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The Water Cooler
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worst deal ever
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<blockquote data-quote="flybeech" data-source="post: 2091865" data-attributes="member: 7557"><p>Supply and demand, willing buyer, willing seller and all that fancy marketing stuff. I suggest that this is the new norm, since supplies have all but dried up and the manufacturers have sold orders for many months to come. Perhaps prices will tumble, if there is no more fear of gun registration and the confiscation that historically so often follows registration.</p><p></p><p>Part of the increased prices has to be a function of the private Federal Reserve creating $45 to $85 billion in new fiat currency created every month from thin air, backed with nothing, at interest, then using the debt they assign us to purchase themselves mortgage backed securities (our real estate). It's not that the price of everything is going up, it's simply the value of a diluted currency that has continued to flood the market since the inception of the private Federal Reserve in 1913 going down, as always.</p><p></p><p>Gas is still a dime, if that dime is silver, a nice new Ford is still about $400, or 20 ounces of gold and an AR-15 is still under $30, if a lawful money is used. I suggest that normally, production strongly tends to catch up, but if the fear of gun registration, taxation, bans and eventual confiscation is a concern for firearms manufacturers, they might tend to be less inclined to invest in new production capacity.</p><p></p><p>All we're seeing is the free market at work and a commodity is worth what someone will pay for it. The only twist is the uncertainty of how long our rulers will continue to allow us to remain armed and what We the People will do in the face of continued infringement of the Second Amendment.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="flybeech, post: 2091865, member: 7557"] Supply and demand, willing buyer, willing seller and all that fancy marketing stuff. I suggest that this is the new norm, since supplies have all but dried up and the manufacturers have sold orders for many months to come. Perhaps prices will tumble, if there is no more fear of gun registration and the confiscation that historically so often follows registration. Part of the increased prices has to be a function of the private Federal Reserve creating $45 to $85 billion in new fiat currency created every month from thin air, backed with nothing, at interest, then using the debt they assign us to purchase themselves mortgage backed securities (our real estate). It's not that the price of everything is going up, it's simply the value of a diluted currency that has continued to flood the market since the inception of the private Federal Reserve in 1913 going down, as always. Gas is still a dime, if that dime is silver, a nice new Ford is still about $400, or 20 ounces of gold and an AR-15 is still under $30, if a lawful money is used. I suggest that normally, production strongly tends to catch up, but if the fear of gun registration, taxation, bans and eventual confiscation is a concern for firearms manufacturers, they might tend to be less inclined to invest in new production capacity. All we're seeing is the free market at work and a commodity is worth what someone will pay for it. The only twist is the uncertainty of how long our rulers will continue to allow us to remain armed and what We the People will do in the face of continued infringement of the Second Amendment. [/QUOTE]
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