11 Replies to “It’s Probably Nothing”

  1. The race to a common electronic currency…destroy the old, in with the new. The better to manipulate people…

  2. “Liberals Have Opened the Flood Gates, so Canadians can now join us in the Great North American Decline..”
    True…but Bunnykins and Co. are just giving the voters what they voted for.

  3. That is right. Bread and circuses. Enjoy the decline. And, just like in Rome, the barbarians are not only at the gates but are in fact within the gates.

  4. The more you use cards the better control they have.
    They, the bankers (those are the capitalists, they own the capital), the governments, the Club of Rome, the Bilderberg Group.
    European and Western civilisation is going to hell in a handbasket.
    It had a good run, over 2000 years plus.
    This is not about conspiracy theory, it is where it is pointing.
    It is organic, as it were.
    As is often said, all things will come to an end.
    It’s the nature of things.
    Think of Sisyphus.
    Get ready for a more down to earth Asian civilization.
    It will swallow ‘they’ like a whale swallows little insignificant fish.
    It will take over. Resistance is futile. Western politicians will make sure of that.
    Who can tell, maybe it will better than what we’ve got.
    Don’t look forward to it though.

  5. Leftist have told us that government debt is meaningless, and can go on forever … because the government can just print more money. And if necessary, just invent jobs for everyone. Heck, it worked for FDR … he SAVED America, right ? Socialism will usher-in a NEW WORLD … beyond money.

  6. No worries, as we possibly push past $30b deficits, for five years, with roughly the same economic conditions when Harper was PM, if anything a bit better but still sluggish. Just borrow, no problems with economic drag, plus the “productivity bump” from using infrastructure funds for Bombardier and consumption spending. But now we have a chance to invest in the economy by selling long term government bonds at low interest rates, more likely staying short term to raise funds. Oops, forgot, interest rates will never go up again.
    Right, investors will snap those up. More likely they’ll end up offering them at a premium, with old debt rescheduling at higher rates in the future, awaiting the inflation beast. It seems now is the worst time for anyone to borrow, including business & government, especially considering unfunded obligations to aging boomers. Our dollar is in its comfort zone now; remember when it was artificially high? How long before it’s artificially low?
    Where’s the emergency necessitating this level of borrowing? Were worried about the middle class? They’re doing just fine, help is needed with working poor-not enough votes, so no emergency? We must ramp up spending to keep us out of recession? Oh no recession? Check out our approval rating. We’ve got to re-engineer our economy, because government managed economies always perform best, especially green ones like ON; just check out Japan and Venezuela, because of climate change that we have no effect over. Provinces laughed you off, recent warming faked, you have to take the political hit? Don’t live in fear? I don’t except that I’m afraid we have economic idiots in charge of the treasury, of which they’ve already lost control.
    Maybe he’s still on his political honeymoon. It won’t be long before voters, as in AB, will be looking for an annulment. His five year plan is to last five years, good luck to him as he fights the old socialist battles and burdens his countrymen with jobs and growth killing policies, refusing to accept the new paradigms of trade and terror.

  7. A lot of people didn’t like what FDR did. There was one program which was unpopular at first but proved to be beneficial to the U. S. in the long term: the Civilian Conservation Corps.
    Look it up. One benefit that nobody immediately foresaw came from it years after it was established. When the U. S. mobilized for WW II after the attack on Pearl Harbour, it already had men who were experienced in working in a regimented and disciplined setting, namely members of the CCC.

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