I couldn't think of a suitable subject. Oh, well. ;/
What no one has known before about me (which will be an exception after the end of this sentence ;p) is that I spend a lot of my time browsing around the Internet and absorbing information. You can call it my "zombie time." The reason for why I brought that up is because this is the first time that I'm making a subject purely based on my investigations.
This investigation concerns Wall Street. The record numbers are more alarming to me than a relief because of a sense of security. One part of the reason why is because I've noticed a lot of similarities between now and the crash of 1929. Around the time of the crash of 1929 a number of things happened: for one, the Dow Jones Industrial Average had increased in value by five times in the five years leading up to the crash; the market had unstable losses and gains just before the crash; some particular people tried to gain the confidence of the public for the market in the midst of the crash; the price and interest in gold rose dramatically afterward.
What really got my attention was the part about the gold. Usually when the economy is doing good you could expect gold to stay at a relatively low value. However, despite how well Wall Street has been doing since the recession that followed 9/11, and the record-breaking results that it has to show in these past couple of days after a short period of insecurity and instability in the market, the ever-increasing value of gold, which has been predicted to keep rising well into the future, has made its entrance onto the stage. Is this in preparation for another recession or, perhaps, another depression? That's what I've wondered.
In my opinion the Wall Street that we know today doesn't represent nearly as much of our economy as it should, and has been representing more and more the success of international corporations and other entities that feed on our consumers and make more money by hiring cheaper elsewhere (or even within our own borders by using illegal immigrants). That's what I've come up with to explain the contrast in how well the market's doing in comparison to how the people of this nation are actually doing. And look at our deficit!
The difference between then and now, however, is that the value of gold is rising before (what I think will be) the next crash. My guess is that, since there are plenty of people that place their faith in the value of gold, that this is a tactic that will take advantage of people. In other words: to make a profit despite what the future will hold for the market and the economy. I've already noted at least three different advertisements (from three different entities; I refuse to call them businesses) for the selling of the public's gold to them for an amount of money that will pale in comparison when the value of gold rises to the predicted heights. Gold is accepted internationally with open arms, so the only flaw in this potential scheme is if not enough people fall for it.
Something just doesn't seem right about all of this, and these are some of the theories that I've decided are worth considering. I've even wondered if it's possible for Wall Street to be acting as a sort of blanket to cover much of how we're actually doing. What do you guys think about all of this?