Quote from trefoil:
Another day, another doomsday thread.
I wonder, what would this place have been like in Jan 1980, when gold peaked? Would there have been twenty more threads just like this, with not a single one of the thread starters stopping to think that if the US could survive civil war and prosper, and WWII and prosper, that it could survive a mild oil shortage and some inflation without collapsing?
Or, to take a more apt historical parallel, the 1907 financial crisis is only remembered by folks who know the history of the Federal Reserve. At the time, it felt a whole lot worse, I'm sure.
Marc Faber is an ass.
In 1980 the total U.S. debt was under one trillion dollars. Today it is $13.5 trillion, and rising by over $1 trillion per year. In inflation adjusted terms the current national debt is 5 times bigger than it was in 1980. That debt works out to about $117,000 per household in the United States. That is the debt you owe, courtesy of the crooks in Washington D.C., in addition to any mortgage, car loan, student loan, or credit card debt you may have. In 1980 the U.S. trade deficit was close to 0. In the past decade it has been $300 billion a year or more, whether the economy was good or bad. This isn't your father's financial crisis.