Hyperinflation

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Why don't you list the the precursors to a hyperinflation scenario. Excessive money printing? Check.
Nope. Not enough to cause hyperinflation.

Loss of trust in the government and the financial system? Check.
Only among retarded conspiracy theorists like you who never had trust in the government anyway. Try going outside your bubble every now and then, you'll learn something
Ridiculously inflated national debt? Check.
Not enough for hyperinflation.
Collapse of production of goods and services? That's a Texas-sized check right there. Your lumber prices have increased by 270%, for fucks sake.
Not due to inflation, but due to covid. Just lumber alone isn't cause for hyperinflation.

I know Q told you that the US is doomed without Donald Trump leading it but don't believe random LARPers on /pol/, they're trolls.
 
Nope. Not enough to cause hyperinflation.


Only among retarded conspiracy theorists like you who never had trust in the government anyway. Try going outside your bubble every now and then, you'll learn something

Not enough for hyperinflation.

Not due to inflation, but due to covid. Just lumber alone isn't cause for hyperinflation.

I know Q told you that the US is doomed without Donald Trump leading it but don't believe random LARPers on /pol/, they're trolls.
Ahh, so that's why you don't believe in hyperinflation. Because orange man bad?

Still waiting for you to list what in your mind are the precursors to hyperinflation...

Edit: Tell me more about how you trusted orange man's government for 4 years straight and did not question it one bit.
 
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Hyperinflation? But @Hollywood Hulk Hogan told me it's just a right-wing conspiracy theory and can never happen in America because the Fed is staffed with intelligent and competent people who do a good job.

Hyperinflation Pro-Gamer Tip: Your debts will soon become worthless too. Get that credit card out, buy all the silver and ammo you can find. Also common medical goods such as antibiotics.
Here comes 4-5 pages of screaming back and forth at each other like every other thread he's pulled into
 
Ahh, so that's why you don't believe in hyperinflation. Because orange man bad?

Still waiting for you to list what in your mind are the precursors to hyperinflation...

Edit: Tell me more about how you trusted orange man's government for 4 years straight and did not question it one bit.
The precursors you listed are somewhat accurate, but generally also accompanied by the government just printing off insane amounts of money, usually to cover debts. However, while the US does print off a lot of money, it doesn't do nearly enough to cause hyperinflation. You really need to look up hyperinflation because it's obvious you don't know what the fuck you're talking about and read too much shit on /pol/
 
The precursors you listed are somewhat accurate, but generally also accompanied by the government just printing off insane amounts of money, usually to cover debts. However, while the US does print off a lot of money, it doesn't do nearly enough to cause hyperinflation. You really need to look up hyperinflation because it's obvious you don't know what the fuck you're talking about and read too much shit on /pol/
So you think this narrative is just something /pol/ came up with, and not China trying to wage economic war on the US?

Or is Reuters the new place for Q drops now?
 
Hulk. The quickest way to get people from going right wing is acknowledge there more to the world then "my side good, enemy bad".
 
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So you think this narrative is just something /pol/ came up with, and not China trying to wage economic war on the US?

Or is Reuters the new place for Q drops now?
Selling US bonds isn't waging economic war on the US and selling them at a loss would do more harm to China than harm to the US. Besides, most US debt is held by the US itself.

If you really want to avoid hyperinflation, you should be pushing for higher corporate and rich people taxes. I doubt you will though
 
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IIRC they've been selling bonds, which is more for raising capital than shifting to a different foreign currency.
That is correct, although the overall narrative is still indicating China's end goal is complete de-dollarization. The Biden regime has been proven massively unpopular around the world and obviously it impacted the USD as well.


@Hollywood Hulk Hogan How do you expect to have higher corporate taxes when those corporations directly control your government? Taxation is a burden on the poor by the ruling classes, never the other way around.

That tax on people making 400k and more just showcases how out of touch the Biden regime is. 400k is just enough to be considered middle class if you live in a large city. It's a tax to prevent normal people from becoming wealthy, not a tax on the wealthy.
 
That is correct, although the overall narrative is still indicating China's end goal is complete de-dollarization. The Biden regime has been proven massively unpopular around the world and obviously it impacted the USD as well.

Let's be real, people have been "challenging" the dollar hegemony for years. Remember when BRICS was supposed to be the next big thing?
 
That is correct, although the overall narrative is still indicating China's end goal is complete de-dollarization. The Biden regime has been proven massively unpopular around the world and obviously it impacted the USD as well.


@Hollywood Hulk Hogan How do you expect to have higher corporate taxes when those corporations directly control your government? Taxation is a burden on the poor by the ruling classes, never the other way around.
So you think we shouldn't even try? You do know it's possible to close tax loopholes, right?
That tax on people making 400k and more just showcases how out of touch the Biden regime is. 400k is just enough to be considered middle class if you live in a large city. It's a tax to prevent normal people from becoming wealthy, not a tax on the wealthy.
Unless you're talking SF, $400k is way more than middle class
 
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Let's be real, people have been "challenging" the dollar hegemony for years. Remember when BRICS was supposed to be the next big thing?
They have been forever, true. The US has never been in such a rough shape back then. Even through the energy crisis of the 70s things were never that dire. Between the social unrest, the pandemic, and the fact that less than a quarter of Americans see their government as legitimate, things were never this bad. Even without Soviet nukes aimed at the US, you got to admit that outlook is not so good. Regarding BRICS, they became much more efficient since they dropped the B, the I, and the S. Especially the I.


So you think we shouldn't even try? You do know it's possible to close tax loopholes, right?
How do you still not understand that in America you can't tell where the corporations end and the government begins? Why would they close their own tax loopholes?

Unless you're talking SF, $400k is way more than middle class.
It's a catch 22. In any major city where you can legally earn $400k a year, that amount of money is barely enough to sustain a middle class lifestyle. It's not "wealthy" money. It's just one step above living paycheck to paycheck in a rented hovel.
 
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That is correct, although the overall narrative is still indicating China's end goal is complete de-dollarization. The Biden regime has been proven massively unpopular around the world and obviously it impacted the USD as well.
...Are you retarded? Biden is far, far more popular with the world than Trump ever was, mostly because he confirmed that yes, the US will uphold its treaty obligations against Chinese aggression or Russian aggression.

@Hollywood Hulk Hogan How do you expect to have higher corporate taxes when those corporations directly control your government? Taxation is a burden on the poor by the ruling classes, never the other way around.

That tax on people making 400k and more just showcases how out of touch the Biden regime is. 400k is just enough to be considered middle class if you live in a large city. It's a tax to prevent normal people from becoming wealthy, not a tax on the wealthy.
Do you have any idea on how taxation actually works? I'm guessing no. The tax increase on people making 400k or more would be a tax on all income after you've already made 400k, and only a couple of a percentage increase in that would have a lot of returns and little downside. Essentially put, taxable income is put into brackets. You pay no tax on your income up to a certain point, then a percentage on all income after that, then a higher percentage the more and more income you make. Also, 400k is not middle class in a large city. That's still pretty high earning as an individual. To put in perspective, the average household income in NYC is about 62k. Your average middle class income per household hovers around ~100k to 200k per year. That's if you're generous, 50% of the income per person that this tax would effect. You're completely out of touch with reality.
 
You are a fool if you think that 400k is wealthy. Don't be looking at your neighbor with the slightly nicer car and think he's wealthy, look at the piece of shit corporate politician in his gated community making 400k from a single 30 minute speech as wealthy. Where are AOC's tax records, for example?

Edit: Regarding trust in government, how about you show some evidence instead of screeching autistically? For example:
 
You are a fool if you think that 400k is wealthy. Don't be looking at your neighbor with the slightly nicer car and think he's wealthy, look at the piece of shit corporate politician in his gated community making 400k from a single 30 minute speech as wealthy. Where are AOC's tax records, for example?
Where the fuck do you live that 400k per year is middle class?

EDIT: What you posted has nothing to do with global trust in the US which is what I was referring to and you were referring to.
 
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Where the fuck do you live that 400k per year is middle class?
In reality, where we realize there's a ridiculous gap between the poor and the actually wealthy. Your government has been lying to you. Anyone making below 80k a year is below the poverty line. Up to 600-700k a year you're middle class. 2m is upper middle class.

Edit: I think some of the confusion stems from certain people not understanding how much wealth actual rich people have, and confusing it with having a reasonable middle class net worth.

EDIT: What you posted has nothing to do with global trust in the US which is what I was referring to and you were referring to.
The fuck you say?
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In reality, where we realize there's a ridiculous gap between the poor and the actually wealthy. Your government has been lying to you. Anyone making below 80k a year is below the poverty line. Up to 600-700k a year you're middle class. 2m is upper middle class.

Edit: I think some of the confusion stems from certain people not understanding how much wealth actual rich people have, and confusing it with having a reasonable middle class net worth.

I think it comes from you using (i'm assuming) an average to pin what's considered middle class, rather than a median, which is what literally everybody else does.
 
In reality, where we realize there's a ridiculous gap between the poor and the actually wealthy. Your government has been lying to you. Anyone making below 80k a year is below the poverty line. Up to 600-700k a year you're middle class. 2m is upper middle class.
What the actual fuck are you smoking, really. As for evidence, let's do some basic fucking google searches, or even better, something from a very trusted research organization.

Middle class according to the Pew Research Center (and defined by the US Census Bureau) is 67% to 200% of the median income. The median US income per individual is $31,133. 200% of that is 62k per person. Where you're getting fucked around with is you're looking at the mean (average) income, which is far more likely to get skewed by outliers than the median income. Median household income is about 62k in the US, which makes sense when you have two earners in a house hold. Even being generous and saying if you're making 100k a year and still "middle class" as an individual (which is absolutely retarded, you're in the upper 25% of income), 400k as a yearly income is quadruple that. Here's some more math.

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A house hold that makes 400k a year with 4 people in the NYC area is easily among the top 21% of earners in that area. That's upper class no matter how you look at it, even after taxes and living expenses.
 
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