Reality Check continued
- Article Dates:
- 2005
- All Months
Displaying Matches 113 thru 128 of 216 Found. FIRSTBACK NEXTLAST
Supermoney is for founders of businesses, who retain a huge number of shares, and then sell the remainder to investors. The founder gets rich if the stock goes way up. But he must sell into the boom if he is to keep his wealth. That's what Bill Gates does.... keep reading
The American personal savings rate has been close to zero for a decade. Younger Americans do not save. Capital investing remains close to 20%, but foreigners are the investors: buying up capital. This is why you should keep working after age 65.... keep reading
The recession officially in October, 2001, yet the stock market did not forecast this by rising. It was still in the doldrums in July, 2002. This was a recovery like no other, and remains so.... keep reading
Franklin Roosevelt's 1933 Inaugural Address is the model. He is still revered by the voters. Whenever the politicians target a victim, rest assured that you will pay to help them stamp out evil-doers.... keep reading
The decline of the historical content of American high school education has paralleled the increase in taxation. This connection is not random.... keep reading
The Dow Jones Industrial Average in August, 2005, has yet to return anywhere near its 2000 high. This reinforces the 2002 prediction of this top stock analyst. His logic was impeccable. If you have money in the stock market, read this.... keep reading
Arthur Andersen paid a heavy price: bankruptcy. The general public will pay a heavy price when retirees find that the accounting assumptions of the U.S. government were even more creative.... keep reading
George Gilder's book, Wealth and Poverty, was a masterpiece. But in the late 1980s, he was seduced by high tech. His writing style went hyper in 1990, his jargon went exponential in 1995, his followers went wild in 1999, and their investments went south in 2000.... keep reading
The drip, drip, drip of government debt has not created a crisis of public confidence, but eventually it will. In the meantime, here is how smart investors made money in 2002.... keep reading
There is no free market in money. There is a controlled market. Stock market bulls are never content to let the free market have its way in establishing stock prices and debt expenses in a recession.... keep reading
The international gold standard was always a government-created fraud waiting to happen. Shortly after World War I began, this fraud was consummated. Lesson: a government promise is never as good as gold.... keep reading
In The Millionaire Next Door, we learn how 80% of America's millionaires became millionaires: a family business. This is the way to wealth. Start here.... keep reading
The Opponents of Gold Hate the Fact That It Restricts Government Spending. They Love Government Spending -- Even the Monetarists.... keep reading
A seller of any commodity does not announce his sale in advance, for that might drive down the price. Yet central bankers always announce such sales. The reason is obvious: to drive down gold's price. This is not irrational behavior, if you understand their peculiar situation.... keep reading
Here are some stories of the transition from slavery to liberty. My favorite is the story of John McDonough, the riches man in Louisiana at his death in 1850.... keep reading
How Islamic terrorists use Americans' worry to advance their agenda. This was obvious in 2002, when I wrote this. It should be obvious today. There is a way to overcome this, or was before America invaded Iraq.... keep reading
Displaying Matches 113 thru 128 of 216 Found FIRSTBACK NEXTLAST