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-   -   Coin Dealor guage of where we are at (http://goldismoney.info/forums/showthread.php?t=326598)

electric-amish 11-29-2008 10:59 AM

Coin Dealor guage of where we are at
 
I went to local Dealer today.

Bought some Ben Franklin Halfs and checked into other coins.

I was talking with him and his son and said, Real Estate will be important soon if they continue debaseing with bail outs.

he said he said, "I JUST BOUGHT A FARM."

Hes a man with his finger on the pulse for the last 35 years. I was somewhat starteled to have this confirmation from him.

Just a heads up.

E-A

elroy 11-29-2008 11:03 AM

Re: Coin Dealor guage of where we are at
 
In my area tillable ground is going for around $4500-5000 per acre.

Pretty damn high to grow $2.50 corn.

As the ethanol scam winds down the demand for corn will fall.

meatman 11-29-2008 01:12 PM

Re: Coin Dealor guage of where we are at
 
all you need is a couple acres

compass 11-29-2008 01:15 PM

Re: Coin Dealor guage of where we are at
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by elroy (Post 1439971)
As the ethanol scam winds down the demand for corn will fall.

The real problem is corn subsidies to the giant monocropping agribusinesses which have been putting small farmers out of business not ethanol.

Don't trust what is pushed by the old media whores. It's informative to look at the history of the "war against alcohol". David Rockefeller heavily funded the "Women's Christian Temperance Union" which spearhead the crusade for prohibition which ultimately resulted in the 18th amendment. It was repealed after 13 years (by the 21st amendment) by which time dependence on petroleum was already entrenched.

I don't mean to derail the thread but check out this video about alcohol:

And an interesting tidbit from the following site.
http://weblog.timoregan.com/2008/01/...ohibition.html
Quote:

Most people are not aware that Henry Ford's Model T came in a variation that allowed the driver to switch the carburetor to run the engine on farm-made ethyl acohol [sic]. This allowed the operator to stop at local farms (equipped with stills) to refuel his/her car during long trips through the backcountry. After all- the gas station wasn't exactly as ubiquitous in those days, as it is now. The Standard Oil Company and its industrialist-founder John D. Rockefeller wasn't too happy with this arrangement. After all, Rockefeller's company had a virtual monoploly on gasoline at this time in our nation's development.


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