Is it possible that there is never another "crash"/recession ever again (talking about the US)?
Can central banking keep it afloat? I've been thinking about this more and more.
The stock market has never been so relevant in US history. Wars are now fought economically not violently. And considering the US is the largest economic powerhouse in the world by a significant margin + allies in Europe and modern capitalism has had just over 200 years to be in effect - so it makes sense that the past 200 years have taught us enough about economic policy and how people behave to make it work.
I mean compare shitcoin charts to legacy financial market charts. You will see they look drastically different. Shitcoins pump then dump in cycles. Same with bitcoin - these are 100% free markets without regulations and no central banking. Yet the way in which stocks and commodities behave looks... just weird. unnatural almost.
Yeah, talks like these remind me about 15k btc days. Where every day was green, and people saying what btc is in a bubble were laughed at. It was the new paradigm. Same is happening in the stock market right now. Euphoria never ends well.
just imagine inserting your dick right in the tight white teenage pussy and not pulling out while she moans
Carson Hill
The mere fact that we exist in insane. To people thinking there is some sort of set in stone law about economics is laughable. The djia could moon to 100k and there doesn’t need to be an explanation
Connor White
Fuck, that brown chic is gorgeous.
Jaxson Cox
Everyone will say it's different this time and everything will turn out well, until suddenly the market overflows and dives the fuck down. Then it's pink, pink everywhere the eye can see. No-crash economy is a pipe dream, it's fucking impossible.
Cameron Cook
Wars have always been fought economically since humans invented tools. Central banking is irrelevant to the economy over long periods of time. The stock market is different than shitcoins because shitcoins are useless, that's why the charts look like pnds. The stock market grows over time because things get done more efficiently and the stock market "tracks" that. If other metrics were employed different than the s&p for example, the stock market could look flat for example.
These are facts for everyone over 120 IQ
Joshua Turner
Actually most of the comments I read about bitcoin NOT being a bubble were actually saying that it is a bubble, but not like just a bubble and pop and that's it. Everyone who knows about bitcoin price knows that there are bubbles every few years. There are bubbles, just not "Bitcoin is a bubble"
Tyler Parker
>Central banking is irrelevant to the economy over long periods of time why?
are you retarded? the world is producing magnitudes more in value than it was 50 years ago.
infinite growth certainly is possible.
Alexander Diaz
It's just pushing some numbers around, that can have some short term effects, of course, but in the long run, when more efficient technology replaces certain parts where things are inefficient, the profit will be too much.
For example, let's say I build a machine that grows food automatically for me using the minerals on the ground and sun power or something. I don't need to go to work since it's more efficient for me to do things myself, therefore I'm not affected by whatever the economy does. In the real world is more complex but I believe the same happens
Evan Parker
Research Austrian business cycle theory. The inflationary wave has to be followed by a deflationary crash. The banks right now are creating massive problems and their solutions are to inflate to cover it up. This only causes more problems..
Robert Walker
Unnatural yes Sustainable no
For your thesis to be true it means infinite debt should be manageable.
Brody Allen
Most brainlet post I’ve read in the past week, and that’s saying something considering all the bullfags on this forum
Tyler Reyes
Central banking isn't supposed to keep it afloat. It's supposed to stabilize it when possible and keep it's powder dry when it's not so that it can stabilize it at the next viable price point.
Ian Wilson
I don't need to imagine it. I do it every weekend
Brody Ramirez
Everyone knew it was a bubble except for brainlets. The argument was that once the bubble popped it would still be here. And what do you know.... It is still here.