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The chart above should scare the hell out of anyone looking at it. It parallels the markets behavior right before the 1929 crash that lead to a long, deep depression.
The chart superimposes the market’s recent performance on top of a plot of its gyrations in 1928 and 1929. The picture isn’t pretty. And it’s not as easy as you might think to wriggle out from underneath the bearish significance of this chart.
Yet the market over the last two months has continued to more or less closely follow the 1928-29 pattern outlined in that two-months-ago chart. If this correlation continues, the market faces a particularly rough period later this month and in early March.
The chart was first publicized in late November of last year, and the correlation since then certainly appears to be just as close as it was before. To be sure, as McClellan acknowledged: “Every pattern analog
Tom Demark added in an interview that he first drew parallels with the 1928-1929 period well before last November. “Originally, I drew it for entertainment purposes only,” he said—but no longer: “Now it’s evolved into something more serious.” (source)
When the Wall Street stock market crashed in October 1929, the world economy was plunged into the Great Depression. By the winter of 1932, America was in the depths of the greatest economic depression in its history.
The number of unemployed people reached upwards of 13 million. Many people lived in primitive conditions close to famine.
In St Louis, more than 1,000 people lived in shacks made from scrap metal and boxes. There were many similar Hoovervilles all over America. (source)
Between 1 and 2 million people travelled the country desperately looking for work. Signs saying ‘No Men Wanted’ were displayed all over the country.
Causes of the Depression
Effects of the Depression
There is no complete record of how many people starved to death or died from malnutrition and deficiency diseases caused by poor diet during the depression. We can be sure that deaths occurred, but lack of transparency by the Hoover regime, and a lack of nationwide record keeping means we will never know exactly how many lost their lives.
Starvation, vitamin deficiencies, malnutrition, immune disorders and suicides would all have increased during such a major downturn. History teaches us that this happens after any major disaster, economic or otherwise. Incidences of diseases like typhus and typhoid would have increased in the shanty towns that sprung up in some parts of the United States.
All this in a country that had less than half the population than it currently has. Lets hope for all our sakes that the similarities between 1929 and 2014 are just that, and a second great depression does not come to pass.
Delivered by The Daily Sheeple
Contributed by Chris Carrington of The Daily Sheeple.
Chris Carrington is a writer, researcher and lecturer with a background in science, technology and environmental studies. Chris is an editor for The Daily Sheeple. Wake the flock up!