Message from @sɪᴅɪsɴᴏᴛʜᴇʀᴇ

Discord ID: 533367757174079488


2019-01-11 17:12:44 UTC  

And if he said one thing wrong he fucked everything

2019-01-11 17:12:48 UTC  

very gamer style

2019-01-11 17:14:41 UTC  

Ha typical

2019-01-11 17:17:41 UTC  

Petition to make this a reaction image

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/418667927169138688/533333692186230804/image0.jpg

2019-01-11 17:18:19 UTC  

Lol I love how in trumps recent videos he’s wearing a fucking rain coat and a golf hat

2019-01-11 17:18:22 UTC  

Absolute chad

2019-01-11 17:18:37 UTC  

@Leo (BillNyeLand) you’re libtard

2019-01-11 18:19:34 UTC  

Fears about the American gold standard were intensified in March 1891, when the Treasury suddenly imposed a stiff fee on the export of gold bars taken from its vaults so that most gold exported from then on was American gold coin rather than bars. A shock went through the financial community, in the U.S. and abroad, when the United States Senate passed a free-silver coinage bill in July 1892; the fact that the bill went no further was not enough to restore confidence in the gold standard. Banks began to insert clauses in loans and mortgages requiring payment in gold coin; clearly the dollar was no longer trusted. Gold exports intensified in 1892, the Treasury’s gold reserve declined, and a run ensued on the U.S. Treasury. In February 1893, the Treasury persuaded New York banks, which had drawn down $6 million on gold from the Treasury by presenting Treasury notes for redemption, to return the gold and reacquire the paper. This act of desperation was scarcely calculated to restore confidence in the paper dollar. The Treasury was paying the price for specie resumption without bothering to contract the paper notes in circulation. The gold standard was therefore inherently shaky, resting only on public confidence, and that was giving way under the silver agitation and under desperate acts by the Treasury.

2019-01-11 18:20:36 UTC  

There was again, easy money dished out by central planners

2019-01-11 18:21:10 UTC  

This is what I mean by , any recession you look at. You'll see it's only government intervention which has caused it.

2019-01-11 18:21:25 UTC  

1817, 1847, 1854, 1873, 1893, 1908 etc etc

2019-01-11 19:01:55 UTC  

I’m not reading that

2019-01-11 19:02:06 UTC  

In summary the government

2019-01-11 19:02:14 UTC  

Gamer

2019-01-11 19:29:58 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/418667927169138688/533366985401040899/image0.png

2019-01-11 19:30:54 UTC  

The sources I find always seem to go against what you post.

2019-01-11 19:32:01 UTC  

Yeah it's because they ignore it

2019-01-11 19:32:15 UTC  

It's the same way the ignore the causes for the '29 and '08 crisis

2019-01-11 19:32:57 UTC  

Every recession you find, It always links back to state intervention and the Austrian business cycle theory

2019-01-11 19:33:02 UTC  

Japan was a great example

2019-01-11 19:33:22 UTC  

They tried so many fiscal stimulus' that Keynesian economics praise as a way to recover from recessions, but they all failed and didn't do anything

2019-01-11 19:33:28 UTC  

the recession in Japan continued into the 2000s

2019-01-11 19:33:32 UTC  

The "lost decade"

2019-01-11 19:34:26 UTC  

In addition, we haven’t had this type of national ban run and failure crisis since the modern federal banking deposit insurance and regulations system was established

2019-01-11 19:34:39 UTC  

national ban run and failure crisis?

2019-01-11 19:34:51 UTC  

2008 was probably the closest to that

2019-01-11 19:35:03 UTC  

yeah the 2008 crash was caused by a regulation

2019-01-11 19:35:05 UTC  

and cheap credit policies

2019-01-11 19:35:10 UTC  

But still not a failure of the traditional banking system, rather the investment banking system

2019-01-11 19:35:17 UTC  

It was caused by not enough regulation

2019-01-11 19:35:22 UTC  

I'd say a failure of central planning

2019-01-11 19:35:24 UTC  

central banks

2019-01-11 19:35:26 UTC  

It was CHAD

2019-01-11 19:35:40 UTC  

The CRA ( community reinvestment act). The CRA evolved through times and got hard pressed by regulators over the years until in 2008 it all popped.
This was a regulation that forced banks to give loans out to people who couldn't pay it back. This led to bad loans being created which caused a boom and bust.

2019-01-11 19:35:59 UTC  

Not against normal banks, but central banking

2019-01-11 19:36:03 UTC  

things like the FED should not exist

2019-01-11 19:36:11 UTC  

It was caused by banks trying to fulfill a new demand from both the government and investors of loaning to low-income households

2019-01-11 19:36:33 UTC  

The whole reason they lent to low income households was the government itself

2019-01-11 19:36:39 UTC  

and not to mention the cheap credit

2019-01-11 19:36:44 UTC  

2 things that caused the crash