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Debt Clock

| A Day in the Life of a Scrapper
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    CopperHeadAKA started this thread.
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    Debt Clock

    U.S. National Debt Clock : Real Time

    This page is hard to wrap your head around

    Look at the Dollar to ( gold sliver copper ETC ) Ratio as compared to 1913
    on the far right side
    http://www.scrapmetalforum.com/members/copper-head.html
    Copper Head and CopperHeadAKA (same person)
    I am back to my skill set from the 80's Painting & all that follows it
    I removed myself from the trash company I worked for as of 2 years ago
    I find scrap non the less

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  3. #2
    Scrappah's Avatar
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    It's a lot of information to take in all at once.

    In another way it's simple and easy to understand common sense. The buying power of the dollar is devalued as you put more and more money out in circulation. It takes more money to buy the same thing.

    This Friday came around and when you got your paycheck you walked out of the grocery store with five bags of groceries.

    A year from now you might only walk out with four bags of groceries. Your weekly paycheck won't buy as much.

    Lol ... i must be old cause i can remember when you could get a bottle of Coca Cola out of the vending machine for a nickel.



    Not quite sure what they're driving at with the dollar to gold ratio. They're listing gold as being 8,133.00$/oz. The current spot price is about 1.328.00 USD/oz. Something is a bit cattywampus there.

  4. #3
    CopperHeadAKA started this thread.
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    The implication is buying power .
    It appears the dollar is inflated but not hyperinflation
    if the dollar collapses and silver retains that value
    I'd assume milk would be $10 a gallon

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    RLS0812's Avatar
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    Exclamation

    Quote Originally Posted by CopperHeadAKA View Post
    Look at the Dollar to ( gold sliver copper ETC ) Ratio as compared to 1913
    on the far right side
    The price of gold and silver was controlled by the government until the 1970's ...

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    I believe i understand ....

    As the story goes the dollar was 100% backed by gold way back when. I think it was sometime around the Roosevelt administration that they gradually began to de-couple the value of the dollar from gold. They completed the process sometime during the Nixon administration.

    This part makes sense. In order to expand the size of your economy you have to expand the money supply. If the monetary unit is tied to physical gold it's limited to the amount of gold you have on hand to back it up.

    Once we were unchained from gold we could expand the money supply as much as needed.

    In a weird way this applies to the debt clock too ! See ... as we expand the money supply it devalues the dollar AND devalues the debt. We could run the debt up to 100 trillion dollars and it wouldn't be a problem as long as we devalued the dollar accordingly. Neat trick huh ?

    The government of Zimbabwe inflated their currency by one million percent a number of years back thus cancelling their national debt.

    There was a huge cost in human terms.



    Something similar is happening here. Our standard of living has been declining. The moderately wealthy have been driven down into the middle class. The middle class has been driven down into the working class. The working class folks have been driven into the dust. It's brutal ....

    I think that if people understood there might be a chance to turn things around. There ain't no such thing as a free lunch.Every time they increase the debt -or- inflate the money supply to compensate it comes out of your hide. Doesn't matter if you're rich or poor cause we're all affected by it.

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    RLS0812's Avatar
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    Germany had a huge hyperinflation issue after World War 1 ... As far as I am aware, Venezuela has the worst inflation issues at the moment ...

  8. #7
    CopperHeadAKA started this thread.
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    Well we all know this . We need money to buy things and live
    I see what I make does not go as far .
    Yet scrapping has taught me reality , sure I liked CU at $2.75 #
    or Mix @ $275.00 GT & the list goes on
    I am still grateful I can get $1.57 # for CU or $120 per GT for mix .

    I have learned we all are in charge of our ultimate finical health
    from age 23 to now (I am 57 ) $500 per month investments in Gold , Silver .some stocks
    would of been Key & I'd be well off
    I had the ability and then some !!!
    But no I wanted - cars - toys - vacation - what ever was in my head I got
    I ran the gravy train with no worry of the future . So thats me .
    So scrap taught me a truth of value ( real value ) that lets you see the truth of
    inflation and deflation .
    A pound of copper now will be a pound of copper next week , but money value ??
    Any way 100% of scrap recycling I do is free find wile I go about normal trips of life
    so no matter what they pay it's kinda like 90 % pure profit & depending on how you
    see the gathering and driving to yard and finding more each way the other percent is
    kinda work but not
    ( it's time ) time is not forever.
    I've sold enough copper in my life ,
    if it's ever $20 #
    I'll say I remember when i was selling each week 100#
    If only I knew .
    Life is hard to win .
    I work to live ,
    I sell scrap to survive and invest .

    Wile I visually messed my life with scrap (inventory)
    I bless the enlightenment .
    Last edited by CopperHeadAKA; 09-11-2016 at 08:10 PM.

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    About the same age here. The way i figure it ... i probably don't have much more than twenty years left. For all i know it could be a whole lot less. You can always make more money but you can't make more time.

    It makes the most sense to spend what time you do have left wisely.

    When i'm on the job it's about making money so the sensible choice is to do the thing that pays the most.

    When i'm off the job it's about doing the things that i find enjoyment in and living life to the fullest. Scrapping for me is just a hobby. The pay is pitiful but it's fun and relaxing and i learn new things all the time.

    What value can you put on gaining new knowledge and more skills ? I dunno ... sometimes it pays off and sometimes it doesn't.

    When you look at the debt clock it's plain to see there's a problem. JMHO but i think the folks running the show have lost their minds to think that what they're doing will ever work. No doubt, it will all work out just the way it's supposed to.

    There's no point in worrying about things that well beyond your control. If it all goes sideways then it all goes sideways.

    Life goes on.

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  12. #9
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    They can't be broke, they still have a printing press!

  13. #10
    CopperHeadAKA started this thread.
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    Quote Originally Posted by Scrappah View Post
    You can always make more money but you can't make more time.

    It makes the most sense to spend what time you do have left wisely.
    It's so true , Some times daily life feels like it will be forever .
    The final rest will be forever.
    Some times I wonder if all our words and thoughts on these post
    will be around for generations to come .

    Gotta figure if the Internet grows exponential all information will be put some place
    categorized for future research .
    100 years from now some high school kid will do a school report
    on the scrap gold rush of 2008

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    Quote Originally Posted by t00nces2 View Post
    They can't be broke, they still have a printing press!
    Venezuela no longer has enough hard currency to pay for the paper stock to print their funny money. So in their case they are broke. Last time I was there was 2002. Almost everyone we knew long has left the country.

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    Scrappah's Avatar
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    Venezuela, Germany, Zimbabwe, and a lot of other places. Things aren't great in France, Greece, and Spain right now. We had our own Great Depression of the 1930's. Money was really hard to come by back then.

    The thing is that most people are entirely dependent on the cash economy for their daily needs. That's especially so for people living in the city. They go work their job and use the money they've earned to buy everything they need to live.

    In a way it's like being trapped in a cage. See .... the government takes a portion of your earnings in taxes. You've got no say over how much they take. If they take a small portion it's not so bad. When they take bigger and bigger portions you're left with less and less to live on.

    That's what sucks. See ... currency inflation is an indirect hidden tax. If you want Obamacare -or- a powerful military all these things have to be paid for. The growing national debt has to be paid as well. It's coming out of your pocket and it doesn't matter if you're rich or poor.

    When it gets to the point that they're taking more than half of what you make then you become a slave to the system.

    Some people think that's the way it should be. They feel that most of what you make should go to the government.

    It's something to think about .....

    What do you think is right ? How much is too much ?

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    If we can stop using oil, most of this mess would just disappear.

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    Quote Originally Posted by HipoGear View Post
    If we can stop using oil, most of this mess would just disappear.
    For whom?

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    Quote Originally Posted by HipoGear View Post
    If we can stop using oil, most of this mess would just disappear.
    Yep!!

    No oil means no trains or trucks. No ocean vessels carrying cargo. About 2/3 of electrical power shut off. Cities would die off in days or weeks. Politicians wouldn't have anybody to pander to and politics would become local, where you could beat the crap out of them when they do something stupid. That alone would solve most of today's mess. However scrap would be everywhere and worthless and unless you are self sufficient you aren't going to enjoy the new normal. But, you are right, "most of this mess would just disappear".

    Starbits
    "Only the weak blame parents, their race, their times, lack of good fortune, or the quirks of fate. Everyone has it within his power to say, this I am today, that I shall be tomorrow. The wish, however, must be implemented by deeds." Louis L'Amour The Walking Drum

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    Quote Originally Posted by HipoGear View Post
    If we can stop using oil, most of this mess would just disappear.
    Of the 7.4 billion people on this planet right now, I believe over 6.4 billion would die of starvation or war if the flow of oil stopped ...

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    The main problem is that we're living well beyond our means. It's costing somewhere around 1.5 trillion to run the Federal government every year. We take in about half of that in tax revenues. We're having to borrow the other half. That's why the debt clock is spinning up as fast as it is.

    It's just common sense that we can't live that way.

    It really doesn't matter if it's more social programs or a shiny new battleship ... the money just isn't there to pay for it. We can't even afford what we've already got.

    The hard part is that you're going to run into problems whenever you get a mixed group of people in congress. They go into a room and try to work out some kind of budget but they can't agree on anything. You sure as hell don't want to cut old lady McFarland's social security check. On the other hand it is a big bad world out there. There are more than a few Hitler's and Stalins running around. If you've got a strong military it discourages them from getting ideas in their head. If you're perceived as weak they won't hesitate to beat you up and steal your lunch money.

    ~There's no easy fix for this.~

    The only thing i can think of is for everyone at the table to agree to set their differences aside for awhile. Take another run at it and work out a ten year plan to bring us even up again.

    They can always go back to bickering over how to spend the money once we have some money to spend.

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    Quote Originally Posted by RLS0812 View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by HipoGear View Post
    If we can stop using oil, most of this mess would just disappear.
    Of the 7.4 billion people on this planet right now, I believe over 6.4 billion would die of starvation or war if the flow of oil stopped ...
    They say 90% would die innthe first year if just the power went out.

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    Quote Originally Posted by starbits View Post
    About 2/3 of electrical power shut off.
    False.

    Coal and natural gas produce 2/3 of the power in the US. Liquid petroleum generates 1%.

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    Quote Originally Posted by EDC76 View Post
    False.



    Coal and natural gas produce 2/3 of the power in the US. Liquid petroleum generates 1%.
    Yes, but what do the people who maintain these coal mines or natural gas stations drive to get to work?
    What does their equipment run off?
    Stop using oil would be the worst thing that could happen.

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