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biffvernon
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Post by biffvernon »

Google is my friend. First result:
Question: How Many People are Killed or Injured in Hunting Accidents?

Answer:

According to the International Hunter Education Association, approximately 1,000 people in the US and Canada are accidentally shot by hunters every year, and just under a hundred of those accidents are fatalities. Most victims are hunters, but non-hunters are also sometimes killed or injured. Although some other forms of recreation cause more fatalities, hunting is one of the few activities that endangers the entire community, and not just the willing participants.
http://animalrights.about.com/od/wildli ... cident.htm

Yep, they're bonkers.
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emordnilap
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Post by emordnilap »

Tarrel wrote:Long established principles on here, but:

- Insulate as well as you can
- Grow what you can
- Learn to make, mend, repair, etc.
- Keep a few chickens
Thanks to a combination of circumstances - of which PS was a major factor (thanks to everyone here, including the naysayers) - I took the spirit of those principles as far as I could a few years ago.

It works. It lays bare the problem of this obsession with 'growth'. Growth is unnecessary. Resilience is preferable. Look after your needs. Wants are often transient if not illusory.
I experience pleasure and pains, and pursue goals in service of them, so I cannot reasonably deny the right of other sentient agents to do the same - Steven Pinker
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emordnilap
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Post by emordnilap »

biffvernon wrote:
vtsnowedin wrote: Built up areas go with shotguns to reduce the chance of a stray shot reaching a house beyond the visible trees etc.
They allow hunting with guns in built up areas. USA is deeply, deeply bonkers.
Hilary Clinton stated 90 people a day lost through firearms-related incidents. One every 15 minutes. Bonkers is an understatement.
I experience pleasure and pains, and pursue goals in service of them, so I cannot reasonably deny the right of other sentient agents to do the same - Steven Pinker
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clv101
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Post by clv101 »

emordnilap wrote:
biffvernon wrote:
vtsnowedin wrote: Built up areas go with shotguns to reduce the chance of a stray shot reaching a house beyond the visible trees etc.
They allow hunting with guns in built up areas. USA is deeply, deeply bonkers.
Hilary Clinton stated 90 people a day lost through firearms-related incidents. One every 15 minutes. Bonkers is an understatement.
No, this is fine. It's a perfectly acceptable for 90 people to die today because otherwise the Bolivian army would successfully invade in 2038 were it not for all these handguns. :twisted:
raspberry-blower
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Post by raspberry-blower »

Back to the original topic

Michael Hudson on The Federal Reserve and the Global Fracture
Michael Hudson wrote: In 2008 the Federal Reserve had a choice: It could save the economy, or it could save the banks. It might have used a fraction of what became the vast QE credit – for example $1 trillion – to pay off the bad mortgages and write them down. That would have helped save the economy from debt deflation. Instead, the Fed simply wanted to re-inflate the bubble, to save banks from having to suffer losses on their junk mortgages and other bad loans. Keeping these debts on the books, in full, let banks foreclose on defaulting homeowners. This intensified the debt-deflation, pushing the economy into its present post-2008 depression. The debt overhead is keeping it depressed. One therefore can speak of a financial war waged by Wall Street against the economy. The Fed is a major weapon in this war. Its constituency is Wall Street. Like the Justice and Treasury Departments, it has been captured and taken hostage.
Many of the policies used by the Fed have been replicated by the BoE, ECB (European Central Bank not the English Cricket Board :P ) and the BoJ

He has some damning words on austerity:
Michael Hudson wrote: Industrial capitalism plowed profits back into new means of production to expand the economy. But today’s rentier model is based on austerity and privatization. The main way the financial sector always has obtained wealth has been by privatizing it from the public domain by insider dealing and indebting governments. The ultimate financial business plan also is to lend with an eye to end up with the debtor’s property, from governments to companies and families. In Greece the European Central Bank, European Commission and IMF demanded that if the nation’s elected representatives did not sell off the nation’s ports, land, islands, roads, schools, sewer systems, water systems, television stations and even museums to reimburse the dreaded austerity troika for its bailout of bondholders and bankers, the country would be isolated from Europe and faced with a crash. That forced Greece to capitulate. What seems at first glance to be democracy has been hijacked by politicians who accept the financial class war ideology that the way for an economy to get rich is by austerity. That means lowering wages, unemployment, and dismantling government by turning the public domain over to the financial sector.
A common mistake that people make when trying to design something completely foolproof is to underestimate the ingenuity of complete fools - Douglas Adams.
raspberry-blower
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Post by raspberry-blower »

Another must read at TAE:

Ilargi: Central Banks ARE the Crisis
Ilargi wrote: That another crisis is waiting to happen, and that politics and media have made sure that just about no-one at all is aware of it, is one thing. We already knew this, a few of us. That the world’s main central bankers have an active incentive to bring about the crisis, if only by sitting on their hands long enough, is new. But they do.

Yellen, Draghi and Kuroda may opt to leave before pulling the trigger, or be fired soon enough. But whoever is in the governor seats will realize that unleashing a crisis sooner rather than later is the only option left not to be blamed for it. Let the house of dominoes crumble now, and they can say “nobody could have seen this coming�, while at the same time saving what they can for the banks and bankers they serve. That option will not be on the table for much longer.

We should have never given them, let alone their member/master banks, the power to conjure up trillions out of nothing, and use that power as a political tool. But it is too late now.
A common mistake that people make when trying to design something completely foolproof is to underestimate the ingenuity of complete fools - Douglas Adams.
raspberry-blower
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Post by raspberry-blower »

The problem of "cheap debt" endowed onto the Emerging Markets is that it is a real kicker when the piper comes a calling.

Wolf Richter: The Price of Cheap Dollar/Euro debt: Local Currencies come unglued; Debt crisis ensues
Wolf Richter wrote: After nine years of experimental monetary policies in the US, Europe, Japan, and elsewhere, the Emerging Market economies have become addicted to this debt borrowed in a hard currency that they cannot inflate away. In Turkey, this cheap debt – cheap even for junk-rated issuers such as the government of Turkey – funded a construction boom in the property sector. This construction boom has been crucial to the economy – which is why the government is trying to ride this bull all the way.

Turkey’s inflation is surging. In July, annual inflation reached 16%, the highest since January 2004. Inflation is what ultimately destroys a currency. But it’s not yet 30% as in Argentina, and perhaps the government thinks it still has some leeway.

The Turkish lira always hits record lows against the dollar, interspersed with brief periods of upticks, because the Turkish government has always destroyed its currency at a blistering speed. But even for Turkey, this is a bit much.

A currency crisis is one thing. But when a currency crisis morphs into a foreign-currency-denominated debt crisis, all heck tends to break lose. This is when the cheaply borrowed dollars and euros that the economy has come to depend on suddenly dry up. And then the whole economic edifice based on this debt tends to come unglued.
A common mistake that people make when trying to design something completely foolproof is to underestimate the ingenuity of complete fools - Douglas Adams.
raspberry-blower
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Post by raspberry-blower »

A common mistake that people make when trying to design something completely foolproof is to underestimate the ingenuity of complete fools - Douglas Adams.
raspberry-blower
Posts: 1868
Joined: 14 Mar 2009, 11:26

Post by raspberry-blower »

Trouble at mill! Well the European Central Bank in fact:

Wolf Richter: Palace Revolt at the ECB: Policy Legitimacy out of the window
Wolf Richter wrote: The ECB already has two mega-problems on its hand: Acknowledging that negative interest rates are a destructive experiment that is now blowing up into their faces and that they need to somehow back away from; and acknowledging that QE as standard monetary policy is an economic failure that creates all kinds of wild distortions – though it glued to Eurozone together by having prevented more sovereign defaults after Greece’s default, particularly a default by Italy.

But now the ECB has a third problem on its hand: The legitimacy of its policy decisions has been revealed to be a joke; and that this circus has become a one-man show driven by Draghi’s own agenda.
A common mistake that people make when trying to design something completely foolproof is to underestimate the ingenuity of complete fools - Douglas Adams.
kenneal - lagger
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Post by kenneal - lagger »

This paper from the Cass Business Institute of City University also points out basic problems with the Eurozone that can only be resovled by forming a US of Europe.

This article on a poll from the EU ahead of the last EU elections says that there is unprecedented support for the EU at a time when Eurosceptic parties are gaining ground throughout the EU but it also says that people think that the EU could collapse into war within 20 years.

Nicholai Hubble in his book "How the Euro Dies" explains how the ECB has been illegally supporting the Italian economy by preferentially purchasing Italian government bonds to prop that country up. German businesses have taken the ECB to court to stop the practice. Italy owes Germany about a trillion Euros through the Target2 money distribution scheme of the Eurozone which is unpayable due to the parlous state of the Italian economy caused by its membership of the Euro. Either Italy has to default and leave the Euro or leave the Euro and repay in much devalued lira or a US of Europe is formed taking full control of all fiscal and political decisions.
Action is the antidote to despair - Joan Baez
Little John

Post by Little John »

A poorer region either devalues its currency to stimulate economic competitiveness. Or, it is given money to keep it afloat on the back of differentially redistributed taxation gathered from a collection regions or which it is a part.

The EU is neither fish nor fowl.
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