Thursday, November 22, 2007

Ask An Economist

 

They all had that thirsty look and then they noted the snipers and their commanders,
not seeing but noting the poltergeist effects in the street.
Noting the freightened animals eyes when the disorder of the hunter and the hunted is actuated and there's no protection from the reactions of the adamant with firepower and the lust of empire.

So it went in the survival of the most corrupt with diligence of an evangelist but no horse sense with regard to kickbacks for the cosmos
Blindsided if you happen to look thru a pinhole of light that exposes what goes on in the shadowy parts of  the hollow parts.

Rumbling down a mountain comes what looks like a grizzly , knowing the Man has a big bang , never before experiencing except in the ears.
The primeval fixtures become more accentuated, including bearskin rugs for the shooters who give the 360 degrees to anything that moves.
That assures success that can be verified by blood running in the ditches.
Most credit given to the fingers with the least amount of reaction time.

Poverty, what is it good for? ask an economist.
Telling you something like it's a structural filter to keep capital flexible , but usually forget to mention the market function of those licensed to kill to justify ends that have special meaning according to the theories in their manuals.

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