Subject: The Sky Already Has Fallen, Folks...
Date: Tue, 11 Dec 2007 13:35:53 -0500
www.ConspiracyPenPal.com
The Sky Already has Fallen
by Edgar J. Steele
December 11, 2007
Here's an
email notice I just received from a correspondent:
_______________________________________
CompUSA going out of business. Possible big discounts
starting Wednesday.
Normally, when a store goes out of business, it means an
"everything must go" sale, and CompUSA's will be no
exception.
_______________________________
CompUSA is
a big chain. Time was, this would be front-page news all over
America. Bet you don't hear about it at all, except from this
single email. Lots of companies this size are going under now,
but you don't hear about them.
Take
this as a sign of the times. GM now has negative equity of $74
per share. Ford should have gone under a year ago. When
I was working in San Francisco as a financial analyst, line banks
would use their loan covenants to force corporate
takeovers/dissolutions when book value got low. GM's is negative,
fercrissakes! Difference is, GM and Ford are too big
to let go out of business - too noticeable to Americanus
Stupidus.
Same
thing with gas prices. That's why diesel, which always has
been cheaper, now costs a bunch more than gas - they keep the gas
prices low so as not to unduly alarm the sheep.
I
had my wife drop the pickup off at the dealer recently, asking her
to tell them to replace the glow-plug relay, which obviously had
gone bad due to the hard-starting and smoking symptoms. I just
found out that they charged us $253 for a part I should have bought
off eBay ($40, including shipping) and replaced myself (3 screws) -
a repair I have done myself before on other diesel vehicles. $253!!!
I have a call in to the service department, which I have used for 15
years, and can hardly wait to hear their excuse. They just
lost my business, of course.
I
expect lots of local business failures due to customer losses
in the face of pricing practices just like this, which now are
pandemic throughout America. I'm going to start changing my
own oil again, too, just like I used to, after 30 years of having
others do it for me. How about you? There goes Jiffy
Lube.
I
just got a pitch from UCLA's law school for donations. Part of
it was a recounting of tuition cost through the years, designed to
cause me to want to send in a check. The only thing that it
made clear to me is that we mere mortals no longer can
afford a professional education and that it is time to close down
UCLA's law school!
Though
second only to UC Berkeley's Boalt Hall law school in quality for
public universities in America, UCLA and Boalt Hall still are
publicly-funded colleges, so must be accessible. When I attended
UCLA Law School (1979-1982), my total tuition for three years
was $2,500. If you started at UCLA law this past fall, you
will pay $87,000 in tuition alone before you finish - and that
is in-state, resident tuition, too. I can't afford to
send my kids to such a school, but you know who gets free rides.
I
hurt my back when some dumb cluck teenager backed into my car in a
parking lot this past fall, so had to hire others to cut wood for
our winter heat. Couldn't get anybody local to respond to my
ad offering $10, then $12 per hour, cash. I finally got
two guys to commute 1 and 2 hours, respectively, to cut wood for me
for $15 per hour.
Maybe
there really are jobs that we won't do anymore.
I
call the two current generations the "lost generations,"
because they don't want to work, don't know how to work and won't
show up when they agree to work. What America really needs is
the financial enema she is about to receive. Unfortunately, a
good smacking from World War is going to accompany it, thanks to our
friends in the ranks of The Chosen.
Already,
we are hurtling into the abyss, folks, and they are doing everything
they can to lie to us about it.
Think
not? Watch this video of CNBC
hacks at work:
N
ote how, halfway through, the anchor quickly cuts off the guest
when he both accuses the govt of lying in statistics and actually
mentions discontinuance of the reporting of M3. Then,
shortly after that, the guest says he believes the US economy is a
house of cards and that the world is teetering on the brink
of financial collapse, whereupon the anchor again steps in,
recharacterizes what the guest just said as "recession"
and breezily changes the subject for the balance of the interview.
This
is how it is done, folks, even when they get someone honest and
knowledgable on TV. This is why the average American is
just so damned stupid!
(Not you, of course. Your mere presence on this list
proves you to be far from average.)
The sky isn't falling - it
already has fallen and lies about us in broken shards that
are obvious if we just open our eyes.
-ed