Very interesting background, I had a Chinese friend a while back who said the same thing, American leftists were reminding him of the cultural revolution. Western Marxism is a neat trick isn't it? Get people living an otherwise comfortable life to hate Apple for making profit off selling i-phones even though that activity has nothing to do with them, it would be funny if it wasn't so damned dangerous. I don't have your background but I can see these folks for what they are, masters of gaslighting, telling the rest of us how greedy and awful we are all the while it is their own envy and hate driving their thoughts.
Geez really though, a marxian market trader, how the hell does one's brain not explode with that one? some of these folks must not be traders
While I agree with much of what has been posted lately far right is just as dangerous as far left.
And far right in last 5 years or more has had more way more power and sway so until that changes those are folks I watch and fear grabbing more.
And that is what I am doing, pointing out the problem exists in both current extreme points of view.Fanaticism is dangerous, of course. But whataboutism isn't a good answer to someone pointing out that a problem exists.
Right, the buyer at the high transaction price should be equally to blame, how dare they price me out. Somebody above mentioned DRAM price, however bitcoin miners and traders were part of the demand spike yet they get spared the indignation - no logic except for hatred of corporations. Just came here and I am blown away that traders of all people would be so sanctimonious and left thinking about this. Really?
Nice observation. Just one minor correction:I noticed it before the phony econ numbers started showing price increases. My data points were from shopping at Costco. The prices on various items that we routinely buy were going up $1 to $4. One example, the canned chicken we buy went up $2 initially and now it's up $6 a pack. The first jump was well before the Fed was saying anything about inflation. My wife was probably sick of me bitching about the prices going up.
I think similar to college tuitions going through the roof as money was made easily available via the govs student loan program, the extra money they kept throwing out added to pricing power as people weren't changing buying habits because they were getting cash. (I'll add my pet peave, calling the government student loans "student aid" gave the impression to far too many people that it was free money, now they know otherwise)
I'm not saying it wasn't necessary initially, but it probably needed to be reined in instead of expanded sooner.
Also not saying the shut down and restart to the supply system wasn't a major factor also, but as it came back online prices have just kept going up.
The worst part is the people who the money was supposed to help the most are getting creamed by the inflation, and will get creamed again as the economy collapses under the direction of the Fed.
The FED is noticing the same thing:-.... The 1%, however, will hardly notice a thing other than the drop in the worth of their bond portfolios. (What am I saying!, if they are in the 1%, they are well hedged.)
How were bitcoin miners and traders part of the demand spike when the DRAM price fixing I cited had happened in the early 2000's, well before crypto was invented. Do you have any real knowledge or understanding of anything ?
Ah, verbiage straight from the Marxist Playbook for Fifth Column Marchers, 1962 edition. That will surely convey useful, truthful, and accurate information...
BTW, you'll want to review the definitions section of that manual: "Truth To Power" only applies when people NOT in power put themselves in danger - life, sacred honor, all that - by exposing secrets about those IN power over them. This in no way applies to a scummy politician pretending to be shocked by publicly available information in front of other scummy politicians in order to get some degree of leverage over them for deal-making. It's as boring as a hooker's thirtieth trick on payday; there's absolutely nothing "epic" about it.
How were bitcoin miners and traders part of the demand spike when the DRAM price fixing I cited had happened in the early 2000's, well before crypto was invented. Do you have any real knowledge or understanding of anything ?