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Re: Martin Armstrong

Posted: 16 Mar 2012, 14:55
by Obi-Wan
For the fans... interview met M.A. Armstrong

Link F.S.

Jim welcomes back Martin Armstrong of Armstrong Econonics.com. Martin believes "capital knows something is wrong" and we’re past the tipping point of the debt crisis. He sees the crisis rotating from Europe to Japan and finally reaching the US, with devastating results. As to gold, he believes the best thing for gold would be a correction this year and a healthy period of consolidation, setting the stage for a launch higher as the debt crisis worsens.

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Re: Martin Armstrong

Posted: 19 Mar 2012, 07:24
by Rasta
Anatomy of a Debt Crisis
only Julius Caesar understood
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Re: Martin Armstrong

Posted: 19 Mar 2012, 13:21
by Rasta
SEC supports Goldman Sachs
v Shareholders
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Re: Martin Armstrong

Posted: 20 Mar 2012, 08:21
by Rasta
"Nuclear economic war", has started, by taking Iran out of the SWIFT system. But that will backfire as the US is dependent on selling of treasuries to the Iranian allies.


Re: Martin Armstrong

Posted: 20 Mar 2012, 17:59
by Indiana Jones
Mmmm, does Martin agree with this Sinclair interview in his own thread ?
:lol: :lol: :lol:

Re: Martin Armstrong

Posted: 20 Mar 2012, 20:26
by Rasta
Indiana Jones wrote:Mmmm, does Martin agree with this Sinclair interview in his own thread ?
:lol: :lol: :lol:
Probably not, pasted in the "wrong" thread.....

Re: Martin Armstrong

Posted: 20 Mar 2012, 20:36
by Indiana Jones
thought so ..... :lol: ;), but again it's a must hear interview. James is spot on.

Re: Martin Armstrong

Posted: 21 Mar 2012, 00:50
by Paul
Rasta wrote:Anatomy of a Debt Crisis
only Julius Caesar understood
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brilliant article
Armstrong wrote:Therefore, Caesar is the only politician who seems not only to have risen to the level of a statesman and not merely acting out of self-interest for his party or for himself, but he saw the dynamic relationship that constitutes value. He realized that value is merely a tangible concept in and of itself

Caesar realized that money is not a constant. Neither are assets. The only constant is time.

Re: Martin Armstrong

Posted: 23 Mar 2012, 05:48
by Malcolm
Armstrong on Caesar is a very interesting and thought provoking piece. It isn't the Caesar I read about as a teenager! Armstrong's use of Roman coins to illustrate his points is excellent.

My only objection is when Armstrong suggests we need a new Caesar. I am not interested in a proposal that requires a superman.

Malcolm

Re: Martin Armstrong

Posted: 25 Mar 2012, 16:53
by Paul
I think he suggests the opposite

it is not the superman we need, it is the self sacrifice we lost.
Caesar paid with his life ...