
Originally Posted by
Steven Douglas
...and then jumbling them into an homogenous, meaningless blob.
Fucking-A I would. You might enjoy batting at the leaves, and ignoring the roots, but I don't like to waste time. The Fed is exactly where I would start, for all the market distortions that originated with the Fed. Think it's hard to draw a meaningful connection between the Fed and agriculture? It's so easy that anyone with a pair of working eyes and half a brain stem can see it.
I'll provide the dots. You draw the six degrees of Kevin "Fed" Bacon separation lines between them. And if you can't do it, don't worry, there are plenty here who can.
1) Nixon Shock
2) Petro dollars
3) Wars in Iraq and the rest of the Middle East
4) Ethanol
5) Corn
No, that's your obfuscating fingers, trying to get everything framed so that they can point in so many directions, at so many possible causes (and there are many, most of which are minor) that the Fed just gets lost in the jumbled up, obfuscated heap, as one "possible" effect (probably minor, doncha know -- ya just never know!).
TO WIT: (didn't even read this before posting the above, but it's a predictable script, and proves my point)
Game, set, match. Now I'll repeat myself:
...trying to get everything framed so that they can point in so many directions, at so many possible causes (and there are many, most of which are minor) that the Fed just gets lost in the jumbled up, obfuscated heap, as one "possible" effect (probably minor, doncha know -- ya just never know!).
FYI, the Fed's role in everything monetary does not EVER get lost in a "millions of other things" heap for me. The Fed not only causes monetary and price inflation, it FACILITATES every other kind of distortion in the market, making big things out of "millions of other[wise little] things". End the currency debauchery, THEN look at the size of those "millions of other things" that affect prices, both naturally and artificially. What you DON'T do, is work your way backwards, batting at MILLIONS of leaves, most of which could be consequences, unintentional or otherwise, while pretending to address things in a meaningful way.
When Copernicus finally did successfully place the Sun in the center of the solar system (not universe), that was not the end of Ptolemaic epicycles (perfect circles and circles within circles) and equants and such, because he used all of them. We would need a Kepler and others follow after and shake out the cobwebs. But Copernicus had at least put us on the right track, because it did not matter what anyone worked on, so long as the Earth was assumed to be the center of the universe. Likewise, it does not matter how many "price influences" you look at; so long as you leave the Fed as the accepted center of the known monetary universe, EVERYTHING will be incredibly overly-complicated, and completely fucked up.