Zak Klemmer

Next Stop: Hyperinflation?

Comments

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You say "Either the U.S. government eventually defaults on ... obligations to retirees. Or we hyper-inflate the currency..." Actually, if you think about it, it already has defaulted on its obligations to retirees so the only thing left (since it wouldn't dare -- at least at this point in time -- default on its foreign loans) is for hyper-inflation of the currency.

One of the causes of this over-whelming national debt is it's size -- how many average citizens can even imagine $1,000,000,000,000 let alone $10T or $70T? Another, as you stated, is convenient leaving out of ALL obligations.

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There are, as usual, options other than the two you have reductively suggested, Zak.

I am convinced that real retirement for me as an American lies outside America.

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Zak, are you willing to give a nod to the suggestion that the dynamic/systemic cause of all this bubbling instability is the notion that the so-called 'free' market is infinitely good, all knowing, and all-powerful?

No, it just reflects human behavior. I think that more freedom is preferable to a centrally planned economy or one that is manipulated by the state. I have never seen so much manipulation as in the past 12 months.

There is a huge difference, I think, between (a) an economy that has some checks, balances and reality in it and (b) a centrally planned economy.

Don't use an extreme centralized strawman to throw out any possible moderation of the 'free' market extremism.

Those who have been MILKING their manipulated version of 'free' market - which wierdly is far more 'free' for them than it is for the public - don't really want it to be free, do they? That is, they want to maintain its complex, secret, labyrinthian nature - to avoid responsibility and open participation.

Is it not true, Zak, that the economy (investment, credit, insurance, hedges, derivatives, mortgages, speculation, leveraging, etc) was WAY out of whack, extremely unhealthy and unsustainable, BEFORE the onslaught of ridiculously ineffective government intervention?

Go back six months, or a year, or two years, when govt manipulation was not so much a factor. Before bailouts and stimuli. Was the American economy healthy? Or was it riddled with a cancer of country-club-insider manipulation?

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