Bill Bonner — Hormegeddon: How Too Much of a Good Thing Leads To Disaster — Videos

Posted on July 13, 2019. Filed under: American History, Banking, Blogroll, Books, Business, College, Communications, Computers, Computers, Congress, conservatives, Constitution, Corruption, Crime, Culture, Economics, Education, Elections, Employment, Energy, Faith, Family, Farming, Federal Government, Federal Government Budget, Fiscal Policy, Foreign Policy, Freedom, Friends, government, government spending, Health, history, History of Economic Thought, Immigration, Investments, Journalism, Language, Law, liberty, Life, Links, Literacy, Macroeconomics, media, Microeconomics, Monetary Policy, Money, Money, Narcissism, Newspapers, Non-Fiction, People, Philosophy, Photos, Plays, Police, Political Correctness, Politics, Presidential Candidates, Programming, Psychology, Radio, Radio, Rants, Raves, Raymond Thomas Pronk, Regulations, Reviews, Security, Talk Radio, Tax Policy, Taxation, Taxes, Technology, Terrorism, Trade, Trade Policiy, Transportation, Wealth, Writing | Tags: , , , , , , , |

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Why Public Policy Always Ends in Disaster

It’s Hormeggedon! What Happens When Public Policy Passes the Point of No Return

Bill Bonner Interview: hold on to your cash, the real financial crisis is yet to come

Bill Bonner on the financial markets WORLD.MINDS INTERVIEW

How to Profit from the Death of Retail. Guest Bill Bonner.

Bill Bonner (author)

 MoneyWeek magazine,[2] and his daily financial column Bill Bonner’s Diary.[3]

Contents

Biography

Bonner was born in 1948.[4] He attended the University of New Mexico and Georgetown University Law School, and he began work with Jim Davidson, at the National Taxpayers Union.[citation needed]

Bonner was a director of MoneyWeek from 2003 to 2009.[4]

Works

Bonner co-authored Financial Reckoning Day: Surviving The Soft Depression of The 21st Century and Empire of Debt with Addison Wiggin. He also co-authored Mobs, Messiahs and Marketswith Lila Rajiva. The latter publication won the GetAbstract International Book Award for 2008.[5] He has previously co-authored two short pamphlets with British media historian, John Campbell, and with The Times former editor, Lord William Rees-Mogg, and has co-edited a book of essays with intellectual historian, Pierre Lemieux.[6]

In his two financial books, as well as in The Daily Reckoning, Bonner has argued that the financial future of the United States is in peril because of various economic and demographic trends, not the least of which is America’s large trade deficit. He claims that America’s foreign policy exploits are tantamount to the establishment of an empire, and that the cost of maintaining such an empire could accelerate America’s eventual decline. Bonner argues in his latest book that mob and mass delusions are part of the human condition.[citation needed]

Bonner warned in 2015 that the credit system, which has been the essential basis of the US economy since the 1950s, will inevitably fail, leading to catastrophic failure of the banking system.[7][8]

In June 2016, Bill Bonner, via his company Agora, paid for an advertisement on Reuters describing a new law that would not allow Americans to take money out of their own USA accounts. The ad reads: “New Law Cracks Down on Right to Use Cash. Americans are reporting problems taking their own money out of US banks.” The advertisement does not cite the law (the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act or FATCA[9]) to which it refers.

References

  1. ^ “Bill Bonner, Author at LewRockwell LewRockwell.com”.
  2. ^ https://moneyweek.com/author/bill-bonner/
  3. ^ Bill Bonner’s Diary
  4. Jump up to:a bhttps://beta.companieshouse.gov.uk/company/04016750/officers
  5. ^ “getAbstract International Book Award”.
  6. ^ Bonner, Bill; Lemieux, Pierre (2003). The Idea of America. Agora Health Books. ISBN 1891434136.
  7. ^ “Bill Bonner: hold on to your cash, the real financial crisis is yet to come”. MoneyWeek. March 3, 2015.
  8. ^ Wiggins, Addison (June 29, 2015). “When Genius Fails Again”. Forbes. Retrieved December 1, 2016.
  9. ^ Sahadi, Jeanne (June 4, 2015). “You’ve never seen IRS penalties like these”CNNMoney. Retrieved 2016-08-01.

External links

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill_Bonner_(author)

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Lewis J. Spellman–U.S. Sovereign Risk–Videos

Posted on April 20, 2012. Filed under: American History, Banking, Books, Business, College, Communications, Demographics, Diasters, Economics, Education, Employment, Energy, European History, Federal Government, Federal Government Budget, Fiscal Policy, Foreign Policy, government, government spending, history, History of Economic Thought, Inflation, Investments, Language, Law, liberty, Life, Links, Macroeconomics, media, Microeconomics, Monetary Policy, Money, People, Philosophy, Politics, Public Sector, Rants, Raves, Tax Policy, Taxes, Unions, Video, Wealth, Wisdom | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , |

Professor Lew Spellman

US Sovereign Risk Part 1-1: Reality Bites Introduction

US Sovereign Risk Part 1-2: Reality Bites Introduction

US Sovereign Risk Part 2: Growth of Debt in the US

US Sovereign Risk Part 3-1: Political Economy of the Growth of Government Debt

US Sovereign Risk Part 3-2: Political Economy of the Growth of Government Debt

US Sovereign Risk Part 3-3: Political Economy of the Growth of Government Debt

US Sovereign Risk Part 4-1: Why the Financial Market Supports Treasuries Despite the Risk

US Sovereign Risk Part 4-2: Why the Financial Market Supports Treasuries Despite the Risk

US Sovereign Risk Part 5-1: How the Market Reins in an Out of Control Sovereign

US Sovereign Risk Part 5-2: How the Market Reins in an Out of Control Sovereign

    US Sovereign Risk Part 6: Capital Safe Havens

The Spellman Report

“…Professor Lew Spellman Lew Spellman has taught financial markets at the McCombs School of Business at the University of Texas at Austin, where he  is  Professor of Finance since the 1970s. He has also been on the faculty of Stanford University, the LBJ School of Public Affairs, the UT School of Law, and the University of California, Berkeley.

Professor Spellman’s teaches financial markets and institutions at both the graduate and undergraduate level with an emphasis on analyzing and interpreting current financial market trends and policy developments.  His academic publications appear in the Journal of Finance, Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, The Journal of Money, Credit and Banking and the Journal of Banking and Finance among others. He is author of The Depositor Firm and Industry: History, Theory and Regulation.

His experience outside of academics includes government service as Assistant to the Chairman of the President’s Council of Economic Advisors and Economist with the Federal Reserve Board. His published works generally concern the market pricing of financial institution claims. Professor Spellman’s business interests include serving as Director and Chairman of Investments, Magna Carta Insurance Companies. Previously, he served as Chairman and CEO of Real Rate Financial and Electronic Exchange Technologies. He holds several U.S. patents relating to inflation adjusting financial instruments that led to the development of the Treasury TIPS instrument.

Lew Spellman holds the degrees of BBA and MBA from the University of Michigan and MA and PhD in economics from Stanford University. …”

http://thespellmanreport.com/about/

 

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Lewis J. Spellman–Quantitative Easing 2 and Inflation–Video

Lewis J. Spellman Interviews Dr. Lacy Hunt–The Morass of Debt 1–Videos

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