Originally posted by Robtard
Not surprised in the US, with 22 million jobless claims and rising.
More than 2008 housing market crash, by far.
10K-15K deaths in the US from just suicides related to the 2008 housing market crash. Alone.
The lockdowns are not worth the lives that would be saved unless you count the abortions that can't get done then the lockdowns are saving a TON of lives.
At some point these "experts" didn't talk to other intelligent epidemiologists and economists. And we ended up with this mess where will lose more lives than we save from the policies, alone. The uptick in cases and deaths, when you control for increased testing capability, should indicate why the lockdown policies were not a good idea (it forced people into small spaces which increased the chance of infection which created more cases which caused more deaths). The reduction in deaths and cases were not seen.
I sure hope more and more people protest. They have nothing better to do. Many government officials have blood on their hands from these lockdown policies.
Originally posted by dadudemonYou know that to a point I agree with you, in truth for non vulnerable people we could have mass produced masks and sanitiser. I'm actually dead serious here, it, with a curfew would have the same affect on disease prevention as lockdown and people would have kept there jobs.
More than 2008 housing market crash, by far.10K-15K deaths in the US from just suicides related to the 2008 housing market crash. Alone.
The lockdowns are not worth the lives that would be saved unless you count the abortions that can't get done then the lockdowns are saving a TON of lives.
At some point these "experts" didn't talk to other intelligent epidemiologists and economists. And we ended up with this mess where will lose more lives than we save from the policies, alone. The uptick in cases and deaths, when you control for increased testing capability, should indicate why the lockdown policies were not a good idea (it forced people into small spaces which increased the chance of infection which created more cases which caused more deaths). The reduction in deaths and cases were not seen.
I sure hope more and more people protest. They have nothing better to do. Many government officials have blood on their hands from these lockdown policies.
Originally posted by Old Man Whirly!
You know that to a point I agree with you, in truth for non vulnerable people we could have mass produced masks and sanitiser. I'm actually dead serious here, it, with a curfew would have the same affect on disease prevention as lockdown and people would have kept there jobs.
I'm not sure about the curfew point but the other things you mentioned are exactly the measures that other leading epidemiologists said we should do to prevent the most deaths and reach heard immunity levels as quickly as possible.
Originally posted by dadudemonI am aware and yes, a curfew would have helped.
I'm not sure about the curfew point but the other things you mentioned are exactly the measures that other leading epidemiologists said we should do to prevent the most deaths and reach heard immunity levels as quickly as possible.
Dow sheds 2.3% in afternoon trade, down for a second day after historic plunge in oil prices
Tech stocks take a broad beating, more than oil stocks, as all Nasdaq 100 components lose ground
Another not good day for the stock market. Dow, S&P 500 and Nasdaq all down again today 🙁
Originally posted by Robtard
Dow sheds 2.3% in afternoon trade, down for a second day after historic plunge in oil pricesTech stocks take a broad beating, more than oil stocks, as all Nasdaq 100 components lose ground
Another not good day for the stock market. Dow, S&P 500 and Nasdaq all down again today 🙁
How did it do, yesterday?
I had a hard time finding a clear picture just google searching. I think I'm having a "dadudemon is retarded" moment because all I find is the ability to adjust it by 1 day, 1 week, 1 month, etc.
No options to just look at yesterday's results.
Why a ‘return to normal’ could mean disaster for the stock market
It’s hard to deny, although some do, that the stock market, pre-coronavirus, was pushing the limits of what it means to be in a bubble. Of course, bubbles come and go, but as Hofstra University’s Jean-Paul Rodrigue suggests, this one had a particularly fierce tailwind.
“Although manias and bubbles have taken place many times before in history...” he once wrote, “central banks appear to make matters worse by providing too much credit and being unable or unwilling to stop the process with things are getting out of control.”
Rodrigue explained that bubbles unfold in stages, an observation backed by 500 years of economic history. “Each mania is obviously different,” he said. “But there are always similarities.”
His concept of the bubble has been passed around finance circles for years. Most recently, John Hussman of Hussman Investment Trust used Rodrigue’s chart to warn investors of what’s to come: -snip
^ If the above is true, this 2+ year old post will age very well:
Originally posted by Bashar Teg
oh well that's what you get when you defer to the stock market as proof of your success. a massive correction could occur, revealing your ineptitude and ignorance.trump pinned his name on a bubble. what a dumbass 😂
Originally posted by Robtard
Why a ‘return to normal’ could mean disaster for the stock marketIt’s hard to deny, although some do, that the stock market, pre-coronavirus, was pushing the limits of what it means to be in a bubble. Of course, bubbles come and go, but as Hofstra University’s Jean-Paul Rodrigue suggests, this one had a particularly fierce tailwind.
“Although manias and bubbles have taken place many times before in history...” he once wrote, “central banks appear to make matters worse by providing too much credit and being unable or unwilling to stop the process with things are getting out of control.”
Rodrigue explained that bubbles unfold in stages, an observation backed by 500 years of economic history. “Each mania is obviously different,” he said. “But there are always similarities.”
His concept of the bubble has been passed around finance circles for years. Most recently, John Hussman of Hussman Investment Trust used Rodrigue’s chart to warn investors of what’s to come: -snip
^ If the above is true, this 2+ year old post will age very well:
All these artificial bubbles they are creating with these 0 % interest rates might spell disaster.
Originally posted by Old Man Whirly!
This is true you guys are oracles up there with Stop the Hate!
whoa let's not get carried away. i appreciate the flattery, but no.
STH likely pulled a doctor manhattan and evolved himself to the point that he warped to higher dimension, which our puny brains could not even comprehend.
we will never see his like again.
Originally posted by Bashar TegThis may be true, O.K. you guys are oracles like the one in Delphi.
whoa let's not get carried away. i appreciate the flattery, but no.STH likely pulled a doctor manhattan and evolved himself to the point that he warped to higher dimension, which our puny brains could not even comprehend.
we will never see his like again.