Well I’d make sure it isn’t that one and don’t like the sound of that. Just what if you were still going at that time and something started going wrong. The older you get the harder it is sometimes on things like your heart. Think I’m gonna look for bone supplements now.
I just like the picture…..
…..but does it mean that all the wildlife has gone up in smoke?? Close to it I think!!

goldielocks @ 11:45…Thanks for that!!
It’s a case of man plans and God smiles. Is anything man does good?? I’m beginning to wonder. I believe the hip replacement surgery done here, if I live so long (lol), is metal with a nylon or plastic cup between the metal ball and socket, with an expectation of it lasting at least 15-20 years. That’ll do me unless I have to wait 15-20 years before my surgery comes. LOL!!! ;o(
Worth a thought!!
Bankers Plan Secret London Meeting To ‘End Cash’
June 1 2015 | From: WakeUpKiwi via TheEventChronicle
Economist Martin Armstrong claims there is a “secret meeting to end cash” set to take place in London before the end of the month involving representatives from the ECB and the Federal Reserve.

Armstrong, who is known for successfully predicting the 1987 Black Monday crash as well as the 1998 Russian financial collapse, expressed his shock that no news outlet has reported on this upcoming conference.
“I find it extremely perplexing that I have been the only one to report of the secret meeting in London. Kenneth Rogoff of Harvard University, and Willem Buiter, the Chief Economist at Citigroup, will address the central banks to advocate the elimination of all cash to bring to fruition the day when you cannot buy or sell anything without government approval,” writes Armstrong.
“When I googled the issue to see who else has picked it up, to my surprise, Armstrong Economics comes up first. Others are quoting me, and I even find it spreading as far as the Central Bank of Nigeria, but I have yet to find any reports on the meeting taking place in London, when my sources are direct.”
Armstrong first brought attention to the alleged meeting earlier this month when he revealed that representatives from the Federal Reserve, the ECB as well as participants from the Swiss and Danish central banks would all be attending a “major conference in London” at which Kenneth Rogoff of Harvard University, and Willem Buiter, the Chief Economist at Citigroup, would give presentations.

Kenneth Rogoff, Professor of Economics at Harvard University.
“We better keep one eye open at night for this birth of a cashless society that is coming in much faster than expected. Why the secret meeting? Something does not smell right here,” concludes Armstrong.
Discussions and moves towards banning cash have repeatedly cropped up in recent weeks.
Willem Buiter, who Armstrong claims is speaking at the secret meeting, recently advocated abolishing cash altogether in order to “solve the world’s central banks’ problem with negative interest rates.”
Last year, Kenneth Rogoff also called for “abolishing physical currency” in order to stop “tax evasion and illegal activity” as well as preventing people from withdrawing money when interest rates are close to zero.

Striking a similar tone, former Bank of England economist Jim Leaviss penned an article for the London Telegraph earlier this month in which he said a cashless society would only be achieved by:
“forcing everyone to spend only by electronic means from an account held at a government-run bank,” which would be, “monitored, or even directly controlled by the government.”
Big banks in both the United Kingdom and the U.S. are already treating the withdrawal or depositing of moderately large amounts of cash as a suspicious activity.
Reports emerged in March of how the Justice Department is ordering bank employees to consider calling the cops on customers who withdraw $5,000 dollars or more.

Willem Buiter, the Chief Economist at Citigroup.
Meanwhile in France, new measures are set to come into force in September which will restrict French citizens from making cash payments over €1,000 euros. Armstrong suggests that “financial police” could enforce this new law by, “searching people on trains just passing through France to see if they are transporting cash, which they will now seize.”
As Armstrong notes, banning cash in order to eviscerate what little economic freedoms people have left to avoid disastrous Keynesian central bank policy is nothing short of economic totalitarianism.
“In the mind of an economic tyrant, banning cash represents the holy grail,” writes Michael Krieger. “Forcing the plebs onto a system of digital fiat currency transactions offers total control via a seamless tracking of all transactions in the economy, and the ability to block payments if an uppity citizen dares get out of line.”
Short fuses
Just another day of watching the pm market rise and then tank. Is it any wonder that after four years of the same old crap day in and day out, fuses are short?
Silverboom – stick around, maybe you’ll bring us some luck.
silverngold
Yep times could get dicey and the farther away from population centers the better off you’ll be.
It’s a certainty that the Feds will try and keep everyone fed but who knows how effective that will be.
ipso facto @ 10:44….very good advice….
But he left out one important thing. Those 1/2 of the population living on government handouts are not going to go quietly into the night. They are going to be looking for something for nothing and believe they have a right to what YOU and I have so they can survive.
Better make sure you and your neighbors have whatever it takes to protect and defend what you were smart enough to save for that crisis; what the government is doing its level best to take away from us. Enough said!! Silverngold
Crisis Could Elevate Protein Above Gold
By Rick Ackerman June 1, 2015
[Hoarding gold and silver against economic catastrophe can give us peace of mind. But in times of true crisis, there are some things that will be even more valuable to our survival than bullion, as the following note reminds us. It was contributed to a Rick’s Picks forum discussion by a rancher who used the pseudonym ‘Bed Rock’. RA]
The place I looked to see how to be prepared for a dollar collapse was in the journals of the pioneers who settled the frontiers in North America two to three hundred years ago. When moving to an unexplored region inside the frontier, and being months of hard travel away from any civilization where the necessities of life could be purchased, is basically where we all will be when commerce stops because of a dollar collapse.
Bartering works good, but money was not very valuable, even gold. The people needed a place to live that offered protection from the weather, water and food. Everything else was and is a luxury. The people who had the talents of building shelters and producing food prospered and those that came with family money either died or went home broke.
more http://us1.campaign-archive1.com/?u=822f57272edf2c46e4f77a7be&id=0316b9297e&e=8a939c79e5
There’s no apparent reason for the jump in gold and silver … that’s why the cretins stand aside
Gold Spikes Above $1200, Silver Over $17 On Heavy Volume
Tyler Durden’s pictureSubmitted by Tyler Durden on 06/01/2015 09:28 -0400
For now, no catalyst – as if one is needed in this market – but gold and silver prices just spiked higher on heavy volume above $1200 and $17 respectively…
Nice pop in the precious
Go Baby Go!
Good morning Oasis
Kinross’ Maricunga Mine Returns to Full Operation
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/kinross-maricunga-mine-returns-full-210000739.html
Aureus Mining pours first gold at New Liberty project in Liberia
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/aureus-mining-pours-first-gold-102222969.html
Endeavour Silver Infill Drilling Confirms Thick, High Grade, Silver-Gold Mineralization at Terronera Property, Jalisco State, Mexico
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/endeavour-silver-infill-drilling-confirms-113000327.html
Metanor Provides Update
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/metanor-provides-130900940.html
Okay, you guys win
Once upon a time I used to like hanging out here.
Once upon a time, it was a well- trafficked site. Plenty of great opinions and info exchanged.
Once upon a time, I made a lot and lost a lot hanging out here.
Once upon a time, it was fun with a lot of give and take.
Once upon a time, it was a good-natured place.
No more. Y’all win. Too much anger, fuses too short.
aufever
Sorry, man, if I mistook someone else’s post as coming from you. I thought I had it noted correctly but obviously not.
Apologies to you, sir!




