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Notices tagged with q

  1. Nobody [LinuxWalt (@lnxw48a1)] (lnxw48a1@nu.federati.net)'s status on Sunday, 08-Nov-2020 17:07:19 UTC Nobody [LinuxWalt (@lnxw48a1)] Nobody [LinuxWalt (@lnxw48a1)]
    Some day someone will decipher the #Q posts (that the #QAnon folks follow). I predict the true meaning will be "Q-ack Q-ack" and the author will turn out to be a duck that escaped from the zoo.
    In conversation about 4 months ago from web permalink
  2. Matthew Davidson (mjd@microblog.ourcoffs.org.au)'s status on Thursday, 22-Jun-2017 12:34:10 UTC Matthew Davidson Matthew Davidson
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    "It’s our job to form a government if we possibly can…" #q Boris Johnson http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/boris-johnson-interview-audio-queens-speech-car-crash-unable-answer-questions-bbc-a7801936.html
    In conversation Thursday, 22-Jun-2017 12:34:10 UTC from microblog.ourcoffs.org.au permalink

    Attachments

    1. Boris Johnson in 'worst interview by a politician ever' after Queen's Speech
      from The Independent
      Boris Johnson struggled to answer basic questions about the Queen’s Speech in a radio interview, stumbling several times when asked: “What is the point of the Prime Minister?”  The Foreign Secretary repeatedly paused and sighed, saying “hang on a second” a number of times as he was questioned by presenter Eddie Mair on BBC Radio 4’s PM. 
  3. Matthew Davidson (mjd@microblog.ourcoffs.org.au)'s status on Friday, 16-Jun-2017 10:54:47 UTC Matthew Davidson Matthew Davidson
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    "[T]he view that the value of money is regulated by the value of the substance of which it is made […] is like confusing a theatre ticket with the performance." #q #Keynes #MMT https://larspsyll.wordpress.com/2017/01/30/the-origins-of-mmt/
    In conversation Friday, 16-Jun-2017 10:54:47 UTC from microblog.ourcoffs.org.au permalink

    Attachments

    1. The origins of MMT
      By Lars Syll from LARS P. SYLL

      Many mainstream economists seem to think the idea behind Modern Monetary Theory is new and originates from economic cranks.

      New? Cranks? How about reading one of the great founders of neoclassical economics – Knut Wicksell. This is what Wicksell wrote in 1898 on ‘pure credit systems’ in Interest and Prices (Geldzins und Güterpreise), 1936 (1898), p. 68f:

      It is possible to go even further. There is no real need for any money at all if a payment between two customers can be accomplished by simply transferring the appropriate sum of money in the books of the bank  …

      A pure credit system has not yet … been completely developed in this form. But here and there it is to be found in the somewhat different guise of the banknote system …

      We intend therefor, as a basis for the following discussion, to imagine a state of affairs in which money does not actually circulate at all, neither in the form of coin … nor in the form of notes, but where all domestic payments are effected by means of the Giro system and bookkeeping transfers. A  thorough analysis of this purely imaginary case seems to me to be worth while, for it provides a precise antithesis to the equally imaginay case of a pure cash system, in which credit plays no part whatever [the exact equivalent of the often used neoclassical model assumption of “cash in advance” – LPS] …

      For the sake of simplicity, let us then assume that the whole monetary system of a country is in the hands of a single credit institution, provided with an adequate number of branches, at which each independent economic individual keeps an account on which he can draw cheques.

      What Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) basically does is exactly what Wicksell tried to do more than a hundred years ago. The difference is that today the ‘pure credit economy’  is a reality and not just a theoretical curiosity – MMT describes a fiat currency system that almost every country in the world is operating under.

      And here’s another well-known economist with early ideas of the MMT variety:

      [Bendixen says the] old ‘metallist’ view of money is superstitious, and Dr. Bendixen trounces it with the vigour of a convert. Money is the creation of the State; it is not true to say that gold is international currency, for international contracts are never made in terms of gold, but always in terms of some national monetary unit; there is no essential or important distinction between notes and metallic money; money is the measure of value, but to regard it as having value itself is a relic of the view that the value of money is regulated by the value of the substance of which it is made, and is like confusing a theatre ticket with the performance. With the exception of the last, the only true interpretation of which is purely dialectical, these ideas are undoubtedly of the right complexion. It is probably true that the old ‘metallist’ view and the theories of regulation of note issue based on it do greatly stand in the way of currency reform, whether we are thinking of economy and elasticity or of a change in the standard; and a gospel which can be made the basis of a crusade on these lines is likely to be very useful to the world, whatever its crudities or terminology.

      J. M. Keynes, “Theorie des Geldes und der Umlaufsmittel. by Ludwig von Mises; Geld und Kapital. by Friedrich Bendixen” (review), Economic Journal, 1914

      In modern times legal currencies are totally based on fiat. Currencies no longer have intrinsic value (as gold and silver). What gives them value is basically the legal status given to them by government and the simple fact that you have to pay your taxes with them. That also enables governments to run a kind of monopoly business where it never can run out of money. Hence spending becomes the prime mover and taxing and borrowing is degraded to following acts. If we have a depression, the solution, then, is not austerity. It is spending. Budget deficits are not the major problem, since fiat money means that governments can always make more of them.

      Financing quantitative easing, fiscal expansion, and other similar operations, is made possible by simply crediting a bank account and thereby – by a single keystroke – actually creating money. One of the most important reasons why so many countries are still stuck in depression-like economic quagmires is that people in general – including most mainstream economists – simply don’t understand the workings of modern monetary systems. The result is totally and utterly wrong-headed austerity policies, emanating out of a groundless fear of creating inflation via central banks printing money, in a situation where we rather should fear deflation and inadequate effective demand.

  4. Matthew Davidson (mjd@microblog.ourcoffs.org.au)'s status on Sunday, 11-Jun-2017 13:27:14 UTC Matthew Davidson Matthew Davidson
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    "I think we're all going to have to get used to the idea that essentially #Trump… You know those inflatable giant wavy guys that you see…?" #q Rich Hall http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p055fzwz
    In conversation Sunday, 11-Jun-2017 13:27:14 UTC from microblog.ourcoffs.org.au permalink

    Attachments

    1. FriComedy: The News Quiz 9th June 2017, Friday Night Comedy from BBC Radio 4 - BBC Radio 4
      from BBC
      A satirical review of the week's news, chaired by Miles Jupp
  5. Matthew Davidson (mjd@microblog.ourcoffs.org.au)'s status on Saturday, 03-Jun-2017 10:55:24 UTC Matthew Davidson Matthew Davidson
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    "If you'd asked me two years ago which of my friends was likely to become leader of the Labour party, Jeremy would have come about 20th. Somewhere after Tim Brooke-Taylor." #q Jeremy Hardy http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p054rrv6
    In conversation Saturday, 03-Jun-2017 10:55:24 UTC from microblog.ourcoffs.org.au permalink

    Attachments

    1. FriComedy: The News Quiz 2nd May 2017, Friday Night Comedy from BBC Radio 4 - BBC Radio 4
      from BBC
      Miles and guests return for another round of News Quizzing.
  6. Matthew Davidson (mjd@microblog.ourcoffs.org.au)'s status on Thursday, 25-May-2017 10:00:09 UTC Matthew Davidson Matthew Davidson
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    "When the #Pope emerged from his private meeting with #Trump, he was smiling in a relieved, almost charming way – like a man who had just left the dentist’s chair" #q Robert #Fisk http://ur1.ca/qx812
    In conversation Thursday, 25-May-2017 10:00:09 UTC from microblog.ourcoffs.org.au permalink

    Attachments

    1. Trump has just met with the new leader of the secular world – the Pope
      from The Independent
      After two days lecturing a collection of head-choppers, dictators, torturers and land thieves, Donald Trump at last met a good guy on Wednesday. Pope Francis didn’t ask for a $100bn (£77.2bn) arms deal for the Vatican. He wouldn’t go to war with Iran. He didn’t take the Sunni Muslim side against the Shia Muslim side in the next Middle East conflict. He didn’t talk about Palestinian “terror”. And he looked, most of the time, grim, unsmiling, even suspicious.
  7. Matthew Davidson (mjd@microblog.ourcoffs.org.au)'s status on Tuesday, 16-May-2017 05:28:20 UTC Matthew Davidson Matthew Davidson
    Remote profile options...
    in reply to
    • Danyl Strype
    @strypey "I have taken more out of alcohol than alcohol has taken out of me." #q Winston Churchill - Mind you, I never touch marijuana. I was born hungry and slightly paranoid, so it's completely redundant.
    In conversation Tuesday, 16-May-2017 05:28:20 UTC from microblog.ourcoffs.org.au permalink
  8. Matthew Davidson (mjd@microblog.ourcoffs.org.au)'s status on Sunday, 07-May-2017 12:02:45 UTC Matthew Davidson Matthew Davidson
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    "There was an Irish athlete who went to the doctor. She said 'I'm really worried that I'm growing a penis 'cos of the steroids.' And the doctor said 'Anabolic?' She said 'No, just a penis.'" #q Jeremy Hardy http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p0522gmj
    In conversation Sunday, 07-May-2017 12:02:45 UTC from microblog.ourcoffs.org.au permalink

    Attachments

    1. FriComedy: The News Quiz 5th May 2017, Friday Night Comedy from BBC Radio 4 - BBC Radio 4
      from BBC
      A satirical review of the week's news, chaired by Miles Jupp
  9. Matthew Davidson (mjd@microblog.ourcoffs.org.au)'s status on Thursday, 04-May-2017 10:59:15 UTC Matthew Davidson Matthew Davidson
    Remote profile options...
    in reply to
    "I look back on all the taboos that I was taught, that everybody was taught, and I see now that they were parts of a great swindle. Their purpose was to make Americans afraid to get close to one another—to organize." #q Kurt Vonnegut
    In conversation Thursday, 04-May-2017 10:59:15 UTC from microblog.ourcoffs.org.au permalink
  10. Matthew Davidson (mjd@microblog.ourcoffs.org.au)'s status on Thursday, 04-May-2017 10:56:22 UTC Matthew Davidson Matthew Davidson
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    "At the very core of my American education was a dread of any gesture which might be interpreted by the football coach as being even vaguely homosexual." #q Kurt Vonnegut http://www.truthdig.com/arts_culture/item/kurt_vonneguts_call_to_humanity_to_save_the_planet_201611161
    In conversation Thursday, 04-May-2017 10:56:22 UTC from microblog.ourcoffs.org.au permalink

    Attachments

    1. Kurt Vonnegut’s Call to Save the Planet Is Just as Timely Now as It Was Four Decades Ago
      from Truthdig
      “We must love one another and care for one another as best we can, and we must organize.” - 2016/11/16
  11. Matthew Davidson (mjd@microblog.ourcoffs.org.au)'s status on Wednesday, 29-Mar-2017 10:24:26 UTC Matthew Davidson Matthew Davidson
    Remote profile options...
    in reply to
    "Anyone can create money; the problem lies in getting it accepted." #q Hyman Minsky http://neweconomicperspectives.org/2011/06/modern-money-theory-primer-on.html http://ur1.ca/qp3jl
    In conversation Wednesday, 29-Mar-2017 10:24:26 UTC from microblog.ourcoffs.org.au permalink
  12. Matthew Davidson (mjd@microblog.ourcoffs.org.au)'s status on Wednesday, 29-Mar-2017 09:39:21 UTC Matthew Davidson Matthew Davidson
    Remote profile options...
    in reply to
    • Danyl Strype
    @strypey "… credit and credit alone is money." #q A. Mitchell Innes http://moslereconomics.com/mandatory-readings/what-is-money/
    In conversation Wednesday, 29-Mar-2017 09:39:21 UTC from microblog.ourcoffs.org.au permalink
  13. Matthew Davidson (mjd@microblog.ourcoffs.org.au)'s status on Friday, 10-Feb-2017 05:54:37 UTC Matthew Davidson Matthew Davidson
    Remote profile options...
    in reply to
    • Danyl Strype
    @strypey "Cars for everyone was one of the stupidest promises that politicians ever made." #q George Monbiot http://www.monbiot.com/2016/09/22/carmageddon-beckons/
    In conversation Friday, 10-Feb-2017 05:54:37 UTC from microblog.ourcoffs.org.au permalink
  14. Matthew Davidson (mjd@microblog.ourcoffs.org.au)'s status on Thursday, 09-Feb-2017 10:34:36 UTC Matthew Davidson Matthew Davidson
    Remote profile options...
    • ruben h
    @tregeagle "There must be discipline in the allocation of resources or you will have anarchistic chaos and inefficiency. And one of the functions of old fashioned religion was to scare people […] into behaving in a way that the long-run civilized life requires." #q Paul Samuelson
    In conversation Thursday, 09-Feb-2017 10:34:36 UTC from microblog.ourcoffs.org.au permalink
  15. Matthew Davidson (mjd@microblog.ourcoffs.org.au)'s status on Wednesday, 08-Feb-2017 12:46:52 UTC Matthew Davidson Matthew Davidson
    Remote profile options...
    #Trump "sees things that aren't there, like 2 million people at his inauguration. […] He has an imaginary friend called Many People Are Saying" #q Andy Hamilton http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p04rt97d
    In conversation Wednesday, 08-Feb-2017 12:46:52 UTC from microblog.ourcoffs.org.au permalink

    Attachments

    1. FriComedy: The News Quiz 3rd Feb 2017, Friday Night Comedy from BBC Radio 4 - BBC Radio 4
      from BBC
      A satirical review of the week's news, chaired by Miles Jupp
  16. Matthew Davidson (mjd@microblog.ourcoffs.org.au)'s status on Tuesday, 31-Jan-2017 10:52:45 UTC Matthew Davidson Matthew Davidson
    Remote profile options...
    "Let me introduce you to my old friend and colleague, the British druid Valueaddetax!" #q Asterix and the Goths #BoomBoom
    In conversation Tuesday, 31-Jan-2017 10:52:45 UTC from microblog.ourcoffs.org.au permalink
  17. Matthew Davidson (mjd@microblog.ourcoffs.org.au)'s status on Sunday, 29-Jan-2017 12:59:32 UTC Matthew Davidson Matthew Davidson
    Remote profile options...
    in reply to
    "There’s no getting round it. Call it Nazi, Fascist, racist, vicious, illiberal, immoral, cruel. More dangerously, what Trump has done is a wicked precedent. If you can stop them coming, you can chuck them out." #q Robert #Fisk http://ur1.ca/qeoqh
    In conversation Sunday, 29-Jan-2017 12:59:32 UTC from microblog.ourcoffs.org.au permalink

    Attachments

    1. Donald Trump's arbitrary, cruel ban on refugees from Muslim countries sets a chilling precedent
      from The Independent
      So Donald Trump is going to f**k them all. No excuses for such filthy words today. I’m only quoting the man whose Pentagon offices he just used to disgrace himself – and America.
  18. Matthew Davidson (mjd@microblog.ourcoffs.org.au)'s status on Friday, 27-Jan-2017 12:51:34 UTC Matthew Davidson Matthew Davidson
    Remote profile options...
    "If I want a sound, I usually feel better if I've chased it and killed it, skinned it and cooked it. Most things you can get with a button nowadays." #q Tom Waits 1985 http://web.archive.org/web/20080226225434/http://www.tomwaitslibrary.com/interviews/85-early-you.html
    In conversation Friday, 27-Jan-2017 12:51:34 UTC from microblog.ourcoffs.org.au permalink

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