The following is a great positive post. I believe this post and the one I just posted here both go hand in hand. Both are about taking back one’s power in a quietly revolutionary way that socks it to the buzztards who have created our overly consumer-based society for their gain and our pain.
This quality of
quantity approach only makes sense. I have always felt if I was going to take
in the calories for chocolate it is worth buying less of the best than more of
the crappy waxy stuff. Throw in free trade and GMO free and I consume a lot
less chocky which is much better in the long run and sooo much more valuable an
experience ~ savouring the melt instead of the greedy gobble down.
Some of us don't have any option at all, of course, but if enough of us do this quality thing, it will KILL walmart quality and perhaps also result in more small home grown businesses that cater to the needs of the locals. Homemade integrity and quality, as well as wealth sharing beats the proffered current options any day!
Some of us don't have any option at all, of course, but if enough of us do this quality thing, it will KILL walmart quality and perhaps also result in more small home grown businesses that cater to the needs of the locals. Homemade integrity and quality, as well as wealth sharing beats the proffered current options any day!
Perhaps even a
different finance structure where even bartering upon occasion could be called
into play could be devised. The options are many and all of them good. THIS
approach, keeping money in our local communities, would really hurt Wall
Street, extra added bonanza!
RECLAIM OUR
BORN NATURAL RIGHTS
AS HUMAN
BEINGS,
CITIZENS OF
OUR PLANET.
These are the
actions of revolutionaries today. Breast feeding. Home schooling. Mom (or Dad) staying
home with the family. Family garden plots. Buying local.
SCREW THE
NWO,
LET PEOPLE
EMBRACE THE LAO. (LOCAL AREA OPTION).
Where I live
there is even a line of grocery shops that are 100-mile only goods. They make
their own pepperonis, meats, etc. which bypass by FAR the woody unhealthy stuff
in regular markets. Want jerky? Buy it made by the local people in the old
ways.
Once I tried
store bought jerky and gave it to the dog after one attempt at chewing it. Give
me the real stuff any time. The only thing is now I do not balance it with a
pepsi; water or natural pop will do.
Everything is
from either the island (I live on one) or just into the BC interior. We are
lucky to have that option so the 100 mile diet is very doable if you can handle
some of the limitations. More of this is good. The produce is GMO free,
natural, and shipping is minimal.
If enough of us
combine this attitude with the quality of goods and only purchase the few
things we cannot find created locally, Wall Street would be hurting at some
point. Monsanto and big agri would have less control. Anyhow, it is worth checking out people.
October 4, 2011
By Bill Bonner
"Have we told you where we think the US and other developed countries are headed? No? Well, things won’t necessarily be so bad. In a few words: the lust for MORE will become a lust for BETTER. Yes, the age of easy growth is over. You probably won’t make any money buying stocks. And your house will never return to the levels of ’05-’06. And oh yes…you may not be able to get a job.
But that’s the good news.
We’ll deal with the bad news some other day.
Today, we’re going to stick with this good news. People in the
developed countries are going to stop thinking so much about GDP, which
measures the gross amount of economic activity. Instead, they will be thinking
about the quality of it.
They’ll switch from thinking about their standard of living,
measured in dollars or pounds or euros, and begin worrying more about the
quality of their lives.
They’ll stop competing to accumulate more than their neighbors;
they will want better instead.
First, let’s look at what happened last week…and last quarter. It was the worst quarter for stocks and commodities since 2008. Worldwide, stocks lost 17% ~ or about $8 trillion. The Dow took a big drop on Friday, ending the quarter just under 11,000. Commodities were hit hard too ~ with copper surprising the experts by dropping more than they expected.
First, let’s look at what happened last week…and last quarter. It was the worst quarter for stocks and commodities since 2008. Worldwide, stocks lost 17% ~ or about $8 trillion. The Dow took a big drop on Friday, ending the quarter just under 11,000. Commodities were hit hard too ~ with copper surprising the experts by dropping more than they expected.
Of course, the experts are always surprised.
That’s what makes them experts.
But the fall in copper is significant. Because copper is what producers use to make things. If you make a refrigerator, you need copper. Ditto a telephone. Or an automobile. Or almost anything. So, when copper goes down it sends a message: the economy is slowing down.
Most likely, the whole world is slowing down. And the US will be
back in recession this quarter. In the last quarter, US GDP growth was clocked
at 1.3%. This quarter, it will probably be negative. Not that it particularly
matters. It is probably more accurate to say that the economy never fully came
out of the recession of ’07-’08. But no matter from what angle you look at it,
the US economy begins to resemble the economy of Japan in the ’90s and ’00s.
On-again, off-again recession…with a ZIRP (zero interest rates policy)…low
yields…and a government that runs huge deficits in order to keep the economy
from dying completely.
Yes, dear reader, the world is a lot poorer than it was in June.
But back then people still thought the Bernanke team was engineering a
‘recovery.’ Now we know, recovery hopes were fantasies.
This is not an economy that can recover.
It has to die.
Then, a new economy will take its place.
WHAT WILL THAT NEW ECONOMY LOOK LIKE?
Here is an article from the Wharton School that helps understand
it:
"Sandy used to eat lunch out five days a week, indulge in premium cable on-demand and duck regularly into Starbucks for $4 coffees. Then the recession hit, and business at the jewelry boutique she had just opened tanked. By the time she started her YesIAmCheap.com blog in January 2009 as a way to make herself more accountable for her spending, her business had failed and she was $105,665.31 in debt. Today, the 33-year-old New Yorker owes $85,605.73. She packs her lunch, limits movie nights to $1 Redbox videos and mostly opts for coffee from Dunkin’ Donuts ~ with the occasional splurge for a Starbucks pumpkin spice latte.”
“They’re small changes but they add up over time,” notes Sandy,
who will not divulge her last name but shares the details of her finances
online. Moreover, she says she doesn’t plan to change her spending habits when
the economy improves because she has “embraced the cheap.” Although she used to
prefer the word “frugal” because she thought it sounded French, “it’s not as
negative as it [once was] to be called cheap. It’s almost a badge of honor.”
After more than three years of belt-tightening, the word “cheap” is losing its stigma. Experts at Wharton and elsewhere say the recession has shifted priorities for consumers, who are now more willing to trade quality for a lower price. While some argue that consumers will go back to spending freely as good times return, others say Americans have permanently embraced a cheapskate philosophy, and are unlikely to go back to their spendthrift ways anytime soon.
Many people are also getting back to basics, rethinking what matters in life, and concluding that expensive products may not be worth the cost.
After more than three years of belt-tightening, the word “cheap” is losing its stigma. Experts at Wharton and elsewhere say the recession has shifted priorities for consumers, who are now more willing to trade quality for a lower price. While some argue that consumers will go back to spending freely as good times return, others say Americans have permanently embraced a cheapskate philosophy, and are unlikely to go back to their spendthrift ways anytime soon.
Many people are also getting back to basics, rethinking what matters in life, and concluding that expensive products may not be worth the cost.
Wharton marketing professor, Cassie Mogilner, who studies the
relationship between time, money and happiness, has found that time is a more
“personally meaningful resource” than money for most people.
Our interpretation of these facts…
MORE IS DEAD.
LONG LIVE BETTER.
Everywhere we look in the developed world, more no longer pays.
You can’t sell more products, because population growth is
slowing…or actually turning negative.
You can’t build bigger houses ~ who’s got the money to buy
them…or heat them?
Bigger automobiles are out too ~ the price of gasoline is
rising.
For the first 200 years of the machine age, we had the whole
world’s energy resources almost to ourselves. They were close at hand…and
cheap. Now, they are deep…distant and difficult…and we have to compete with 3
billion people in the emerging markets for them.
You can forget about using more energy to grow your economy.
That was the formula for 200 years.
But now we’ve passed the point of diminishing returns. More energy
inputs ~ at higher prices ~ don’t pay.
You can’t spend more money ~ because you can’t get more.
You can’t borrow more either, because you have no way to pay it
back.
So, the developed world shifts…from more to better. You can see
it clearly here in Europe.
People don’t necessarily care about having more stuff.Or more energy.Or even more money.They look for ways to save what they’ve got…and to enjoy it more.They don’t want more house…they want a better house.They don’t want more food…they want better food.They don’t want more money….they want a better quality of life with lots of holidays!
Trouble is, the institutions that have developed over the last
200 years depend on more, not better.
France, for example, can give people longer retirements and more
health care, but only when the economy is growing. Otherwise, they can’t afford
it. Sure, it can tax the rich. But as taxes rise, the rich flee…or become poor.
When that juice is used up, it can tax the future. It’s easy, at
first. Because babies don’t vote! But when the supply of babies falls, the
government soon runs into trouble. The future runs out of money. Lenders can
see what is coming.
They know future generations won’t be willing or able to keep
up. Then, the model no longer works.
Without growth, governments must cut spending to only what they can raise in taxes. But then, the whole bargain falls apart.
Without growth, governments must cut spending to only what they can raise in taxes. But then, the whole bargain falls apart.
Modern government depends on MORE…getting more and more tax
revenues…increasing benefits…borrowing more and more money…and spending more.
Voters have to believe that they will get more in “benefits”
than they pay in taxes. But without growth, they will get less in benefits than
they, collectively, pay in taxes. Because government is a wasteful, parasitic
enterprise. It doesn’t add to GDP, it subtracts from it.
And when GDP is stagnant anyway, the extra drag of a leech
government may be more than people will stand.
Households, corporations, economies…and governments…will be
forced to make the transition, from more to better.
How many of today’s major developed-economy governments will
survive in their present form?
None is our guess.
And which one is LEAST likely to survive?
The USA. Because the USA is the only one that still believes
that MORE is the solution to every problem.
The world economy is in a slump.
The world economy is in a slump.
Europe tries austerity. America sticks with more. No serious
effort has been made to trim the US government budget. US economists argue for
more spending, not less.
And Obama’s latest jobs program is merely another spending scam.
The US also has an over-developed confidence in its military
forces. Their solution to every geo-political issue? More force…more
weapons…more meddling. This is where the good news ends.”
http://dailyreckoning.com/
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