Saturday, December 31, 2011
Friday, December 30, 2011
10 Steps To A Low Or Even Negative Tax Economy, Plus How To Keep Inflation Pegged To 0%
from http://www.themonetarist.org/blog/rules-of-debt-free-money
This document is in the public domain.
Here are 10 steps to going from our overtaxed system today to eliminating taxes or even having negative taxes.
1 – Money Supply Linked To GDP To Eliminate Inflation And Deflation
If the GDP grows by 1% then 1% more money can be created without affecting inflation. The government can use this money to pay for its operations without needing to collect taxes.
Therefore money is only created or destroyed by the people depending on the growth or reduction of the GDP. This eliminates taxation through inflation and depression from deflation.
2 – Elimination Or Near Elimination Of Taxes
Taxation can be reduced or eliminated by growing the GDP each year and creating exactly enough new money to reflect this GDP growth. The new money is used for government operations without having to collect taxes.
This document is in the public domain.
Here are 10 steps to going from our overtaxed system today to eliminating taxes or even having negative taxes.
1 – Money Supply Linked To GDP To Eliminate Inflation And Deflation
If the GDP grows by 1% then 1% more money can be created without affecting inflation. The government can use this money to pay for its operations without needing to collect taxes.
Therefore money is only created or destroyed by the people depending on the growth or reduction of the GDP. This eliminates taxation through inflation and depression from deflation.
2 – Elimination Or Near Elimination Of Taxes
Taxation can be reduced or eliminated by growing the GDP each year and creating exactly enough new money to reflect this GDP growth. The new money is used for government operations without having to collect taxes.
Thursday, December 29, 2011
Greensleeves/ What Child is this
This is a nice version with a little background about its creation. Very nice harp playing too.
Labels:
culture
sola heating system. Not pretty but it works
It ain't pretty but it does save cost in heating Especially if you in a really cold climate
25 clever ideas to make life easier
25 clever ideas to make life easier
Why didn’t I think of that?!We guarrantee you’ll be uttering those words more than once at these ingenious little tips, tricks and ideas that solve everyday problems … some you never knew you had!
Via: amy-newnostalgia.blogspot.com
Above: hull strawberries easily using a straw.more at link
http://www.thedailybuzz.com.au/2011/11/25-clever-ideas_household-tips_storage-ideas/
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Weekend Weather is great!
This is strange info. I am not sure what it means but interesting :)
New research may explain why serious thunderstorms and tornados are less prevalent on the weekends
December 22, 2011 by Bob Yirka EnlargeImage credit: AGU
(PhysOrg.com) -- For much of the last century, people in parts of the United States have come to notice that just as they got the weekends off to relax, so too did it seem, did serious weather. Big booming thunderstorms that produced large hail and/or tornados, seemed to strike at will during the week, but come the weekend, things grew quiet. While there have been many theories as to why this might be, mostly religion based, it hasn’t been until much more recently that researchers have begun to take a closer lookhttp://www.physorg.com/news/2011-12-thunderstorms-tornados-prevalent-weekends.html
Co-op Health Care a third way! part I
a true pioneer who may well help revolutionize your relationship with our healthcare system. This idea goes along with the Catholic Distributism, anti-monopoly and benefits to greatest amount of people. Co-ops is a Distributist idea.
Part II
Part II
EXPLODING THE MYTHS ABOUT MONEY
It's difficult to find a good book that will help a person become literate about our modern money supply. Most that are accurate are hopelessly dense and written for graduate students in economics....Ellen Brown has translated a dense subject into a readable and fascinating story....Web of Debt by Ellen Brown not only demystifies money, but provides some thought-provoking and realistic solutions to our nation's dangerous dependence on a for-profit banking system that is sucking the financial lifeblood out of our nation.
http://www.webofdebt.com/
http://www.webofdebt.com/
MONEY=DEBT-- Economic 101
If we fail to understand that our economy is run on debt, we will fail to understand our economy nor our political environment.
This video explains well,if someone takes out a mortgage, they have created money into the system. (This took me awhile to understand because I was focused on the Fed. The Fed loans to government but that isn't all the money supply just the debt of the government) When we pay off the loan that money disappears from the system.
So.... when all these house mortgages collapsed it was like paying off the loan and all that money disappeared from the system. This means that we were heading for a depression because when there isn't enough money we have a depression. That is why the Fed has been printing money like it is going out of style to equal the money lost by failed mortgages. There is still less money in our system than in 2008. Although we may have a slight inflation now.
The reason the Great Depression was so bad was that the Gold standard limited the amount of money the Fed could put into the system when the loans failed in 1929.
It starts slow so be patient
This video explains well,if someone takes out a mortgage, they have created money into the system. (This took me awhile to understand because I was focused on the Fed. The Fed loans to government but that isn't all the money supply just the debt of the government) When we pay off the loan that money disappears from the system.
So.... when all these house mortgages collapsed it was like paying off the loan and all that money disappeared from the system. This means that we were heading for a depression because when there isn't enough money we have a depression. That is why the Fed has been printing money like it is going out of style to equal the money lost by failed mortgages. There is still less money in our system than in 2008. Although we may have a slight inflation now.
The reason the Great Depression was so bad was that the Gold standard limited the amount of money the Fed could put into the system when the loans failed in 1929.
It starts slow so be patient
Secret of OZ--understanding Monatery Reform
This is an important for us to understand our economic system and possible answers to its reform. It covers the history and problems inherent int eh system.
Alternative Energy--LFTRs
I used to be opposed to Nuclear energy but this new LFTR technology has changed my mind. Energy is as much of a key to our society as economy in a sense you could say we are on the crude oil standard. Third World countries can only really seek development and health by cheap clean energy. LFTRs can't be used for nuclear weapons.
Just watch the first 5 minutes, which will help you to understand the importance of this technology. The rest of the video is for a deeper understanding of nukes in general. Lets get informed.
Just watch the first 5 minutes, which will help you to understand the importance of this technology. The rest of the video is for a deeper understanding of nukes in general. Lets get informed.
Thursday, December 15, 2011
Greatest year in Hollywood Film 1939
The Greatest Year for Films Ever: 1939
The most distinguished, pinnacle year in the movies has to be 1939, with many of the greatest, most diverse and superlative movies ever produced in one year. There were ten films nominated for Best Picture that year (not five) for Academy Awards, and four of them were independent productions - (1) Hal Roach's Of Mice and Men (1939), (2) Walter Wanger's Stagecoach (1939) - director John Ford's only Western during the 1930s - a frontier classic that revitalized the A-budget Western, emphasized characterizations, and catapulted the career of John Wayne out of routine, small-scale roles, (3) Sam Goldwyn's and William Wyler's tale of ill-fated lovers in Wuthering Heights (1939) [the Yorkshire moors were realistically re-created on land 50 miles from Hollywood], and the eventual winner (4) David O. Selznick's and MGM's Gone With the Wind (1939) with Victor Fleming credited as director among others. The Best Picture winner sold more tickets than any other picture - and Hattie McDaniel's Best Supporting Actress Oscar win (for her role as Mammy) made her the first African-American Oscar winner. It was also the first color film to win the 'Best Picture' award.
The other six nominated films in 1939 were MGM's big-budget The Wizard of Oz (1939) (credited as directed by Victor Fleming) with emerging star Judy Garland in the colorful magical Munchkinland and land of Oz, MGM's Goodbye, Mr. Chips (1939) starring Robert Donat and Greer Garson, Columbia's and Frank Capra's Mr. Smith Goes to Washington (1939), MGM's Ninotchka (1939) - Garbo's first starring comedy in which she "laughs," WB's Dark Victory (1939), and RKO's Love Affair (1939). Two other lesser-known Westerns, besides Ford's, also contributed to the rebirth of the Western in the 30s: Dodge City (1939), an Errol Flynn Western-style swashbuckler, and Cecil B. DeMille's epic, Union Pacific (1939).
1939 boasted other great classic films of enduring quality: The Roaring Twenties (1939), Destry Rides Again (1939) - Marlene Dietrich's come-back film, Only Angels Have Wings (1939), Young Mr. Lincoln (1939), Beau Geste (1939), the all-female The Women (1939), a re-make of The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1939) with Charles Laughton, and The Old Maid (1939) with Bette Davis.
As a footnote to the decade, three of the best directors in the decade of the 1970s were born in the year 1939: Francis Ford Coppola, William Friedkin, and Peter Bogdanovich.
The most distinguished, pinnacle year in the movies has to be 1939, with many of the greatest, most diverse and superlative movies ever produced in one year. There were ten films nominated for Best Picture that year (not five) for Academy Awards, and four of them were independent productions - (1) Hal Roach's Of Mice and Men (1939), (2) Walter Wanger's Stagecoach (1939) - director John Ford's only Western during the 1930s - a frontier classic that revitalized the A-budget Western, emphasized characterizations, and catapulted the career of John Wayne out of routine, small-scale roles, (3) Sam Goldwyn's and William Wyler's tale of ill-fated lovers in Wuthering Heights (1939) [the Yorkshire moors were realistically re-created on land 50 miles from Hollywood], and the eventual winner (4) David O. Selznick's and MGM's Gone With the Wind (1939) with Victor Fleming credited as director among others. The Best Picture winner sold more tickets than any other picture - and Hattie McDaniel's Best Supporting Actress Oscar win (for her role as Mammy) made her the first African-American Oscar winner. It was also the first color film to win the 'Best Picture' award.
The other six nominated films in 1939 were MGM's big-budget The Wizard of Oz (1939) (credited as directed by Victor Fleming) with emerging star Judy Garland in the colorful magical Munchkinland and land of Oz, MGM's Goodbye, Mr. Chips (1939) starring Robert Donat and Greer Garson, Columbia's and Frank Capra's Mr. Smith Goes to Washington (1939), MGM's Ninotchka (1939) - Garbo's first starring comedy in which she "laughs," WB's Dark Victory (1939), and RKO's Love Affair (1939). Two other lesser-known Westerns, besides Ford's, also contributed to the rebirth of the Western in the 30s: Dodge City (1939), an Errol Flynn Western-style swashbuckler, and Cecil B. DeMille's epic, Union Pacific (1939).
1939 boasted other great classic films of enduring quality: The Roaring Twenties (1939), Destry Rides Again (1939) - Marlene Dietrich's come-back film, Only Angels Have Wings (1939), Young Mr. Lincoln (1939), Beau Geste (1939), the all-female The Women (1939), a re-make of The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1939) with Charles Laughton, and The Old Maid (1939) with Bette Davis.
As a footnote to the decade, three of the best directors in the decade of the 1970s were born in the year 1939: Francis Ford Coppola, William Friedkin, and Peter Bogdanovich.
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