Quantum Kush 38% THC?

TonightYou

Well-Known Member
Errrrr ya. Has an American president ever killed anyone?

Sending in a small, covert team to do the job seems like a much better idea in contrast to George W's multi-trillion dollar cluster fuck, no?
The whole use the right tool for the right job. Bush thought an axe was appropriate when a scalpel was
 

natro.hydro

Well-Known Member
I will go on record saying that I feel George W Bush was/is a complete idiot.

Shit if anyone wants a good giggle look up his speech on sovereign entities lol. Dude didn't have a f'ing clue what he was talking about. Reminds me of when a state senator of mine came to talk to my class and was asked his position on affirmative action and proceeded to him and haw without giving an answer....
 

Cold$moke

Well-Known Member
that vain wouldn`t be near daniel boone would it? i know a grower that had one around there.
I believ its in w. Virginia
right now the co. Sends me about 1500$ a year just to have the lease and they pay for whatever they pull out.

my dad speculated if they went into production the royalties would be very nice $

but im not quitting my day job lol
 

OGEvilgenius

Well-Known Member
Wages have been stagnant for around 30 years. The wealthy have continued to have income and piece of the pie grow at a very large rato.

Now the top .1 has as much wealth as the bottom 90%. These numbers haven't aligned since 1929
That's the nature of the economic system. It will also work out like this. The only reason it changed in America after WW2 was because America was one of the only unscratched major powers and also because of Bretton Woods. But because your currency is nearing the end of its mathematical lifespan and most of your industry has been deliberately sent overseas there's no reason for it to change. The system is setup for those who run it to steal from those who don't.
 

SeedHo

Well-Known Member
I believ its in w. Virginia
right now the co. Sends me about 1500$ a year just to have the lease and they pay for whatever they pull out.

my dad speculated if they went into production the royalties would be very nice $

but im not quitting my day job lol
that`s the same area i was asking about. same way he came about his to, his father had purchased it.
 

Cold$moke

Well-Known Member
Yep I believe its been in the fam since 76 I think

I got family from kentucy lol (dueling banjos)
edit also lived in Charleston when I was very little
 

OGEvilgenius

Well-Known Member
Profits are basically an illusion, almost none of it's been reinvested, almost all of it is coming from stock purchases fueled by the Fed. The reason it's not being reinvested is because there's a great fear that it's a short term illusion and no one wants to be caught with their pants down in a country that's becoming increasingly difficult to do business in and whose fundamental economic problems are incredibly bad. Most jobs created are garbage and the UE numbers are junk anyway as they take people off the rolls after 6 mos to massage the statistics. Government statistics = government lies generally speaking. Actual UE rate is closer to 20%.

That people live and die on the streets of Silicon Valley is no news to the poor, of course. With more than 6,500 tech companies in all, Santa Clara County is home to the biggest stars in the tech universe, including Google, Facebook, Yahoo, eBay and Apple. But the land of high-tech milk and honey is also a prime example of the widening divide between the nation’s haves and have-nots.
For all its stock-option millionaires, the San Jose/Santa Clara County region (pop. 1.8 million) also has the nation’s fifth largest population of homeless (after New York, Los Angeles, Seattle and San Diego), according to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. The main culprits? Budget cuts that have frayed the safety net and sky-high housing costs. These days, a three-bedroom, one-bath starter home in San Jose, the county seat and one of its most affordable cities, costs a cool million. Rents for a two-bedroom apartment go from $2,000 to $5,000 a month, and those on the low-end are scarce.

While homelessness remains off the radar of the Silicon Valley titans, it keeps getting worse, up 20 percent in two years.
More than 7,600 people sleep on the streets every night. Dozens of encampments dot the landscape, and thousands of people live in temporary quarters—shelters, motels, friends’ homes. Several private and public organizations in Santa Clara County are dedicated to helping the unhoused receive medical care, supplies and assistance in finding shelter. But funds and available units to move homeless people into permanent housing are meager.
http://www.alternet.org/hard-times-usa/jungle-thousands-homeless-people-live-shantytowns-epicenter-high-tech-super-rich

There are shanty towns all over the United States now. This wasn't so common not that long ago.

The amount of pain not that far down the road is quite scary to see. Amos is very smart for living in the middle of nowhere and attempting as much self sufficiency as he can IMO. I'm doing the exact same thing.
 

TonightYou

Well-Known Member
I've always remembered the saying "no man's an island". Besides singular individuals are the easiest to wait out if the event of a collapse were imminent. Besides what happens when there is a skill or trade one needs?

Physician heal thy self indeed.
 

OGEvilgenius

Well-Known Member
A living wage is what should be implemented. No full time worker should be forced into poverty and shoved on to the government dole to make ends meet.
Guy, the entire financial system needs to collapse and be replaced with something not based on debt that's beneficial to everyone and not easy to manipulate. Every single financial problem we have is a direct result of privatized fractional reserve banking being the source of our currency. Those who pull the switches make all the money. For example the Rockefellers made a noteable position move, not coincidentally before oil prices crashed, to get out of oil. How could they know to do so before it took a dive? Well, it's because they're one of the controlling hands of said system, which also controls politicians who literally do nothing to help anyone but the mega rich. In fact, a study released by Princeton not that long ago (I haven't read it, but I plan to as I want to see the methodology) indicated that American policy moves on average have only benefitted the mega wealthy over the past 30-40 years or so - literally exclusively and completely and that public opinion had been completely ignored. They even concluded that a democratic republic was not something America could be called with policy created like this. Banana Republic perhaps.
 

OGEvilgenius

Well-Known Member
I've always remembered the saying "no man's an island". Besides singular individuals are the easiest to wait out if the event of a collapse were imminent. Besides what happens when there is a skill or trade one needs?

Physician heal thy self indeed.
My dad's a physician and he doesn't live far away. I live on a small island that's pretty tight knit with a lot of locally skilled folks and a lot of highly rich farm land. I'm in a good position, although we're probably all fucked anyway, I have little faith in humanity overall due to the sociopath influence combined with most folks willingness to bend to sociopaths out of pure fear (the latter quite well established in psychology research).
 

TonightYou

Well-Known Member
Guy, the entire financial system needs to collapse and be replaced with something not based on debt that's beneficial to everyone and not easy to manipulate. Every single financial problem we have is a direct result of privatized fractional reserve banking being the source of our currency. Those who pull the switches make all the money. For example the Rockefellers made a noteable position move, not coincidentally before oil prices crashed, to get out of oil. How could they know to do so before it took a dive? Well, it's because they're one of the controlling hands of said system, which also controls politicians who literally do nothing to help anyone but the mega rich. In fact, a study released by Princeton not that long ago (I haven't read it, but I plan to as I want to see the methodology) indicated that American policy moves on average have only benefitted the mega wealthy over the past 30-40 years or so - literally exclusively and completely and that public opinion had been completely ignored. They even concluded that a democratic republic was not something America could be called with policy created like this. Banana Republic perhaps.
It needs to be regulated not imploded. No one benefits from that occurrence. You have family and friends who are retired? Children who are trying for a future? Any form of savings that you've worked hard for? So do millions.

If you have a link I'd like to read that as well. Im about finished with Capital in the 21st century anyways.
 
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