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Page 12, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7

>>THE NEXT GREAT DEPRESSION<<

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ACCURATE + CREDIBLE.
User ID: 397228
3/21/2008 10:55 PM
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>>THE NEXT GREAT DEPRESSION<<
Quote

NEW THREAD FOR ECONOMIC ARMAGEDDON AND GLOBAL DEPRESSION INFORMATION.


>>> BANKRUPT U.S.A <<<
7 pages of stuff for starters:
[link to www.godlikeproductions.com]
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 397228 (OP)
3/22/2008 4:34 AM
Re: >>THE NEXT GREAT DEPRESSION<<Quote

Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta: Disaster Preparation Video.

[link to www.frbatlanta.org]
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 397228 (OP)
3/23/2008 3:18 AM
Re: >>THE NEXT GREAT DEPRESSION<<Quote

[link to www.newsday.com]

A new Great Depression ? It's different this time.

Fear is spreading with the financial system in disarray. But the global boom is ongoing, unemployment is low and the government has new tools to address the downturn.

WHICH JUST DELAYS A BIT LONGER - THE INEVITABLE BIG FUCKING CRASH.
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 397228 (OP)
3/26/2008 10:09 AM
Re: >>THE NEXT GREAT DEPRESSION<<Quote

THEY ADMIT IT AT LAST.
DUH.


US Treasury chief says Social Security 'unsustainable'.

[link to rawstory.com]

US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said Tuesday that America's Social Security program for the retired is "financially unsustainable" and needs an urgent overhaul.

Paulson, speaking after a government panel had completed its annual assessment of the Social Security and Medicare benefits programs, said waves of retiring Americans threaten to soon deplete available funds stockpiled in the two programs.

"As the baby boom generation moves into retirement, these programs face progressively larger financial challenges," Paulson said.
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 400875
3/27/2008 10:15 AM
Re: >>THE NEXT GREAT DEPRESSION<<Quote

[link to www.incrediblecharts.com]

With real estate exposure exceeding $7 trillion and total capital and reserves of just under $1 trillion, a further 10% fall in house prices would have a devastating effect on the banking system. Much of their normal margin of safety has already been wiped out by the existing fall. While this may appear an extreme scenario, the economy faces falling consumer sentiment and declining incomes from an approaching recession.

I am sure that the problem has been keeping Ben Bernanke awake at nights. With interest rates already close to record lows, the only tool the Fed has left in its toolbox is inflation. By raising nominal incomes rather than lowering house prices they can achieve the same end — but at what long-term cost to the economy?
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 403565
3/30/2008 3:47 AM
Re: >>THE NEXT GREAT DEPRESSION<<Quote

No wonder Jim Rogers has left USA.

He's in the know...
Matrix
User ID: 399308
3/30/2008 4:20 AM
Re: >>THE NEXT GREAT DEPRESSION<<Quote

[link to www.moneymorning.com]

Will Ben “The Mad Hatter” Bernanke Send the U.S. Economy Down the Rabbit Hole?
How do you know when you’re "through the looking glass?"

One terrific clue is when the price of gold - which normally moves up in response to monetary easing - instead plummets in reaction to one of the largest interest-rate reductions in U.S. Federal Reserve history. Apparently, the 12% decline in gold prices last week [with half of that coming in a single day] resulted from the "hawkishness" shown by the Fed in only cutting rates by three quarters of a percentage point, instead of the full percentage point that many had expected and most had wanted.

That 12% decline - gold’s biggest weekly loss in 25 years - is a testament to how low the bar has been set that the Fed can slash rates in the face of a collapsing dollar and soaring commodity prices and still be viewed as hawkish on inflation. Is it just me, or is central bank Chairman Ben S. Bernanke morphing into the Mad Hatter?

Despite the mildly tough language in its statement, it should be clear to all that the Fed sees inflation as the only politically acceptable "solution" to the problems it created. The conclusion that a three-quarter-point cut shows concern about inflation is half right. The Fed is concerned, but only to the extent that the markets stay focused on bogus Consumer Price Index (CPI) numbers and fail to notice severe price increases throughout the economy. The fact is that inflation will be with us for some time, and the knee jerk drop in gold is yet another excellent buying opportunity.

As the credit and financial crisis spirals out of control, and the Fed moved $30 billion of garbage Bear Stearns debt onto the public balance sheet, the proposals coming from other market leaders are taking similarly phantasmagorical turns. Magazine publisher and perennial presidential candidate Steve Forbes, in an interview on CNBC-TV early last week, proposed that the government suspend "mark-to-market" rules for one year so that holders of unsellable mortgage-backed securities no longer have to recognize losses.

Remember, the dominos began to fall precisely when two Bear Stearns Cos. Inc. (BSC) hedge funds were forced to actually sell assets they had failed to properly mark-to-market. Were the government to actually follow this advice it would destroy what little confidence remains in our financial system. However, Forbes believes that the markets can be spared unnecessary pain if participants can simply pretend that their holdings are worth par value. This amounts to a plea for accounting by "mutually beneficial mass delusion."

Later in the week, investors were cheered by the government’s decision to slash the surplus capital requirement of already overextended Fannie Mae (FNM) and Freddie Mac (FRE) by 33%, and by Wall Street’s success in convincing investors to dump $17.9 billion into the record U.S. initial public stock offering of Visa Inc. (V) [$19.65 billion if you factor in the over allotment provision] - which may qualify as the largest sucker bet in history. But the most bizarre idea was introduced on the pages of The Wall Street Journal when veteran opinion page writer Holman Jenkins Jr. recommended that the government buy and "bulldoze" foreclosed homes in order to prop up the values of those that remain standing. I’ll deal with these ideas in sequence.

After the government pushed through some earlier proposals that allow and encourage Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to buy larger loans, the resultant reduction of capital requirements now pushes the government-sponsored lenders farther out on a well leveraged limb. By allowing the accumulation of even more taxpayer-guaranteed debt, the moves will merely delay and exacerbate the housing problems and will increase the size of losses when these two government-sponsored enterprises ultimately fail. In the meantime, by taking on more risk, the appeal of existing Fannie-and-Freddie-insured debt will erode further, driving up mortgage costs, and creating additional losses for leveraged owners of these securities.

In the early stages of the biggest credit crunch in U.S. history, buying shares in Visa, a company that derives its revenue based on transaction fees from credit-card purchases, qualifies as a particularly ill-timed investment. Perhaps buyers of these shares didn’t get the memo, but the days of Americans using credit cards to buy products they cannot afford are about to come to an end. For all its flaws, Wall Street does possess an extraordinary ability to apply lipstick on any pig. For the formerly private owners of Visa, this is perhaps one of the best exit strategies ever engineered, on par with last year’s Hail Mary pass tossed up by top hedge-fund player The Blackstone Group LP (BX) last year [shares of Blackstone are now trading for half their IPO price].

Finally, in response to Jenkins’ proposals, there is no question that we built far too many homes during the housing bubble. However, destroying them now will merely compound our losses. The one benefit we have from excess construction is an ample supply of what will soon be highly affordable homes. At the moment, foreclosed houses are only unwanted because their prices are still too high. Once prices drop sufficiently, there will be plenty of demand. However, destroying existing homes reduces their value to zero [actually less due to demolition costs], and only exacerbates the losses to creditors and society. Jenkins’ thinking is formed by the same perverse logic that led the Roosevelt Administration to destroy farm animals and crops during the 1930s because President Franklin D. Roosevelt wanted to prop up food prices. As I wrote in my book, "Crash Proof: How to Profit from the Coming Economic Collapse," we must certainly be on the eve of our financial destruction - as we are clearly a nation that’s now mad as hatters.
 Quoting: Peter D. Schiff
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 403565
3/30/2008 7:13 AM
Re: >>THE NEXT GREAT DEPRESSION<<Quote

The Real World Has Caught onto the Financial Mania.
History Catches Up to the Credit Bubble.

What happens when the real world catches onto the manic behavior in the markets:
"One of the strange things that happens at the end of a mania is that many people actually seem to clue in to the fact that there may be costs associated with a lunatic era of price appreciation. This is a phenomenon that The Elliott Wave Financial Forecast identified as the 'uh-oh effect' in March 2000 when the NASDAQ was just seven days from completing the great technology boom."

~ [link to www.elliottwave.com]


"Panics are sudden emotional mass realizations of reality. At these points, reason suddenly impresses itself upon the mass psyche, saying, 'Things have gone too far. The current levels are not justified by reality.' To the extent that reason is disregarded, then, will be the extent of the extremes of mass emotional swings and their mirror, the market. … When the fifth wave of the fifth wave tops out, we need not ask why it has done so. Reality, again, will be forced upon us. The laws of nature will have to be patiently relearned."

~ Elliott Wave Principle – Key to Market Behavior (1978)
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 404370
4/1/2008 8:23 AM
Re: >>THE NEXT GREAT DEPRESSION<<Quote

JAMES WOLFENSOHN, FORMER WORLD BANK PRESIDENT on the economic mess.

[link to www.abc.net.au]
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 404370
4/1/2008 8:59 AM
Re: >>THE NEXT GREAT DEPRESSION<<Quote

Germans Fear Meltdown of Financial System.

[link to www.spiegel.de]
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 275112
4/1/2008 9:36 AM
Re: >>THE NEXT GREAT DEPRESSION<<Quote

No wonder Jim Rogers has left USA.

He's in the know...
 Quoting: Anonymous Coward 403565

Agenda 2008 Jim Rogers.
[link to youtube.com]


hiding

TSIGTHTF
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 250123
4/1/2008 10:16 AM
Re: >>THE NEXT GREAT DEPRESSION<<Quote

Coming to a theater near you!
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 404370
4/1/2008 11:45 AM
Re: >>THE NEXT GREAT DEPRESSION<<Quote

A Vicious Circle ending in a Systemic Financial Meltdown
Roubini's Nightmare Scenario.

[link to www.globalresearch.ca]
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 404370
4/1/2008 7:56 PM
Re: >>THE NEXT GREAT DEPRESSION<<Quote

Day of Financial Reckoning: Video

A Nobel Prize winning economist says "a day of reckoning" has come for the federal government over the economy.

[link to edition.cnn.com]
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 407578
4/4/2008 7:33 AM
Re: >>THE NEXT GREAT DEPRESSION<<Quote

Soros Sees Additional Market Declines After Reprieve.
By Katherine Burton

April 3 (Bloomberg) -- Billionaire George Soros called the current financial crisis the worst since the Great Depression and said markets will fall more this year after a brief rebound.

``We had a good bottom,'' Soros said yesterday in an interview in New York, referring to the rally in stocks and the dollar after JPMorgan Chase & Co. agreed to buy Bear Stearns Cos. on March 17. ``This will probably not prove to be the final bottom,'' he said, adding the rebound may last six weeks to three months as the U.S. moves closer to a recession.

Last summer, worried about market disruptions that started with rising subprime-mortgage defaults, Soros, 77, returned to a more active role in managing the $17 billion Quantum Endowment Fund, whose profits pay for his philanthropic projects. Quantum returned an average of 30 percent a year before Soros started using outside managers in 2000 for much of his money.

He also decided to write a book, his 10th, ``The New Paradigm for Financial Markets'' (Public Affairs, 2008). Released today online, the book explains the causes of the current meltdown, a crisis he says has been in the making since 1980, and the trades he put in place this year to protect his wealth, much of it in Quantum.

Soros has bet on declines in the dollar, 10-year Treasuries and U.S. and European stocks this year. He expected foreign currencies to rise, as well as Chinese and Indian equities. The latter bet helped Quantum return 32 percent in 2007. Quantum's returns this year have ranged from up 3 percent to down 3 percent.

`Heightened Uncertainty'

The euro has climbed 7.5 percent against the dollar this year and the Japanese yen has gained 9.1 percent. These and other currencies may continue to strengthen, he said.

``There is an increasing unwillingness to hold dollars, though there's a lack of suitable alternatives,'' he said. ``It's a period of heightened uncertainty.''

Federal Reserve officials dropped their benchmark interest rate 2 percentage points this year to 2.25 percent, and Soros doesn't see that they can lower the rate much further, given the weak dollar.

``We are close to the limit,'' he said.

New York Federal Reserve Bank President Timothy Geithner said today capital markets are still ``substantially impaired'' and policy makers and financial industry leaders must ``act forcefully'' to stem the crisis.

As for his wagers on developing markets, Soros hasn't abandoned his holdings in India, even with the 22 percent drop in the benchmark Indian index this year.

``The fundamentals remain good,'' he said. He is less certain about what will happen to Chinese H shares, which trade in Hong Kong. They've fallen 18.5 percent this year.

Credit-Default Swaps

Credit default swaps -- a way to bet on the creditworthiness of a company -- may be the next crisis area because the market is unregulated, and it's impossible to know whether counterparties can meet their obligations in the event of a bond default. The market has a notional value of about $45 trillion -- or about half the total wealth of U.S. households.

Soros recommends the creation of an exchange with a sound capital structure and strict margin requirements, where current and future contracts could be traded.

The cause of the current troubles dates back to 1980, when U.S. President Ronald Reagan and U.K. Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher came to power, Soros said. It was during this time that borrowing ballooned and regulation of banks and financial markets became less stringent.

Avoiding a `Super-Bubble'

These leaders, Soros said, believed that markets are self- correcting, meaning that if prices get out of whack, they will eventually revert to historical norms. Instead, this laissez- faire attitude created the current housing bubble, which in turn led to the seizing up of credit markets and the demise of Bear Stearns, Soros said.

To avoid a super-bubble in the future, Soros said banks must control their own borrowing. They must also curtail lending to clients such as hedge funds by demanding greater collateral and margin requirements on loans.

Asked if such moves would make it impossible to achieve returns like those of his pre-2000 days, Soros laughed.

``Since I'm designing these regulations, they would not hurt me,'' he said. ``We made direction bets but we haven't used leverage'' like the $25-to-$1 borrowing that brought down John Meriwether's Long-Term Capital Management LLC in 1998.
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 407368
4/4/2008 8:01 AM
Re: >>THE NEXT GREAT DEPRESSION<<Quote

I am sure that the problem has been keeping Ben Bernanke awake at nights.

Ben's boss wants a great depression.
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 411669
4/9/2008 9:07 AM
Re: >>THE NEXT GREAT DEPRESSION<<Quote

The Hidden Battle for the World Food System.

Food Riots Break Out Across the Globe.

Global food prices have risen dramatically, adding a new level of danger to the crisis of world hunger. In Africa, food riots have swept across the continent, with recent protests in Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Ivory Coast, Mauritania and Senegal. In most of West Africa, the price of food has risen by 50 percent—in Sierra Leone, 300 percent.

In the United States there has been a 41 percent surge in prices for wheat, corn, rice and other cereals over the past six months.

[link to www.democracynow.org]
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 413102
4/12/2008 12:30 AM
Re: >>THE NEXT GREAT DEPRESSION<<Quote

SOROS ON THE FINANCIAL TSUNAMI.

[link to www.nytimes.com]

At the age of 77, Mr. Soros, one the world’s most successful investors and richest men, leapt out of retirement last summer to safeguard his fortune and legacy. Alarmed by the unfolding crisis in the financial markets, he once again began trading for his giant hedge fund — and won big while so many others lost.

Mr. Soros has always been a controversial figure. But he is becoming more so with a new, dire forecast for the world economy. Last week he rushed out a book, his 10th, warning that the financial pain has only just begun.
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 413102
4/12/2008 4:22 AM
Re: >>THE NEXT GREAT DEPRESSION<<Quote

Food riots could spread, UN chief warns.

[link to www.telegraph.co.uk]
WW RAUPP
User ID: 414047
4/12/2008 12:34 PM
Re: >>THE NEXT GREAT DEPRESSION<<Quote

I am sure that the problem has been keeping Ben Bernanke awake at nights.

Ben's boss wants a great depression.
 Quoting: Anonymous Coward 407368


What for dumbass? Losing money?
To shape the world is to become immortal
the Stupidest Generation
User ID: 413525
4/12/2008 1:05 PM
Re: >>THE NEXT GREAT DEPRESSION<<Quote

So when you all go thru the next Greatest Depression, then you can bore your grand kids with tales of how hard you had it in the bad times of yore ...
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 418619
4/20/2008 2:25 AM
Re: >>THE NEXT GREAT DEPRESSION<<Quote

YET MORE EVIDENCE OF THE MEGA CRASH THAT IS COMING.

Wall Street Winners Get Billion-Dollar Paydays.

...Since 1913, the United States witnessed only one other year of such unequal wealth distribution — 1928, the year before the stock market crashed...

[link to www.nytimes.com]
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 419607
4/20/2008 3:41 AM
Re: >>THE NEXT GREAT DEPRESSION<<Quote

Monday sp500 believe down strong to 1340,to wednesday is near to 1300,but after i am believe that a rally up to summers.Crash or economy depression should are a fantasy for the bears. 5a
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 421581
4/23/2008 9:17 AM
Re: >>THE NEXT GREAT DEPRESSION<<Quote

"The underwriting of securities in the '20s was extensively financed by the commercial banks, and much of it in this period was done by the affiliates of the commercial banks. The speculative purchase of securities by individuals was done on margin. This is to say the the banks provided the funds for the purchase of the stock and took the latter as collateral.

The commercial banks that were lending money for these operations were, in turn, borrowing substantially from the Federal reserve. Thus the Federal reserve system was financing the great stock market boom. It would be wrong to say that it was the cause; men and women do not speculate because they have the money to do so. But the Federal reserve system did nourish the speculation, and it did not stop it"

~Galbraith "Money Whence it came and where it went" 1975
Nailer45
User ID: 421546
4/23/2008 9:24 AM
Re: >>THE NEXT GREAT DEPRESSION<<Quote

Banks are Borrowing $38 Billion a day from the Federal reserve to stay afloat . How much more toilet paper can the Federal reserve print ?


The economy right now is worse than during the "Great depression" as now we have Credit, Credit cards, Debt makers and just think what would happen if there were no credit cards..
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 422082
4/24/2008 10:19 AM
Re: >>THE NEXT GREAT DEPRESSION<<Quote

It will eventually result in civil unrest and martial law.

No wonder some are already leaving the US.
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 422082
4/26/2008 10:27 AM
Re: >>THE NEXT GREAT DEPRESSION<<Quote

Investors may wonder how the market can possibly rally when the economy resembles a punch-drunk boxer hanging on the ropes. The answer is fairly simple: the big money is not betting on the economy it is betting on inflation.

The Fed is printing money as fast as it can — in order to save the banking system from annihilation. Nobody gets up off the canvas without assistance after taking a 1 trillion dollar sock on the jaw. While the Fed can provide liquidity, there is only one way to protect banks from falling asset prices which threaten to wipe out their reserves. That is to create inflation — to reverse the fall in asset prices.

Investors and financial markets response to low interest rates from the Fed is to borrow all that they can and invest in real assets in anticipation of rising prices. This becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy as demand for real assets exceeds supply, driving up prices.....and the next asset bubble is born.

MUCH MORE:

[link to www.incrediblecharts.com]
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 237482
4/26/2008 10:32 AM
Re: >>THE NEXT GREAT DEPRESSION<<Quote

THEY ADMIT IT AT LAST.
DUH.


US Treasury chief says Social Security 'unsustainable'.

[link to rawstory.com]

US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said Tuesday that America's Social Security program for the retired is "financially unsustainable" and needs an urgent overhaul.

Paulson, speaking after a government panel had completed its annual assessment of the Social Security and Medicare benefits programs, said waves of retiring Americans threaten to soon deplete available funds stockpiled in the two programs.

"As the baby boom generation moves into retirement, these programs face progressively larger financial challenges," Paulson said.
 Quoting: Anonymous Coward 397228


Face it. The 'greatest generation' came back from wwII, fucked their asses off and had the biggest generation ever. Then they just kicked us to the curb to attend tiny schools, unprepared colleges, not enough jobs, and now, nothing for our our old age. Figures. The first generation WITH A CONSCIOUNCE and they WILL make us pay for it.
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 425678
4/30/2008 11:07 AM
Re: >>THE NEXT GREAT DEPRESSION<<Quote

YET ANOTHER WARNING OF THE CRASH THAT IS COMING...


Wealth Disparity: The Coming Political Storm ?

In bullish times, the public is largely tolerant of Wall Street's immense salaries and bonuses. But as you know, these are not bullish times -- and "tolerant" ain't exactly the best word to describe the public mood. You may already have noticed some of the stories that reflect the shift.

In 1970, for example, the average for all CEO pay was about 30 times that of an average worker's; this multiple has increased steadily to about 100 times today. And as much as the chart speaks for itself, there's more: the multiple is actually closer to 500 times if you include benefits and stock options.

[link to www.elliottwave.com]
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 425678
5/1/2008 11:45 AM
Re: >>THE NEXT GREAT DEPRESSION<<Quote

Time for a Deflationary Depression...


The Elliott Wave Theorist,
November 2005, by Bob Prechter

The Coming Change at the Fed.

The consensus appears to be that the long-term expansion in the credit supply will continue or even intensify under the Fed chairmanship of Ben Bernanke. One reason many people share this belief is their recollection of Bernanke’s November 2002 speech, “Deflation: Making Sure ‘It’ Doesn’t Happen Here,” in which he likens the Fed’s printing press option to dropping money from helicopters. There are reasons to believe, however, that the outcome will not be as the majority expects.

One reason that Bernanke is likely to preside over a deflation in credit is that everyone believes the opposite. Investors have poured money into commodities, precious metals, stocks and property in the belief that if anything is certain, it is death, taxes and inflation. When the majority of investors thinks one way, it is likely to be wrong. This is basic market analysis.

Let’s look at some history. Public figureheads have a way of representing eras. This is certainly true of entertainment icons and politicians. The history of Fed chairmanship implies a similar tendency for changes of the guard to coincide with changes in social mood and therefore stock prices and the economy. Figure 1 [not shown] depicts our social-mood meter—the DJIA—since the Fed’s creation in 1913, marked with the reigning chairmen according to a list on the Fed’s website.

The first chairman, Hamlin, presided over a straight-up boom. As it ended, Harding took over and presided over an inflationary period that accompanied a bear market, exiting just as a new uptrend was developing. Crissinger took over at the onset of the Roaring Twenties, and Young presided over the boom, the peak and the rebound into 1930. Meyer took over just as confidence was collapsing and left the office in early 1933 at the exact bottom of the Great Depression. The next three chairmen struggled through the choppy years of the 1940s. Then Martin presided over virtually the entire advance from the early 1950s through 1969, exiting just before the recession of 1970.

Burns and Miller presided over a bear market and exited as the new uptrend was developing. Volcker, after weathering an inflation crisis, presided over the explosive ’80s. Greenspan has presided over the manic ’90s and the topping process. The next chairman will have his own era. Given the eras that have immediately preceded the coming change in leadership, the odds are that this new environment will be a bear market.

The chairmanships of 1967 to the present are remarkably like those of 1913 to 1930. Figure 2 [not shown] shows the two eras, with the latter time expanded variously to show the similarities in form. When we place the chairmen on this graph, we can see that

Martin = Hamlin,
Burns = Harding,
Miller = none listed,
Volcker = Crissinger
Greenspan = Young.

If this progression continues, then Bernanke = Meyer, the man who presided over the “deflationary collapse” years of the Great Depression….

… Like the entrenched belief in continued inflation, there is a widespread expectation of smooth sailing under Bernanke. Summing up the prevailing view, an economist says, “Bernanke is universally admired and respected by people who have seen him on the inside of that institution. The bottom line is that this is excellent news for the Fed and for the economy.” A nationally known economist adds, “We need a Fed chairman who is steady, solid and sticks to basics. Ben Bernanke is the right person at the right time.”

This general conviction will set up the vast majority to be fooled and ruined. There is a vocal minority who views him as a potential disaster, but the only danger they see under his leadership is excessive inflation. With virtually everyone prepared for either good times or severe inflation, bad times and deflation will catch them all off guard.

It is not the case that Fed chairmen are either fools or geniuses, as their records appear to imply. They do, however, preside over eras that make them appear to be one or the other. I am firmly of the opinion that Ben Bernanke, well educated by Harvard and MIT though he is and fine fellow though he may be, is doomed to suffer a historically bad image as chairman of the Federal Reserve.

If for some reason he leaves the post prematurely, his immediate successor(s) will suffer that fate. The trend in social mood will continue to determine the chairmen’s degree of success, not the other way around….
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 404286
5/1/2008 11:51 AM
Re: >>THE NEXT GREAT DEPRESSION<<Quote

Today's Headline "Stocks Cheered by Economic Data"

Unfucking believable.

Dow up 65 pts, Nasdaq up nearly 2%

Party on Garth
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