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@ Blondie.

Posted: 20 Oct 2011, 20:55
by Boefke
It's been a while now that i was confronted with your almost famous statement.

You don't own your baggage, your baggage owns you.

I must admit, at first I wasn't convinced immediately of the power of this line. Now, months and months later I realize it is the most true line concerning the understanding of Freegold. I see and experience it everyday.

What you say about public figures stating anything about whatever is happening around us everyday. But I would like to submit another thing to this. Recently I also had an email exchange with a pension fund advisor concerning the subject gold. His company is specialized in this new way of "insuring" your portfolio. I must say, I hate this word insurance.....and why insure a small part and not everything?
He had written a piece in a paper, and stated some things where I didn't agree on. So we had some conversation about gold and what did this guy tell me? We agreed on almost everything!!
But he stated ( and I Quote): If I tell them (pension funds) everything we just agreed on they will blink with their eye's.......say it sounds nice.....and probably walk away. It's too much, too quick.
It's a matter of bring the subject in, and let it do the magic.

So what I want to make clear here is that there IS a difference between for the curtain (paper articles), and behind the curtain. This was very interesting to me.

Re: @ Blondie.

Posted: 20 Oct 2011, 21:30
by Paul
Boefke wrote:You don't own your baggage, your baggage owns you.
with this one I still agree
really nice

Re: @ Blondie.

Posted: 21 Oct 2011, 06:53
by Blondie
Boefke wrote: But he stated ( and I Quote): If I tell them (pension funds) everything we just agreed on they will blink with their eye's.......say it sounds nice.....and probably walk away. It's too much, too quick.
It's a matter of bring the subject in, and let it do the magic.

So what I want to make clear here is that there IS a difference between for the curtain (paper articles), and behind the curtain. This was very interesting to me.
You are quite right, Boefke, there is a difference in an unknown number of instances between the curtain and that behind it. Things are seldom black and white, it seems.


Martin Armstrong

Posted: 21 Oct 2011, 08:24
by Rasta
Happy Days are Here Again
Answering Your Questions.
3 pages pdf
Image


Nothing new to report, he is mainly advertising his seminar now I think.

FOFOA

Posted: 21 Oct 2011, 09:45
by Rasta

Martin Armstrong

Posted: 21 Oct 2011, 13:22
by Rasta
On Financial Sense Newshour: A Conversation with Martin Armstrong

Why Economists Get It Wrong
Renowned economist Martin Armstrong and founder of Princeton Economics joins Jim Puplava this week in a wide-ranging discussion covering issues such as why economists get it wrong, the European credit mess, the culmination of the sovereign debt crisis by 2015, and why the next bull market will be in volatility.

Interview page and mp3 podcast [38:30]

Zerohedge

Posted: 21 Oct 2011, 17:31
by Rasta

Re: Haystack October 2011

Posted: 21 Oct 2011, 18:02
by Spruitje

Re: Haystack October 2011

Posted: 21 Oct 2011, 21:40
by mcduff
Spruitje wrote:Blitz downgrade in EMU recession.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/fina ... ategy.html
Fixed that for ya;-) (missing a trailing l in the link)

From the article:
Standard & Poor's (S&P) is to warn that a double-dip recession in Europe would imperil France's AAA rating and set off a string of downgrades across Southern Europe, undermining the EU's debt crisis strategy.

Re: Haystack October 2011

Posted: 21 Oct 2011, 22:19
by Spruitje
mcduff wrote:Fixed that for ya;-) (missing a trailing l in the link)
Thanks! :oops: I edited the original post also. Just in case...