I don’t know everything, I don’t pretend to.
There’s a lot of folks in here that have been in this game a long time, as well.
If there’s any newbs in here that need some questions answered, this would be the post for it. Us oldheads can shoot some links over. If you’re an experienced researcher, but have the desire to discuss a particular topic, I’m also all-ears.
I plan on making a detailed writing sometime in the near-future about my experiences in the conspiracysphere.
The most important conclusion I’ve come to, and early on, is that a vast majority outside these spaces have absolutely no interest in learning how the sausage is made.
I listen to Christopher gardeners bio-charisma podcast sometimes and he talks about building domes. Something about how it is the ideal shape, not a box or rectangle with gable roof design prevalent in USA.
Residential housing seems ridiculously overpriced. So I'm just wondering do we tell a young guy to take the 30 year loan and get in now, or wait for another crash because current properties are priced way more than they cost of labor and materials, which is why corporations got so involved, and why importing migrants to fill them was priority over the domestic citizens.
I can't tell young guys to save, because like someone on this forum told me yesterday, the cost of housing increases at a pace faster than anyone can save for it
All by design. You will own nothing and be happy
100%. I think I’ve seen that guy interview with BB a couple times… another guest he’s had on is the uneducated economist, and I love that guy’s perspective.
“Saving” in the traditional sense is now backwards. There’s no interest rates that keep up with inflation, which is targeted at 6% per anuum. Best rate i’ve found is a CD with a minimum of $1,000 over a one year period with 5% interest.
Young people are going YOLO with various blockchain products, meme stocks, or outright casino and sports betting. Sometimes it pays off! Most of the time, you lose. House wins.
If you tell a young person, they should be “investing” instead of “saving,” they’ll be more receptive. Best to push them into sound investments like small denomination precious metals, micro-businesses, (like selling fake weed outside of festivals or on demand screenprint tee shirts) and various licenses. i.e. get your bartending license and do side gigs. There’s apps where you can get 1099 work instantly, like when a bar has the entire staff call in sick on friday morning, they’ll post on these apps crazy pay, like $35/hr + tipshare, tonight only.
I know a construction worker that makes $300-$500 a night bartending, but only works special events
Sounds about right. Bartenders easily make $300+ at a busy bar in one night.
Building domes https://www.bitchute.com/video/0ihTIRWvHWY
Apparently he doesn't need permits. He's using earth bag packing which I guess is loophole in most states.