every year we had Mr.Craig Rowland's analyzes and now we don't have it anymore.
I am sad


Craig Rowland come back, please.
Regards.
Moderator: Global Moderator
Frugal: In case you missed it, Kriegsspiel and I posted our calculations of the PP's returns in 2015 here.frugal wrote: Hello fellows,
every year we had Mr.Craig Rowland's analyzes and now we don't have it anymore.
I am sad![]()
Craig Rowland come back, please.
Regards.
Thank you!Pet Hog wrote:Frugal: In case you missed it, Kriegsspiel and I posted our calculations of the PP's returns in 2015 here.frugal wrote: Hello fellows,
every year we had Mr.Craig Rowland's analyzes and now we don't have it anymore.
I am sad![]()
Craig Rowland come back, please.
Regards.
http://www.carterapermanente.es/resulta ... disculpas/ILoveMoney wrote: I haven't seen the returns for a EU PP posted. Anyone has them? Thanks!
It's way more important today to discuss and get people to understand the immigration risks to the U.S. and western countries than to talk about money. The Permanent Portfolio is small potatoes compared to these other issues.buddtholomew wrote: He has good timing. Leaving after another negative year...
Hi,craigr wrote:It's way more important today to discuss and get people to understand the immigration risks to the U.S. and western countries than to talk about money. The Permanent Portfolio is small potatoes compared to these other issues.buddtholomew wrote: He has good timing. Leaving after another negative year...
You think it's a negative year now, just wait until the demographics of the U.S. and western countries are permanently destroyed, or worse, serious civil unrest starts. You'll be begging for the good old days of 2015 before the U.S. and European economies started functioning like Brazil.
If the immigration situation in the U.S. and Europe is not brought under control then all this talk on investing is completely irrelevant. It will be irrelevant because the cultures that make the economies successful will no longer be functioning as they once did. Or, even worse, there could be massive civil unrest that can lead to really bad consequences.frugal wrote:Hi,craigr wrote:It's way more important today to discuss and get people to understand the immigration risks to the U.S. and western countries than to talk about money. The Permanent Portfolio is small potatoes compared to these other issues.buddtholomew wrote: He has good timing. Leaving after another negative year...
You think it's a negative year now, just wait until the demographics of the U.S. and western countries are permanently destroyed, or worse, serious civil unrest starts. You'll be begging for the good old days of 2015 before the U.S. and European economies started functioning like Brazil.
can you please explain with some more detail.
Thank you.
Do you get paid to bitch and whine about immigration issues?craigr wrote:If the immigration situation in the U.S. and Europe is not brought under control then all this talk on investing is completely irrelevant. It will be irrelevant because the cultures that make the economies successful will no longer be functioning as they once did. Or, even worse, there could be massive civil unrest that can lead to really bad consequences.frugal wrote:Hi,craigr wrote: It's way more important today to discuss and get people to understand the immigration risks to the U.S. and western countries than to talk about money. The Permanent Portfolio is small potatoes compared to these other issues.
You think it's a negative year now, just wait until the demographics of the U.S. and western countries are permanently destroyed, or worse, serious civil unrest starts. You'll be begging for the good old days of 2015 before the U.S. and European economies started functioning like Brazil.
can you please explain with some more detail.
Thank you.
It is just petty to focus on money when there are much bigger issues at play. 2016 is going to be a pivotal year for the U.S. and parts of Europe. Immigration and culture is the defining issue, not whether or not this or that asset is up or down a few points.
People can come on here and whine that I'm not wasting my time with my family over Christmas and New Years writing a blog post for those that are going to bitch and complain regardless (Hi Budd). But the reality is I don't get paid to do this, and in my perhaps too subtle way I'm saying that everyone should stop looking at their portfolios and consider some of the bigger issues going on.
In terms of the U.S., investors should focus on getting in a candidate that is going to get the immigration system under control. In Europe, investors should be supporting candidates and governments that will defend the host country and culture against mass immigration and globalism.
Nothing else matters right now but stopping what is going on with mass migration. It's just that simple.
No, but I donated to Trump. Happy 2016.dragoncar wrote:Do you get paid to bitch and whine about immigration issues?
Since this thread was addressed to me and people wanted to know why I'm not posting I answered them. That reason is that stopping mass immigration is more important than the Permanent Portfolio.buddtholomew wrote:Let's try and stick to the PP as there are other sections on the site for you to push your political views. By the way, I am an immigrant.
Is that the 5th economic climate that no one else has discovered?craigr wrote:Since this thread was addressed to me and people wanted to know why I'm not posting I answered them. That reason is that stopping mass immigration is more important than the Permanent Portfolio.buddtholomew wrote:Let's try and stick to the PP as there are other sections on the site for you to push your political views. By the way, I am an immigrant.
That's my opinion and analysis in a nutshell. We'll see who's right on what the major issues are going forward, and I can guarantee you it's not interest rates, etc. It will be mass immigration and the fallout from it. It completely dwarfs all other risks to investors by a long shot. Not even close.
So you wanted me to write on the Permanent Portfolio and you got it. That's it right above and nothing else matters.
Don't forget climate change -- oh wait, I forgot that doesn't exist here.buddtholomew wrote:Is that the 5th economic climate that no one else has discovered?craigr wrote:Since this thread was addressed to me and people wanted to know why I'm not posting I answered them. That reason is that stopping mass immigration is more important than the Permanent Portfolio.buddtholomew wrote:Let's try and stick to the PP as there are other sections on the site for you to push your political views. By the way, I am an immigrant.
That's my opinion and analysis in a nutshell. We'll see who's right on what the major issues are going forward, and I can guarantee you it's not interest rates, etc. It will be mass immigration and the fallout from it. It completely dwarfs all other risks to investors by a long shot. Not even close.
So you wanted me to write on the Permanent Portfolio and you got it. That's it right above and nothing else matters.
I agree immigration control is an important topic, but so is nuclear war, famine or suicide bombings. We somehow still invest for out future in the face of all of these geopolitical issues.
:-Pcraigr wrote:No, but I donated to Trump. Happy 2016.dragoncar wrote:Do you get paid to bitch and whine about immigration issues?
Even though your answer is not serious, I would actually say that the culture of the country and how it is changed with immigration is the 5th economic condition.buddtholomew wrote:Is that the 5th economic climate that no one else has discovered?
Simonjester wrote: i agree immigration is an important issue but i don't think it's number one, i have no problem with tackling it first, its a pretty quick fix, if the will to do so is there. but to me the number one issue is education... the dumbing down of our country (which open borders contributes to) will be the end of us.. if there are no critical thinkers left or they become so outnumbered they have no influence, all the problems caused by illegal immigrants will soon enough be caused by citizen idiots and the idiots that they elect to lead them.."I know no safe depositary of the ultimate powers of the society but the people themselves; and if we think them not enlightened enough to exercise their control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it from them, but to inform their discretion by education. This is the true corrective of abuses of constitutional power." --Thomas Jefferson
Bud, Just as a matter of decorum...buddtholomew wrote: Let's try and stick to the PP as there are other sections on the site for you to push your political views.
Whoa!dragoncar wrote: Don't forget climate change -- oh wait, I forgot that doesn't exist here.
People think that those against mass immigration are some kind of mean people. But the reality is that history on mass movements of people is very clear to us and it always leads to conflict. So far from being on the wrong side of the issue, those against mass immigration are actually trying to prevent the inevitable repeat of history.dutchtraffic wrote: Europe is lost already, too late, war is the only solution, which is obviously what the governments want.
Only the cultural marxists are still cheering for the multicultural hell while their daughters and wives get raped/robbed/murdered.
With "Lost" i mean civil unrest/war is the only realistic outcome left, voting is not going to change things anymore over here.craigr wrote:People think that those against mass immigration are some kind of mean people. But the reality is that history on mass movements of people is very clear to us and it always leads to conflict. So far from being on the wrong side of the issue, those against mass immigration are actually trying to prevent the inevitable repeat of history.dutchtraffic wrote: Europe is lost already, too late, war is the only solution, which is obviously what the governments want.
Only the cultural marxists are still cheering for the multicultural hell while their daughters and wives get raped/robbed/murdered.
Europe is not lost. A lot of Americans do not understand that those countries and people have thousands of years of history there and are not just going to roll over and hand it to incoming troublemakers. There will be a reaction and portfolio returns are going to be the least of their concerns.
As far as I can tell, feminists are avoiding this story as they would the plague.Pointedstick wrote: As the attacks on Cologne show us, when multiculturalism is putted against feminism… feminism loses. Feminists should be paying very close attention here and seriously asking themselves whether the introduction of a bunch of people with no respect for women is likely to help or hurt their cause.