Tuesday, 16 October 2012

The cosmic law in our atoms

I got this film from a friend in Romania today and it explains in a good way the energies between the universe and what takes place in our own atoms in our bodies. The film is 30 minutes but I recommend to see it to the end because there are many things explained that we should know about.

  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iFN0tjEbuL0&feature=youtu.be

Saturday, 23 June 2012

Why did I post the Astrology site on my blog.

If you have read my blog from the start you know that I believe that anything that can be measured if put in a chart and becomes a curve will show that the chart looks like any other chart whatever it is. DOW's monthly chart between 1973 and 1980 looks exactly the same as the chart of my daily weight during 3 years. A one minute chart for the dollar against the yen during 2 hours two weeks ago has exactly the same pattern as a chart of my daily emails sending times during 6 weeks.
I have studied this for 29 years and my conclusion is. Whatever you measure and make a chart of will look the same as any other chart at a certain period. To me this is a fact. So when I see a curve I can often predict what the next movement will be because I have seen this curve pattern hundred of times in different charts. It does not matter if it is a one minute chart, 2 hours, daily, weekly or monthly.

My world economic charts tells me of a strong possibility of a depression and maybe even a Great depression coming. When I happened to see this article about 2012 - 2015 where 1.200 astrologers see the same thing coming I just wanted to share it with you.


Uranus Square Pluto: What's the Fuss? Get the scoop on the biggest Astrology event of the year

http://beta.tarot.com/articles/astrology/about-uranus-square-pluto


Saturday, 11 February 2012

The Great Depression.


Read this story and compare with Europe today. What is tried today did not help 1930 - 1954. Will it help now ?


A Short History of the Great Depression

By Nick Taylor is the author of “American-Made,” a 2008 history of the Works Progress Administration.
The Great Depression was a worldwide economic crisis that in the United States was marked by widespread unemployment, near halts in industrial production and construction, and an 89 percent decline in stock prices. It was preceded by the so-called New Era, a time of low unemployment when general prosperity masked vast disparities in income.
The start of the Depression is usually pegged to the stock market crash of “Black Tuesday,” Oct. 29, 1929, when the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell almost 23 percent and the market lost between $8 billion and $9 billion in value. But it was just one in a series of losses during a time of extreme market volatility that exposed those who had bought stocks “on margin” – with borrowed money.
The stock market continued to decline despite brief rallies. Unemployment rose and wages fell for those who continued to work. The use of credit for the purchase of homes, cars, furniture and household appliances resulted in foreclosures and repossessions. As consumers lost buying power industrial production fell, businesses failed, and more workers lost their jobs. Farmers were caught in a depression of their own that had extended through much of the 1920s. This was caused by the collapse of food prices with the loss of export markets after World War I and years of drought that were marked by huge dust storms that blackened skies at noon and scoured the land of topsoil. As city dwellers lost their homes, farmers also lost their land and equipment to foreclosure.
President Herbert Hoover, a Republican and former Commerce secretary, believed the government should monitor the economy and encourage counter-cyclical spending to ease downturns, but not directly intervene. As the jobless population grew, he resisted calls from Congress, governors, and mayors to combat unemployment by financing public service jobs. He encouraged the creation of such jobs, but said it was up to state and local governments to pay for them. He also believed that relieving the suffering of the unemployed was solely up to local governments and private charities.
By 1932 the unemployment rate had soared past 20 percent. Thousands of banks and businesses had failed. Millions were homeless. Men (and women) returned home from fruitless job hunts to find their dwellings padlocked and their possessions and families turned into the street. Many drifted from town to town looking for non-existent jobs. Many more lived at the edges of cities in makeshift shantytowns their residents derisively called Hoovervilles. People foraged in dumps and garbage cans for food.
The presidential campaign of 1932 was run against the backdrop of the Depression. Franklin Delano Roosevelt won the Democratic nomination and campaigned on a platform of attention to “the forgotten man at the bottom of the economic pyramid.” Hoover continued to insist it was not the government’s job to address the growing social crisis. Roosevelt won in a landslide. He took office on March 4, 1933, with the declaration that “the only thing we have to fear is fear itself.”
Roosevelt faced a banking crisis and unemployment that had reached 24.9 percent. Thirteen to 15 million workers had no jobs. Banks regained their equilibrium after Roosevelt persuaded Congress to declare a nationwide bank holiday. He offered and Congress passed a series of emergency measures that came to characterize his promise of a “new deal for the American people.” The legislative tally of the new administration’s first hundred days reformed banking and the stock market; insured private bank deposits; protected home mortgages; sought to stabilize industrial and agricultural production; created a program to build large public works and another to build hydroelectric dams to bring power to the rural South; brought federal relief to millions, and sent thousands of young men into the national parks and forests to plant trees and control erosion.
The parks and forests program, called the Civilian Conservation Corps, was the first so-called work relief program that provided federally funded jobs. Roosevelt later created a large-scale temporary jobs program during the winter of 1933–34. The Civil Works Administration employed more than four million men and women at jobs from building and repairing roads and bridges, parks, playgrounds and public buildings to creating art. Unemployment, however, persisted at high levels. That led the administration to create a permanent jobs program, the Works Progress Administration. The W.P.A. began in 1935 and would last until 1943, employing 8.5 million people and spending $11 billion as it transformed the national infrastructure, made clothing for the poor, and created landmark programs in art, music, theater and writing. To accommodate unions that were growing stronger at the time, the W.P.A. at first paid building trades workers “prevailing wages” but shortened their hours so as not to compete with private employers.
Roosevelt’s efforts to assert government control over the economy were frustrated by Supreme Court rulings that overturned key pieces of legislation. In response, Roosevelt made the misstep of trying to “pack” the Supreme Court with additional justices. Congress rejected this 1937 proposal and turned against further New Deal measures, but not before the Social Security Act creating old-age pensions went into effect.
Brightening economic prospects were dashed in 1937 by a deep recession that lasted from that fall through most of 1938. The new downturn rolled back gains in industrial production and employment, prolonged the Depression and caused Roosevelt to increase the work relief rolls of the W.P.A. to their highest level ever.
Hitler’s invasion of Poland in September 1939, following Japan’s invasion of China two years earlier and the continuing war there, turned national attention to defense. Roosevelt, who had been re-elected in 1936, sought to rebuild a military infrastructure that had fallen into disrepair after World War I. This became a new focus of the W.P.A. as private employment still lagged pre-Depression levels. But as the war in Europe intensified with France surrendering to Germany and England fighting on, ramped up defense manufacturing began to produce private sector jobs and reduce the persistent unemployment that was the main face of the Depression. Jobless workers were absorbed as trainees for defense jobs and then by the draft that went into effect in 1940, when Roosevelt was elected to a third term. The Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in December 1941 that started World War II sent America’s factories into full production and absorbed all available workers.
Despite the New Deal’s many measures and their alleviation of the worst effects of the Great Depression, it was the humming factories that supplied the American war effort that finally brought the Depression to a close. And it was not until 1954 that the stock market regained its pre-Depression levels.

Friday, 10 February 2012

The World in 50 years


 I see the world as it will be within 50 years. One land and one leader. USA started with putting together 52 states, Europe now already has 27. Facebook and internet is used by today's youngsters to get to know each other. It takes 4 hour to know 80 % of a new personality anywhere in the world on internet. I have tried this myself. I needed Facebook, Camera, Skype and a Numerology program. Studied pictures of my new friend on her site, saw a video of her to read the body language. After 4 hours I know more about her than my best friend. Within 5 years every person will have access to the internet.

 My vision is that the World President  and the Congress will sit in Europe. All markets are open to everyone and there is only one currency. Wars are gone and so atomic weapons and tanks etc. At that time in 2062 is does not matter who makes stuff, food or hair dressing. 
To get there we need a Super Great Depression that soon will start according to analysis. It will last for thirty years and all paper money will be worth less until the new world currency comes. Think of how easy it is to look back to our own knowledge we learnt at school during the 1900's. Today the world has changed dramatically and I see my grand children sending videos to China and Russia with pictures of their house, friends and cat attaching their favourite music and discussing their teachers at school. I have lived with computers since 1982, 12 hours per day and I just see this.

Saturday, 21 January 2012

Interest rates, bonds and SP500


Currently the U.S., Britain and Europe are asking about one per cent for loans. The sovereign debts increase enormously year by year. There is no stop in sight for either of these habits. The SP500 has moved from 100, 1982 to 1.500, 2000. A drop to 800, 2002 and a new top at 1.500 2007 and a drop to 800, 2009. From here a top 2011 or 2012 at 1.300 – 1.500. The big technical picture shows that there are five waves on upside 1900 – 2001. This third top in 2013 seems to be the final top before the big drop that will take the indexes down to between 800 till 1.300  within a few years. Yields on 10 year notes have fallen from 16 % to 2% during 30 years. These yields are at the very bottom and from here we will start to move up again within months with the long term target of 16%. Bond yields and SP500 followed each other 1962 – 1985. Then yields fell and SP500 rose to 1.500. After the top that will come 2014 the index will fall and rates go up until the curves meet again.