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While we're posting lyrics...

 

Allman Brothers "Hot 'Lanta"

 

 

 

and "In Memory of Elizabeth Reed"

 

 

 

:P ?:P

 

qo

And Mountain Jam.

 

It's really worth listening to even the recent stuff from the Allmans. "High Cost of Low Livin" has some very, very fat tones... even without Dickey, they smoke. Warren Haynes is a very fine guitarist.

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Look, TwoScrews:

 

you are, now, sadly, (sniff!!!) a proven cultural illiterati. At least HRFF knows the difference between symphony and OPERA.

 

Gentle reader, lest you have NO IDEA WHAT The BARE SPEAKETH OF (Heaven FURfend?!!!!) Mr TwoScrews, just yestiddy, tried to engage in yet anUDDER one of his tour de FURces? of HISTORICAL REVISIONISM and characterized Wagner as a writer of SYMPHONIES, SNOT operas. :o :blink: :unsure: :rolleyes: :rolleyes:

 

HRFF is still rolling on the floor in laffter over/re THAT FO' PAW.

 

Take MH's mocking cASS(_)_)tigations of HRFF w the proverbial grain of salt, pleez.

 

Tia.

 

Much more of that, TwoScrews and you will leave HRFF little choice butt to regard you, henceFURth, as some sort of shiftless cultural HACK. :D :P :D not merely a repository of fatuous pretense lurking behind a razor thin veneer of boundless bluster and bombASS(_)_)t.

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Look, TwoScrews:

 

you are a proven illiterati. At least HRFF knows the difference between symphony and OPERA.

 

Gentle reader, lest you have NO IDEA WHAT The BARE SPEAKETH OF (Heaven FURfend?!!!!) Mr TwoScrews, just yestiddy, tried to engage in yet anUDDER one of his tour de FURces? of HISTORICAL REVISIONISM and characterized Wagner as a writer of SYMPHONIES, SNOT operas. :o :blink: :unsure: :rolleyes: :rolleyes:

 

HRFF is still rolling on the floor in laffter over/re THAT FO' PAW.

 

Take MH's mocking cASS(_)_)tigations of HRFF w the proverbial grain of salt, pleez.

 

Tia.

 

Much more of that, TwoScrews and you will leave HRFF little choice butt to regard you as some sort of idle cultural HACK. :D :P :D

Wasn't that Vagner dude the one who wrote "Killed the Wabbit"???

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WOOOOOWWWWWZAAAAA....quit lurking merci...give us your take on the Bonds away

 

Another very profitable week following Doc and stooltown, sold 5 of my 20 today to take some major coin off the table, and low and behold Daboys are kind enough to drop the POG just in time for me to roll my profits into some more maples.

 

Think we are headed to 940-960 as previously noted but had to take some profits ...Bulls could sneak up on Dabears with the old csco trick or another Sodamn

sighting early in the week. Will be looking to pile on any rallies...evening!

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I agree with TE on the bond market. There will be a flight to safety very soon AGAIN due to a tanking fo the stock market.

 

Ironically, Greenspan has tried to prop up the stock market for the last 3+ years and now he is probably hoping for a good downward correction to help prop up his bond bubble.

 

Still sounds weird to look at almost everything and realize it is in some sort of bubble.

 

Corporate debt.

Consumer debt.

Stock market.

Bond market.

Housing market.

 

Guess that about covers it.

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I agree with TE on the bond market. There will be a flight to safety very soon AGAIN due to a tanking fo the stock market.

 

Ironically, Greenspan has tried to prop up the stock market for the last 3+ years and now he is probably hoping for a good downward correction to help prop up his bond bubble.

 

Still sounds weird to look at almost everything and realize it is in some sort of bubble.

 

Corporate debt.

Consumer debt.

Stock market.

Bond market.

Housing market.

 

Guess that about covers it.

Doolar bubble?

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Nolan -- Credit Bubble Bulletin

 

Returning to reality, major tumult overwhelmed the Credit market this week. Despite Treasury bond option volatility reaching the highest level since LTCM and panic selling gripping the marketplace, yesterday?s developments didn?t even muster one of the 15 ?Top Stories? on Bloomberg News in the evening. The stock market responded only by giving up the majority of its earlier 160 point gains. Bullish pundits were quick to explain that bond market weakness was confirmation of the recovering economy. I see no recognition that we have abruptly returned to near systemic crisis.

 

http://www.prudentbear.com/creditbubblebulletin.asp

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Microsoft's Web site was made inaccessible for an hour and 40 minutes Friday afternoon when a denial-of-service attack overwhelmed the site with traffic, making it impossible for legitimate page requests to get through.

The outage, which began about 1:21 p.m. Pacific time, was the result of a conventional denial-of-service attack and not a software vulnerability being exploited, a Microsoft spokesman says.

 

http://www.informationweek.com/story/showA...icleID=12808118

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Gosh. It looks like bonds, the 10,000 lb gorilla, are going to STOMP equities FURshurrrrre. Itz only a matter of TIME.

 

Monday a bad FUR day FUR stox? Perhaps. PerhapSNOT.

 

SNOT until there's some dreadful newz or equally dreadful dislocation that can't be PAPERED OVER any longer.

 

The BARE glanced at his latest copy of Martin Weiss's agitprop last night, and wondered, idly, when Mr Weiss' dour predix will come to pASS(_)_) ass they have several X beFUR.

 

Meanwhile, on the LEFT COAST the weather remains eternally sunny, tempered by cool marine air, the skies, like those painted by Wall St shills remain almost cloudless, pierced, at noon, by the thunder of The Blue Angels practicing FUR SeaFair, and late in the evening an elegant, svelte CRESCENT MOON hangs low in the Heavens over the Olympic range and sets, languidly, behind their majestic purple silhouette in the gathering darkness.

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Why yields will continue to fall:

 

"Our best judgement is that heroic efforts of monetary and fiscal authorities will become wanting. Their best laid plans will be thwarthed by a failure of the transmission mechanism of public policy. Debt deflation, the slow, inevitable repayment of debt will inexorably subtract sufficient funds from the spending stream to thwart their best stimulative efforts. The result will be an ever increasing shortage of yields, and the longest dated, highest quality securities will be the most sought after as short term rates languish near zero. Already at 1%, the Fed funds rate, which is the anchor to the Treasury yield curve, suggests that in normal circumstances the curve in ten and thirty year maturities would yield 2.6% and 3% respectively. However, 1% is not the end of the easing cycle. The inability of massive governement deficits and monetary stimulus in Japan during 1990-2000 highlights the problem to engender nominal growth in the face of excessive debt levels.

 

....we view the bull market in long bonds only about half over."

 

-Van Hoisington, Hoisington Investment Managment Co.

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