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Author Topic: the huge Problem that most people doesn't really understand  (Read 9405 times)
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December 05, 2013, 09:44:51 PM
 #21

After reading your post i still can't understand what is the huge problem that most people don't understand. Inflation?

quick profit against the concept of bitcoin, and yes people do understand inflation but most of them doesn't take time and think about it, the story that I've wrote is to give a simple clear picture

You shouldn't write stories in languages you don't master.
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December 05, 2013, 09:49:21 PM
 #22

I am a noob, but also Bitcoins become more for the next like 100 years (well, after 2020 there is only a few Bitcoins left to mine https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/File:Total_bitcoins_over_time_graph.png)  - right now 25 Bitcoins every 10 Minutes. That is 3600 Bitcoins per day. That is 3 600 000 (3 million, sixhoundredthousand) new dollars (when 1 BC = 1000 dollars) that have to flow into Bitcoins daily (buying orders) just to keep the current price of a Bitcoin.
How does this compare to how much more dollars are created?

It's pocket change.  The Federal Reserve is creating new US dollars at a rate of $85 Billion per month, or about 2.25 billion per day.  And that is just what they will admit.

"The powers of financial capitalism had another far-reaching aim, nothing less than to create a world system of financial control in private hands able to dominate the political system of each country and the economy of the world as a whole. This system was to be controlled in a feudalist fashion by the central banks of the world acting in concert, by secret agreements arrived at in frequent meetings and conferences. The apex of the systems was to be the Bank for International Settlements in Basel, Switzerland, a private bank owned and controlled by the world's central banks which were themselves private corporations. Each central bank...sought to dominate its government by its ability to control Treasury loans, to manipulate foreign exchanges, to influence the level of economic activity in the country, and to influence cooperative politicians by subsequent economic rewards in the business world."

- Carroll Quigley, CFR member, mentor to Bill Clinton, from 'Tragedy And Hope'
mmitech (OP)
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December 05, 2013, 09:52:51 PM
 #23

After reading your post i still can't understand what is the huge problem that most people don't understand. Inflation?

quick profit against the concept of bitcoin, and yes people do understand inflation but most of them doesn't take time and think about it, the story that I've wrote is to give a simple clear picture

You shouldn't write stories in languages you don't master.

thank you for the kind advice.
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December 05, 2013, 10:04:57 PM
 #24

OP mentions cigarettes and gasoline. Typical expenses for people who willingly refuse to be rich and throw their hard-earned money at the first thing that relieves them from the grind. A grind they insist on suffering through their irrational spending.

What most people don't really understand is that capitalism is about exploiting you for 8 hours a day and taking your money from you the following 8 hours in exchange for a quick shot of comfort.


Inflation is evil because it takes purchasing power away from currency holders (and, in general, the poorer you are, the higher the percentage of your savings is based on currency),
The poor might want to invest a little, they could actually get rich!

Seriously, the more I read about this topic, the more I wish for a world where everyone were taught financial education in their infancy. I hope I can contribute to that goal along my life.
kireinaha
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December 05, 2013, 10:06:44 PM
 #25

After reading your post i still can't understand what is the huge problem that most people don't understand. Inflation?

quick profit against the concept of bitcoin, and yes people do understand inflation but most of them doesn't take time and think about it, the story that I've wrote is to give a simple clear picture

You shouldn't write stories in languages you don't master.

thank you for the kind advice.

Just ignore people like that. I like this board because I get to hear the viewpoints of many different people. All should be welcome to share, whether English is their primary language or not.

Night gathers, and now my bitcoinwisdom watch begins.
mmitech (OP)
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December 05, 2013, 10:17:36 PM
Last edit: December 05, 2013, 10:39:38 PM by mmitech
 #26

OP mentions cigarettes and gasoline. Typical expenses for people who willingly refuse to be rich and throw their hard-earned money at the first thing that relieves them from the grind. A grind they insist on suffering through their irrational spending.

What most people don't really understand is that capitalism is about exploiting you for 8 hours a day and taking your money from you the following 8 hours in exchange for a quick shot of comfort.


Inflation is evil because it takes purchasing power away from currency holders (and, in general, the poorer you are, the higher the percentage of your savings is based on currency),
The poor might want to invest a little, they could actually get rich!

Seriously, the more I read about this topic, the more I wish for a world where everyone were taught financial education in their infancy. I hope I can contribute to that goal along my life.

choosing Cigarette and gasoline as first examples were not a coincidence, I also did mention bread but you seemed ignorant about that, however if you were as educated and talented as you pretend you would know why I choose these 3 examples, I will explain more: Sin taxes are a common trick governments use (google it I don't want to go out of subject by writing 10 pages about how that works) Gasoline is also a merit that you should know about right!  

I admit my bad habit of smoking, but how the price of gasoline does fall into the same box of people like me who "refuses" to be rich? care to explain more ...
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December 05, 2013, 10:22:25 PM
 #27

After reading your post i still can't understand what is the huge problem that most people don't understand. Inflation?

quick profit against the concept of bitcoin, and yes people do understand inflation but most of them doesn't take time and think about it, the story that I've wrote is to give a simple clear picture

You shouldn't write stories in languages you don't master.

thank you for the kind advice.

Just ignore people like that. I like this board because I get to hear the viewpoints of many different people. All should be welcome to share, whether English is their primary language or not.

I agree. That kind of elitism doesn't fit with the true nature of bitcoin.
Having said that, i wouldn't mind some grammar nazi's fixing my english. Sometimes they help you get better   Tongue
Pente
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December 05, 2013, 10:33:13 PM
 #28

For me, I track local inflation using the Whopper Index. The price of a whopper at the local Burger King is going up faster than 11% per year.

In 1994, a whopper was exactly $1 here. It is currently $7.95 here.

7.95^(1/19)=1.1152 and most of the price increases have been in the last couple years.

That is over 11% inflation during the last 19 years.

The media is lying to us about inflation, for example: http://money.cnn.com/2013/10/29/news/economy/relative-prices/
Quote
"Stuff" is getting cheaper

The price of manufactured goods is way down. Televisions are now 98% cheaper than they were in 1983, according to the Consumer Price Index.

The index accounts for advances in technology. That 98% drop means a TV that costs $100 in 1983 -- with its dial controls and antenna -- would be worth about $2 today.

This is due to the hedonics adjustment in the CPI index. They are saying that a modern television is 50 times better than one from 1983, but the free market says otherwise. For example:

I can buy a new CRT television (old design like in the 70's) in the Philippines for about $100 vs. an LED television of the same size for about $250 there. I guess that the free market only sees the new ones as being 2.5 times better design.

Also, here in the USA, I work at an ewaste recycle center 3 days a week (no is allowed to work over 29 hours a week thanks to Obamacare). An old CRT television in good shape sells for about $20, while a plasma TV of about the same size sells for about $50, and LED of the same size for about $100. So even here in the USA, the new LED TVs are only worth 5 times more according to the free market.

In neither country does the free market consider a new LED television to be worth 50 times more than an old style CRT television. Those CPI numbers are a straight lie.

Most of my co-workers make minimum wage of $7.25 per hour, even the ones that have been here for years. Jobs are scarce and my boss has no problems hiring new ones to replace the old ones. And I have seen his books, he is barely surviving. Anyway, I was handed the wrong paycheck once and discovered that my co-workers are earning about $750 per month. I don't know how they survive after paying rent. Most of them get food stamps.

I fix the computers here that people (mostly schools & government offices) throw away or sell the chips out of them on Ebay. Since they are basically free for us, I also make sure that every employee gets a refurbished laptop for free. Most of them have never owned a computer before. A couple of the girls started crying when I gave them one. That is how poor they are.

Wages are NOT keeping up with inflation. People at the bottom are starting to hurt. I am lucky enough that I always saved some of my earnings in precious metals over the years, so I had savings to invest in bitcoin. I have good job skills and can show my boss each month how much money I made for him fixing and selling discarded ewaste, so I have job security. I also own a piece of land up in the jungle area with a cabin in the back, so I don't pay any rent. I get free computer stuff from work, but I still spend money on food and gas. As I see the prices constantly go up on those two things, I alway wonder, how do normal people survive?

I really hope bitcoin reverses this trend of falling real wages.
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December 05, 2013, 10:39:37 PM
 #29

For me, I track local inflation using the Whopper Index. The price of a whopper at the local Burger King is going up faster than 11% per year.

In 1994, a whopper was exactly $1 here. It is currently $7.95 here.

$7.95 for a Whopper?? You must be referring to the combo meal at least, right?

Night gathers, and now my bitcoinwisdom watch begins.
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December 05, 2013, 10:44:10 PM
 #30

For me, I track local inflation using the Whopper Index. The price of a whopper at the local Burger King is going up faster than 11% per year.

In 1994, a whopper was exactly $1 here. It is currently $7.95 here.

$7.95 for a Whopper?? You must be referring to the combo meal at least, right?

Whoppers must be really expensive where you live. I can order a junior whopper off the dollar menu... so that's $1 if I'm not mistaken (in 2013!).

Night gathers, and now my bitcoinwisdom watch begins.
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December 05, 2013, 11:09:11 PM
 #31

For me, I track local inflation using the Whopper Index. The price of a whopper at the local Burger King is going up faster than 11% per year.

In 1994, a whopper was exactly $1 here. It is currently $7.95 here.

$7.95 for a Whopper?? You must be referring to the combo meal at least, right?

I think the combo meal is almost $10 now. Yes, they are more expensive here in Hawaii than the mainland, but they were still only a $1 back in 1994.
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December 05, 2013, 11:28:05 PM
 #32

After reading your post i still can't understand what is the huge problem that most people don't understand. Inflation?

inflation is not the problem it is the symptom of the problem

Quote from: Satoshi Nakamoto
The Times 03/Jan/2009 Chancellor on brink of second bailout for banks.
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December 05, 2013, 11:46:19 PM
 #33

For me, I track local inflation using the Whopper Index. The price of a whopper at the local Burger King is going up faster than 11% per year.

In 1994, a whopper was exactly $1 here. It is currently $7.95 here.

$7.95 for a Whopper?? You must be referring to the combo meal at least, right?

I think the combo meal is almost $10 now. Yes, they are more expensive here in Hawaii than the mainland, but they were still only a $1 back in 1994.

Hope you haven't eaten Whoppers from 1994 till now Smiley


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December 06, 2013, 12:13:38 AM
 #34

if people take just a moment and think about how bad the economy is now, everyone would invest in bitcoin, not to talk about 20 years ago, just few years ago (2007-2008) I paid €2 for my cigarettes and less than €1  for gasoline , around €0.2 for bread (1 baguette) , today I pay €3.6 for cigarettes and €1.5 for gasoline and more than 0.3 for bread. the worst thing is my salary didn't almost change.

This is something that is completely true. Alot of things have been becoming more expensive than the official inflation level says. Then some things have become cheaper. But the things that have become cheaper are often unnecessary products like clothes that are cheaper and of lower quality and not essentials like bread and gasoline.

The items that have become cheaper are often the ones that are produced abroad in low cost countries whereas the products made domestically are becoming more expensive. This means that the reduced cost of some goods are not due to better technology and hence lower cost in one's own country but due the fact that other people elsewhere make less money working.

Hence the reality of situation is that inflation is understated, not according to economic theory, but in practice for people. The result is that you can say that inflation is low if you also accept the greater economical differences that a globalized economic system bring. I'm not saying this is a bad thing per se in the long run, I'm just saying that the goods that become cheaper and count towards lower inflation are not saying the whole truth about the domestic economy and hence cannot be counted as a true measure of inflation for the individual.

I hope this makes sense.
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December 06, 2013, 12:28:26 AM
 #35

For me, I track local inflation using the Whopper Index. The price of a whopper at the local Burger King is going up faster than 11% per year.

In 1994, a whopper was exactly $1 here. It is currently $7.95 here.

7.95^(1/19)=1.1152 and most of the price increases have been in the last couple years.

That is over 11% inflation during the last 19 years.

The media is lying to us about inflation, for example: http://money.cnn.com/2013/10/29/news/economy/relative-prices/
Quote
"Stuff" is getting cheaper

The price of manufactured goods is way down. Televisions are now 98% cheaper than they were in 1983, according to the Consumer Price Index.

The index accounts for advances in technology. That 98% drop means a TV that costs $100 in 1983 -- with its dial controls and antenna -- would be worth about $2 today.

This is due to the hedonics adjustment in the CPI index. They are saying that a modern television is 50 times better than one from 1983, but the free market says otherwise. For example:

I can buy a new CRT television (old design like in the 70's) in the Philippines for about $100 vs. an LED television of the same size for about $250 there. I guess that the free market only sees the new ones as being 2.5 times better design.

Also, here in the USA, I work at an ewaste recycle center 3 days a week (no is allowed to work over 29 hours a week thanks to Obamacare). An old CRT television in good shape sells for about $20, while a plasma TV of about the same size sells for about $50, and LED of the same size for about $100. So even here in the USA, the new LED TVs are only worth 5 times more according to the free market.

In neither country does the free market consider a new LED television to be worth 50 times more than an old style CRT television. Those CPI numbers are a straight lie.

Most of my co-workers make minimum wage of $7.25 per hour, even the ones that have been here for years. Jobs are scarce and my boss has no problems hiring new ones to replace the old ones. And I have seen his books, he is barely surviving. Anyway, I was handed the wrong paycheck once and discovered that my co-workers are earning about $750 per month. I don't know how they survive after paying rent. Most of them get food stamps.

I fix the computers here that people (mostly schools & government offices) throw away or sell the chips out of them on Ebay. Since they are basically free for us, I also make sure that every employee gets a refurbished laptop for free. Most of them have never owned a computer before. A couple of the girls started crying when I gave them one. That is how poor they are.

Wages are NOT keeping up with inflation. People at the bottom are starting to hurt. I am lucky enough that I always saved some of my earnings in precious metals over the years, so I had savings to invest in bitcoin. I have good job skills and can show my boss each month how much money I made for him fixing and selling discarded ewaste, so I have job security. I also own a piece of land up in the jungle area with a cabin in the back, so I don't pay any rent. I get free computer stuff from work, but I still spend money on food and gas. As I see the prices constantly go up on those two things, I alway wonder, how do normal people survive?

I really hope bitcoin reverses this trend of falling real wages.

11 % inflation seems a lot closer to the true number than what is officially reported. Your post rings true to what OP was saying.

The problem with inflation is that they don't count quality together with price and that they mix the upper, middle and lower classes together in one pot. Statistically everyone seems better off, but in practice reality is showing something different.
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December 06, 2013, 12:32:58 AM
 #36

The problem with inflation is that they don't count quality together with price and that they mix the upper, middle and lower classes together in one pot. Statistically everyone seems better off, but in practice reality is showing something different.

Within the US, the deception goes much deeper than that.  For example, the official CPI (Consumer Price Index of inflation) deliberately excludes prices in food or energy; which just happen to be two of the most important things that people around the world really need.  Also, changes in real estate are not directly considered; instead a massaged number called "Owner's Equivilant Rent" is included. 


"The powers of financial capitalism had another far-reaching aim, nothing less than to create a world system of financial control in private hands able to dominate the political system of each country and the economy of the world as a whole. This system was to be controlled in a feudalist fashion by the central banks of the world acting in concert, by secret agreements arrived at in frequent meetings and conferences. The apex of the systems was to be the Bank for International Settlements in Basel, Switzerland, a private bank owned and controlled by the world's central banks which were themselves private corporations. Each central bank...sought to dominate its government by its ability to control Treasury loans, to manipulate foreign exchanges, to influence the level of economic activity in the country, and to influence cooperative politicians by subsequent economic rewards in the business world."

- Carroll Quigley, CFR member, mentor to Bill Clinton, from 'Tragedy And Hope'
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December 06, 2013, 12:35:54 AM
 #37

How about my Whopper Jr. inflation index? One burger cost 25 cents here in 1983, and now it is $1.

1 x (0.25/30) = 0.00833 ... so less than 1% inflation each year.

See, it's easy to come up with any bullshit number if you focus on only one arbitrary item.

The notion that the price index is rising 11% year over year is ridiculous. Most of these goods that shoot up in price such as tobacco and gasoline are the result of increasing global demand and taxation, rather than inflation.

Night gathers, and now my bitcoinwisdom watch begins.
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December 06, 2013, 01:35:24 AM
 #38

Guys, a quick search online will show that minimum wage has NOT kept up with inflation in the US.  Minimum wage should be around $11+ atm, and that's before taking into account increases in the standard of living and productivity.

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kireinaha
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December 06, 2013, 01:39:11 AM
 #39

Guys, a quick search online will show that minimum wage has NOT kept up with inflation in the US.  Minimum wage should be around $11+ atm, and that's before taking into account increases in the standard of living and productivity.

Yes, according to your sources in the Huffington Post. Thanks for sharing.

Night gathers, and now my bitcoinwisdom watch begins.
GameKyuubi
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December 06, 2013, 01:48:01 AM
 #40

Yes, according to your sources in the Huffington Post. Thanks for sharing.

You gonna explain why I'm wrong or are you gonna let your fallacy spaghetti?

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