinopener!"

:D

Platapus
09-11-08, 03:51 PM
Ok if we are telling academic jokes.....

A Mathematician, a Physicist, and a Mechanical Engineer are involved in a study.

The Professor tells them that they will be placed in one corner of a room. At the opposite corner of the room is this beautiful naked horny woman.

"Each of you will be allowed to walk toward her but you can only go half the remaining distance every time you move."

"Mathematician, you are first."

The Mathematician refuses to even go in the room and explains that if he can only go half the remaining distance to the naked woman he would never get to her.

The Physicist, wanting to take a look at the naked woman, enters the room, takes a few measurements but comes out and basically agrees with the Mathematician -- by only going half the remaining distance you will never get there.

The Mechanical Engineer enters the room and comes out 45 minutes later, clothes disheveled, smirk on his face, buttoning up his pants. "oh boy she was great"

"Foul!" cried both the Mathematician and the Physicist. "By being restricted to only advancing half the remaining distance you would never get there"

"That is true", replied the Mechanical Engineer, "but soon you get close enough for all practical purposes."

<rim shot>

Mush Martin
09-11-08, 05:26 PM
:rotfl::up:

mookiemookie
09-11-08, 07:10 PM
Think that's bad? Here's 16 minutes well spent on why government GDP and inflation data should be taken with a grain of salt:

http://www.chrismartenson.com/fuzzy_numbers

Happy Times
09-11-08, 07:22 PM
I have always believed that if you truly want to understand the world you need to study three subjects

Physics
Chemistry
Economics

Pretty much covers all the important questions.

The problem is that the first two make sense and the third is hard to follow :damn:

There is no way you can leave history out, to me philosophy and religion are part of it.

Letum
09-11-08, 07:24 PM
Ok if we are telling academic jokes.....

A Mathematician, a Physicist, and a Mechanical Engineer are involved in a study.

The Professor tells them that they will be placed in one corner of a room. At the opposite corner of the room is this beautiful naked horny woman.

"Each of you will be allowed to walk toward her but you can only go half the remaining distance every time you move."

"Mathematician, you are first."

The Mathematician refuses to even go in the room and explains that if he can only go half the remaining distance to the naked woman he would never get to her.

The Physicist, wanting to take a look at the naked woman, enters the room, takes a few measurements but comes out and basically agrees with the Mathematician -- by only going half the remaining distance you will never get there.

The Mechanical Engineer enters the room and comes out 45 minutes later, clothes disheveled, smirk on his face, buttoning up his pants. "oh boy she was great"

"Foul!" cried both the Mathematician and the Physicist. "By being restricted to only advancing half the remaining distance you would never get there"

"That is true", replied the Mechanical Engineer, "but soon you get close enough for all practical purposes."

<rim shot>



I'm gonna take all the humor away and be a pedant/arsehole.

The mathematician would use calculus to show that he would reach his goal.
Thats what calculus is most useful for.
Only the philosopher would point out that the way calculus handles motions
does disprove the claim that you will never get there if you only go half way in
each journey.

Happy Times
09-11-08, 08:06 PM
Where do you people invest your "debt-money"?
I save in stocks, little gold, i also bought some forest.

Letum
09-11-08, 08:31 PM
My belly and my petrol tank.

UnderseaLcpl
09-11-08, 08:59 PM
Where do you people invest your "debt-money"?
I save in stocks, little gold, i also bought some forest.

Railroads (CSX, BNSF, UP) I'm counting on fuel prices driving up the demand for rail and intermodal transport. I'm also counting on foolish government investiture in passenger rail networks. They will inevitably fail (like amtrak) because they will never prodice a profit, but I see them as being worth a short-term investiture.
I don't have such an income that I can diversify my assets. I would like to invest in new petroleum-development companies, but I don't have the money to do so.
The political situation surrounding U.S. drilling concerns me. They may not be allowed to drill. Given the democratic majority in the legislative branch, I'm not going to take that chance with the little spare income I have available.

My main fear is that trucking lobbyists will succeed in getting subsides for truckers' fuel costs. Double-whammy for me. My rail stocks will drop while government intervention causes inflation to rise (via printing of money and foreign debt)
If legislation to such effect is even introduced I will sell. That is, assuming that I can find buyers.

Friggin' government:damn:

Happy Times
09-11-08, 09:24 PM
Where do you people invest your "debt-money"?
I save in stocks, little gold, i also bought some forest.

Railroads (CSX, BNSF, UP) I'm counting on fuel prices driving up the demand for rail and intermodal transport. I'm also counting on foolish government investiture in passenger rail networks. They will inevitably fail (like amtrak) because they will never prodice a profit, but I see them as being worth a short-term investiture.
I don't have such an income that I can diversify my assets. I would like to invest in new petroleum-development companies, but I don't have the money to do so.
The political situation surrounding U.S. drilling concerns me. They may not be allowed to drill. Given the democratic majority in the legislative branch, I'm not going to take that chance with the little spare income I have available.

My main fear is that trucking lobbyists will succeed in getting subsides for truckers' fuel costs. Double-whammy for me. My rail stocks will drop while government intervention causes inflation to rise (via printing of money and foreign debt)
If legislation to such effect is even introduced I will sell. That is, assuming that I can find buyers.

Friggin' government:damn:

I dont have fortunes either but i try to diversify as much as possible, wish i would have tought about these from earlier age so i would have more to play with.
I would love to take advantage of the weak dollar somehow but i have only bought stocks.
Many Finns are buying real estates in US, the thing is you really have to consider the location trough.

Koondawg
09-12-08, 01:04 AM
Where do you people invest your "debt-money"?

In my kids....:know:

Happy Times
09-12-08, 01:30 AM
Im just happy i have the possibility to live of the land if need be.:cool:

mookiemookie
09-12-08, 11:55 AM
A mathematician, an accountant and an economist apply for the same job.

The interviewer calls in the mathematician and asks “What do two plus two equal?” The mathematician replies “Four.” The interviewer asks “Four, exactly?” The mathematician looks at the interviewer incredulously and says “Yes, four, exactly.”

Then the interviewer calls in the accountant and asks the same question “What do two plus two equal?” The accountant says “On average, four - give or take ten percent, but on average, four.”

Then the interviewer calls in the economist and poses the same question “What do two plus two equal?” The economist gets up, locks the door, closes the shade, sits down next to the interviewer and says “What do you want it to equal?”

Platapus
09-12-08, 04:39 PM
Should not the last two answers be reversed?

I would think the accountant would be the one saying "what do you want it to equal".

But in any case, most mirthful.

Happy Times
09-12-08, 04:48 PM
How to invest your money.

1.One third to something that keeps it value and you can carry with you.
This is for a rainy day.

2.One third to something that gives a profit right away.
This is for living.

3.One third to something that grows in value in time.
This is for getting wealthier in the future.

Thats something i try to do, and hopefully pass to my children if im lucky to get them some day.:)

mookiemookie
09-12-08, 04:48 PM
Should not the last two answers be reversed?

I would think the accountant would be the one saying "what do you want it to equal".

But in any case, most mirthful.

Being in the economics field, I would agree. But maybe it was an accountant telling the joke. Who knows? Like any good joke, you can always flip it around to suit your needs. :up:

Platapus
09-12-08, 05:04 PM
I have been spending the last 30 years investing in agriculture and Real Estate.

I buy food and pay rent/mortgage.

It keeps me alive....I guess. :nope:

Happy Times
09-12-08, 05:28 PM
I have been spending the last 30 years investing in agriculture and Real Estate.

I buy food and pay rent/mortgage.

It keeps me alive....I guess. :nope:

You dont have anything to worry about then, not many have done as wisely. :up:

mookiemookie
09-12-08, 07:11 PM
I have been spending the last 30 years investing in agriculture and Real Estate.

I buy food and pay rent/mortgage.

It keeps me alive....I guess. :nope:

"Buy land. They're not making it anymore." - Mark Twain.

Wolfehunter
09-12-08, 11:39 PM
Thanks for this I already saw something similar long ago...:up: I'm aware of bank practices and how weak our government is.

orwell
09-13-08, 12:43 AM
Not a bad video, I'd recommend, say, the first 30 minutes at most of it though. By the end this thing has more fruit loops in it than the cereal aisle.

Happy Times
09-13-08, 01:07 AM
Money, Banking and the Federal Reserve

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iYZM58dulPE

mrbeast
09-13-08, 05:51 PM
A very informative film Letum, good find:up:

Task Force
09-13-08, 11:24 PM
After watching this. My brain hurts.:dead: Too much Info at once.:doh: :rotfl: