Oct-27-2018 11:11 AM
Oct-31-2018 12:53 PM
westernrvparkowner wrote:Big Katuna wrote:The US national debt is approximately $21 trillion dollars. Approximately 2/3rds of that amount is owed to US citizens and US government accounts. Of the $6.3 trillion owed to foreigners, China owns $1.1 Billion. That is about 5 percent of our national debt, while significant, it isn't a percentage that allows the tail to wag the dog.
For what it’s worth, it’s a house of cards. All of the above info about moving information around about people who sell stuff made somewhere else to people who use it, throw it away and buy something else or on the way to a Drs appt.
We are one big service economy looking for a decent screwdriver.
And when China decides to quit loaning us money, you are going to wish you had a good screwdriver.
Here is one.
Clicky
Like any debtor/creditor arrangement, it is in the best interest of the creditor for the debtor to remain financially healthy, that is how they get repaid. By comparison, the US represents about 20 percent of China's export market. They have as much or more to lose than the US should something happen that breaks all ties between the two countries. I wouldn't be too concerned that China will suddenly stop purchasing US debt and redeem all of their US treasury bond holdings.
Oct-31-2018 12:23 PM
Oct-31-2018 12:20 PM
MEXICOWANDERER wrote:West Texas Intermediate crude prices dropped over 10 percent in October, it's steepest monthly decline in over two years. Perhaps the end of the US and capitalism as we know it has been similarly delayed for at least a month.
The economic scenario was based on this...
ONE: The onset of a speculator infestation with energy
TWO The spiking of OIL PRICES with energy, transportation, and manufacturing costs leading the contributing negatives.
Oct-31-2018 11:46 AM
Oct-31-2018 11:18 AM
Oct-31-2018 11:11 AM
JimK-NY wrote:
This whole series of rants started due to a mistake. $40 frying pans are obsolete. The most functional frying pans are Teflon coated. Unfortunately the Teflon only lasts about one year. So the best plan is to spend $25 for a set of three pans which you replace every year. I recommend Tfal from Walmart or other discount.
Oct-31-2018 10:24 AM
Oct-31-2018 10:19 AM
Big Katuna wrote:The US national debt is approximately $21 trillion dollars. Approximately 2/3rds of that amount is owed to US citizens and US government accounts. Of the $6.3 trillion owed to foreigners, China owns $1.1 Billion. That is about 5 percent of our national debt, while significant, it isn't a percentage that allows the tail to wag the dog.
For what it’s worth, it’s a house of cards. All of the above info about moving information around about people who sell stuff made somewhere else to people who use it, throw it away and buy something else or on the way to a Drs appt.
We are one big service economy looking for a decent screwdriver.
And when China decides to quit loaning us money, you are going to wish you had a good screwdriver.
Here is one.
Clicky
Oct-31-2018 09:40 AM
MEXICOWANDERER wrote:
Klein Tools are alive and thriving.
The parents purchased a Sears color TV fifty six years ago. We had a channel master antenna rotator with amplifier.
PORTA WALLS fake white sidewalls were the rage for kid's cars. So were Appleton (fake) spotlights, and Lakes Pipes, side exhaust. JC Whitney became huge in young lives. Ford flathead V8 engines had a water pump on each side the the engine. Turn on the radio and listen for the Vibrator before the radio became alive. Do you remember the tire sizes? 6:70-15 7:10-15 7:60-15 and 8:20-15. When the new Lincolns, demanded 9:50-14 tires, speedometers read high, fenderwells became scraped in an effort to use the "cool" new size.
RVs were a wonder. No more sleeping on rocky ground. No more waking up in a soaked sleeping bag. Tent? Oh jesus no. A center pole tent weighed 30 pounds and did nothing for the rocky earth under the canvas.
Sink? You bet! Grab that knob and start pumping. No more coleman stove generator problems. A jug of gas and a 3-burner stove was paradise. Sleeping across a rearranged dinette set wasn't. The ice box never worked well so it was packed with extra groceries.
And it was all affordable. NFS campgrounds were free. Yosemite cost $4.00. In 1954 cabins at Weber Lake CA cost .50 night. Dad tried to teach us boys how to fish where there were no fish. Had to learn on my own later. Mitchell 300 open face reels.
There was one thing VERY PRESENT back then that is utterly missing today. A sense of unlimited opportunity. A lot of this had to do with population density. I saw the census of the USA at fifty two million. Now California alone is not far from that figure.
Later on it was Vibra Sonic. Open the trunk, turn the radio way up and twang the resistor with a flick of the fingers, instant War of The World's II sound effects.
And don't be so dang cocky about medical. I joke with my doctors about "The 7-minute Appointment" Unfaxed prescriptions. Waiting with fifteen pregnant youngsters none of whom speak English. This is in the US.
Then and now is a giant trade off. Then there were no wobble-impact-sockets nor impact guns. You had better know how to sharpen drills.
Flashlights and batteries were truly sad. My dad imposed a near-death-penalty on us boys if we so much as touched his navy gray flashlight. The one with the 90 degree elbow at the end.
Going way back, a 2x4, one fruit crate, and roller skates provided endless fun.
But unlike today, electrical products were tested before they were boxed up. Want decent car stuff? Go to Sears, or Montgomery Ward for Power Kraft tools.
Oct-31-2018 08:52 AM
Oct-31-2018 08:39 AM
Oct-30-2018 09:44 PM
Oct-30-2018 09:42 PM
Oct-30-2018 08:55 PM
Big Katuna wrote:Would it be safe to say that today's mini vans are of better quality than that VW? Also, would it be safe to say that the telephone equipment and networks are superior to the equipment and networks then? Today I can call anywhere in the US, talk for as long as I want and not pay any long distance charges, was that the case back then? When that VW was $4000, if you were expecting an important phone call, you couldn't leave your home or office. And what was your household income when you shopped for that VW? My guess way below the median US income today of $61,372.
In the telephony industry back when a new VW Westphalia was $4000, I used Klein tools. Wire cutters, flush cutters, sheath, screwdrivers, wiring scissors.
I stilll have some. Don’t know if the quality is still there.
Oct-30-2018 08:36 PM