Poolman's Account Talk



I'm sorry Poolman..not to be disrespectful of your choice in Stock experts..But this guy is a certifiable KOOK!!!..He went on for 5min:45sec about absolutely nothing except he craps good now...Holy moldy..if this guy was so smart, why is he selling Radio Shack stuff and filming these vids from a one room closet?...

Anyways, at least he cut his friggin hair, and don't look like he just came from a Love-in at Haight-Ashbury.
 
Now young man don't be harsh - it takes all kinds to make a market.

yeah but, he kinda creeps me out....
ekk.gif
 
Well half those jokers at Obama's economic summit today were creeping me out - what a three ring circus. This guy has got me as nervous as a cat on a hot tin roof - you may think the economy has problems now, well just wait.
 
Well half those jokers at Obama's economic summit today were creeping me out - what a three ring circus. This guy has got me as nervous as a cat on a hot tin roof - you may think the economy has problems now, well just wait.

Yeah, that three ring circus that includes Warren Buffett..... :rolleyes:

NOW HERE IS REALITY......

US deficit zooming to half-trillion as Bush leaves
Monday July 28, 7:48 pm ET
By Andrew Taylor, Associated Press Writer US deficit soaring to record half-trillion dollars as Bush leaves; sagging economy blamed

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The government's budget deficit will surge past a half-trillion dollars next year, according to gloomy new estimates, a record flood of red ink that promises to force the winner of the presidential race to dramatically alter his economic agenda.
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The deficit will hit $482 billion in the 2009 budget year that will be inherited by Democrat Barack Obama or Republican John McCain, the White House estimated Monday. That figure is sure to rise after adding the tens of billions of dollars in additional Iraq war funding it doesn't include, and the total could be higher yet if the economy fails to recover as the administration predicts.
The result: the biggest deficit ever in terms of dollars, though several were higher in the 1980s and early 1990s as a percentage of the overall economy.
Neither campaign is backing off campaign promises -- McCain to cut taxes and Obama to expand health and education programs -- in light of the bleaker new figures.
"We can't afford not to invest in some major initiatives such as health and energy and more tax cuts," said Obama economic adviser Jason Furman.
But Democrats controlling Congress suggest that may have to change once President Bush's successor takes office.
"Whoever becomes the next president will have a very, very sobering first week in office," said Senate Budget Committee Chairman Kent Conrad, D-N.D.
McCain promises to renew the full roster of Bush tax cuts enacted in 2001 and 2003 and add many more for businesses and upper income people who pay the alternative minimum tax. The Bush tax cuts expire at the end of 2010 and renewing them would soon cost well over $200 billion a year. Eliminating the alternative minimum at the same time would cost almost as much.
Obama would repeal tax cuts on wealthier taxpayers and investors but would leave most of the Bush tax cuts in place while seeking additional cuts for senior citizens, the middle class and the working poor. And he also wants lots of new spending for health care, education and many other federal programs.
"There's a total disconnect between today's report and what we're hearing on the campaign trail," said Robert Bixby of the Concord Coalition budget watchdog group.
The deficit situation confronting the next president is reminiscent of that which Bill Clinton faced in 1993. Under Wall Street pressure, Clinton abandoned promises of tax cuts and pushed a tax-heavy deficit reduction plan through a Democratic Congress.
The administration said the deficit was being driven to an all-time high by the sagging economy and the stimulus payments being made to 130 million households in an effort to keep the country from falling into a deep recession. But the numbers could go even higher if the economy performs worse than the White House predicts.
The budget office predicts the economy will grow at a rate of 1.6 percent this year and will rebound to a 2.2 percent growth rate next year. That's a half point higher than predicted by the widely cited "blue chip" consensus of business economists. The administration also sees inflation averaging 3.8 percent this year, but easing to 2.3 percent next year -- better than the 3 percent seen by the blue chip panel.
"The nation's economy has continued to expand and remains fundamentally resilient," said the budget office report.
A $482 billion deficit would easily surpass the record deficit of $413 billion set in 2004. The White House in February had forecast that next year's deficit would be $407 billion.
The deficit numbers for 2008 and 2009 represent about 3 percent of the size of the economy, which is the measure seen as most relevant by economists. By that measure, the 2008 and 2009 deficits would be smaller than the deficits of the 1980s and early 1990s that led Congress and earlier administrations to cobble together politically painful deficit-reduction packages.
Still, the new figures are so eye-popping in dollar terms that they may restrain the appetite of the next president to add to the deficit with expensive spending programs or new tax cuts. In fact, pressure may build to allow some tax cuts enacted in 2001 and 2003 to expire as scheduled, with Congress also feeling pressure to curb spending growth.
The administration actually underestimates the deficit since it leaves out about $80 billion in war costs. In a break from tradition -- and in violation of new mandates from Congress -- the White House did not include its full estimate of war costs.
On a slightly brighter note, the deficit for the 2008 budget year ending Sept. 30 will actually drop from an earlier projection of $410 billion to $389 billion, the report said.
McCain used the new 2009 estimates to slam both the Bush White House for its "profligate spending" and Democratic rival Obama, who has declined to endorse the goal of McCain -- and congressional Democrats -- to balance the budget.
"I have an unmatched record in fighting wasteful earmarks and unnecessary spending in the U.S. Senate, and I have the determination and experience to do the same as president," McCain said in a statement. McCain again called for a full plate of multi-trillion dollar tax cuts, though campaign adviser Douglas Holtz-Eakin said some modifications could be made to McCain's economic plan to try to reach balance.
Obama's campaign used the new numbers to assail McCain for embracing Bush's tax cuts. As for Obama's plans, campaign adviser Furman said the candidate would cut wasteful spending, close corporate loopholes and roll back the Bush tax cuts on upper brackets while still promising to make "health care affordable and putting a middle class tax cut in the pocket of 95 percent of workers and their families."
Monday's figures capped a remarkable deterioration in the United States' budgetary health under Bush's time in office.
He inherited a budget seen as producing endless huge surpluses after four straight years in positive territory. That stretch of surpluses represented a period when the country's finances had been bolstered by a 10-year period of uninterrupted economic growth, the longest expansion in U.S. history.
In his first year in office, helped by projections of continuing surpluses, Bush drove through a 10-year, $1.35 trillion package of tax cuts.
However, faulty estimates, a recession in March 2001 and government spending to fight the war on terrorism contributed to pushing the deficit to a record in dollar terms in 2004.
There had been progress since then, with a $161.5 billion deficit for 2007 representing the lowest amount of red ink since an imbalance of $159 billion in 2002.
White House budget office: http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/
 
The deficit will be balanced when stronger economic growth returns - it's that simple. We need tax reduction policies to engage industry toward greater productivity and job creation - this all comes with an expanding economy and that takes time.
 
Quit taking it out of MY pockets and putting it in THEIR pockets. I want tax cuts for ME for a change!:mad:

WINDFALL PROFIT TAX ON OIL!
 
Buster,

Come in here and close the door. I have something to tell you that is for your ears only. Maypo actually smells as good if not better than it tastes. There is no comparison with oatmeal. Have you ever had Moxy?
 
Buster,

Come in here and close the door. I have something to tell you that is for your ears only. Maypo actually smells as good if not better than it tastes. There is no comparison with oatmeal. Have you ever had Moxy?

Isn't Moxy a softdrink like soda, the memory isn't what it use to be !
 
moxy 79 up, 44 down
1.Courage, balls, intestinal fortitude.
2. Failed soft drink of the 1930s that tasted like ****. You had moxy because it took courage to drink the stuff. Its downfall came when soda jerks were able to mix the **** motor oil taste indisriminately



I choose #1:cool:
 
And BTW..

Poolman..very sorry for highjacking your thread..Your Daily VIDs are as always, greatly appreciated by me...Please continue as long as they last...Many thanks
 
And BTW..

Poolman..very sorry for highjacking your thread..Your Daily VIDs are as always, greatly appreciated by me...Please continue as long as they last...Many thanks


No Harm, No Foul...

I appreciate everyone's opinion. Everyone is always welcome to speak there peace here. I know that MOT sounds off the wall sometimes. I hesitated to post his last video but thought, Would it be fair to only show the viewer's what I thought was important as far as what MOT post's. No. That is the answer. I have been a "Bear" with this market since last year this time. I have not been comfortable in making a trade for the last 5 months. I have to feel in my heart that I will make money. I don't feel it yet. Way to many problem's on the Horizon. We are at a very critical time right now with the Market's.

Which way will we go ? :worried:
 
Everything is just really bad, IMO. I can't wait to get back into G. If we languish below my sell target of 1280-1320 too long, I will assume we won't make it. Lots of fireworks this week, starting tomorrow with crude inventories.

Seriously, what healthy market moves EXACTLY inverse to every tick by tick oil price? None. It is ridiculous. I think what is means is...no one has any confidence in the market right now. If it's not mortgage related implosions, it's high oil prices, and decreased consumer spending, and job losses....etc etc.

The nuclear bomb may still be ticking ya'll! I suggest sitting at least half in G for the rest of the year.

Everyone is "expecting" this bounce rally to go to 1320, maybe even 1350. I think it will have a tough time. Oil is 5-10 bucks away, IMO, from a hard bounce up. Guess what that does to Mr. Market in this environment? Uh huh.
 
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