dapoes
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So in other words, you do agree Celente was right about Iraq.
I think he means it has something to do with the price of rice in china...or something...

So in other words, you do agree Celente was right about Iraq.
You never gave an answer. All you did was put on an extended song and dance routine to try and avoid giving a simple answer.
So in other words, you do agree Celente was right about Iraq.
Gerald Celente has been quite frank and rather shocking in his predictions over the years. His latest gives one something to mull over with this reckless abandon to our debt and inflation that this current administration has trouble seeing.
With Bush tax cuts set to expire at year's end, we'll see companies reporting large profits this year to offset the rise in taxes in 2011. And of course as you can expect the Obama administration will tout these profits as proof that their skillful guidance of the economy is working. Great, but wait until the shoe drops sometime in 2011. Europe is dying and soon it will be here.
Article........
“The US is becoming a shadow of what it used to be. Take education for example. The OECD group of developed countries ranks quality of life, education, health care of its member nations. The US is now falling down the table as one piece of data after another shows America is in decline.
"When people have lost everything they have nothing to lose. Violence and crime will explode. Look at the OECD figures. The number of people not graduating from high school is exploding -- they're wacked out on drugs. New York City will look like Mexico City in a few years. The collapse of morality from top down -- and especially in the government -- makes it inevitable."
He said it right there dell, NYC will look like Mexico City. So go ahead and tap dance all you want.
Have any input about his comment regarding the state cessionist movement and the USSR? Or what people wear and their choice of music and the "moral vacum" in this country?
and no big shocker...
While overall inflation nationwide was 1.1 percent, grocery prices went up 1.7 percent nationally and 1.3 percent in the Bay Area, said Todd Johnson, an economist for the Bureau of Labor Statistics office in San Francisco. "The largest effects on grocery prices here over the last month were tomatoes, followed by eggs, fish and seafood."
How about some context?
"I noticed just this month that my grocery bill for the same old stuff - cereal, eggs, milk, orange juice, peanut butter, bread - spiked $25," said Sue Perry, deputy editor of ShopSmart magazine, a nonprofit publication from Consumer Reports. "It was a bit of sticker shock."
But it makes sense. Since November 2009, meat, poultry, fish and eggs have surged 5.8 percent in price. Dairy and related products have gone up 3.8 percent; fats and oils, 3 percent; and sugar and sweets, 1.2 percent.
Food Sellers Grit Teeth, Raise Prices
Packagers and Supermarkets Pressured to Pass Along Rising Costs, Even as Consumers Pinch Pennies
An inflationary tide is beginning to ripple through America's supermarkets and restaurants, threatening to end the tamest year of food pricing in nearly two decades.
That's not polite.... go choke on it...
My apologies 😉That's not polite.
How about some context?