Here's how I broke it down by source and date published:All you had to do was realize that Osama was in Afganistan at the time fighting the Soviets with weapons we were supplying or helping to supply. There was no reason North would have named Osama.
So it would seem that no one really cared much until after Sept 11, 2001. Though someone must have asked the question or brought it up to cause North to write it up (purportedly) some 14 years after the fact. I did not find the actual letter or in-print column anywhere.
- Oliver North testifying 7/8/87
- Purported letter from North saying it was Nidal 11/28/2001
- townhall 1/22/2002
- workbench.cadenhead 2/13/2003
- Snopes undated <-- much like their pole dancer
- democraticunderground 1/19/2006 <-- seems to indicate Snopes article around this date
- factcheck 4/30/2009
- urbanlegendsonline 2/17/2010 <--- still says it was Osama
- Youtube of North testifying 3/9/2013
- truthorfiction 3/15/2015
- truthorfiction 8/9/2016 <--- needed to reinforce it or slow news day?
So it was either my 25 years ago fuzzy memory or the BetaMax or the above search and findings. And I dang sure was not going to invest further time using the way back engine to validate original pub dates, so f*ck it. Originally Posted by Why_Yes_I_Do
if you say soLook Gordon Gecko, lustylady was the one making fun of another poster (me) making fun of some dipshit (WYID) wanting me to reflect on my life.
posts: 46,595
bahahahaaaaa
Originally Posted by The_Waco_Kid
What would have happened if the Fed hadn't doubled its balance sheet during the pandemic? It seems safe to say bond market rates would have been higher, for both treasuries and MBS, without the 800-pound gorilla in the room lapping up everything in sight.... Originally Posted by lustyladThanks for that! I'd never thought about the effect of the PPP on rates.
Coming after Monkey pox. I have heard they will release Viral hemorrhagic fevers if certain chain of events happen between the midterms and 2024... Just be careful who you touch and blisters and such you can google pictures of monkey pox and it can blow up on someones back like the chicken pox Originally Posted by JohnWBabaykaHorse shit
Look Gordon Gecko, lustylady was the one making fun of another poster (me) making fun of some dipshit (WYID) wanting me to reflect on my life.
How about you reflect on the meaning of your life....go ahead, lustylad and WYID, will go after you.
How much you lose today? Originally Posted by WTF
Please explain how her analysis fucked up your life? Originally Posted by WTFPLEASE. You know about the American Rescue Plan, Fed policy, unaffordable housing, unaffordable gasoline, unaffordable food, and the price of goods and services going up faster than wages. Yeah there are a lot of reasons inflation is high besides Janet Yellen. But she’s as good a scapegoat as any.
PLEASE. You know about the American Rescue Plan, Fed policy, unaffordable housing, unaffordable gasoline, unaffordable food, and the price of goods and services going up faster than wages. Yeah there are a lot of reasons inflation is high besides Janet Yellen. But she’s as good a scapegoat as any. Originally Posted by TinyOnly a retard expects an explanation on a meme.
The media would like to believe the Fed is doing everything in its power to fight inflation, but it’s not true.
Yes, the Fed raised rates by 50 basis points in May and, yes, the Fed is trying to sound as “hawkish” as possible. But these things are designed to dupe the public not to reduce inflation. Let me explain.
The current rate of inflation in the US is 8.6%, a 40-year high.
At its May meeting, the Fed raised its target Fed Funds Rate to 1%. Here’s the scoop:
“The Federal Reserve recently announced that it’s raising interest rates by half a percentage point, bumping the federal funds rate to a target range of 0.75-1.00%.” (The Spokesman-Review)Got that? So the Fed’s rate is still a measly 1%. That’s what the media is trying to hide from you, and that’s why you might have to read 9 or 10 articles before you find a journalist who provides you with the actual rate.
Why are they hiding the rate?Because the rate is 7.6% below the rate of inflation, so it doesn’t do a damn thing. It’s another public relations travesty dolled-up to look like serious monetary policy. But it’s a joke, and you can see it’s a joke.
Think of it like this: If I loaned you $100 at 1% interest– but inflation was running at 8%– I would lose 7 bucks per year, right?
Right. And that’s what the Fed is doing. When interest rates are set below the rate of inflation, then the Fed loses money on every loan. In other words, the Fed is providing a subsidy to the banks for borrowing money. Have you ever heard of anything so ridiculous?
How would you like a deal like that? How would you like it if the Fed paid you interest on your credit card debt? You’d probably like that, right? But—if you were honest with yourself—you’d admit that it was a “gift”, because that’s what it is, a gift. The big banks are getting another handout from Uncle Sugar. That’s the whole deal in a nutshell.
Meanwhile, you and I and the other 300 million serfs, continue to pay a hefty 18% to the banks that are being subsidized by the Federal Reserve. Sound fair?
So, how much would the Fed have to hike rates if it really wanted to do its job? Check out this clip from an article at the Chicago Booth Review:
“The usual wisdom says that to reduce inflation, the Fed must raise the nominal interest rate by more than the inflation rate. In that way, the real interest rate rises, cooling the economy....
At a minimum, then, according to the usual wisdom, the interest rate should be above 8.5 percent. Now. The Taylor rule says the interest rate should be 2 percent (the Fed’s inflation target), plus 1.5 times how much inflation exceeds 2 percent, plus the long-term real rate. That means an interest rate of around 12 percent. Yet the Fed sits, and contemplates at most a percent or two by the end of the year.” (“Why Hasn’t the Fed Done More to Fight Inflation” Chicago Booth Review)