WhiteLove
19th August 2016, 18:54
Everybody are talking about deflation, the need to build inflation etc. In real life I have not seen a single evidence of that during the last 10 years. What I am seeing is that the prices of stuff in general are sky rocketing and I see a pattern - the higher the price, the more expensive it gets and more so over time, so the formula is something like Price = p * i^2, where p is the current price of a product and i is the percentage in yearly price increase.
During the last 10 years my breakfast has increased by +5,2% on a yearly basis when you spread out the price increase evenly instead of as an accelerated curve. But because it accelerates according to the formula Price = p * i^2, you get the following:
0 40
1 44,26816
2 48,99174974
3 54,21936541
4 60,00478858
5 66,40753954
6 73,49348963
7 81,33553895
8 90,0143663
9 99,61925924
10 110,2490327
So this means that the inflation appears very low when you look at it from a poor man's short term perspective which is obviously cabal's strategy to keep everyone as a slave. But the fact is that only when you are on the highly rich side are you able to ride on this inflation, basically everybody else are losers, I would say at least 90%.
So this whole Fed debate about the inflation being so low, it's just bs. In reality it's extreme and it makes it so that whatever that has a very high value becomes more and more difficult to reach over time. This is an explosion coming. It's not going to work, people are going to work to the point that it does not matter whether they work or not, they still can't afford it, because the basic needs in life have such a value that it amounts to a too high price.
The 100+ trillion USD of unfunded liabilities on a global scale, that is a better figure on the amount of inflation going on around the world.
And btw. this same breakfast price increase pattern works on the price increase of Swedish apartments too:
0 1,1
1 1,2173744
2 1,347273118
3 1,491032549
4 1,650131686
5 1,826207337
6 2,021070965
7 2,236727321
8 2,475395073
9 2,739529629
10 3,031848399
(the figure above is in mSEK)
The ones that are able to escape the greatest debt position, are the richest. The issue is then that all of the rules and regulations on top ensure that only the richest can escape, while all the rest are stuck.
An example of this is like in the US where big business owners have the lowest tax rates. Because of that they are in turn able to escape most easily while at the same time having the greatest levels of debt and hence they turn the richest.
But wait, does not that mean that the more crazy risks you take, the richer you will get?
No. The more crazy risks you take the more crazy rich or poor you will get.
But what will then determine whether you will get crazy rich or crazy poor?
The corruption factor.
The elite plays the game like this: Take the craziest amounts of risks possible and use the corruption to make it work.
That's why you have all of these crazy huge lawsuits going on in the US, on one side of the table there is a target victim. Force huge amounts of money to a single point, sue that one (or infiltrate someone on the inside to sue the other way) and take it by corrupting the court. That's how they play the game.
So, it's not going to work in the long run. Sooner or later this kind of bubble will burst.
During the last 10 years my breakfast has increased by +5,2% on a yearly basis when you spread out the price increase evenly instead of as an accelerated curve. But because it accelerates according to the formula Price = p * i^2, you get the following:
0 40
1 44,26816
2 48,99174974
3 54,21936541
4 60,00478858
5 66,40753954
6 73,49348963
7 81,33553895
8 90,0143663
9 99,61925924
10 110,2490327
So this means that the inflation appears very low when you look at it from a poor man's short term perspective which is obviously cabal's strategy to keep everyone as a slave. But the fact is that only when you are on the highly rich side are you able to ride on this inflation, basically everybody else are losers, I would say at least 90%.
So this whole Fed debate about the inflation being so low, it's just bs. In reality it's extreme and it makes it so that whatever that has a very high value becomes more and more difficult to reach over time. This is an explosion coming. It's not going to work, people are going to work to the point that it does not matter whether they work or not, they still can't afford it, because the basic needs in life have such a value that it amounts to a too high price.
The 100+ trillion USD of unfunded liabilities on a global scale, that is a better figure on the amount of inflation going on around the world.
And btw. this same breakfast price increase pattern works on the price increase of Swedish apartments too:
0 1,1
1 1,2173744
2 1,347273118
3 1,491032549
4 1,650131686
5 1,826207337
6 2,021070965
7 2,236727321
8 2,475395073
9 2,739529629
10 3,031848399
(the figure above is in mSEK)
The ones that are able to escape the greatest debt position, are the richest. The issue is then that all of the rules and regulations on top ensure that only the richest can escape, while all the rest are stuck.
An example of this is like in the US where big business owners have the lowest tax rates. Because of that they are in turn able to escape most easily while at the same time having the greatest levels of debt and hence they turn the richest.
But wait, does not that mean that the more crazy risks you take, the richer you will get?
No. The more crazy risks you take the more crazy rich or poor you will get.
But what will then determine whether you will get crazy rich or crazy poor?
The corruption factor.
The elite plays the game like this: Take the craziest amounts of risks possible and use the corruption to make it work.
That's why you have all of these crazy huge lawsuits going on in the US, on one side of the table there is a target victim. Force huge amounts of money to a single point, sue that one (or infiltrate someone on the inside to sue the other way) and take it by corrupting the court. That's how they play the game.
So, it's not going to work in the long run. Sooner or later this kind of bubble will burst.