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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Went to the local reloading shop today
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<blockquote data-quote="Mr. Magoo" data-source="post: 2663721" data-attributes="member: 124360"><p>Yes, the dilution is the broad economy wide cause in this round, along with increasing minimum wages (it never fails to do so), mandatory vaccinations at large comanies in states with lots of shipping ports and manufacturing causing goods to come to a standstill and corresponding shortages in labor and goods. The shortages and excess money in people's hands created the demand spikes that got it going.</p><p></p><p>The russian invasion started prices heading up *immediately* on things like natural gas, oil, and grain even though none of the real effects from that were hitting at that time. The immediate jump was fear and uncertainty based.</p><p></p><p>There were a few artificial triggers that happened to get the ball rolling as well, in order to try to shift blame away from the root cause you outlined above such as the ship getting stuck crossways in the suez canal, starting the shipping snarl that backed things up there, and the oil pipeline that went from texas to the east coast that got "hacked", that sent fuel prices heading up. That's when they were still saying the inflation we were seeing was 'transitory' haha.</p><p></p><p>These spikes at 50 to 300% that we are seeing on certsin things like reloading stuff and real estate are planned, and only set in motion when investors are well positioned to take advantage of the spike.</p><p></p><p>Every single one of the factors I've outlined</p><p>including the relentless push for excess consumerism (rather than saving and investing) serve to shift weath and real estate (and corresponding control) out of the hands of the many and into the hands of the few.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Mr. Magoo, post: 2663721, member: 124360"] Yes, the dilution is the broad economy wide cause in this round, along with increasing minimum wages (it never fails to do so), mandatory vaccinations at large comanies in states with lots of shipping ports and manufacturing causing goods to come to a standstill and corresponding shortages in labor and goods. The shortages and excess money in people's hands created the demand spikes that got it going. The russian invasion started prices heading up *immediately* on things like natural gas, oil, and grain even though none of the real effects from that were hitting at that time. The immediate jump was fear and uncertainty based. There were a few artificial triggers that happened to get the ball rolling as well, in order to try to shift blame away from the root cause you outlined above such as the ship getting stuck crossways in the suez canal, starting the shipping snarl that backed things up there, and the oil pipeline that went from texas to the east coast that got "hacked", that sent fuel prices heading up. That's when they were still saying the inflation we were seeing was 'transitory' haha. These spikes at 50 to 300% that we are seeing on certsin things like reloading stuff and real estate are planned, and only set in motion when investors are well positioned to take advantage of the spike. Every single one of the factors I've outlined including the relentless push for excess consumerism (rather than saving and investing) serve to shift weath and real estate (and corresponding control) out of the hands of the many and into the hands of the few. [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Went to the local reloading shop today
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