For those of you who listened to Peter Schiff cut on Ben Bernanke in typical style on FSN this weekend, maybe this will make some sense. I really don't think Bernanke is a bad guy. He's just a guy who all of a sudden has realized that it's a lot harder in the real world than in the academic world. To his credit, he hasn't thrown in the towel. I think he's trying very hard, but he's having to relearn everything that he's ever been taught. Schiff made the point that Bernanke made the unintelligent statement several weeks go about inflation not affecting American consumers as long as they bought products within their domestic market, something like that. He now points out that Bernanke is backtracking on that statement. I think Schiff's sentiments are wrong. I don't think Bernanke is backtracking, I think he just didn't know what he was talking about and he went out and learned it as fast as he could. Now he's changing his story. He's not changing his story because he's a bad guy, but because he's educated himself. He's a learner and he suddenly is realizing that everything he's been taught has been wrong. If Jim Puplava should try and reach anyone in the world, it should be Ben Bernanke, because he is the first person among all those Washington types I have seen in quite some time who has been willing to restudy one of his public assertions. This seems to be a demonstration of humility. This is a positive. What are the chances Jim could ever get Bernanke on the show to interview? What are the chances Jim could get to him? Wouldn't that be glorious! Bull