Silver getting crushed today

Discussion in 'Bullion Investing' started by Soiled, Apr 1, 2016.

  1. TommyP

    TommyP BS detector

    No corp
    orate
    No corporate types IS a step in the right direction. Thanks brother. You'll be staying here?
     
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  3. TommyP

    TommyP BS detector

    The chopped responses are a result of tracking attempts and I get tired of correcting them so, let the trackers fix them.
     
  4. V. Kurt Bellman

    V. Kurt Bellman Yes, I'm blunt! Get over your "feeeeelings".

    Nah, the last time I drew a paycheck from a corporation was 1975. My best plan is to retire in the British Isles, far away from major cities. I figger I'll meet my demise instinctively pulling right in what should have been a near-miss vehicle collision.
     
    Last edited: Feb 13, 2017
  5. TommyP

    TommyP BS detector

    Good for you. I can only hope God doesn't recognize class (or maybe I do). So long as he doesn't make me sit next to them (assuming they're there at all)..
     
  6. bdunnse

    bdunnse Who dat?

    Are there any costs/tax benefits to retiring there? Do you pay taxes in both countries? What about healthcare?
     
  7. TommyP

    TommyP BS detector

    I don't think the top tiers worry or care about these things nationally. Don't think it matters to them (being so incredibly rich already and all). It's only the working poor that need worry.
     
  8. V. Kurt Bellman

    V. Kurt Bellman Yes, I'm blunt! Get over your "feeeeelings".

    I prefer to not get into my healthcare status. It's so generous it embarrasses me. Suffice it to say I'll have to pay cash up front and send claims back stateside, for small stuff. Hospitalization requires pre-auth.
     
    bdunnse likes this.
  9. V. Kurt Bellman

    V. Kurt Bellman Yes, I'm blunt! Get over your "feeeeelings".

    If you think I'm anything other than lower middle class, you're wrong. I'm educated like a patrician, but I'm not one. Scholarships can buy you an education, but not acceptance at the "right sort of people, Buffy" table.
     
  10. TommyP

    TommyP BS detector

    Let's hope that "In God we Trust" on our coinage actually represents a true God. I know I am (hoping).
     
  11. TommyP

    TommyP BS detector

    We all think things about others that may or may not be true. I'm resigned to letting God decide who is what. Meanwhile, I just try to insulate myself as best possible and pray and thank my lucky stars I can afford to live apart from those that I don't think too much of, and be thankful I'll not have to be in a position to be under these kinds of folks thumbs.
     
  12. V. Kurt Bellman

    V. Kurt Bellman Yes, I'm blunt! Get over your "feeeeelings".

    At the end of the analysis, it doesn't get much better than that. Just to be clear, I live among the Amish. If it DOES go all sideways, my neighbors are the ones I want to learn my new skills from.
     
  13. TommyP

    TommyP BS detector

    We agree on that. Imagine.
     
  14. desertgem

    desertgem Senior Errer Collecktor Supporter

    Lets keep the Religion discussion limited to numismatics please ( Rules).
     
  15. TommyP

    TommyP BS detector

    Apologies. Tough to not respond to baiting on occasion.
     
  16. desertgem

    desertgem Senior Errer Collecktor Supporter

    Tommy, I know Kurt can be a pain sometimes, but he was playing nice here, and I saw no baiting in the previous several pages. Jim
     
  17. V. Kurt Bellman

    V. Kurt Bellman Yes, I'm blunt! Get over your "feeeeelings".

    @bdunnse, I have now explored U.K. emigration (I love their coinage - what could be a better retirement?) for several years. Right now, a prospective immigrant to the Blessed Plot has to prove they won't be a burden to the social safety net in Britain. Eligibility to work part time to supplement retirement income is the present bugaboo. Now IF a certain new head of state actually manages to get a free trade pact done with the U.K., as he claims he wants to, the same sort of eligibility to work there that used to attach to EU citizens MAY, just MAY, fall to U.S. citizens.

    I have the time to wait for developments.
     
    bdunnse likes this.
  18. V. Kurt Bellman

    V. Kurt Bellman Yes, I'm blunt! Get over your "feeeeelings".

    Back atcha there, Jim. I'm still learning what things trip your trigger. I consider it a challenge to learn it. I still find Doug less inscrutable.

    By the way, Jim, in all fairness, you did miss one. The place I recommended was the site of the Chernobyl disaster.
     
  19. desertgem

    desertgem Senior Errer Collecktor Supporter

    As per policy: Religion, politics, World events :)
     
  20. Clawcoins

    Clawcoins Damaging Coins Daily

    Having neighbors that livelihoods are built around manual labor from housing to carts, farming etc would be very handy in episodes of complete disaster, though lacking catastrophies of nuclear war. Learning to build by hand and have no light bulbs (in general) can be very handy. But then so are Bushwhacking skills which is a little more primitive and portable and self contained. Imagine how many cows would be poached if a true total economic disaster occurred.

    If petroleum distilling stopped I'm curious how many months/years? worth of gasoline stockpiles the US has before it dissolved. Gasoline could be worth more than silver or gold.

    But then one would have to learn new, though ancient ways of silver mining so we could at least maintain some value in silver as it now would be a localized economic thing. No more charts of spot silver, just pure bartering for the shiny silver stuff. I wonder how many ppl bartered Platinum away without knowing it ...
    [​IMG]

    gotta learn how to Mint silver and gold coins by hand again ... grab a couple heavy hammers :)
     
  21. TommyP

    TommyP BS detector

    We're all entitled to our opinions and I've already been exposed to that scenario and those cards and I came out on the short end so.
     
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