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NotLambchop
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October 29, 2014, 06:09:09 PM |
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... yes dear. ...
When I think about the money you've already lost because stupid & stubborn... 
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empowering
Legendary
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Activity: 1092
Merit: 1442
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October 29, 2014, 06:09:32 PM |
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Or Bullshit (they will have no choice, when they take a good look down the barrel)
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noobtrader
Legendary
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Activity: 1456
Merit: 1000
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October 29, 2014, 06:10:14 PM |
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empowering
Legendary
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Activity: 1092
Merit: 1442
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October 29, 2014, 06:10:52 PM |
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Window licking dribble
Yes dear. (that is a nice little dream you have got there, don't worry dear it is just a dream)
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NotLambchop
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October 29, 2014, 06:12:26 PM |
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... yes dear. ...
Yes dear. (that is a nice little dream you have got there, don't worry dear it is just a dream) Butthurt confirmed. 
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empowering
Legendary
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Activity: 1092
Merit: 1442
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October 29, 2014, 06:14:11 PM |
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blah blah shit gargling twaddle
Yawnn. Yes dear. (no more now dear, bored of you, begone now, shush) 
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NotLambchop
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October 29, 2014, 06:17:29 PM |
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... Yawnn. ...
 I'd say "wake up and smell the coffee," but sadly you can't afford such luxuries anymore.
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noobtrader
Legendary
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Activity: 1456
Merit: 1000
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October 29, 2014, 06:18:07 PM |
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JimboToronto
Legendary
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Activity: 4494
Merit: 5812
You're never too old to think young.
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October 29, 2014, 06:23:51 PM |
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Well good afternoon Bitcoinland. Finally got a chance to check in and I see we've dipped almost 3%. It appears that's enough to spark a teddy bear picnic. LOL.  Gotta love this place. More fun than a barrel of monkeys.
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Walsoraj
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October 29, 2014, 06:26:49 PM |
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There is a paywall. Can you quote the entire article?
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hdbuck
Legendary
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Activity: 1260
Merit: 1002
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October 29, 2014, 06:27:14 PM |
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anyone had bookmarked the thread with all famous quotes in bitcointalk? cant find it anymore 
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NotLambchop
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October 29, 2014, 06:29:53 PM |
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Well good afternoon Bitcoinland.
Finally got a chance to check in and I see we've dipped almost 3%.
It appears that's enough to spark a teddy bear picnic. LOL. ...
If you go down to the woods today You'd better not go alone It's lovely down in the woods today But safer to stay at home. For every bear that ever there was Will gather there for certain, because Today's the day the Teddy Bears have their picnic.
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Bittings
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October 29, 2014, 06:30:21 PM |
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And if we are to worry about paper losses, the skeptics have more to lose than their untarnished egos. For example, you have been around these parts since December of last year, you've had plenty of time to accumulate some bitcoins for sub $1000/$600/$300 prices. Your lack of buying over the past year means you've forgone the chance to reap the benefits of a sudden bubble to say $6k. That's a 10x increase in paper gains you are betting on not happening. Which I would guess would have more impact to your life than the loss of a couple million would to the Draper family. Fear of missing out is as good a reason as any to try to influence the price down for a skeptic.
I am not sure I understand the logic. "I may have an oportunity to make more than 1000% ROI in the near future, but since I did not bet on that opportunity before, I will try to prevent that opportunity from arising." By the way, note that my strategy -- NOT buying a single satoshi -- has put me in a much better position, vis a vis that fabulous possible opportunity, than all those who went "all in" since last November, when I first learned of bitcoin. In the unlikely chance that I decide to invest now, I will get twice as much return on the dollar than those who bought in January and have been hodling since then. I think you understand the logic fine and are being a little facetious, but is quite believable for trolls/skeptics try and prevent a rise in price. Trolls like to make comments like "How will you look your family in the eyes when you have to tell them you lost all our money when Bitcoin crashed." They don't want that type of comment applied to them. "How will you look your family in the eyes and tell them you knew about Bitcoins when they were worth under $1000, now that they are worth $100k. We could have been set for life, and not left with all this worthless fiat". Trolls/skeptics live with that fear everyday. They want see price go down to make them fell good that they made the right call. No one wants to be on the wrong side of history. P.S. Invest now, its fun.
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bitebits
Legendary
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Activity: 2317
Merit: 3791
Flippin' burgers since 1163.
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October 29, 2014, 06:30:30 PM |
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All the blockchain.info charts are up, except for the price graph. Especially the latter makes me bullish.
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NotLambchop
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October 29, 2014, 06:34:00 PM |
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..."How will you look [to your family when you] tell them you knew about Bitcoins when they were worth under $1000, now that they are worth $100k $340." Sane?
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Walsoraj
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October 29, 2014, 06:34:18 PM |
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There is a paywall. Can you quote the entire article? Article below. This isn't really bullish. Yes, the fed is open to more bond buying if needed. But, they are ending the program for now because it appears to have worked in their eyes. Bullish would be the fed saying, "oh, and yes we expect to restart the program but don't know when." Federal Reserve officials meeting Tuesday and Wednesday are virtually certain to end their latest bond-buying program, but they won’t be retiring the policy for good.
Their recent comments show bond purchases are now an established part of the Fed’s policy tool kit that they could employ again in times of deep economic trouble. The central bank has employed three rounds of bond-buying programs since the 2008 crisis, first to stabilize the financial system and later to spur stronger growth.
Several Fed policy makers say they think the latest round of Treasury and mortgage-bond purchases, begun in late 2012, helped lower long-term interest rates, boosting hiring and growth. But they also see a high bar to launching more bond buying—known as quantitative easing, or QE—seeing it as a last resort to use only if very low interest rates and communications efforts were to fail to reverse a sharply worsening economic outlook.
“I think QE is quite effective,” Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren said in a recent interview with The Wall Street Journal, describing the approach as an option for dealing with an adverse shock to the economy.
Related Video Dorothy Weaver, former chair of the Federal Reserve bank branch in Miami, joins MoneyBeat with a preview of the Fed's decision on bond-buying and interest rates. Photo: Getty. John Williams, president of the San Francisco Fed, said in a recent Journal interview that he would consider more bond buying in a “worst-case scenario,” in which the forecasts for growth and inflation were very poor and officials had already exhausted other tools to spur the economy.
Supporters of QE note the unemployment rate has dropped to 5.9% in September from above 8% when they launched the current and third round of bond purchases. The economy has grown for most of the past five years, though modestly and erratically. And while inflation has been running below the Fed’s 2% target for more than two years, it has risen a bit and stabilized in recent months.
Fed Chairwoman Janet Yellen has said she wouldn’t rule out more bond buying if needed, and Fed Vice Chairman Stanley Fischer deemed the program “largely successful.”
ENLARGE Yet opponents in academia, on Capitol Hill and even at the Fed cite a number of concerns. Many point to the weak economic growth of recent years and see little benefit to bond buying and many risks.
Fed officials such as Philadelphia Fed President Charles Plosser and Richmond Fed President Jeffrey Lacker worry the new money the Fed created to buy bonds—more than $3 trillion through the three programs—could fuel excessive inflation when growth picks up or asset bubbles that could cause financial instability and potentially another crisis.
Mr. Lacker is among those particularly unhappy with the Fed’s purchases of mortgage-backed bonds in the latest program, saying it “tilts the playing field against borrowers in other economic sectors, such as businesses and renters.”
The Fed’s bond buying has generated plenty of research, with differing conclusions about its effectiveness. Many of the studies agree the programs worked very well to stabilize the financial system during the 2008 crisis, but disagree about how effective the programs have been in boosting growth since then.
MORE
Fed Favors Guidance Over Bond Buys Ahead of the Tape: Following the Dotted Line A QE Research Bibliography The Fed’s October Meeting, at a Glance Fed Touchy About Touching Rate Guidance Sign Up: Central Banks News The Great Dissenter—It’s Not Fisher or Plosser In a 2012 speech, then-Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke cited a Fed study estimating the first two rounds of Fed bond purchases in 2008 and 2010 “may have raised the level of output by almost 3% and increased private payroll employment by more than 2 million jobs, relative to what otherwise would have occurred.”
But some studies have found much smaller or unclear benefits.
Mr. Williams wrote a paper this year concluding the Fed’s bond-buying programs “have proven a potent but blunt tool, with uncertain effects on financial markets and the economy.”
Arvind Krishnamurthy, a professor at Stanford University, said his research suggests the bond purchases helped through their direct effect on asset values—for example, by lowering bond yields and pushing up stock prices—and also through the strong signal they sent about the Fed’s intention to keep interest rates down for some time to bolster the economy.
CENTRAL BANK WATCH
Here is how the central banks in four major advanced economies have moved two key levers of monetary policy in recent years, and how two important economic indicators have responded. View the interactive.
ENLARGE GRAND CENTRAL
Grand Central newsletter: Sign up to receive the Journal’s daily report on global central banks E-Book: Yellen and the Fed, a WSJ Briefing James Bullard , president of the St. Louis Fed, said in a recent interview with Bloomberg TV the Fed could consider continuing the bond purchases beyond this month to keep its options open amid falling U.S. inflation expectations. But no other Fed official has shown support for the idea.
Policy makers have been winding down the bond-buying program all year and decided at their September meeting to end it after this month if the economy continued to improve as expected.
Mr. Rosengren, an advocate for aggressive policies to bring down unemployment, said the Fed’s criteria for ending the bond program have been met. Reaching “5.9% [unemployment] relative to where we were when we started the program is a substantial improvement,” he said.
He said even if his forecast for continued employment gains deteriorated dramatically, he wouldn’t turn to more bond purchases as the first line of defense. “There are other tools that we can use,” he said, such as holding interest rates very low for longer than anticipated and communicating that intent publicly.
Many investors expect the Fed to start raising its benchmark short-term rate from near zero in the middle of next year, a view some top officials have encouraged.
Also: http://www.marketwatch.com/story/fed-ends-qe3-and-sends-upbeat-signals-on-economy-2014-10-29http://www.marketwatch.com/story/read-what-fed-says-on-ending-qe-stimulus-2014-10-29
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JayJuanGee
Legendary
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Activity: 4200
Merit: 12820
Self-Custody is a right. Say no to "non-custodial"
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October 29, 2014, 06:40:18 PM |
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I enjoy watching dumb animal greed get bitchslapped by the Invisible Hand. Market forces at work, what's not to love?
Maybe the people who got in at <$10 and held the entire way through because they thought $600, $800, etc. wasn't enough -- waiting for $100k/btc or whatever ridiculous prices bulls we're calling for during the big rise -- could be considered greedy, but the guys who bought at those prices were actually quite generous in their donations to those who bought at single/low-doubles and had the sense to take profit along the way. $100k is still within the reasonable realm of possibilities... and merely b/c people are making these kinds of claims does NOT mean that they are tricking anybody or attempting to trick anybody. Now if we attach probabilities to various possible price points, then some predictions are going to be more outlandish than others... but none can really guarantee the future, so that is a bit much to attribute some blame to people who are more bullish in their predictions regarding the height of the price rise and the speed of the escalation.
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