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Harris picked the only running mate she could find more insane than she is. I guess she's more interested in getting the illegal alien Somali vote than the votes of the people who depend on fracking in Pennsylvania.It appears that new evidence suggests that there was only one shooter in Butler, PA, but we can't be sure if the crime was LIHOP (let it happen on purpose) or MIHOP (Make it happen on purpose).Biden loses in court again ... twice. He MUST spend that $1.4B on border wall construction rather than diverting it to some pet project. But count on him dragging his feet. AND... Texas can put those buoys in the Rio Grande to block illegal alien wetbacks.The market drop is a strong predictor that Harris will lose.We need to paint in bright colors in campaign ads.https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2024/08/to_reach_non_traditional_republican_voters_we_must_speak_in_non_traditional_ways.html
Tom welcomes a new guest to the show Robert R. Prechter, the founder of Elliott Wave International. Robert believes that social mood shapes events, not the other way around. He argues that human beings go through cycles of positive and negative moods that have an impact on the stock market and other areas of society. He has observed that conflicts tend to break out when social mood is declining after reaching a peak. This correlation has been seen in the recent events in the Middle East. Bob explains how the human brain is conditioned to think linearly, which makes it difficult to understand the fractal nature of the stock market. He gives examples of how regular explanations for market changes often fail, while predictions using the Elliott wave model have been more successful. He also discusses how the recent mania for tech stocks and cryptocurrencies is a reflection of the positive social mood that has been prevalent since the end of the COVID-19 lockdowns. However, he believes that this is coming to an end, and the world is entering a negative mood phase. Bob also talks about the potential for a deflationary crash and how investors can protect themselves by investing in safe assets like gold, silver, and floating rate notes. He recommends having an offshore bank account and a second passport as a backup. He also offers a special landing page for listeners of Palisades Gold, which provides free resources and discounted options for his book "Conquer the Crash" and various subscription services. Talking Points From This Episode Social mood drives market trends, not news events. Debt and speculation have caused a bubble in real estate and other investments. Take precautionary measures such as investing in gold and securing an offshore account to protect against potential market crashes. Time Stamp References:0:00 - Introduction0:30 - Socionomics & Moods4:45 - Movement & Fractal Thinking6:00 - Commodities & Covid9:00 - Current Outlook & Optimism15:00 - Lockdown Effects18:30 - Supercycles & Trends20:00 - Bitcoin & Currencies24:30 - CBDC Concerns27:00 - Bond Rate Bomb29:20 - Feds Control Illusion32:40 - Politics & Sentiment34:30 - Real Estate Debt38:35 - Dollar Outlook & Gold41:00 - Deflationary Impulse43:45 - Zero-Day Derivatives45:50 - Banks & Bail-Ins?48:45 - Safety & Gold/Silver50:45 - Metal Storage & Passports52:30 - Africa & Passports54:30 - Concluding Thoughts Guest Links:Website: https://www.elliottwave.com/PGRTwitter: https://twitter.com/elliottwaveintl Robert R. Prechter has authored 20 books on finance, including a New York Times bestseller. Since founding Elliott Wave International in 1979, Bob has focused on analyzing financial markets from a technical perspective. Prechter writes the monthly Elliott Wave Theorist, one of the longest-running financial publications in existence today. Prechter has developed a theory of social causality called socionomics, whose main hypothesis is that waves of social mood prompt social actions, including trends in fashion, entertainment and the overall pricing of stocks. Prechter has co-authored several academic papers, including one demonstrating that the stock market can predict the outcome of U.S. presidential elections when an incumbent is running. Bob has been a lifelong advocate of real money as opposed to fiat money.
What does the length of hemlines in women's fashion have to do with trends in the stock market? Discover the answer on this week's Retirement Lifestyle Advocates radio program, where your host, Dennis Tubbergen, talks with our guest Mr. Murray Gunn about what Elliot Wave principle and Socionomics indicate for the future of the markets.…
In this weekly Metaversal Recap, we cover the hottest projects entering the NFT space. Sartoshi released his MFers, Damien Hirst is repurposing his design of Drake's Certified Lover Boy, and Ross Ulbricht is dropping a collection from prison. We walk through the exciting things happening in the world of Meebits, as well as novel mechanisms being used in Wolf Game. Also, Sandbox Alpha is finally here! And finally… are we seeing top signals? Stick around and find out! ------
In this weekly Metaversal Recap, we cover the hottest projects entering the NFT space. Sartoshi released his MFers, Damien Hirst is repurposing his design of Drake's Certified Lover Boy, and Ross Ulbricht is dropping a collection from prison. We walk through the exciting things happening in the world of Meebits, as well as novel mechanisms being used in Wolf Game. Also, Sandbox Alpha is finally here! And finally… are we seeing top signals? Stick around and find out! ------
Welcome to The Barrier Breakdown: Disrupting Mental Health! This week we are joined by Matt Lampert, director of the Socionomics Institute. Years of observing market trends and social swing have given Matt and his colleagues key insights into fortunes and failures of the future. In this episode, he discusses how he came to see these trend-shaping waves of social mood reflected in the stock market — and how to capitalize on them. Listen to us talk about the economic irregularities of 2020, as well as how our experience with COVID-19 is mirrored by prior examples of highly infectious diseases. You can learn more about Matt and his work by checking out https://socionomics.net/ to see firsthand the research he's working on, or follow the Socionomics Institute on Twitter @socionomics and Facebook https://www.facebook.com/socionomics/ All our upcoming continuing education events can be found at www.cbicenterforeducation.com You can watch or listen to The Barrier Breakdown on any of the following streaming services: Youtube - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCyc6xZzY7ra3L5pI2g5GKrw Podbean - https://cbi.podbean.com Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/2ETgUdDykWN96Tv26PWyZ2 Apple Podcasts - https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-barrier-breakdown-disrupting-mental-health/id1546097545 Follow us on social media: CBI: https://www.facebook.com/CognitiveBehaviorInstitute Center for Ed: https://www.facebook.com/CBIcenterforeducation Instagram: @cognitivebehaviorinstitute :::::::::::::::::::: Music: Basic Majesty - Ashley Shadow Support by RFM - NCM: https://youtu.be/XVwlTTMgw5c ::::::::::::::::::::
The following conversation centres around Socionomics, the science of history and social prediction which aims to understand how social mood influences the social actions of the individual and a population at large. This conversation is with the Director of Socionomics Institute, Matt Lampert and has many practical implications to how psychology, behaviour, sociology influence the economy and stock market. We dissect how individuals can make more informed profitable decisions in the stock market as a result of understanding the concept of Socionomics. https://twitter.com/Socionomics http://socionomics.net/
One of the things we underestimate is the interconnectedness of our global habits, behaviors and phases in culture with hormones like testosterone and dopamine. How can we map The Age of Enlightenment, The Great Depression, and even the progressive virus we see today alongside the solar patterns and hormone levels? Is there a solution to this? On this episode, I’m joined by researcher, author and independent scholar, Roy Barzilai who shares on a very overlooked field of study that is vital to understanding our society and the challenges we’re facing. If we neglect or abandon the science of hormones and solar cycles and how it shapes our history, character and personality, we will remain impotent to doing anything about it. -Roy Barzilai Four Takeaways The problem in our society today is that we take a reductionist approach to science and fields of study. Not integrating these fields puts us at a disadvantage. The Age of Enlightenment was connected to more solar activity. As a result there was more energy, higher fertility and birth rates. People were more reasoning and independent. The ebb and tide of human culture and history is driven by the connection between hormonal cycles and solar cycles. The decline in testosterone actually leads to more violence, imbalances and instability in the masculine ideal. At the start of the show, Roy shared on his background and how taking a reductionist approach has destroyed the scientific establishment. Next, we talked about the cycles of history and why hormones play such a huge role in that. We also discussed how bad the next economic crash will be, and the link between increased addiction and low numbers of mood hormones. We also discussed; The connection between solar activity and the Independence of man How we’ve gone from an age of enlightenment to anti-reason How mental health manifests in male and female brains We have a lack of hormonal balance in our society which is causing massive and far reaching issues in how we relate to each other, and how the world functions as a whole. In the past, increased solar activity increased enlightenment because of rising testosterone, serotonin and dopamine. Now the opposite is happening. With declining rates in mood hormones there isn’t much to motivate and make us happy. This doesn’t mean it out of our control though, we have to pay attention to these patterns to know how to change them. Guest Bio- Roy Barzilai is an independent scholar, researcher and author of Sex Wars - How Hormones Drive Gender, Race, & Culture Conflicts and two other books. By exploring the intellectual history of Western civilization, Roy seeks to reach a greater understanding of the human mind. As a financial analyst for more than a decade, Roy became aware of the herd mentality in financial markets. He studied the Wave Principle of Human Social Behavior and the new science of Socionomics, focusing on how change in social mood affects society, its ideas, philosophy, culture, and economy. To learn more and to get Roy’s books, go to https://testosteronecivilization.com/ for more information.
Humans are pack animals, and they are vulnerable to the moods of the crowd. Socionomics is the study of crowd dynamics and how they impact markets. Steven Hochberg has been studying and applying this for many years with Elliott Wave International, and in this episode he drills down into this field and addresses many of the rebuttals and errors of his organization. Show notes: http://goldnewsletter.com/podcast/socionomics-101-steven-hochberg-reads-the-mood-of-the-market/.
This portion of HHE explains where the science is headed (6 of 6)
This portion of HHE explains where the science is headed (6 of 6)
This portion of HHE explains where the science is headed (6 of 6)
This portion of HHE explains where the science is headed (6 of 6)
This portion of HHE explains where the science is headed (6 of 6)
This portion of HHE explains where the science is headed (6 of 6)
This portion of HHE explains where the science is headed (6 of 6)
This portion of HHE explains where the science is headed (6 of 6)
This portion of HHE explains where the science is headed (6 of 6)
This portion of HHE explains where the science is headed (6 of 6)
This portion of HHE explains where the science is headed (6 of 6)
This portion of HHE explains where the science is headed (6 of 6)
This portion of HHE explains where the science is headed (6 of 6)
This portion of HHE explains where the science is headed (6 of 6)
This portion of HHE explains where the science is headed (6 of 6)
This portion of HHE explains where the science is headed (6 of 6)
This portion of HHE explains where the science is headed (6 of 6)
This portion of HHE explains where the science is headed (6 of 6)
This portion of HHE explains where the science is headed (6 of 6)
This portion of HHE explains where the science is headed (6 of 6)
This portion of HHE explains where the science is headed (6 of 6)
This portion of HHE explains where the science is headed (6 of 6)
This portion of HHE explains where the science is headed (6 of 6)
This portion of HHE explains where the science is headed (6 of 6)
This portion of HHE explains where the science is headed (6 of 6)
This portion of HHE explains where the science is headed (6 of 6)
This portion of HHE explains where the science is headed (6 of 6)
This portion of HHE explains where the science is headed (6 of 6)
This portion of HHE explains where the science is headed (6 of 6)
This portion of HHE explains where the science is headed (6 of 6)
This portion of HHE explains where the science is headed (6 of 6)
This portion of HHE explains where the science is headed (6 of 6)
What makes the upheaval in Syria SO impossible is that 15 separate countries have active military operations in that country. The war also involves non-state group like ISIS, the Kurds, and Hezbollah. With a crisis this thorny, new or useful insights are in short supply. Can we shed light on how you see this conflict? In a word, yes...
"I'm sorry" -- it's the first truly hard-to-say phrase we repeat as children. We all know why apologies matter. Yet with big public apologies, what about the when? Are big apologies more frequent in certain recognizable eras? Pop Trends, Price Culture explains how social mood feeds the emotions that motivate "I'm sorry"...
“The Most Important Thing in the World…” Yes, that is the conventional wisdom about the fed funds rate. No, we are not putting words in anyone’s mouth. Someone really said it: Hear that audio clip – and lots more – for yourself. Pop Trends, Price Culture considers what really is (and is not) “the most important thing…”
Can two economists from opposing schools of thought share the Nobel Prize in the same year? They can ... and they did. Yet this mixed-up decision becomes clear when you see it as a story about mixed...
The only thing worse than making a bad decision is to make a bad decision and think that it's good.
Halloween is right around the corner: This episode of Pop Trends, Price Culture pays tribute to the greatest and most chilling 'Trick or Treat' prank of the 20th century. Let's just say that, if anything, America's mood was a bit too ready for this one. Plus, a link to the free video we call "History’s Hidden Engine."
As the world was falling apart, a towering maestro gave the world an exquisite composition that both captured and reflected the grievous sentiment of that time. This week's episode of Pop Trends, Prices Culture tells part one of an exceptional two-part story. Plus, a link to the free video we call "History's Hidden Engine."
The public loves portrayals of vigilante justice. Memorable vigilantes are sometimes a ‘good guy,’ other times they are … something else. Why? Where did those characters come from? Are there ever ‘good guy’ vigilantes in the real world? These great questions get great answers in this episode of Pop Trends, Prices Culture. Plus, read Bob Prechter's original essay that explains the link between pop culture & the stock market (free!).
More than 80 percent of economists predicted it would happen. The Fed would raise interest rates. It would be the 'All Clear' signal for the economy. But... it didn't happen. The entire economics profession was caught off guard. Listen to the 'follow up story' you won't get anyplace else.
Just before he was re-elected, the President assured the public that America would not go to war. But go to war it did -- complete with harsh anti-immigration laws, and tens of thousands of naturalized citizens in "relocation camps." No, this isn't a re-run of our previous episode. Different president, different war -- but social mood was very much alike.
For the past 100 years, social mood has been pivotal in America’s decisions to go to war. This episode of Pop Trends, Price Culture shows just how true this is was for World War I – despite...
Immigration policy has been an epic contradiction all thru U.S. history. America is “a nation of immigrants,” yet major political trends in America frequently include outbursts of anti-immigration...
Who actually tries to get away with making the most outrageous and extreme comments in public? No, not professional wrestlers. The answer is, “Aspirants to the Oval Office.” Pop Trends, Price Culture explains why the Stupid Season of presidential politics has arrived a full year ahead of schedule.
The meltdown of China’s stock market is arguably the biggest global financial story so far in 2015. The decline began barely six weeks ago, yet the Shanghai index has lost nearly one-third of its value.
A few provocative questions: Just over a month ago, 9 people were murdered in a church in Charleston, SC. What if people there had responded by looting and destroying property?
To “demonize the enemy” is a staple of war propaganda. But, you don’t need a war to call your enemy demonic. Case in point, the United States and Iran for the past 35 years – as in, “The Great Satan” vs. “The Axis of Evil.” Each country really did use language that describes a mortal foe. So what on earth explains recent news of these two enemies shaking hands over a comprehensive nuclear agreement? This week’s Pop Trends, Price Culture explains the otherwise inexplicable answer.
What made a sitting president go on TV to show America a big bag of crack cocaine - literally? And what made a later president drop the phrase “War On Drugs” from his vocabulary?
Real liberty begins with independent thinking -- and Professor Dennis Elam is really good at it. You heard his insights for yourself if you caught part one of our interview, and in part two he covers an even more amazing range of topics...
Dr. Dennis Elam is a tenured professor of accounting at Texas A & M University, San Antonio. He is an expert in finance, yet Professor Elam blows up stereotypes about the accounting profession. He's incredibly well versed in popular culture: his insights go from Richard Pryor, to themes in cinema, to the "mob museum" in Las Vegas. And, as we learned in conversation with Professor Elam, he actually applies socionomics in his curriculum for accounting -- students love it.
Can you name the MOST authoritarian government document in U.S. history? A Pulitzer Prize winning author described it as a plan "for America's intelligence services ... to monitor the communications...
Lots of critics say television has been in a second "Golden Era." But truth be told, the phrase 'Dark Golden Era' describes it better -- because the best shows in the past 15 years have indeed been a deep shade of "dark gold." Listen in and hear Robert Folsom's four top nominees for the best and most conspicuously negative shows since 1999 (yes, including Game of Thrones).
The 'Rural Purge' of the 1970-1971 season changed television forever -- it was fast, dramatic and revolutionary, yet it's all but unknown today. This historic transformation reveals an influence more powerful than historians and sociologists can ever discern.
Alastair MacDonald has a pretty cool resume: Successful business owner, stockbroker on Wall Street, and a real estate investor. Yet he was born & raised in Zimbabwe, so before his career in finance he was a professional hunter and safari guide. Alastair has had amazing success using socionomics to anticipate major trend changes. Hear his story now.
Two stories this week reveal huge possible abuses of government power. Both stories were vastly underreported in the media -- and both also sound too far-fetched to be true... but they are.
The 100-year rise of the security state did NOT happen in subtle steps across decades. Instead, nearly all the growth came during identifiable SURGES — specific periods when the downtrend in social mood fueled the uptrend of authoritarianism.
When Uncle Sam said 'I want YOU,' they stepped forward. But after 14 years the U.S. government STILL would not pay the money it owed tens of thousands of military veterans for their war service. This shameful true story previews the rise of the security state.
Andrew Baptiste's career spans three decades on Wall Street, including senior positions at Morgan Stanley and J.P. Morgan. Yet his familiarity with the Elliott Wave Principle began even earlier, as an insight literally passed from father to son.
When do you know the past is about to repeat itself? Well, in the stock market that time comes when you hear phrases like “This time it’s different,” or, like today’s “New Normal.” Get the 9-minute...
Can you name the first “Rock Star” economist? No, not Robert Shiller. Not Greenspan. Not even Milton Friedman. It was the 1920s, when virtually every literate American knew Irving Fisher.
What could the Federal Reserve and comedian Bill Cosby possibly have in common? In a sentence, “Ruined reputations, thanks to negative social mood.” Yes it sounds bizarre -- but hear Robert Folsom and TR explore WHY the ugly hidden truths about heroes (and heroic institutions) can so suddenly make news. Listen for yourself.
The central bank has a story to tell about itself. Should you believe it? We explain why the Fed wants you to think it has superpowers, even as it befuddles you with preposterous language.
How do you define "Deflation"? Hint: It begins with psychology, NOT with falling prices. Deflation turns the economy and financial world upside down, to the point that borrowers get PAID by lenders. Get the 9-minute story in this episode of Pop Trends, Price Culture.
We survey history's greatest horror films across the decades, and WHY they so often cluster during stock market declines.
Bond yields have fallen to 50-year lows in the world's major economies, and this trend has reached nearly ALL countries. Yet if you can even find a news article about this story, it will probably include phrases like "unanticipated," "surprise," and "against the consensus forecast." What that means is, the experts did NOT see any of this coming...
Three hugely popular horror movies, and three simultaneous stock market declines. Is that just a semi-interesting coincidence... or could the timing of bear markets in stocks and the popularity of...
Social mood transformed a pair of conventional comedians - George Carlin and Richard Pryor - into two of history's greatest stand-up comedians. Hear the story you haven't heard told until now...
Ten minutes about Lenny Bruce, one of the greatest comedians of all time. His career, says Folsom, was shaped more by social mood than any other stand-up comedian in history.