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3 Comments

  1. A number of years ago, I bought a brand new Ruger 77RSI in 308. I had to special order the rifle and waited about a month for delivery. It was an absolutely beautiful rifle. When I took it to the range it shot better than I could. Unfortunately, it was so good looking that I didn’t want to chance scratching it up. Consequently, it lived for several years in my gunrack without being used. Eventually I traded it for a new Remington 1187 and some boot. Wish I still had it.
    Guess that’s the basis for collectabilty… Now i want one again….

  2. “From the moment the opening-bell rang for US cash equity markets, a buying-panic ensued, lifting Dow futures 300 points off their lows…”–Zerohedge

    I include myself in a group who, at one point, mistakenly believed there was going to be a stock market collapse. Today’s market action is just another sign that this will never be allowed to happen. More rigged than a WWE match (whose stock is up 112% over the past year, by the way), there could be total anarchy in the streets, and all we will see in the markets are new all-time highs. If you are over 62 years of age, I suggest you spend your kid’s inheritance and whatever else you have before it is all inflated away. The printing will never stop.

    Joel Skousen is the only one who has ever called it correctly. Until there are mushroom clouds over US cities, the markets will never crash.

  3. Given that the entire Government is oriented toward forcing the markets ever higher — and those invested in them have made out like bandits for quite a while now — spending down might not be the best strategyn. Ideed, I’ve made literally hundreds of % increase (in numerical value)

    Instead, one might view this as a “golden goose” or “milking cow” and as your stocks move ever higher [bonds, of course, being disfavored by the Fed actions suppressing interest rates] Periodically re-balance into cold hard cash some of the incredible gains, and then push those into tangibles — particularly tangible that do not generate a new taxation on yourself….which might be different in various locales.

    At some point, the stocks may (will?) crash — and at that point one can choose whether to re-enter [which I’ve done twice, with remarkable gains as a result]. But Solomon’s advice not to put all your eggs in one basket (even TANGIBLES) might be the best choice. Make sense?

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