Greg, you are confusing me. I'm not sure what you are looking for in Fed direct action. I see aggressive action to keep the bond market stable every day. Debt on their books is going up substantially. Are you looking for new highs in the stock market? We may get them, maybe only one. But is that the bank's goal?
You say, and I agree, that the bank's goal is to own all significant assets before the natural implosion occurs from too much debt pushing too much inflation. Or own it all as you say. All they need to do then in my opinion is keep the suckers in the markets that don't realize it is strictly an insider game now, based on fed actions in the markets.
The system's public narrative is the market always goes up after it goes down. So if it drifts down slowly with some volatility periodically, it can be pitched to the public as a normal bear market. It's a confidence and loyalty game. It is based on how much can be printed before implosion as well., right?
So what are you looking for in terms of direct aggressive action? Under the economic laws of physics, it would seem to me they have to print more aggressively every day, incrementally just to keep the confidence game going till the endgame is achieved.
Janet Yellon in your face bag 💼 woman
Greg, you are confusing me. I'm not sure what you are looking for in Fed direct action. I see aggressive action to keep the bond market stable every day. Debt on their books is going up substantially. Are you looking for new highs in the stock market? We may get them, maybe only one. But is that the bank's goal?
You say, and I agree, that the bank's goal is to own all significant assets before the natural implosion occurs from too much debt pushing too much inflation. Or own it all as you say. All they need to do then in my opinion is keep the suckers in the markets that don't realize it is strictly an insider game now, based on fed actions in the markets.
The system's public narrative is the market always goes up after it goes down. So if it drifts down slowly with some volatility periodically, it can be pitched to the public as a normal bear market. It's a confidence and loyalty game. It is based on how much can be printed before implosion as well., right?
So what are you looking for in terms of direct aggressive action? Under the economic laws of physics, it would seem to me they have to print more aggressively every day, incrementally just to keep the confidence game going till the endgame is achieved.