Newsletter Subject

An economic, social, and political catastrophe

From

bonnerandpartners.com

Email Address

feedback@exct.bonnerandpartners.com

Sent On

Wed, Apr 14, 2021 04:31 PM

Email Preheader Text

An Economic, Social, and Political Catastrophe By Bill Bonner Wednesday, April 14, 2021 , we trod li

[Bill Bonner’s Diary]( An Economic, Social, and Political Catastrophe By Bill Bonner Wednesday, April 14, 2021 [Bill Bonner] YOUGHAL, IRELAND – This morning, the Irish Independent reports: “US consumer prices climbed by the most in nearly nine years in March as the end of pandemic lockdowns triggered a rebound in travel and commuting that pushed up the cost of petrol, car rentals and hotel stays.” The death of an empire begins with a whimper… and ends with a bang. [Yesterday]( we trod lightly over the whimpers. After all, they are mostly silly… and puerile. Together, they generate a lot of noise, but they mean nothing. They are pointless… stupid… time-wasters. Recommended Link [Trump Buys Walled-Off Island Complex (What Is He Planning?)]( [image]( In case you haven’t seen [this disturbing story]( Trump now owns a barricaded compound just off the U.S. coastline. It’s critical you hear this breaking report now – before it’s too late. [Click here to find out more.]( -- Big Deal Today, we sink into more serious matters. The Big Bang, that is. Yes, the [Katastrophenhausse](. The empire suffers a thousand paper cuts – trivia, distractions, and BS. But the deeper wound comes from the people who control the money. The [logical and inevitable consequence]( of the Federal Reserve’s money-printing and reckless spending is inflation. Prices go up. No big deal? Well… actually… Inflation is not always, everywhere, and only a monetary phenomenon. It is much more than that. It is an economic, social, and political catastrophe. [Featured: This Revolutionary Tech IS the #1 Investment of the Century]( Asset Inflation Before we go further, we will point out that “inflation” refers to increasing the money supply. This “inflation” then goes somewhere… but not always where and when you want it to go. So far, in the 21st century, it has mostly gone into asset prices. The Nasdaq-100, for example, home to many of America’s leading tech companies, has gone up more than 500% over the last 10 years. But Sanford Bernstein Research tells us that 37% of companies in the tech sector are unprofitable. Housing, too, has been distorted by price inflation. We are now in the second housing bubble of the century, with prices rising even faster than they did in the last one. Politico reports: Home prices in January – typically a slow month for the market – were up 14 percent over the same month the previous year, while sales jumped 24 percent, despite an unemployment rate that was almost twice as high. Demand for existing homes is so strong that the average residence is on the market for just three weeks, and inventory is at a record low after seeing its steepest drop last year since the data was first tracked in 1999. Inventory is at a record low? Didn’t Trump and Biden’s $5 trillion of “stimulus” increase output… including the supply of new houses? No, it didn’t. While house prices are 43% higher than they were at the height of the last housing bubble, the rate of new house construction is down nearly 50%. Hmmm… More money… Fewer houses available to buy? What do you get? Well, let’s take a look. Recommended Link [Man Who Picked Apple Under $2 Issues NEW Urgent Buy]( [image]( He picked Apple back in 2003… BEFORE shares skyrocketed almost 48,000%. He picked Bitcoin when it was trading for just $428. Since then, it has exploded over 9,000% . And now he’s saying this will be the hottest investment of 2021. [Click here and get the ticker… no strings attached.]( -- Road to Ruin Let’s take a little trip… a little vacation… to the biggest island in the Caribbean. There, we will find an example of what we’re looking for – a social, political, and economic catastrophe approaching its climax. Back in the 1950s, Cuba was a vacation spot. A jewel, with the fifth-highest per capita income in the Western Hemisphere, equal to 41% of the U.S., making the average Cuban wealthier than the typical American in the poorer states such as Mississippi or South Carolina. Cuba was second to the U.S. in ownership of automobiles and telephones, and first in ownership of TV sets. It was a mecca for American tourists. A friend recalls, as a child, family vacations every year in Cuba. Ernest Hemingway lived for 20 years outside of Havana. And Lucille Ball’s husband – Desi Arnaz – brought the popular Cuban rhythms to New York and American television. Had it been allowed to evolve in a normal way, Havana probably would have become like Las Vegas – but with Latin culture and a beach – rather than the dilapidated metropolis it is now. But so desperate are people for government – like children for parents – that they will put up with almost anything, no matter how bad. And so it was that the Castro regime – with its central planning and price controls – set Cuba on the road to ruin, where it stayed for the next 60 years. [Featured: Shocking Prediction Made Two Years Ago in Motion Now.]( Dire Economic Crisis This week, the Castros’ reign comes to an end. Financial Times reports: Cuba’s last Castro is set to leave the political stage, as Fidel’s 89-year-old brother Raúl cedes power to a younger generation at next week’s communist party congress which must also tackle a dire economic crisis and growing political dissent. The “dire economic crisis” is the rather obvious fruit of dumbbell policies pursued over the last six decades. They began with the appointment of Che Guevara, the famous revolutionary, as head of the central bank of Cuba. Mr. Guevara knew no more about banking than current U.S. Treasury Secretary and former head of the Federal Reserve Janet Yellen does. The result was an early setback for the new government… to be followed by many more over the years – almost all of them driven by activist bureaucrats, who thought they could do a better job of allocating capital than the “market.” The end result is now on display. “This is cattle country,” the FT quotes a source in Camagüey province, “but there’s no milk, butter, yogurt or meat.” Cuba imports 60% of its food. And when its tourism industry hit the skids in the COVID-19 panic of 2020, it left very little money available for other things. Over the years, some 1.4 million Cubans left the island. Those who remain live like paupers. That is not to say they are necessarily unhappy or unwell. But its pursuit of “equality” left most Cubans poorer. Government can’t equalize up; for that would require creating new wealth. It can only equalize down, by taking away money and redistributing it… and destroying much of the wealth-generating capacity of the free economy in the process. At first, Castro’s Cuba relied on the Soviet Union for subsidies – selling its sugar at inflated prices. Then, it depended on Venezuelan oil money to keep going. Both of these socialist paradises have gone into the ditch. And now, Cuba is on its own… desperately trying to hold itself together. Recommended Link [Reclusive Best-Selling Author Issues Final Warning]( The Founder of the largest “underground” financial research firm in the world… Has one last warning to readers. [image]( Bill Bonner founded The Agora in 1978. Today – after 40+ years in the publishing business – he’s coming forward with his final warning. And not a moment too soon… With offices in 11 countries… millions of daily readers… and two New York Times best-sellers to his name already… Bill’s latest – and last – warning may be the most important of his career. [Go here for details – and to get a personal message from Bill.]( -- End in Sight But alert dear readers are already wondering: Why doesn’t the Bank of Cuba just print up some more money, like the U.S. is doing? Doesn’t it know the “stimmy” trick? Well, what do you think? Of course, Cuban central bankers read the same books and journals as those everywhere else. The Cuban government recently devalued the peso by 96%... and raised salaries for everyone who works for the government – but not for the 40% of workers who actually produce goods and services. And guess what? Cuba approaches its Big Bang finale. Consumer price inflation there is said to be approaching 500% this year. And new revolutionaries gather around Havana… like sharks off the Playa Paraiso… ready to take a bite out of Havana’s aging rulers. More to come… Regards, [signature] Bill --------------------------------------------------------------- Like what you’re reading? Send your thoughts to [feedback@rogueeconomics.com](mailto:feedback@rogueeconomics.com?subject=An economic, social, and political catastrophe). --------------------------------------------------------------- MAILBAG Dear readers share scenarios that they believe contributed to America’s decline… The decline in Christianity directly correlates with the Republican takeover of the Faithful. They have traded in Jesus and the Bible for Fox News and the corruption of Donald Trump via the Conservative Republican establishment. My Bible teaches me, amongst other things, “Thou shalt not bear false witness.” Simply put, lying is a sin! Thanks to QAnon, Trump, Kellyanne Conway, and Fox… alternative truths, which are just a dressed-up way of saying lies, are somehow acceptable. This is at the very core of the downslide. You put this along with the inexcusable wealth gap, which is clearly traceable back to President Reagan (the beginning of the big “Trickle Down” lie), and the blunt-force attack on blue collar, working America. I could go on and on about the causes. But in the end, if we don’t get a handle on truth and transparency in our economy, the likely outcome is an already charted course. God help us. – Jonathan V. The elite universities of America have to take some of the blame for the country’s current troubles. The people that you meet at our elite universities can best be described as weird people who know a lot about weird things. They have a great deal of esoteric knowledge but are deficient in basic knowledge. They know a great deal about Andy Warhol, Glenn Gould, and Frank Kafka, but have their facts all wrong about key historical events, like the Great Depression, the Industrial Revolution, World War I, World War II, and the Civil War. And nearly all our elite universities have very poor departments of economics, run by crackpot Keynesian economists. – Christopher C. Some historians believe, as I do, that Rome fell because its armies and conquests extended into the Middle East and beyond. This put too much of a strain on the economy. I currently believe that the cost of keeping our military in the Middle East is similar. It costs over $1 trillion for the lifetime of a single F-35 fighter jet (and the maintenance costs of this airplane are huge). And the country has spent $7 to $9 trillion for the war in the Middle East... – Howard S. Meanwhile, another shares Bill’s essay, “[The Feds’ Dumbbell Monetary Experiment]( with his coworkers… Great story. I’ve reposted in our own company Teams chat. Great way of keeping everyone up to date. I am involved in IT and am writing about my mom’s brush with COVID-19, so your perspective on all things economical and financial is what I long to read about every day. Keep up the great work. – Luke K. Is the Big Bang finale coming for the U.S. as it is for Cuba? What are you doing to prepare? Write us at [feedback@rogueeconomics.com](mailto:feedback@rogueeconomics.com?subject=An economic, social, and political catastrophe). IN CASE YOU MISSED IT… [The One Mistake That Could Haunt Investors Today]( Are you about to make an expensive mistake? Investors who bought Cisco at the peak of the dot-com mania are still down 40%—more than 20 years later! Right now, many popular tech stocks are flashing warning signs. And many investors are about to repeat this classic “Cisco mistake.” Don’t be one of them. The man regarded by many as America’s most accurate tech investor just put together a list of the most dangerous tech stocks. [Get the full details here…]( [image]( --------------------------------------------------------------- Get Instant Access Click to read these free reports and automatically sign up for daily research. [image]( [The Ultimate Guide to Taking Back Your Privacy]( [image]( [The Gold Investor’s Guide]( [image]( [How to Earn Free Bitcoin]( [Rogue Economincs]( Rogue Economics 55 NE 5th Avenue, Delray Beach, FL 33483 [www.rogueeconomics.com]( [Share]( [FACEBOOK]( [Tweet]( [TWITTER]( To ensure our emails continue reaching your inbox, please [add our email address]( to your address book. This editorial email containing advertisements was sent to {EMAIL} because you subscribed to this service. To stop receiving these emails, click [here](. Rogue Economics welcomes your feedback and questions. But please note: The law prohibits us from giving personalized advice. To contact Customer Service, call toll free Domestic/International: 1-800-681-1765, Mon–Fri, 9am–7pm ET, or email us [here](mailto:memberservices@rogueeconomics.com). © 2021 Rogue Economics. All rights reserved. Any reproduction, copying, or redistribution of our content, in whole or in part, is prohibited without written permission from Rogue Economics. [Privacy Policy]( | [Terms of Use](

EDM Keywords (220)

yes years year wrong writing world works workers whole whimpers whimper week way war want use unwell truth trump travel transparency trading traded ticker thoughts thought think things telephones take supply sugar subscribed strong strain still stayed source soon skids sink similar sight set services service sent seen seeing second saying say said ruin road result reposted repeat redistribution redistributing rebound read rate questions put pushed pursuit process print point peso perspective people peak part parents owns ownership one offices noise nearly much motion morning month money moment mom mississippi missed military meet mecca matter market march many making make lot looking long logical list lifetime lie left leave latest know keeping katastrophenhausse journals jewel jesus island involved inventory inflation increasing important huge hold height hear head havana handle guess government gone go get generate founder food followed first find financial fidel feedback far faithful facts exploded example evolve everyone essay equalize ensure ends end economy driven dressed downslide ditch distorted display diary details desperate described depended deficient decline death date data cuba critical country could costs cost corruption core control content companies commuting coastline century causes case caribbean buy bs brush books blame bite biden bible beyond best beginning began banking bank bad automobiles armies appointment amongst america always along allowed airplane agora 96 500 41 40 37 2020 2003

Marketing emails from bonnerandpartners.com

View More
Sent On

22/04/2022

Sent On

22/04/2022

Sent On

21/04/2022

Sent On

21/04/2022

Sent On

20/04/2022

Sent On

20/04/2022

Email Content Statistics

Subscribe Now

Subject Line Length

Data shows that subject lines with 6 to 10 words generated 21 percent higher open rate.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Number of Words

The more words in the content, the more time the user will need to spend reading. Get straight to the point with catchy short phrases and interesting photos and graphics.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Number of Images

More images or large images might cause the email to load slower. Aim for a balance of words and images.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Time to Read

Longer reading time requires more attention and patience from users. Aim for short phrases and catchy keywords.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Predicted open rate

Subscribe Now

Spam Score

Spam score is determined by a large number of checks performed on the content of the email. For the best delivery results, it is advised to lower your spam score as much as possible.

Subscribe Now

Flesch reading score

Flesch reading score measures how complex a text is. The lower the score, the more difficult the text is to read. The Flesch readability score uses the average length of your sentences (measured by the number of words) and the average number of syllables per word in an equation to calculate the reading ease. Text with a very high Flesch reading ease score (about 100) is straightforward and easy to read, with short sentences and no words of more than two syllables. Usually, a reading ease score of 60-70 is considered acceptable/normal for web copy.

Subscribe Now

Technologies

What powers this email? Every email we receive is parsed to determine the sending ESP and any additional email technologies used.

Subscribe Now

Email Size (not include images)

Font Used

No. Font Name
Subscribe Now

Copyright © 2019–2025 SimilarMail.