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BookQuotes

Community for : 2.8 years

If you are literate and find a good quote, just post it. This verse is kind of self-explantory.

It must come from a book and must be cited. Page is unnecessary.



Owner: GrayDragon

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2
"I'm not a cultivated man, but I have thought a lot about this!" Look at what this line does to this paragraph. Taking your ideas and putting them in dumb mouths is magic. That is how you write.      (files.catbox.moe)
submitted by Dindu to BookQuotes 4 months ago (+3/-1)
1 comments last comment...
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Psalm 139:22 - My new favorite bible verse.      (files.catbox.moe)
submitted by lord_nougat to BookQuotes 1.6 years ago (+10/-0)
4 comments last comment...
8
Mr. Rothschild's Energy Discovery     (BookQuotes)
submitted by Crackinjokes to BookQuotes 2.0 years ago (+8/-0)
1 comments last comment...
"mechanics, electronics, etc.) can be immediately applied in the study of any other energy
system (e.g., economics).

Mr. Rothschild's Energy Discovery

What Mr. Rothschild [2] had discovered was the basic principle of power, influence, and
control over people as applied to economics. That principle is "when you assume the
appearance of power, people soon give it to you."

Mr. Rothschild had discovered that currency or deposit loan accounts had the required
appearance of power that could be used to induce people (inductance, with people
corresponding to a magnetic field) into surrendering their real wealth in exchange for a
promise of greater wealth (instead of real compensation). They would put up real
collateral in exchange for a loan of promissory notes. Mr. Rothschild found that he could
issue more notes than he had backing for, so long as he had someone's stock of gold as a
persuader to show his customers.

Mr. Rothschild loaned his promissory notes to individuals and to governments. These
would create overconfidence. Then he would make money scarce, tighten control of the
system, and collect the collateral through the obligation of contracts. The cycle was then
repeated. These pressures could be used to ignite a war. Then he would control the
availability of currency to determine who would win the war. That government which
agreed to give him control of its economic system got his support.

Collection of debts was guaranteed by economic aid to the enemy of the debtor. The
profit derived from this economic methodology made Mr. Rothschild all the more able to
expand his wealth. He found that the public greed would allow currency to be printed..."


Please note that it is unintended cycle of expansion and contraction of fictitious money supply which causes people to overleverage and then lose their real property to the lenders.

Remember that when you wonder why the Fed which is run by these same descendants of this same person are suddenly raising interest rates making it hard for people to make their debt payments meaning they're going to quote "lose their homes" and "lose their stuff" as planned as outlined by Mr Rothschild from his Discovery above.

It is never the fed's intention to correctly control the economy. It is the feds intension to get people to over leverage and then surrender all their real property.
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Preconceived notions, especially when one is fairly brought up in their influence, are most difficult to shake off.     (BookQuotes)
submitted by SilentByAssociation to BookQuotes 2.6 years ago (+2/-0)
0 comments...
Stewart Edward White, Camp and Trail, 1907
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ThotPatrol in a Fantasy Book     (BookQuotes)
submitted by GrayDragon to BookQuotes 2.7 years ago (+17/-1)
12 comments last comment...
I was thinking about posting this in /v/ThotPatrol, but you illiterate neanderthals would probably complain ...

Background: This well-written book series is The Belgariad. Ce'Nedra is a clever but highly conceited Imperial princess that is a newly minted queen in a foreign land by marriage. A war is scheduled, and so she wants armor, but she is extremely small-framed. The master armorer, Delban, who cares not for even royal titles, does not want to waste real armor for a small girl. Finally, they agree on ceremonial armor. Ce'Nedra comes to pick it up ...

Ce'Nedra, however, was staring disapprovingly at the breastplate Delban had made for her. It would quite obviously fit -- too well. "Didn't you forget something?" she asked him.

He picked the breastplate up in his big hands and examined it. "It's all there," he told her. "Front, back, all the straps to hook them together. What else did you want?"

"Isn't is a trifle -- understated?" Ce'Nedra suggested delicately.

"It's made to fit," he replied. "The understatement isn't my fault."

"I want it a little more --" She made a sort of curving gesture with her hands.

"What for?"

"Never mind what for. Just do it."

"What do you plan to put in it?"

"That's my business. Just do it the way I told you to."

He tossed a heavy hammer down on his anvil. "Do it yourself," he told her bluntly.