I have been mainly thinking that the price at about US$3000 per ounce is crazy for what is just a metal. It's not diamonds and was recently so much cheaper. I have been mainly convinced that if one of the two wars would definitively end, it would drip back down to perhaps $2200. So was thinking I'd wait for that before going and getting some more of it, since Trump is consistently pushing peace in Ukraine.
Then, in another thread here I posted some stuff about German hyperinflation -
1919 was the Treaty of Versaille, 1929 was a serious stockmarket crash on Wall Street.
1929 to 1939 was the Great Depression.
Hitler was elected chancellor in 1933.
A gap in my knowledge and possibly this thread are the details of what the London and New York bankers, and Rothschild's specifically did in the 1920s after the Treaty of Versaille to corner Germany in such a way that WW2 was provoked.
en.wikipedia.org
the exchange value of the mark fell from 320 marks per dollar in mid 1922 to 7,400 marks per US dollar by...
In one of the references it says :
That is about 100 years ago, just under.
There is an old thread here on that topic -
Hello all,
I believe it would be wise to have a space to discuss, and share, our ideas pertaining to how to deal with the eventual decline of the USA, and its presumed downward spiral into hyperinflation as the welfare apparatuses disintegrate. I indicated, both, "nationally", & "internationally", as this topic will have global ramifications, thus those of you that live abroad are more than welcome to join such a discussion: The manner in which one will be required to prepare will vary greatly based on one´s geography.
Thus, let´s share general sentiment that will hopeful shake some of...
So with that scary history in mind, maybe it is worth getting more gold even at this elevated price.
Earlier today I had a similar thought to this -
Wouldn't call them all
important although there is some sort of collective intelligence, just as how the bookmakers predict elections better than the survey groups. There has been a sense for a long time that things in the economy cannot go on, and some form of hard reset is needed and inevitable. This would have been worse without Trump, but maybe there is something fatal in the economy that no-one is talking about openly which can't really be helped at this point.