YOUR FRIDGE IS DIRTY
My dad says "buy silver" and if you know anything about me, I never conclude any entries with the topic I started on, so I'm really gonna go off on a tangent here.
http://www.manilatimes.net/national/2004/jun/05/yehey/life/20040605lif1.html
It's about new appliances that use little pieces of silver to kill bacteria, particle physicists, and other forms of disease (it doesn't really but it'd be nice).
Go see a particle physicist in a theater near you (they tend to be actors too because they're all fakeing stuff) and ask him how to travel back in time. Perhaps 27 or so years in the past. You'll immediately see the financial advantage and bring all sorts of modern drivel to the particle physicist and you'll ask him "how do I go to the past and sell all this crap?" He'll then pertend to know about "atoms" and "temporal physics" and talk your ears off (if you're lucky- in most cases your brain will atrophy and you'll start being obsessed with shiny objects). On the off chance that he actually can get you back to 1977, you'll notice that money is worth more, and you'll use that $5 in your pocket to purchase the following:
-> various shiny objects
-> IBM stock
-> Butterfinger bars
-> Significant parts of Central New York (people were smarter then and saw that it's a wasteland)
-> A private yackt (damn I hope I spelt that right)
-> Several oceans to place the Yackt in
Basically, stuff was cheaper then, people earned less, you could do more per dollar. Now go here.
http://www.sharelynx.com/chartsfixed/SI.gif
Yes, the metal silver is the same price as it was in 1977. It didn't double, triple, quadruple, like everything else did. Just some food for thought. Silver, unlike US money, cannot be printed. It has to be mined out of the ground, a tedious process whose methods haven't improved much over the last quarter-century. The price, theoretically, should rise like everything else.
But it didn't. Maybe someday it will, rapidly, to catch up with everything else.
I have a significant part of my net worth (total $7, which is the estimated street value of the lint in my pocket and various intellectual property which can be found at http://atomicbartbeans.blogspot.com) invested in silver. Do you? Just pick up some quarters made before 1964 (they're all silver). Find 'em yourself or buy 'em for less than a dollar apiece on eBay.
More investment advice soon to come...
http://www.manilatimes.net/national/2004/jun/05/yehey/life/20040605lif1.html
It's about new appliances that use little pieces of silver to kill bacteria, particle physicists, and other forms of disease (it doesn't really but it'd be nice).
Go see a particle physicist in a theater near you (they tend to be actors too because they're all fakeing stuff) and ask him how to travel back in time. Perhaps 27 or so years in the past. You'll immediately see the financial advantage and bring all sorts of modern drivel to the particle physicist and you'll ask him "how do I go to the past and sell all this crap?" He'll then pertend to know about "atoms" and "temporal physics" and talk your ears off (if you're lucky- in most cases your brain will atrophy and you'll start being obsessed with shiny objects). On the off chance that he actually can get you back to 1977, you'll notice that money is worth more, and you'll use that $5 in your pocket to purchase the following:
-> various shiny objects
-> IBM stock
-> Butterfinger bars
-> Significant parts of Central New York (people were smarter then and saw that it's a wasteland)
-> A private yackt (damn I hope I spelt that right)
-> Several oceans to place the Yackt in
Basically, stuff was cheaper then, people earned less, you could do more per dollar. Now go here.
http://www.sharelynx.com/chartsfixed/SI.gif
Yes, the metal silver is the same price as it was in 1977. It didn't double, triple, quadruple, like everything else did. Just some food for thought. Silver, unlike US money, cannot be printed. It has to be mined out of the ground, a tedious process whose methods haven't improved much over the last quarter-century. The price, theoretically, should rise like everything else.
But it didn't. Maybe someday it will, rapidly, to catch up with everything else.
I have a significant part of my net worth (total $7, which is the estimated street value of the lint in my pocket and various intellectual property which can be found at http://atomicbartbeans.blogspot.com) invested in silver. Do you? Just pick up some quarters made before 1964 (they're all silver). Find 'em yourself or buy 'em for less than a dollar apiece on eBay.
More investment advice soon to come...
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