If it's as grim as that dull old fellow insists it is, then maybe now we'll finally have that "Mad Max" future I've been hoping for.
Meanwhile, here's my personal check list:
*78 rifles and handguns *260,000 hollow-point rounds *2 tons of canned and freeze-dried foods *Water filter/purifier *Entropy Prayer Book *Macho T-shirt slogan (piss yellow in color): "I'm a Friend of Eddie Coyle's"
If it's as grim as that dull old fellow insists it is, then maybe now we'll finally have that "Mad Max" future I've been hoping for.
Who knows? Nobody can't tell for sure. All I know is that the US economy was hit bad in 2008 and therefore FSM had to close because Silver Age scores ceased to sell.
I hope we'll avoid a case of Soylent Green. I'm not mad about biscuits.
I rob banks on a regular basis to support my drug habit.
I also have a real job to make the IRS happy. If I ever get audited I'll tell them my hard drive crashed and I lost two years worth of financial information.
I rob banks on a regular basis to support my drug habit.
I also have a real job to make the IRS happy. If I ever get audited I'll tell them my hard drive crashed and I lost two years worth of financial information.
That's ok, the CEO's of said banks are robbing us to support their drug habits.
But we must also be wise enough to know in this game of life, we will always have so called experts telling us all the time in the near future , this or that will collapse and it so often does not quite happen the way they say it will. What is that common statement? The world will end tomorrow , it always does.
But we must also be wise enough to know in this game of life, we will always have so called experts telling us all the time in the near future , this or that will collapse and it so often does not quite happen the way they say it will. What is that common statement? The world will end tomorrow , it always does.
I tend to agree with you. The future is 'never' written in advance…
It has always amused me that a financial 'instrument' called a 'derivative' was allowed to become ensconed within the framework of financial doubletalk.
The mathematical derivative, from which the financial one seems to have been 'derived' is an altogether different species of functional entity. It is a noble artefact from Calculus which has opened up science in a big way. It is truthful and clean. The name is sullied by it's fraudulent mis-application in the financial underworld. The word 'derivative' has been laundered in such a way as to make something originally clean and wholesome, henceforth, linked with piles of s***.