
candrewb5
121 posts


@LawrenceLepard I'd rather they get it over with now rather than when I am elderly.
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@LarsLarsonShow Yes, as a Washingtonian, I’m all for Portland acting as a regional derelict sink.
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I don’t think people understand what is going to happen to Germany in 10-15 years time: huge unemployment by deliberate economic suicide combined with millions of structurally unemployable welfare-entitled migrants will cause a total collapse of the welfare state and civil-war like circumstances.
Nikolaus M@foxofreason
"Their job market is crashing. Send in 10 million more immigrants."
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@RealRickRule Not to diminish, but how is this any more significant than when this happened four years ago?
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@hermes5210 @intlmandotcom No fan of Trump, but this was in the cards since 9/11.
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@intlmandotcom And the blame for it all falls squarely on Trump and his failed presidency
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The 10-year Treasury yield is perhaps the most important financial benchmark in the global fiat system, as it drives valuations and market trends worldwide. It is widely—and erroneously—regarded as the risk-free rate of return.
The 10-year Treasury yield can be thought of as a key barometer of the US dollar-based fiat system—a critical measure akin to its beating heart.
Bond yields move inversely to bond prices. When bond prices fall, bond yields rise.
A rising 10-year Treasury yield signals trouble for the US dollar because it means investors are selling Treasuries, which pushes up the US government’s borrowing costs. That is why the 10-year Treasury yield is a major pain point for the US government.
The 10-year Treasury yield was 3.97% when the war started. Now it is around 4.60%, an increase of roughly 63 basis points.
I expect the 10-year Treasury yield to keep climbing over the coming weeks and months—until it forces the Fed’s hand. At that point, the intervention will be sold as “stability,” but the mechanism will be familiar: suppress yields by debasing the currency.
At today’s debt levels, every 1 basis point increase in the government’s average borrowing cost adds roughly $3.9 billion in annual interest expense. So a 63 bps rise is not trivial—it translates to nearly $250 billion in additional yearly interest costs, materially widening a 2025 budget deficit that was already around $1.8 trillion.
Higher yields mean the US government must pay tens or even hundreds of billions more in interest on its debt. At the same time, the global economy faces even greater added costs because Treasury rates serve as the benchmark for borrowing worldwide.
That is not an insignificant move. However, given all the headwinds I have discussed, I suspect the 10-year Treasury yield is headed much higher because investors will demand higher yields to compensate for rising inflation. Further, if Hormuz remains closed, drastically higher oil prices are all but certain. Higher energy prices mean higher prices across the economy and higher official inflation rates, which means investors will demand still higher yields to compensate.
The problem is that interest on the federal debt is already over $1.2 trillion and is now the second-largest item in the budget. The US government cannot afford yields going much higher because the interest expense would push it toward bankruptcy.
I am not sure how—or even if—the US government can manage this situation. Something has to give, and we will not have to wait long to find out what.
The Iran war may prove to be more than another foreign policy disaster. It could be the trigger that exposes the fragility of the entire dollar-based financial system.
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@BTC_Siferd @LukeGromen Banger earnings combined with a Trump post about how his incredible self just opened up Hormuz should buy another two weeks.
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@LukeGromen What happens next Luke 🤔. Especially with NVDA reporting earnings tomorrow.
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@LukeGromen Let's not chalk this up to a single military engagement. There are decades of irresponsible fiscal, monetary, and geopolitical policy that get credit.
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@CarolinaLion2 Pepperidge Farm bread - chemical garbage
Oscar Mayer hot dogs - chemical garbage
Dr. Pepper - chemical garbage
Milking cows for the pharmaceutical industry
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I live in a rural farming town and drive a used pick-up that I payed $26,000.00 for. None of what you are saying changes the fact a loaf of Pepperidge Farm bread is $5.00 now, a pack of Oscar Mayer hot dogs is $6.00, a 12 pack of Dr. Pepper is $10.00 or a gallon of gas is $4.50.
RedMenanceNick, Nick Incognito@SicSemper1983
@CarolinaLion2 I've never bought a new car I got a 2020 elantra that had 12k miles on it for 19k 7 months ago I bought my house, a fixer upper for 50k outright I have to put 20-30k into it but its in a nice rural area Im willing bet you want live near convenience and that costs money
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@PNWConservative No it's mail-in. Same numbers didn't vote pre mail-in and the politics were more or less balanced. I watched the shift happen overnight. I watched in real time how Sawant, Oliver, NTK, Scott, etc all had miraculous numbers of votes arrive in the final days of counting
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Guy I went to high school with won $940k in the lottery in 2022.
Paid cash for a house, two trucks, and took the whole family to Disney four times.
Three years later he’s broke and back driving for DoorDash.
The IRS came for $310k in taxes he never set aside.
His “friends” and family hit him up nonstop until the money dried up.
He said the worst part is realizing how many people were waiting for him to slip.
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@nickgillespie @JoshEakle You might want to look into large almond farm ownership...
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Over at Substack, @JoshEakle asks: "It's 2026, and I have yet to see an anti-almond farm protest."

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@TomANelson Most Americans know enough that even if it was man-made, higher revenue to their state's general fund direct from their wallets isn't going to help.
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@PNWConservative Walk away. You don't have to fund them. Let them have their Utopia.
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