2cents,
I was concerned that you might not be willing to rely upon the particular internet links I already provided, so I found one from an authoritative source, the Encyclopaedia Brittanica, at http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-58204:
Are you now willing to back away from your claim that:
If you are not willing to back away from your claims, then I am sure everyone would be most interested in your own analysis of Weimar history. I'm sure everyone would be interested if you could engage in any discussion of history at all, for that matter. Please, by all means, discuss the topic, and try to give me and all the other frauds and morons on EliteTrader just a bit of an education. I have asked you, over and over again, to please explain your views on Weimar history, but I get nothing in response except insults and accusations that I am a moron and a fraud. Please, 2cents, teach us the non-moronic, non-fraudulent history of Weimar's hyperinflation.
I was concerned that you might not be willing to rely upon the particular internet links I already provided, so I found one from an authoritative source, the Encyclopaedia Brittanica, at http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-58204:
Although the inflation was rooted in the huge debt that Germany had amassed in financing its war effort, the hyperinflation of 1923 was triggered by the French-Belgian military occupation in January 1923 of the German industrial district in the Ruhr valley. The occupation occurred in retaliation for Germany's having fallen behind in its reparation payments and was intended to force German industry to provide compensation for the French and Belgian losses. Rather than accede quietly to the humiliation of occupation, the German government urged workers and employers to close down the factories. Idle workers were paid during the following months with a currency inflating so rapidly that printers gave up trying to print numbers on bills. By mid-1923 the German mark was losing value by the minute: a loaf of bread that cost 20,000 marks in the morning would cost 5,000,000 marks by nightfall; restaurant prices went up while customers were eating; and workers were paid twice a day. When economic collapse finally came on November 15, it took 4.2 trillion German marks to buy a single American dollar.
Are you now willing to back away from your claim that:
Quote from 2cents:
jimmy, you are just digging a bigger hole for yourself, and impressive amounts of smokey blather just won't do... you are the one who linked public debt / gdp ratio to hyperinflation, weimar had nothing to do with that you haven't even begun to address any of my objections... but thats how it is with intellectual frauds, loads of posturing, no substance... not really a surprise![]()
If you are not willing to back away from your claims, then I am sure everyone would be most interested in your own analysis of Weimar history. I'm sure everyone would be interested if you could engage in any discussion of history at all, for that matter. Please, by all means, discuss the topic, and try to give me and all the other frauds and morons on EliteTrader just a bit of an education. I have asked you, over and over again, to please explain your views on Weimar history, but I get nothing in response except insults and accusations that I am a moron and a fraud. Please, 2cents, teach us the non-moronic, non-fraudulent history of Weimar's hyperinflation.