Banking Collapse? Coming to a Branch Near You!

WHAT: A pre-planned collapse of the US (and global) financial and economic systems. WHO: The same characters who perpetrated the original 911. WHERE: New York City & DC, of course. Plus a sideshow in Washington state. WHEN: The days surrounding September 11, naturally.

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blackcat wrote:Super Rich: The Greed Game

"As the credit crunch bites and a global economic crisis threatens, Robert Peston reveals how the super-rich have made their fortunes, and the rest of us are picking up the bill. "


BBC2 : 9 pm Tonight April 1 2008 (60 mins)

I saw this one. One of the better production of the BBC, not promoted at all.
But as usual it is at least 5 years out of date as what it described where processes that have been noted and tracked by all observers of current economic woes.

What needed to be said about what is going on now was not.
The imploding dollar and collapsing sterling overvalued and in total debt will crash to the floor. Then the economies that aren't producing anything other than fictitious debt will be faced soon with a position of having to trade with other countries with nothing more than worthless pieces of paper. Only those countries with products which have use value to humans will survive. In the process millions will be made homeless and they will go hungry as hyperinflation is already here with price rises already in a whole basket of goods.

The difference with the past is that none of this will arrive in the mainstream media. Soros appearing on the programme was asked point blank if he thinks a recession is coming and he said it will only happen in America not the rest of the world. Now how can that be?

A majority of countries are moving away from the dollar, the US government unable to finance its operations has no more money to fund its illegal wars and this crisis is relfected in the collapsing dollar. Already a section of the superrich want to dump it and go over to another currency. Anyone with dollars in their banks will be burnt. In short the Yanks are attempting to resolve their crisis by dumping it on the world. First it was oil, now its our money!!!
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http://www.naturalnews.com/022932.html
The Forbidden Financial Topic: U.S. National Debt

Wednesday, April 02, 2008 by: Mike Adams

As we wind our way towards an election between the numerous professional liars who have been put forward as candidates for U.S. President, it seems to be a great time to remind us all about the financial issue being routinely ignored by virtually everyone (except Ron Paul, of course, who was never really embraced by the "please lie to me" mainstream public). To what financial issue am I referring? The national debt, of course.

Americans don't want to hear about the national debt. It's like a family living paycheck to paycheck, maxed out on their credit cards, trying to pretend the collection notices are all being lost in the mail. They don't want to admit they have no ability to actually pay off the debt they've incurred by pursuing a flamboyoant lifestyle, blowing wads of cash on high-priced wines, luxury vehicles, and an occassional line of coke -- they desperately want to imagine they can keep living on money that appears from nowhere, regardless of how much they owe to everybody else and the fact that their incomes don't even come close to matching their expenditures.

See the related Counterthink Cartoon on this topic at: http://www.naturalnews.com/022931.html

Too bad every household in America doesn't have its own Federal Reserve, huh? If it did, we could all just print money to pay off our debt, save our skins, and ignore the fundamentals of economics. But even in Washington today (and New York), the Federal Reserve is too busy bailing out greedy, criminally-operated banks to turn much attention to the much larger issue of the United States' national debt. Apparently, saving the banks is more important than anything else, and the Fed is now committed to destroying the U.S. dollar through runaway hyperinflation in order to prevent a few rich bankers from facing the consequences of their outrageous sub-prime lending sprees.


America runs its finances like a crack addict
But let's get back to the national debt for a moment. The United States government is broke. The only reason it's been able to operate for this long is because other nations and foreign central banks have been foolish enough to keep lending the U.S. government more money. It's like giving cash to a crack addict and hoping he will somehow seek out a drug rehab center on his own.

This is the person who never gets a job, never makes an honest living, but yet somehow manages to hit up everybody else for cash. You know how it works: "I need to buy a car to get a job," they say. And then when you pony up the cash for their car, they get drunk and wreck the car, and they never try very hard to get a job in the first place. They keep spending and spending, tossing money down the drain on blows of crack, meth, heroin or booze. They promise to go into rehab someday, if you'll only help them through "the next month" with a little more cash. This is the life of a drug addict. (Do you know one? Everybody does, it seems...)

America is that drug addict. It borrows cash from the central banks around the world, blowing it all on Medicare prescription benefits signed into law by Bush (money for drugs, see?). It spends trillions on military campaigns that accomplish nothing positive, yet enrage the global community and recruit lifelong enemies of this nation. Notice how the price of oil has more than tripled since the war with Iraq started? It's so bad now that truck drivers are going on strike over the price of diesel.

America spends money not merely like a drunken sailor, but like a crack-addicted sailor with a wheelbarrel piled high with one-hundred dollar bills, locked in a room full of Gov. Spitzer's favorite hookers and a suitcase spilling over with blow.


Don't dare explain the national debt to anyone
But try to explain the simple workings of finance, debt and economics to the uninformed, and you'll be accused of being a doomsayer, a pessimist, or -- the worst insult in today's fear-based society -- unpatriotic! How dare you point out the economic truths that will soon bring this country's federal government to its knees! Such blatant truths shall not be tolerated... especially not in a country whose entire financial system is based on a cascade of fictional financial instruments propped up by nothing more than wishful thinking and Enron-style accounting fraud.

Let me translate all this for you in serious terms: The United States is already broke. The Federal Reserve is destroying the currency. The U.S. dollar will soon be virtually worthless. There is no saving the dollar, and there's no saving the savings of any U.S. citizen foolish enough to be holding dollars when the music stops. The Federal Reserve has already decided to do anything in its power to save the rich bankers; even if it means destroying the value of all the dollars held by hard-working Americans. The day will come, folks, when your savings accounts will all be "recalibrated" and you'll be given ten cents on the dollar while the Fed slinks away with 90% of your savings, using it to bail out overpaid bank owners.

And the federal government? Under a long string of presidential crooks -- Democratic and Republican alike -- it has decided to pursue a dangerous experiment called, "What happens if we never pay our debtors while running up more debt?" That experiment, not surprisingly, will end in the financial demise of this nation. (But there's good news: A new, better system may emerge from the dust of the greenback... keep reading...)


You can't defy the laws of gravity... nor economics
These aren't careless predictions, by the way. These are simple observations the follow the fundamentals. Why are the nations of the world fleeing the U.S. Treasury debt auctions? Why are dollars increasingly worthless everywhere except in the United States itself? The answer is because the Fed is hyperinflating the currency to save the banks, even while the government is snorting yet more crack and spending unprecedented levels of increasingly-worthless dollars on drugs and war (or, as they call it, "medication and defense").

Hence the bumper sticker: Annoy everyone. Explain the national debt. People don't want to hear this. They'd rather imagine none of these problems exist; that debt doesn't matter; that unlimited dollars can be created out of nothing with zero impact on peoples' savings; that the U.S. government is wise enough to avert financial disaster. These are the hopes of the deluded. These are precisely the ramblings of Enron's accountants before the crash, or dot-com stock pushers before that crash. They're the slobbering blatherings of all the people who said housing prices will never fall, and therefore everyone will get rich off the never-ending housing price booms!


Important lessons learned the hard way
I've spend many years pointing out the idiocies of the deluded. I publicly predicted the dot-com crash and began warning people to get out of the market in 1998 - 2001. (This is a matter of public record, not some wishful hindsight.) I also publicly predicted the collapse of the housing market right here on this website, beginning nearly two years ago. And now, those predictions that once seemed "radical" are the Wall Street Journal's front page news. What am I predicting now? Like I said, it's not a prediction, it's just an observation.

It's like observing gravity. If you toss something into the air, you can be confident it's going to come falling back to the ground. You don't have to "predict" gravity; it's a law of the universe. It works by itself, like clockwork, regardless of what you want it do to (I'm ignoring near-light speed travel, relativity, quantum physics, and all that fun stuff for the purposes of this metaphor, by the way, for those readers who are physicists). Likewise, when you see a nation throw its dollars into the air, spending its way to oblivion, ignoring its debt and ramping up its spending to even higher levels, it doesn't take much of a prediction to know that it's all going to fall back to the ground in a grand economic collapse.

So I'm not even calling the coming collapse of the U.S. government a "prediction." It's just common sense. It's as obvious as gravity. If you don't believe me, do the math. There is no mathematical solution to the current financial crisis facing not merely the banks and the currency, but the federal government itself. The only unknown factor is WHEN things will happen. Can the Fed help the economy limp along in a state of near-collapse for another year? Perhaps. Five years? Maybe. Ten years? I doubt it.

Now for the good news: The good news is that the U.S. federal government will eventually go bankrupt. Yes, that's the good news! Because after the financial chaos passes (which will not be fun, believe me), we have a chance to create a new society, a new currency and a new, honest system of government that actually represents the People for a change. The current cabal of corruption and criminal behavior that sits in Washington and pretends to protect the interests of the voters is about to find itself on the receiving end of an angry mob. The 200+ year experiment called The United States of America is in its final chapter. But out of its failure, we can learn important lessons. We can learn things that will help us create a better future society. Lessons like:

• Never let a private company (the Federal Reserve) control the money supply.

• Never let "representative" legislators vote in your place. Insist on a DIRECT Democracy in the next society. (We don't need Senators and Congresspeople, folks. The whole concept is long since outdated, and most Senators and Congresspeople are crooks.)

• Never let a government abandon the gold standard for its currency. If you do, that government will inevitably hyperinflate the currency and leave the people broke.

• Never let corporations run the government. If you do, your government will become a branch of the corporations, and the regulators (like the FDA, USDA, etc.) will become agents of corporate-sponsored terrorism that abandon all ethics and destroy the health and safety of the People.

• Never allow the centralization of power in one branch of government. For example, do not allow the creation of Executive Orders we've seen signed by the President.

• Never allow one man (the President) to commit acts of war. Didn't we learn this after Vietnam?

• Never allow people from industry to take jobs in the government where they become biased, pro-corporate pushers of everything from pharmaceuticals to beef.

• Never allow politicians to censor scientists.

• Never allow the population to be dumbed-down through sub-standard public schools that only raise a generation of obedient workers, not skeptical thinkers.

• Never allow the media to control the population through advertiser-supported propaganda and violent programming.

• Never allow politicians to destroy citizens' rights. When they attempt to do so, march on your capitol (in a non-violent way, of course). Arrest the politicians. Prosecute them for crimes against the People.

• Never allow corporate lobbyists to have access to lawmakers. If you do, you'll end up with a corrupt government that only protects corporations, not the People.

• Never allow your government to operate in secret, with secret prisons, secret wiretapping laws and secret war "evidence" that is never made public. Secrecy breeds corruption. Honest societies do not need to conduct their judicial processes in secret.

• Never allow corporations to play God with the food supply by genetically modifying the crops.

• Never allow corporations to be granted intellectual property ownership over seeds, genes, animals and medicines. If you do, you will one day wake up impoverished, "homeless on the continent your fathers conquered," to quote Jefferson.

• Never allow banks to operate on a fractional reserve system of loans and money creation that's just begging for a series of cascading failures.


... I could go on, but you get the point. We have learned some very tough lessons over the last 200+ years, and once this present government collapses, it is crucial that we apply those lessons in creating a new system that abandons tyranny and embraces genuine freedom. We will have this opportunity soon. Many Americans will lose their life savings on the journey towards this new opportunity, but if we maintain our collective vision of a brighter future society, I believe we can create something much better out of the ashes of this failed experiment called the United States of America.

Please note: In no way do I support violence of any kind in creating a new society in the aftermath of this current one. I only support collaboration, openness, freedom and great respect for all living creatures as well as our sacred planet Earth. I believe the passing of this failed government is a blessing, not a curse, and I believe the collapse of the U.S. dollar will ultimately help awaken many to the tough but rewarding decisions that will face us all in the very near future. We must consciously decide to take back our freedoms, our rights and our futures from a system of corporate and government control that has destroyed our planet, exploited our people, and stolen our savings. But if can make the rights decisions based on creating a more promising future for our children, then the rewards will be unimaginable.

We the People hold the power to create a new society based on the freedoms and promises once held sacred in this land. Be ready to play your role, a constructive role, in the aftermath of this current society. And do not be surprised when gravity kicks in and this entire fictional government charade comes crashing down along with the fractional reserve banking system, the criminal Federal Reserve, the war-mongering politicians and the endless, endless debt. There is no way out now other than collapse and rebirth.

I can't say when it will come, or exactly how it will play out. I only urge us all to remain positive, informed and constructive. The coming chaos will be painful in the short term, but out of the ashes of a failed society, we can work together to rebuilt a new one based on real freedom, honest money, sensible medicine and limited government.

###

About the author: Mike Adams is a holistic nutritionist with a strong interest in personal health, the environment and the power of nature to help us all heal He has authored and published thousands of articles, interviews, consumers guides, and books on topics like health and the environment, reaching millions of readers with information that is saving lives and improving personal health around the world. Adams is an independent journalist with strong ethics who does not get paid to write articles about any product or company. In 2007, Adams launched EcoLEDs, a manufacturer of mercury-free, energy-efficient LED lighting products that save electricity and help prevent global warming. He's also a successful software entrepreneur, having founded a well known email marketing software company whose technology currently powers the NaturalNews email newsletters. Adams volunteers his time to serve as the executive director of the Consumer Wellness Center, a 501(c)3 non-profit organization, and practices nature photography, Capoeira, Pilates and organic gardening. Known by his callsign, the 'Health Ranger,' Adams posts his missions statements, health statistics and health photos at www.HealthRanger.org
"The conflict between corporations and activists is that of narcolepsy versus remembrance. The corporations have money, power and influence. Our sole influence is public outrage. Extract from "Cloud Atlas (page 125) by David Mitchell.
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http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2008 ... cs.banking
Batten down the hatches: this is the big one
The Bank has to change its low inflation mentality to address economic reality

Ashley Seager, economics correspondent The Guardian, Monday April 7
2008

"Whole cities of pain. A continent of pain," said the great, if eccentric, Wall Street money dealer Jim Cramer recently. He was talking about the economic pain spreading across the United States, of course.

Until recently, the pain of the US housing market had not spread to our own fair land. Much of the economic data here has been, if anything, surprisingly healthy. But such figures are generally backward-looking and often look fine until suddenly they don't.

Last week we saw a dramatic escalation in pain levels as one mortgage lender after another either withdrew home loans or raised the interest rates. The chart shows the growing divergence between the Bank of England's official rate and interbank Libor rates that explains this.

This is the most concrete evidence to date that the esoteric "credit crunch" has moved out of the so-called "interbank money markets" and into the consciousness and pockets of the British people.

The Co-op Bank and First Direct said they had to shut their doors to new business because house buyers were deluging them with requests for favourable mortgage terms. Many who bought a two-bed flat in a city centre anywhere in Britain are now finding they can't afford the mortgage repayments and the value of the property is dropping fast.

Perhaps Cramer should take a trip across the Atlantic to see more cities groaning under the pain.

Britons are also carrying record levels of debt. Figures last week showed a surprise jump in unsecured lending in February, mostly overdrafts.

A sign of continued consumer confidence, you might say. But it looks more as if consumers faced with greater difficulty in raising mortgage finance have simply let their overdrafts take the strain: it is a sure sign of consumers under stress.

That makes sense when survey after survey has been showing consumer confidence is very weak and people's intentions of making a major purchase are vanishing. No wonder private car sales are dropping. Ernst & Young, the consultants, have warned that dealerships face a year of struggle.

The Bank of England's credit conditions survey last week showed banks expect lending conditions to get worse, signalling more trouble ahead.

The economy has sailed resiliently through many shocks over the past 15 years, from the Asian crisis in the late-1990s to the dotcom bust of the early noughties. But it has not been hit by anything like this credit calamity for a very long time, if ever. This is the big one.

The idea that we can escape the impact of what is happening in America is just wishful thinking. There was some optimism in financial markets last week that the worst of the credit crunch might be over. These are the same markets that failed to predict the credit crunch and are the root cause of this misery, so their opinion, frankly, is not worth much.

Housing bubble

The reality is that the economy has been pumped up and up in the past decade by the cheap and easy availability of credit. Now it is neither cheap nor plentiful and the fallout is hurting.

For one thing the housing market bubble - in a way we knew all along it was a bubble - has been pricked and is starting to deflate rapidly.

House prices are not going to drift quietly sideways over the next few years while average earnings catch up. They are going to fall sharply. I would be surprised if they don't fall by a quarter or more over the next two years.

It is not just about the supply of credit, it is about mentality - the fear and greed syndrome. Who would buy a property, even if they could get a mortgage, if they thought they could wait another year and pay, say, 10% less?

Estate agents report they have stacks of properties for sale but simply can't shift them. So supply is plentiful and demand has dried up. In most markets, that means prices fall. Why should the housing market be different?

Already, the construction sector has nose-dived, as witnessed by two surveys of the sector that came out last week. The much bigger services sector, too, looks as if it is running into trouble, according to a survey by the Chartered Institute of Purchasing and Supply last week.

The service sector is about two-thirds of the economy and has looked robust until now. Financial services employment has fallen sharply. The data is turning down.

All of which brings us to the policy response. What can the Bank of England do about interest rates? The growing risks to growth would normally call for sharp cuts in interest rates, following the Federal Reserve in the United States. The Fed has cut from 5.25% last autumn to just 2.25% now.

The Bank of England has been much more cautious, cutting from 5.75% to 5.25%. Part of the reason is that, until now at least, the British economy had held up well. But the other key element, as the Bank's executive director, Paul Tucker, said last week, is that the monetary policy committee is not prepared to let the "inflationary genie" out of the bottle.

He hinted that slow, gradual rate cuts were in the committee's mind rather than Fed-style emergency cuts.

Inflation

Inflation has been pushed up to 2.5% - above its 2% target - by rising food and energy prices and is likely to rise quite a bit further.

Tucker acknowledged that a sharp slowdown in the economy would also put the brakes on inflation but it was not clear by how much.

But these are strange times for the MPC. In the face of such a shock to the economy as this credit crunch, it has to be wondered whether any of its forecasting models are of any use.

Models often use past performance to predict what might happen. But the past 15 years have been so stable for British growth and inflation that most models are likely to forecast that it will simply carry on. That is very unlikely, which means in turn that interest rates could be left too high for too long, just as happened in the US.

The rate cuts implemented by the Bank of England have probably already been cancelled out by the rising market interest rates that have pushed mortgage costs up. So interest rates are likely to be slowing the economy down, rather than boosting it.

The MPC is also conscious that for years, inflation was steady around the 2% target as high domestic inflation was offset by very low foreign inflation thanks to the strong pound and cheap Chinese imports. But now, rising world food and energy prices, combined with a falling pound, mean imported inflation has risen.

The implication of that is that domestic inflation will have to be much lower in the coming years than in the past decade. In turn, that means the economy will have to be run more slowly to keep domestic inflation in check. That's why Tucker said last week that the MPC wanted to see some slack develop in the economy.

But the risk is that the economy might slow much more sharply than the MPC is expecting, possibly even follow the US into a recession.

In the face of such downside risks, which look to be much bigger than the upside risks to inflation, rates need to be cut, and fast, starting this week. There may not be much time. The pain is real, it is time to get the aspirin out.
"The conflict between corporations and activists is that of narcolepsy versus remembrance. The corporations have money, power and influence. Our sole influence is public outrage. Extract from "Cloud Atlas (page 125) by David Mitchell.
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Post by Emmanuel »

Slowly slowly this is all being introduced to us.
Radio 4 item on yesterday reveals food prices are on the rise and gas in USA already inflating .
Is a house in the Uk ever going to be worth anything?
How did this happen?

A decent layout for the past 10 years.

http://www.chycho.com/?q=node/1638

- - - - - -

10 of the Most Important Economic Events of the Last 10 Years: Collapsing the Economy in the Buildup to World War III

*Excerpt of 10 points

1. Year 1999: Introduction of the euro to world financial markets
2. Year 2000: Collapse of the Dot-com bubble
3. Year 2000: Iraq dumps the US dollar and switches to the euro
4. Year 2005: Rewriting the U.S. Bankruptcy Law
5. Year 2006: Discontinuance of M3
6. Year 2006: Iran moves from US dollars to the euro
7. Year 2006/07: Subprime Market Collapses
8. Year 2007: Run on The Bank in the US and UK
9. Year 2007: 52% Support U.S. Military Strike Against Iran
10. Year 2008: US comptroller general and head of the Government Accountability Office resigns
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The joke is that prior to the credit crunch is that you couldn't buy a flat if you were a first time buyer in London unless you lied on the form and asserted your income was probably 9 times what it was. Now banks wont lend you the money as they know price collapses are occuring across the board, much less in London than the rest of Britain
IMF makes gloomy forecast for UK economy

* Heather Stewart in Washington
* guardian.co.uk,
* Wednesday April 9 2008



Alistair Darling's prediction that Britain will bounce back from the credit crunch by next year looks hopelessly optimistic, according to an authoritative assessment of the crisis by the Washington-based International Monetary Fund.

In its twice-yearly World Economic Outlook, the IMF warned there is a one-in-four chance of a full-blown global recession over the next 12 months.

Against this gloomy backdrop, the UK, with its debt-laden consumers and shaky house prices, looks especially vulnerable. Just a month ago, in the budget, the Treasury pencilled in GDP growth of 2% this year, and a healthier 2.5% in 2009, as the economy recovers; but the IMF today forecast much weaker 1.6% growth for both this year and next.

Alistair Darling has been pinning his hopes on a rapid resolution of the turmoil that has gummed up the credit markets and cut the supply of lending. But the IMF's report paints an alarming picture of an unfolding crisis that will take a long time to resolve. The mortgage crisis in the US is now "the largest financial shock since the Great Depression," it said.

In the UK, the chancellor has repeatedly insisted that the economy is "better-placed" to weather the storm, because of its flexible labour market and low unemployment. But the IMF calculates that Britain's housing market is overvalued by up to 30%, and could be destined for a damaging correction.

House prices are already falling – by 2.5% last month alone, according to the Halifax – and the IMF believes the wider economy will be hit hard over the next two years, as overstretched banks repair their balance sheets, and ordinary borrowers face higher interest rates and tighter loan conditions.

"Certainly the housing market is going to be a drag on the economy," said senior IMF economist Charles Collyns. "We do see house prices softening already, and we see potential that the housing correction will continue, with an impact on consumption. We also see the UK being affected by the tightening of the financial constraints related to the turmoil in the financial markets."

In January, when it last updated its forecasts, the IMF was expecting much stronger growth, of 2.4%, in 2009, but the longer the credit crunch has continued, the more threatened the UK economy has become.

Darling insisted that the downgrade was "not surprising" and that the economy was "extremely strong". But the IMF's gloomy prognosis is a blow to his credibility, as he prepares to fly to Washington tomorrow to discuss the turmoil with his fellow finance ministers from the G7 industrialised countries.

A Treasury spokesman said: "We set out our forecast for the UK economy in the budget, and we stand by that. The Treasury has an excellent forecasting record and we've outperformed the consensus of independent forecasters over the last 10 years."

But as the impact of the banks' funding problems has begun to ripple out through the economy over the past few weeks, with mortgage-lenders pulling hundreds of cut-price deals off the market, Darling has come under attack from Liberal Democrat Treasury spokesman Vince Cable, and even from usually loyal Labour backbenchers, for failing to take pre-emptive action against the risk of widespread repossessions.

Philip Hammond, shadow chief secretary to the Treasury, said: "This worrying report adds to the growing evidence that Gordon Brown's economic incompetence has left Britain badly prepared. Alistair Darling is totally out of his depth and out of touch with the concerns of millions of families. To support the housing market and help maintain consumer confidence, he should be cutting stamp duty for first time buyers, instead of increasing taxes on the low paid."

Such is the concern at the global level about the potential damage to the economy as banks tighten their belts, that a series of radical options are on the table at the G7 meeting, including measures to force banks to reveal the full scale of their losses; and even coordinated action to take the risky mortgage-backed assets at the heart of the banks' problems onto governments' balance sheets.

Sterling hit an all-time low against the euro today, with a euro worth more than 80p, as the markets became increasingly pessimistic about the economic outlook.

In the UK, the Bank of England is widely expected to cut interest rates to 5% tomorrow, in an attempt to offset some of the credit tightening imposed by the banks.
Last edited by conspiracy analyst on Thu Apr 10, 2008 9:48 am, edited 1 time in total.
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what can we do about all this - I wish I knew - but one thing's for sure the crooked international banking network should be thoroughly exposed by the wonderful Alf Mendes

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http://www.bilderberg.org/nwo.htm#MONEY
MONEY-LAUNDERERS TO THE GLOBAL ELITE

by Alf Mendes - 03Nov06 - bilderberg.org

It is an indisputable fact that the collapse of the USSR in 1991 was the most significant post-WW 2 event on the world scene (as the Americans would be the first to admit) - leading, as it did, inevitably, to the cataclysmic scenario facing us today. It is thus essential to examine this said event in greater detail if we are to reach a clearer understanding of the matter - always keeping in mind that it was but one more step in the stand-off between the capitalist West and the communist USSR - and that its border with that unstable nation, Afghanistan, would, understandably, play a crucial role in subsequent events - given the fact that the Soviet Republics in that region were of Muslim orientation. This was exacerbated by the following events preceding the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979: (a) In Afghanistan, Mohammed Daoud ousted his brother-in-law, King Zahir Shah, in 1973; (b) In 1978, Mir Akbar Parcham, leader of the communist-orientated Parcham Party (of Afghanistan), was murdered & Daoud ordered the arrest of other leading figures of the Parcham Party - which resulted in the Parcham Party taking over the government in a coup. Daoud was killed. [1]

As revealed by Zbigniew Brzezinski: “on July 3, 1979, unknown to the American public and Congress, President Jimmy Carter secretly authorized $500 million to create an international terrorist movement that would spread Islamic fundamentalism in Central Asia and ‘de-stabilise’ the Soviet Union. The CIA called this ‘Operation Cyclone’ and in the following years poured $4 billion into setting up Islamic training schools in Pakistan (Taliban means ‘student’). Young zealots were sent to the CIA's spy training camp in Virginia, where future members of al-Qaeda were taught ‘sabotage skills’ - terrorism... In Pakistan, they were directed by British MI6 officers and trained by the SAS”. [2]

Five months later, and well-aware of Ops. Cyclone, in December ‘79, the USSR invaded Afghanistan, and after a long and devastating war with guerrilla opposition forces (the mujahideen) the last of the Soviet troops left Afghanistan in February1989, their economy and rubles in tatters. America’s role in destabilising the USSR (as noted above) therefore calls for closer scrutiny, and from the vantage point of hindsight, the fact that in the aftermath of the collapse of the USSR the American oil companies (with others) quickly bought their way into the vast reserves of Russian oil and gas is surely proof enough that this was one of the crucial aims of America’s strategy. [3]

This ‘destabilisation’ was implemented, primarily, by money-laundering - an illegal method used by political, military, intelligence, business, drug cartels, and the Sicilian Mafia - better known as ‘Black Ops.’. Two Americans, Leo Emil Wanta, and the notorious Marc (Reich) Rich, were the main players in this - but it must not be forgotten that the Medellin Cartel and the Sicilian Mafia also played a crucial role in this money-laundering scam............
http://www.bilderberg.org/nwo.htm#MONEY
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Post by conspiracy analyst »

The fun is just beginning. Collapsing currencies, exploding prices...


Say goodbye to era of cheap Chinese imports

http://articles.moneycentral.msn.com/In ... ports.aspx

By Slate.com

For years, American importers and Chinese factory managers have been having the same conversation. The importers would demand lower prices for products destined for American shelves. Factory managers would counter with a long list of reasons why they needed to charge more. Most of the time, the American importers would prevail, and Wal-Mart (WMT, news, msgs) shoppers would rejoice.

Not anymore. The era of cheap Chinese consumer goods appears to be ending, thanks to irrepressible inflation.

Now when the Chinese present their lists, some American importers are conceding higher prices, meaning that American shoppers, for the first time in years, are starting to pick up the tab for rising costs in China.

Some Chinese factories are now asking their American customers for price increases of as much as 20% to 30%.........
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Survivalism Goes Mainstream As Middle Class And Wealthy Fear Breakdown Of Society

Darryl Mason
Your New Reality
Wednesday, April 9, 2008

I have the strangest feeling we are about to see some elements of survivalism hitting the mainstream media in a huge way, as soon as Britney Spears, George Clooney or Kate Moss announce they keep food stockpiles, grow their own vegetables and maintain isolated cottages to escape to when water riots and bank runs turn cities in combat zones.

Soon we will see a spread in something like Vanity Fair of six movie and music stars listing what they keep in their survivalist stockpiles, or showing off their organic veggie patches at their secret 'haven'.

The New York Times gets busy marketing the new, less threatening, survivalism :

(Article continues below)

The traditional face of survivalism is that of a shaggy loner in camouflage, holed up in a cabin in the wilderness and surrounded by cases of canned goods and ammunition.

It is not that of Barton M. Biggs, the former chief global strategist at Morgan Stanley.
“Your safe haven must be self-sufficient and capable of growing some kind of food,” Mr. Biggs writes. “It should be well-stocked with seed, fertilizer, canned food, wine, medicine, clothes, etc. Think Swiss Family Robinson. Even in America and Europe there could be moments of riot and rebellion when law and order temporarily completely breaks down.”

Survivalism, it seems, is not just for survivalists anymore.
Faced with a confluence of diverse threats — a tanking economy, a housing crisis, looming environmental disasters, and a sharp spike in oil prices — people who do not consider themselves extremists are starting to discuss doomsday measures once associated with the social fringes.

They stockpile or grow food in case of a supply breakdown, or buy precious metals in case of economic collapse. Some try to take their houses off the electricity grid, or plan safe houses far away. The point is not to drop out of society, but to be prepared in case the future turns out like something out of “An Inconvenient Truth,” if not “Mad Max.”
“I’m not a gun-nut, camo-wearing skinhead. I don’t even hunt or fish,” said Bill Marcom, 53, a construction executive in Dallas.
“If all these planets line up and things do get really bad,” Mr. Marcom said, “those who have not prepared will be trapped in the city with thousands of other people needing food and propane and everything else.”

“You just can’t help wonder if there’s a train wreck coming,” said David Anderson, 50, a database administrator in Colorado Springs who said he was moved by economic uncertainties and high energy prices, among other factors, to stockpile months’ worth of canned goods in his basement for his wife, his two young children and himself.
(A) book, “The Long Emergency” (Atlantic Monthly Press, 2005), by James Howard Kunstler, an author and journalist who writes about economic and environmental issues, argues that American suburbs and cities may soon lay desolate as people, starved of oil, are forced back to the land to adopt a hardscrabble, 19th-century-style agrarian life.

Some middle-class preparedness converts, like Val Vontourne, a musician and paralegal in Olympia, Wash., recoil at the term “survivalist,” even as they stock their homes with food, gasoline and water.

“I now think of storing extra food, water, medicine and gasoline in the same way I think of buying health insurance...It just makes sense.”

Anything that encourages more people to grow their own vegetables and herbs, and put away a bit of food and water just in case, is a positive.
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http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2008 ... .useconomy

The complete collapse is getting closer and closer.
Ken Thompson, the chief executive of Wachovia, blames housing market conditions for emergency measures.
Though he doesn't explain what caused the "housing conditions"!!
Fourth-largest US bank resorts to emergency fundraising

Jill Treanor guardian.co.uk, Monday April 14 2008

America's fourth-largest bank, Wachovia, is raising $7bn (£3.52bn) through emergency fundraising as the subprime mortgage crisis in the US continues to reverberate through the banking sector.

Wachovia is raising the funds through public offerings of common and convertible preference stock after incurring a surprise $350m loss in the first quarter of 2008 compared with $2.3bn in profit a year earlier.

The news came today as two of the biggest names in Wall Street - Citigroup and Merrill Lynch - were poised to report huge write-downs because of the continuing credit crisis. Analysts are bracing themselves for total write-downs of $17bn when the two banks report their quarterly results later this week.

At North Carolina-based Wachovia, the loss was caused by a rise in provisions against loans which had turned sour, particularly mortgages hit in the housing downturn. These option adjustable rate mortgages begin with a low interest rate, which is then replaced by a heftier charge.

Wachovia's chief executive, Ken Thompson, blamed the "precipitous decline in housing market conditions and unprecedented changes in consumer behaviour" for the figures. The group bought Golden West Financial Corp, a specialist in these adjustable rate mortgages, just before the home loan market plunged. It has set aside $2.8bn for credit related losses compared with $177m in the same quarter last year before the home loan crisis began.

To conserve $2bn of funds, Wachovia is cutting its quarterly dividend by 41% to 37.5 cents per share.

Other US banks have taken action to raise new funds and have tended to approach investors with deep pockets such as sovereign wealth funds.

Wachovia's decision to raise capital and cut its dividend comes at a time when speculation is mounting that banks in the UK will have to take action to bolster their balance sheets.

Mortgage lender Bradford & Bingley has denied reports that it is planning to tap its shareholders for new funds through a rights issue while analysts believe Alliance & Leicester and Royal Bank of Scotland may also be candidates for fundraising exercises.

Shares in B&B fell by 7% in early trading to 155.5p, although they recovered to close down 1.75p, or 1%, at 165.50p.
"The conflict between corporations and activists is that of narcolepsy versus remembrance. The corporations have money, power and influence. Our sole influence is public outrage. Extract from "Cloud Atlas (page 125) by David Mitchell.
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At last the elitist and aloof bankers come in for a bit of low-calibre flak from Gordon Brown!!!

Brown blames banks for the credit crisis as he warns of tough times ahead

Gordon Brown blamed the economic downturn on financial institutions today and warned the international credit crunch will continue to bite.

At a private meeting at Goldman Sachs in London this afternoon the Prime Minister said inadequate banking practices are to blame for gloom in the markets.

And he signalled that the battle against global economic turmoil was far from won, saying: 'There are still difficulties ahead.'

He spoke after it was revealed the Bank of England had promised to inject an extra £15billion into the financial system.

Mr Brown said: "People will probably look back to say this is the first financial crisis of this new era of globalisation.

"And behind this lies the under-pricing and under-reporting of risk and off-balance sheet activities, inadequate credit rating services and more recently the failure to disclose, in a thorough and systematic way, write-offs.

"All have served to reduce confidence in a global economy that has moved from risk taking to aversion to risk.'

Last night, in an interview with the Prime Minister on the CBS news in the US, Mr Brown added: 'My own view, having been a finance minister before prime minister, is we can act quickly to deal with the problems.

'We know what to do with disclosure, oil prices, food prices, better global supervision, better free trade agreement. All these things will contribute to building confidence that we might move forward.'

But finance chiefs have accused the Prime Minister of trying to deflect voters' anger away from Labour ahead of May's London mayoral and local elections.

Ahead of a meeting between Mr Brown and the chief executives of Barclays, HBOS, HSBC and the Royal Bank of Scotland this morning, one bank boss said: "The whole thing about passing on base rate cuts is an attempt to shift the blame."
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/a ... ge_id=1770
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Ambassadors are now admitting openly this is the Big One...



The Black Death of financial collapse
By James Cumes

The financial and economic crisis now upon us is by far the most menacing of the past century - even more so than the Great Depression of the 1930s. It is not just a "subprime" crisis; it is systemic - affecting the entire financial system. It is also global, affecting various countries in various ways but affecting them all. In achieving a certain "globalization", we have been uniquely successful in globalizing collapse, chaos and misery. It is a globalization which, in our short-sighted negligence, we never envisaged.

In this crisis, even a country such as Australia is no more than a subordinate, neo-colonial, financial and economic dependency. In essence, we have reverted to what we were before and during the Great Depression of the 1930s, when Whitehall, Westminster and



the Bank of England played the tune to which we jigged. Then, from 1945 to 1969, for the first time, we played our own tune of full employment and stable economic growth. Wild radicals such as minister Eddie Ward in the governments of John Curtin (1941-45) and Ben Chifley (1945-49) warned us to be wary of Wall Street.

The cynics might now say that Eddie, who died in 1963, was right. After 1969, we forgot his warning. Indeed, the Americans themselves forgot to guard against the chicaneries of Wall Street, where eternal vigilance should always be the watchword. They forgot what the mania of Wall Street can do to the reality of Main Street; and we shared their amnesia.

From 1969 and especially from 1971, when the United States cut the dollar link with gold, Australia surrendered any worthwhile independence in its economic and financial thinking. We swallowed American financial and economic formulae, whether we were academics or policymakers, industrial entrepreneurs, banks or providers of "financial services."

We did not entirely switch off tunes played by Britain, the more so as its prime minister Margaret Thatcher formed her slapstick band with US president Ronald Reagan to drum up support for "free" markets, "free" trade, privatization, globalization and the free flow of almost everything, including speculative capital in unqualified pursuit of private profit. Corporation and consumer greed marched in step towards global disaster.

Rational economics based on real investment, productivity and production died in favor of speculative and often Ponzi pretensions. The cowboy junk-bond merchants of the 1980s metamorphosed into respectable, mostly young and usually idolized financial wizards who "perfected" sophisticated, highly complex credit devices. From the 1990s, these highly leveraged instruments took the form of derivatives, private-equity, hedge-fund and mortgage securities, abbreviated to CDOs, SIVs and the rest.
Allied with "free" markets, deregulation and the uninhibited flow of all kinds of finance, those financial devices destroyed industries and the jobs that go with them. With casual indifference, they also destroyed the self-reliant working and middle classes until then typical of robust free-enterprise economies.

Theirs was not Joseph Schumpeter's "creative destruction" but wholesale destruction of their own economies and, eventually, their own financial "system". They destroyed personal savings and created massive indebtedness. They undermined the power and security of the United States itself as they "outsourced" real economic strength and stability to countries especially in Asia.

The Asian Tigers, China and others grew into "powerhouses" whose creation, historically, would otherwise have taken them generations. Our eminently creditable aim of peaceful change through development of developing economies was distorted, largely through negligent inadvertence, into financial, economic and social self-destruction. Looming global collapse, with political and strategic uncertainties, are our inevitable legacy.

Consumerism rages, industry gutted
The speculative, Ponzi mania spread especially to Anglo-Saxon countries and to other developed countries in lesser degree. Australia took to "free" markets, "free" trade, free-floating currencies, deregulation, privatization, globalization, derivatives, hedge funds, private equity, wildcat mortgages and leverage-without-limit as a duck to water. Consumerism raged. Industry was gutted. Debts ballooned. The value of the currency fell at home and abroad. Despite low-cost imports, inflation flourished. In 2008, the Australian dollar can perhaps buy as much in real terms as five or 10 cents did in 1969.

A situation in which real public and private investment was replaced by "ownership investment", massive leverage and speculative finance, in which consumption grew and debts spread, could not persist, except so long as ever more money flooded in to support the insupportable. Once the flood slowed or stopped, a Ponzi-type collapse was inevitable.

But few saw it that way. Warren Buffet belatedly called derivatives weapons of mass destruction; but most saw the financial devices as belonging to a "new era". They represented a "new paradigm". Far from being a threat to stable growth in a stable financial system, they "spread risk" and made everyone more secure and of course more wealthy.

The wealth effect was a particular feature of the residential mortgage business. Funds were available from many new banking and non-banking sources, including hedge funds and private equity, as well as pension and mutual funds; and sources that, in their magnitudes, were new, such as the carry trade. Funds marketed wholesale and retail mortgages. Liability could be shifted even or especially for debt in the deepest sense sub-prime. Mortgages also enabled homeowners to expand consumption through mortgage-equity withdrawals (MEW).

In a real sense, MEWs were symptomatic of multitudes of individuals - and, in effect, whole societies - high-living it off their capital. That enabled a process of growth that was both irresistible and inherently unsustainable.

However, the Ponzi scheme to shame all others may yet be waiting to deliver its coup de grace. One commentator has drawn attention to "the bad news [which] is the US$500 trillion derivatives market". He says that "This is an area that the general public does not even know exists. Few professionals understand this market. There is no regulation as government just let it go ... and go it did. You must expect a 5% default problem. That is a $25 trillion number ... It can create insolvent institutions all over the world ... It is the making of the first global depression. The world is not ready."

Unprepared for depression
Australia is not ready either. Prime Minister Kevin Rudd told us late in March that Australia's economic prospects remain "sound, strong and good". The Reserve Bank of Australia shares that view. Eerily, they echo US President Herbert Hoover in 1929 immediately before the stock market crash of that year.

Australia's situation contains some positive features. High commodity prices, it can be argued, are likely to persist, even though volatile, at least in the short term. A member of Iceland's central bank board recently said that "fears of a meltdown in my sub-arctic homeland are vastly overblown. True, the current account deficit was 16% of GDP last year, but that's an improvement from more than 25% in 2006. And while net private-sector debt is about 120% of GDP, there is virtually no public debt in Iceland. This is largely the result of unparalleled political stability and continuity."

Australia's situation may not be as dire as Iceland's; or indeed as dire as that of the United States or New Zealand; but all three of us have some negatives like those of Iceland.

Like all booms of such size and speculative character, the Australian housing boom must soon demand payment of its account. From their peak, prices could fall 30% to 50%. Industry researcher BIS Shrapnel does not agree; but we must expect that our housing boom, even more robust than the American, will collapse along the same general lines as the bust occurring right now in the United States.

The high "unaffordability" of housing for the average home-seeker, as distinct from speculator, suggests that the bust will be savage. The real-estate, building and associated industries will suffer severely, with massive job losses. Simultaneously, profitable investment opportunities elsewhere may have vanished with the widespread collapse of the "financial services industry".

How likely is such a collapse? So far, although some non-banking financial institutions have gone to the wall, the four major banks have seemed largely immune. "The take-up of the Australian economy is still good," Rudd said last week in New York. Australia had "limited exposure" to the subprime mortgage woes that erupted in the United States last year, he said. "We have excellent balance sheets in terms of our principal corporates and the banks themselves ... The default rate in Australia is minuscule by Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development standards."

We don't know how far banks and other potentially exposed institutions have concealed their liabilities and to what extent and how soon they will be forced to reveal whatever bad news there is. Within this broad question, we also do not know how far they are exposed to losses from the massive and still largely mysterious menace of derivatives.

In some measure, Australia's major banks have certainly been involved in the wide range of structured securities - CDOs, SIVs, and the rest. A report on April 4, 2008, that local councils in New South Wales have lost US$200 million and perhaps up to $400 million on investments in CDOs is a worrying sign that other and even bigger losses may yet be revealed in a variety of institutions, including banks. It seems scarcely credible that an economy which, for so many years, has absorbed so much of American theory and practice - so much of the American financial character - can be wholly immune from the penalties inflicted on its American model.

The subprime crisis first hit the United States after a housing about-turn that began as far back as 2005 or 2006. An unequivocal downturn in housing in Australia has yet to check in; but non-bank lenders are already withdrawing from the market. Wholesale mortgage lenders are closing shop, perhaps as a prelude to a sharp housing decline.

The carry trade which has presumably provided funds for mortgages and other financial services in Australia has been volatile for some time. If it unwinds completely, that could not only intensify mortgage problems but also impact on Australia's external balances.

Our deficits have so far tended to persist at a less healthy level than the commodity boom might have encouraged us to hope. Our aggregate private overseas debt is said to amount to the order of half a trillion dollars. Against that background, the current depreciation of the United States dollar might foreshadow what awaits our own currency.

Lagging impact
Economic and financial change in the United States tends to have a lagging impact on Australia. An acute awareness of the severity of our crisis may consequently not emerge before the second half of 2008.

When it does, what will the Rudd government do? Currently, it seems as unaware of the magnitude of the challenge it faces as the James Scullin government was in 1929. So the present government might become just as bewildered as Scullin and stagger just as blindly and ineffectually when they are called on to act. In the 1930s, we listened to the likes of Otto Niemeyer of the British Treasury who was also a director of the Bank of England. Will the Rudd government this time listen to the Americans and the likes of US Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke? If they do, catastrophic outcomes might not be in short supply.

Our only real hope lies in clear, independent thinking by those not too steeped in the flawed policies responsible for our current crisis. We must see clearly that fundamental, comprehensive financial and economic reform is imperative. We must adapt that fundamental reform to our own needs, as the John Curtin and Ben Chifley governments did between 1941 and 1949. As we did then, we must simultaneously try to guide the international community out of the calamitous course that has evolved since 1969, and return it to the goal of stable, peaceful, global change which, as a primary objective, we pursued between 1945 and 1969.

While we embark on this journey, a high level of political volatility in Canberra is inevitable. Rudd might succeed; but the Labor Party and government might split two or three ways as they did between 1929 and 1932. Another Joe Lyons, prime minister from 1932 to 1939, might emerge. Whoever he might be, the odds are that he will be even less likely to find quick or easy solutions than Lyons was during the long and bitter years of depression. Those years ended only in the even deeper tragedy of world war.

James Cumes is a former Australian ambassador to the European Union and Australian representative at the United Nations. He is the author of among other works The Human Mirror: The Narcissistic Imperative in Human Behaviour.
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New Labours Buy to Let scams come unstuck...


Vacant Homes in U.K. Prove Speculator Nightmare as Losses Mount


http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?p...cfc&refer=home
By Simon Packard

April 17 (Bloomberg) -- Richard Lee spent 5.3 million pounds ($10 million) buying 20 rental homes across the U.K. with just 150,000 pounds of his own money. Today, the properties are worth about 60 percent less and owned by the banks that financed the purchases.

Lee was one of thousands enticed by one of Europe's top five best-performing residential property markets during the past decade. Now repossessions are mounting and properties stand empty as many investors fail to find the tenants needed to cover their mortgages after a building boom flooded cities, especially Leeds and Manchester, with apartments.

The unraveling buy-to-rent investment market contributed to a 2.5 percent drop in home prices last month, the biggest since 1992, a report by mortgage lender HBOS Plc shows. Britain is among the countries most likely to follow the U.S. into a housing slump, according to the International Monetary Fund. Prices may drop 10 percent this year and next, said Michael Saunders, a London-based economist at Citigroup Inc.

``Buy-to-let investment was a bubble inside the housing market bubble,'' Saunders said. ``It's turning out worse than I thought.''

Home purchases by investors such as Lee helped triple housing prices between 1997 and 2007. The buy-to-rent market in the U.K. increased 19-fold to about 190 billion pounds in the same period, according to London-based broker Savills Plc.

Tax Incentive

Banks started promoting buy-to-let mortgages in the mid- 1990s, after the government ended rent controls and introduced fixed-term leases to ensure that tenants vacated properties. Interest payments on the loans are tax-deductible, making them attractive for landlords.

Rental properties generated annual investment returns of about 22 percent in the five years ended March 31, according to the Association of Residential Letting Agents in Warwick, England. The U.K. FTSE All-Share Index climbed about 12 percent, including reinvested dividends.

The ``virtuous circle'' of rental investment that powered the U.K. housing market was broken by falling property values and banks' retrenchment following record mortgage-related losses, Saunders said. Banks and securities firms have disclosed about $245 billion of asset writedowns and credit losses since the beginning of 2007.

The number of available buy-to-let mortgages dwindled to 926 in the first week of April from 3,362 at the start of August 2007, according to personal finance Web site Moneyfacts. Average two- year fixed-rate mortgage rates have climbed to 6.5 percent, or 1.5 percentage points more than the gross rental yield from a property in the first quarter.

Vulnerable Investors

Investors such as Lee, who have high levels of debt, and homebuilders that focused on developments in the center of English cities such as Leeds and Manchester are now the most vulnerable to the deflating buy-to-let market.

Buy-to-let investors who were behind on their mortgages by three months or more increased by 25 percent to 7,584 in the fourth quarter, according to the London-based Council of Mortgage Lenders. Repossessions rose 26 percent to 1,247.

Connells Asset Management in Leighton Buzzard, England, which sold more than 10,000 repossessed homes last year, expects the number of foreclosures to rise from the 20 percent gain already reported, led by cities in the northern part of the country.

High-Rise Condos

The skyline of central Leeds is dominated by construction cranes erecting high-rise condominiums, 60 percent of which were sold before completion to buy-to-let investors, according to London-based real estate broker CB Richard Ellis Hamptons International.

``Leeds is where we are seeing more city-center apartments coming onto our books,'' said Managing Director Mike Pudney.

Thousands more apartments are being built in the center of the city, where two-bedroom homes lost 12 percent of their value in the past two years, according to London-based research firm Hometrack Ltd. Brokers report average rents for these properties have dropped by about 20 percent and about 13 percent of city- center apartments are empty, according to Leeds City Council estimates, based on local tax returns.

``Twelve months ago, development was an easy way to make your fortune,'' said Tom Bloxham, chairman of Manchester-based Urban Splash, which develops derelict sites. ``Today, it's a disaster zone.''

`Mini-Floridas'

City center condominium developments like what's happening in Leeds represent Britain's ``mini-Floridas,'' said Alastair Stewart, who tracks homebuilders at Dresdner Kleinwort Securities in London. The state of Florida had the third-highest foreclosure rate in the U.S. in March, with one foreclosure for every 282 households, according to RealtyTrac Inc., the Irvine, California- based seller of data on mortgage defaults.

In Leeds, the market got so bad that a unit of Taylor Wimpey Plc, the U.K.'s largest homebuilder, delayed the planned 800-unit Green Bank condominium project in November. It may seek a zoning change to allow a mixed development of offices, shops and apartments. Taylor Wimpey dropped 40 percent in the past six months in London trading on concern about the collapse of the buy- to-let market and the slide in land values and home prices.

Barratt Developments Plc, Bellway Plc, Bovis Homes Group Plc, Berkeley Group Holdings Plc, Persimmon Plc and Redrow Plc declined by 16 percent to 48 percent in the same period.

Investment Clubs

Newly built apartments accounted for a ``significant part'' of the investments made by 61 percent of new buy-to-let investors over the past six years, Savills reported. Many of those purchases were brokered by the dozens of Internet-based property investment clubs that sprang up since 2000.

The clubs often attracted novice buyers, some of whom lacked ``an understanding of the risks that such investments pose,'' according to U.K. regulators at the Financial Services Authority. In May 2005, the government forced two of the clubs into liquidation to protect investors.

For a fee, the clubs offer members residential developments before construction work begins. They negotiate a price with homebuilders that is below the valuation made by an appraiser, and collect a percentage of the purchase price as a fee. The clubs also offer their dues-paying members property management, home insurance, legal and mortgage-broking services.

City Gate 2

Lee, 37, bought an apartment in the City Gate 2 development in Manchester for 239,500 pounds in October 2005. An identical property in the same building sold for 115,000 pounds earlier this year, said Lee, who has surrendered his keys to the bank.

Lee also purchased 17 properties, most of them in Leeds, in late 2005. He said he expected to earn a steady income from renting to students.

After the transactions were completed, Lee said he realized he had overpaid for the properties. He said 15 hadn't been refurbished as promised, the tenants occupying the homes had left and rental-income projections were wildly optimistic.

``The valuations were 15 years ahead of their time,'' Lee said. ``The biggest genius in the world couldn't have got those loans to work.''

Lee estimates his properties are worth about 3 million pounds less than he paid for them. The banks will probably ask Lee to repay the money when the homes, now in their possession, are sold. He doesn't have the money, he said.

Legal Action

Lee and 85 other investors plan to sue the developers, lenders, appraisers and solicitors involved in their property transactions. Lee's attorney, Hammad Ahmad of Max Gold Partnership in Hull, England, said the lawsuit will probably be filed in about two months.

Regulators and the government are beginning to review the practices and excesses of the U.K.'s housing boom. The FSA said in its 2008 report on financial risks that ``organized property fraud is most common in new-build and purpose-built flats in major towns and cities, and where renting is the main form of tenure.''

The FSA is probing more than 200 cases of suspected mortgage fraud and the City of London Police department is recruiting for its economic crime department to investigate fraud nationally.

Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling last week appointed James Crosby, former chief executive officer of HBOS, to make recommendations on improving the U.K.'s mortgage market.

Tony McKay, chief operating officer of Instant Access Group, the country's largest property investment club, said it's time the U.K. started regulating companies such as his.

``It's really strange,'' he said in an interview. ``A pension-provider is regulated for taking in just 20 pounds a month.''

Many homeowners and tenants have profited from the buy-to-let boom, said Michael Ball, professor of urban and property economics at Reading University, 35 miles west of London. And even as home prices decline, most investors will hold onto their properties, according to a Savills survey.

Once he has dug himself out of his current financial difficulties, Lee will consider getting back into the business.

``Would I do buy-to-let again?'' he said. ``Without a shadow of a doubt. This time I'll ensure I'm in control of all the levers.''
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...we have been uniquely successful in globalizing collapse, chaos and misery.It is a globalization which, in our short-sighted negligence, we never envisaged.
James Cumes can speak for himself. The coming meltdown has been blatant for over a year now and was always going to happen because the financial system is based on a pyramid scam. The Federal Reserve prints say a billion dollars, and expects a billion dollars plus twenty percent back. The problem being that there is no twenty per cent available because it requires the Federal Reserve to create it!
"The conflict between corporations and activists is that of narcolepsy versus remembrance. The corporations have money, power and influence. Our sole influence is public outrage. Extract from "Cloud Atlas (page 125) by David Mitchell.
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http://www.europe2020.org/spip.php?article540&lang=en

Global systemic crisis: Four big trends over the 2008-2013 period
- Public announcement GEAB N°24 (April 16, 2008) -

16/04/2008


As we approach the climax of the global systemic crisis (which should be reached in the second half of 2008 according to LEAP/E2020), it becomes easier to grasp the big trends about to affect foreign exchange rates, global trade and regional dynamics over the next five years. Indeed some of the characteristics of the so-called “decanting” phase of the crisis [1] are beginning to emerge. In this 24th issue of the GEAB, LEAP/E2020 therefore decided to introduce its first anticipations on big trends between now and 2011/2013. These anticipations are of course meant for the use of private investors willing to enhance their mid-term visibility. They are also relevant for exporting companies and for the economic and financial authorities in need of a similar visibility to make their strategic decisions, at a time when all the landmarks and beliefs which used to found the global economy and finance in the past decades are collapsing altogether.

In the past weeks, the world’s economic and financial operators appeared utterly disoriented, while the institutions in charge of dealing with market regulation and of supervising global economic trends display sheer powerlessness.

In this 24th issue of the GEAB, we describe four trends particularly illustrative of the global systemic crisis’ impact phase as it is about to unveil between mid-2008 and 2011/2013. It is the first time that our team is able to provide some accurate indications (completed in the “Strategic recommendations” section, P. 17) about the next 3/5 year-period.

Global financial crisis – Savers and investors trapped into USD 10,000-billion worth of « ghost-assets »

USD-denominated asset crisis – End of 2008: The US Federal Reserve and its network of « Primary Dealers » fight for their institutional and financial survival

Foreign exchange crisis - Horizon 2011/2013: Sustainable changes in the hierarchy of foreign currencies

Global social crisis – From hunger riots worldwide to the 25 million unemployed of the Very Great US Depression

Each of these sector-based crises both illustrates the historic scope conveyed by the ongoing global systemic crisis, and indicates that we are just at the beginning of the phase of impact, indeed as protections disappear one after the other, the situation automatically gets worse. This is the specific “spiralling” process of development of the present global systemic crisis, described by LEAP/E2020 in the previous issues of the GEAB.

In this public announcement, LEAP/E2020 chose to present an excerpt of the first part on the global financial crisis: Savers and investors trapped into USD 10,000-billion worth of "ghost-assets"
Global financial crisis – Savers and investors trapped into USD 10,000-billion worth of « ghost-assets »

If your banker managed to convince you to invest in the USD 10,000-billion worth of ghost-assets currently haunting the financial planet, then you have most probably lost everything even if you do not know it yet [2].

And neither G7-finance ministers nor IMF governors (who met last April 11, 12 and 13) can do anything about it. All of them are totally helpless in the face of the ongoing crisis. With staff cuts and gold sales in order to fill its deficit, the IMF today embodies the sinking of all the institutions created after WWII to regulate the world economy. The outcome of the mid-April meeting clearly reveals how incapable of working together are the various players gathered within the IMF and its various branches: on the one hand, public institutions longing for greater supervision over banking activities in order to prevent further financial catastrophes; on the other hand, banks quite satisfied with pledges of better behaviour. The only tangible result is near-to-mid-term inaction: the current crisis will continue to worsen while debates will go on at the IMF. As a matter of fact, the very concept upon which the IMF is based is outdated.

In any event, according to our experts, the estimated USD 1,000-billion worth of assets lost in the current crisis is largely underestimated [3]. It is probably closer to 10,000-billion of USD [4] that are about to be lost over the coming two years [5]. In other words, several large international banks will be swallowed up in the maelstrom, and along with them many companies, too fragile or depending too much on the US consumer [6].
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http://worldpressnetwork.net/forum/view ... ?f=2&t=239

UK Government's $100+ BILLION bank bailout whilst taxing the poor $14 BILLION - Robin Hood in Reverse whilst using Enron style accounting loopholes - A resigning matter for Gordon Brown and Alistair Darling


The UK Government has announce a $100+ BILLION (unlimited) bank bailout whilst doubling the income tax rate on one of the poorest segments of society -- whilst using Enron style accounting loopholes to avoid it being correctly counted as national debt.

This is absolutely scandalous.

Liberal Democrat treasury spokesman Vince Cable said: "The doubling of the 10p rate of tax is a £7bn tax grab from some of the poorest in society."

Definitely Robin Hood in Reverse.

This should be a resigning matter for the Prime Minister, Gordon Brown, and Chancellor, Alistair Darling. They are in clear betrayal of the principals of socialism for which they claim their Labour party stands for.

Parties which represent the true interests of the working class, such as George Galloway's Respect party (http://www.RespectRenewal.org), will likely receive many votes from previous Labour voters who have now sworn they will never vote for Labour again whilst its leadership is so beholden to big business that it is more right wing than Maggie Thatcher's government ever was.

Reports from http://www.spiderednews.com/Taxes.htm :

Bank's £50bn rescue plan 'needed' - Bail-out for the banks ? - "We cannot have a situation where the banks are able to privatise their profits and nationalise their losses"
BBC Sun, 20 Apr 2008
A plan to loan billions of pounds to UK banks is needed to stop the financial crisis worsening, the chancellor says.

Mr Darling confirmed a scheme to lend banks money to help them operate during the credit squeeze.

But he insisted that the loans would have to be paid back.

The BBC understands that the Bank will announce the plans to swap about £50bn worth of government bonds for British banks' mortgages.

Mr Darling denied that the scheme was a bail-out for the banks.

But Liberal Democrat Treasury spokesman Vince Cable expressed concern that the government was offering the banks too good a deal.

"We cannot have a situation where the banks are able to privatise their profits and nationalise their losses," he said.

"Since the mortgages from the banks are of inferior quality and higher risk than the government bonds which they are replacing, the implication must be that taxpayers are shouldering the risks and losses of the banks.

"We need urgent reassurances from the Government that the exchange is taking place on a discounted basis so that the banks and not taxpayers carry any losses."

The BBC understands that the government bonds would have a maturity of up to a year, but would be rolled over for up to three years.

These would meet banks' demands for longer term loans, while escaping being accounted for in the national debt.
Breaking News » Business » Taxes

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Have Your Say : Should the government compensate low-earners?
BBC Sun, 20 Apr 2008

"The 10% rate wasn't abolished, it was doubled. Also, what very few people seem to have picked up on, is that those earning between £34600 and £36000 had their tax rate on that amount HALVED from 40% to 20%. As a result of that, I estimate that everyone earning over £41500 will receive a tax cut of about £780 p.a. while anyone on about £7500 will pay about £180 more. Personally I don't want compensation, I just want a tax cut like G Brown, Y Cooper etc are going to get!"

"When the Government say "we're not getting our message across" or "we need to sharpen up our message", that Government is on the skids. The abolition of the 10% rate was an enormous own goal, completely counter to the old philosophy of the Labour Party. It has deserted those it was established to represent. Mr Brown is a huge dissapointment to those who expected a return to more traditional Labour thinking. This is the end for Nu Labour. They'll need GPS to get out of the wilderness"

"My wife and I are both "low earners" and doubling our income tax will have a massive effect. We already struggle and feel like we are paying for new labour to compensate those better off than us (i.e. new labour's core voters). I grew up an "old labour" supporter, but this is the final straw and I will not be voting labour in the next election. It's like living in Thatcher's Britain again. Shame on you, New Labour!"

"This is an example "Robin Hood in Reverse!"

Take from the poorest to assist the better off.

An interesting test of conviction for New-Labour MP's when it comes to the parliamentary vote!"

"Can this government stoop any lower? this situation is a total disgrace, the sooner this labour government is out the better. Tax at an all time high, rising fuel costs, rising food costs, cuts in public services, over crowded prisons, youths running riot in our streets. Now the poorest people earning under £18K per year are hit with being worse off, this country is a joke."

"Gordon, your greed and arrogance will be the end of you, i along with millions of other heavily taxed workers in this country look forward to watching you fall. Democracy, this country has became a dictatorship under these lying robbing cheating swines. Can anyone imagine say the French putting up with this government. I think not."

"Brown & Darling just aren't listening, are they? There are reportedly around 5m people affected by this, all low-paid. My wife is one of them: 60, state-pension and some small private pensions. Total c£8500. No other benefits to claim. She gets the full effect; about £6 a week worse off! But she'll just have to live with it. Never mind rising costs of food, fuel, etc. Please don't insult her by justifying it as good for the general taxpayer or 'promising' something in the future."

"It's usual practice to tax people whose votes don't matter, or in a way they wont notice.

Why is there any surprise that working people, on low wages, without kids, and without homes, who drink or smoke, or drive a car are being made worse off? That's usually the case.

Retired people, those not working, those with kids and homes, they will be better off usually."

"This is a disgrace. Brown and puppet Darling have forgotten that over 5 million (yes thats right) low earners are worse off by this scandelous budget. In fact if a couple each earn £8000 a year they are almost £10 a week worse off.

I find it difficult to assign a suitable adjective to describe these two people or the massive army of advisers, civil servants etc. on their final salry pension schemes who came up with this garbage.

Sack them all and never let them forget the mess they cause."

"I fear even your analysts don't get it. Those on under £18,000 with other household income e.g. a partner working are also ineligible for tax credits. That is a lot of households. Why are your and the government's analysts only working with statistical averages intead of understanding the impact on real examples of individuals?

"Does Brown actually think that one person, let alone 5 million people on the smallest incomes, would sacrifice a single penny to facilitate the simplification of income tax rates? He's expecting them to contribute up to £232 each. He thinks like an accountant and is completly out of touch with the electorate. This will mean a rout for Labour in the May elections and certain defeat in the next general election. Labour are doomed while he’s the leader."

Breaking News » Business » Taxes
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Darling: I can't rewrite Budget - Plan to swap £50bn of government bonds for mortgages - "The doubling of the 10p rate of tax is a £7bn tax grab from some of the poorest in society"
BBC Sun, 20 Apr 2008
The chancellor has ruled out a U-turn on axing the 10p tax rate, saying it would be "totally irresponsible" to "unravel...or rewrite" the Budget now.

He rejected suggestions the 10p tax rate row was Labour's "poll tax moment" - the policy often blamed for hastening the end to Margaret Thatcher's time as Tory leader and PM.

During his interview on BBC One's Andrew Marr Show Mr Darling also confirmed that he would be making a Commons statement on Monday about the Bank of England plan to swap £50bn of government bonds for mortgages.

There is unhappiness among some Labour MPs - including six ministerial aides - about the fact that people on low incomes without dependent children have been hit by the axing of the 10p starting rate for tax.

The tax change, announced when Gordon Brown was chancellor last year but which came into force this month, means people who would have paid income tax at the lowest, introductory 10% rate will now have to pay the 20% rate.

It is part of a range of changes which come fully into force in the new tax year. Child benefits, state pensions and tax credits have all gone up.

The Commons Treasury committee has said childless single people earning under £18,500 will lose up to £232 a year.

On Saturday, Downing Street dismissed calls for a rethink over the abolition of the 10p rate, and denied it would offer concessions to critics.

MPs will get a chance to vote on the 10p tax issue the week after next, when ex-minister Frank Field plans to table an amendment to the Finance Bill calling for compensation for those affected.

Mr Field told BBC News 24 on Sunday he welcomed Mr Darling's recognition of the problem - but said he thought the promise of help in a year's time would not be enough to win over those concerned about the change.

Shadow chancellor George Osborne told the Andrew Marr Show that they wanted to put "maximum pressure on the government" over the 10p tax rate.

"We know thanks to the pressure we exerted earlier this year on issues like capital gains tax that if you push this chancellor enough, he gives way and I think it is manageable to come up with a tax package that protects those on low incomes," he said.

"They shouldn't be the people who are paying the price for the government's economic incompetence."

He said that Mr Brown's government "feels like a government that has lost its way and lost touch with people".

Liberal Democrat treasury spokesman Vince Cable said: "The doubling of the 10p rate of tax is a £7bn tax grab from some of the poorest in society.

"The belated conversion of Labour backbenchers to oppose this tax rise is welcome, but it does raise questions of where were they on this issues last year."
Breaking News » Business » Taxes

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Government plan to bail out banks : £50bn mortgage rescue plan
BBC Sun, 20 Apr 2008
The Bank of England will next week unveil a plan to swap £50bn of government bonds for British banks' mortgages, the BBC has learned.

The government bonds would have a maturity of up to a year, but would be rolled over for up to three years.

These would meet banks' demands for longer term loans, while escaping being accounted for in the national debt.

The lending programme could open up the Treasury to accusations of creative accounting by opposition parties by limiting the maturity of the bonds to one year, but allowing the lending facility to be in place for three years.

If the Treasury had chosen the simpler route of issuing bonds of two-year and three-year maturity, the new bonds would have been part of the national debt under accounting standards.

This would probably have led to a breach of the so-called fiscal rules put in place by Gordon Brown in 1997 to keep the public sector's balance sheet in reasonable shape.

Bonds with a maturity of less than one year, issued in what is known as a "repo" operation, do not count towards the national debt.

Smaller banks will be unable, under Bank of England rules, to directly benefit from the new financing plan. They are prohibited from participating in repos.
Breaking News » Business » Taxes
Downing St denies 10p tax rethink - The change means that people who would have paid income tax at the lowest, introductory 10% rate will now have to pay the 20% rate.
BBC Sun, 20 Apr 2008
Downing Street has dismissed calls for a rethink over the abolition of the 10p income tax rate and denied it would offer concessions to critics.

Six ministerial aides have urged Prime Minister Gordon Brown to help 5.3m low-paid workers who have lost out.

The Commons Treasury committee has said childless single people earning under £18,500 will lose up to £232 a year.

However, government sources have indicated there may be help later for those worst affected by the tax change.

The change means that people who would have paid income tax at the lowest, introductory 10% rate will now have to pay the 20% rate.

Breaking News » Business » Taxes
Brown returns to face tax protest - Labour tax revolt gathering pace - "We should not be making poor people poorer and at the same time giving people extra money through inheritance tax"
BBC Sat, 19 Apr 2008
Five more ministerial aides have joined protests at the abolition of the 10p tax rate.

The five junior government members have called on Gordon Brown to help 5.3 million low-paid workers who have lost out as a result of the changes.

On Thursday Mr Brown had to persuade ministerial aide Angela Smith not to quit over the issue.

The Treasury has denied reports the chancellor is preparing a climbdown over the abolition of the 10p tax band.

The Daily Telegraph reported Treasury officials were working on plans to compensate low-earning workers without children who are losing money, following the scrapping of the 10p rate.

But a Treasury spokesman told the BBC there was no thought of "an imminent change to the policy".

He said the chancellor was aware of people's concerns and in future "would take them into account".

Mr Brown is said to be furious the tax row overshadowed his trip to the US.

Mr Anderson, aide to higher education minister Bill Rammell, told the Standard: "We should not be making poor people poorer and at the same time giving people extra money through inheritance tax."

Breaking News » Business » Taxes

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Letters: After the 10p tax, we won't be fooled again
GUARDIAN Sat 19 Apr 2008
Letters: Because the 10% tax rate has been abolished, I am paying considerably more tax this year
Breaking News » Business » Taxes

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Low-earners fear tax changes
BBC
Britain's low earners say their lives are already difficult enough, but changes to the tax system could make them even harder.
Breaking News » Business » Taxes
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Socialism for the rich and capitalism for the poor was always the way.
"The conflict between corporations and activists is that of narcolepsy versus remembrance. The corporations have money, power and influence. Our sole influence is public outrage. Extract from "Cloud Atlas (page 125) by David Mitchell.
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Last edited by blackcat on Tue Apr 22, 2008 7:20 pm, edited 1 time in total.
"The conflict between corporations and activists is that of narcolepsy versus remembrance. The corporations have money, power and influence. Our sole influence is public outrage. Extract from "Cloud Atlas (page 125) by David Mitchell.
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Well spotted cartoon.

The collapse of the dollar continues unabated. Soon it wont be worth more than toiletpaper. Im sure even Hulk wouldn't wont to wipe himself with it despite being green.

The greenback has literally fallen on its back, never to recover again.


A rising euro threatens American dominance

By Benn Steil

Published: April 22 2008 19:38 | Last updated: April 22 2008 19:38

As the dollar continues its relentless six-year slide against the euro and other main currencies, the question is being asked more and more: what would it mean if the dollar ceded its global dominance to the euro?

The question is a serious one because the US Federal Reserve is pumping new dollars into the global economy at an astounding pace. A broad measure of US money supply growth is increasing at a rate not seen since 1971 when President Richard Nixon imposed price controls and ended the dollar’s convertibility into gold, which recently roared above $1,000 an ounce. With consumer prices having climbed 4 per cent from a year ago, and wholesale prices having soared 6.9 per cent, presaging higher consumer price inflation around the corner, we are living witnesses to Milton Friedman’s famous dictum that “inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon, in the sense that it cannot occur without a more rapid increase in the quantity of money than in output”.

The Fed is acting with the best of intentions to head off a recession. But in a rapidly globalising financial marketplace it is in fact accelerating the demise of its own unique powers. Virtually all national economies show a positive link between currency depreciation and inflation and between depreciation and interest rates, meaning that their central banks cannot use loose monetary policy to stimulate their economies – it only fuels capital outflows and a rise in market interest rates to attract it back. Not so the US, whose currency has commanded a unique premium as the global store of value and the transaction vehicle for international trade. But this may be changing. The dollar is looking more and more like a typical developing country’s currency, with long-term market interest rates, crucial to determining borrowing and investment behaviour, climbing as the Fed pushes hard in the other direction.

If international use of the euro were to continue to rise, the Fed would lose other important powers. In a financial crisis, central banks are supposed to act as “lenders of last resort”, printing money to prop up banks and reassure their depositors. This does not work in developing countries. People withdraw money anyway, not because they fear the governments will let the banks collapse but because they fear the inflation and depreciation that printing money brings. So they exchange it for dollars, undermining the putative powers of their central banks. But what if Americans were to do the same, selling dollars for euros in a crisis? The Fed would become impotent. This is not science fiction. American investors have lately been pouring money into foreign bond funds at a record rate.

What about currency crises, the bane of developing countries? These happen when investors, local as well as foreign, fear that the country may face a shortage of foreign money, necessary to pay off its debts. If America were to become obliged to trade and borrow in euros, rather than dollars, it would face the very same risks.

What about America’s political power in the world? A continuing fall in the dollar means a fall in the global purchasing power of all its foreign assistance, whether for humanitarian, economic or military purposes.

But it means much more than that. The US has exploited the unique role of the dollar in international trade and investment to disrupt the financial flows of its adversaries, such as North Korea and Iran. If such transactions switched to euros and were funnelled through institutions not doing business in the US, this power would be neutered. The US would likewise lose influence over both friends and enemies facing financial problems, as they would be looking increasingly to Europe for euros, rather than to America for dollars.

None of this is inevitable. America is blessed to be the master of the dollar’s fate, in the sense that the world has no incentive to move to another monetary standard as long as the dollar’s long-term value appears secure. But it means that the US government needs to address the country’s economic problems deriving from the housing market collapse and the credit crunch “on-balance-sheet”, through direct, targeted, explicitly funded interventions, rather than “off-balance-sheet”, with the Fed undermining global confidence in the dollar by continuing to flood the market with new dollars. This can only lead to greater damage to America’s prosperity and global influence.

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/afb28736-1...0779fd2ac.html
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Post by Alexander »

Peter Schiff's site at http://www.europac.net/ is an invaluable source of information and guidance as to how we can negotiate the coming economic collapse. Check out the video and radio archives. It is astounding how accurate his predictions have turned out to be. A brilliant mind.
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http://www.thepeoplesvoice.org/cgi-bin/ ... /27/p25078
04/27/08

The collapse of the United States is accelerating: Oil in Euros vs. US

In the last eight years implementing the plans for the Project for the New American Century (PNAC) designed "to promote American global leadership" has backfired.

To accomplish PNAC's goals, all threats needed to be eliminated. From the onset, the United Sates earmarked two countries as mortal enemies: Venezuela and Iran. With Venezuela, it is well documented that the CIA attempted to overthrow the democratically elected government of Chavez. And with Iran, the United States continues to use it as a scapegoat for its failures in Iraq. These cold war tactics however are proving to be US's undoing.

The United States is hemorrhaging from every orifice, and oil prices can be used to measure the rapidity of its demise.

In April 2006, Venezuelan president Hugo Chávez launched "a bid to transform the global politics of oil by seeking a deal with consumer countries which would lock in a price of $50 a barrel." At the time, this proposed price was $15 a barrel below global market levels, and what must surely seems to be a steal at the current $118 a barrel.

How critical was the decision not to take Chavez's proposal seriously? Just two short years later, in April 2008, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad of Iran is stating that oil at current levels is too cheap. That's calling a 136% increase in price not enough, and most analysis and the market seem to agree. So what has changed in that time? The perceived value of the US dollar of course.

In 1999 the euro was introduced as an accounting currency (travelers' checks, electronic transfers, banking, etc.) and then launched as physical coins and banknotes on 1 January 2002. The euro replaced the former European Currency Unit (ECU) at a ratio of 1:1. However its value quickly began to drop, reaching a low of 0.8252 relative to the US dollar on 26 October 2000. This proved to be a solid support level for the next two years, and in 2002 the euro began its appreciation reaching a high of 1.60 as of 23 April 2008.

Aside from consolidating power for the new European Union, the euro added liquidity and flexibility to the financial markets which in time has made the euro a very attractive and safe investment as a major global reserve currency.

As of the beginning of 2007, within five short years, euro notes in circulation have exceeded the value of circulating US dollar notes. Considering that the dollar has been devalued by approximately 50% since reaching its high relative to the euro in 2000 (the euro has gained approximately 100%), we can only assume that according to global markets, the US dollar is losing its perceived value.

Price of oil in US dollars and euros

Oil prices had a recent low point in January 1999 at $8 per barrel, after "increased oil production from Iraq coincided with the Asian financial crisis, which reduced demand. The prices then rapidly increased, more than tripling by September 2000 (35 dollars per barrel), then fell until the end of 2001 before steadily increasing."

1999 is the same year that the euro was introduced as an accounting currency. By the time that the euro was launched as physical coins and banknotes in January 2002, oil was trading at approximately $20 a barrel, and at present, on 23 April 2008, oil is trading at $118 a barrel.

Let's compare the rise in the price of oil relative to the two currencies.

If we take Autumn of 2000 as our base point when the euro was trading at its low of 0.8252 relative to the US dollar and oil was trading at $35 dollars per barrel, we get the following results: The increase in price of oil in euros has been 74% since 2000, while it has been a 237% increase in US dollars.

Now let's take a look at what the increase in price of oil in euros and US dollars has been since April 2006 when Hugo Chávez wanted to lock the price at $50 per barrel. (Note: in April 2006 the euro was trading at approximately 1.22 relative to the US dollar).

Taking into account that the euro had a dramatic increase in value from 2002 to 2005, and then began a retraction period through to 2006, the above numbers confirm what Ahmadinejad has been stating, that "the dollar is not money any longer but a handful of paper distributed in the world without commodity support," and that oil is undervalued at present levels when priced in US petrodollars.

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April 27, 2008 By chycho, visit; The collapse of the United States is accelerating: Oil in Euros vs. US, for related Posts

"The conflict between corporations and activists is that of narcolepsy versus remembrance. The corporations have money, power and influence. Our sole influence is public outrage. Extract from "Cloud Atlas (page 125) by David Mitchell.
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http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php? ... a&aid=6239
The Crashing U.S. Economy Held Hostage

Our Economy is on an Artificial Life-support System

by Richard C. Cook

Global Research, July 7, 2007

Remember when the U.S. was the world’s greatest industrial democracy? Barely thirty years ago the output of our producing economy and the skills of our workforce led the world.

What happened? It’s hard to believe that in the space of a generation our character and capabilities just collapsed as, for example, did our steel and automobile industries and our family farming. What then are the causes of the decline?

Here’s how I would put it today: our economy is on an artificial life-support system, a barely-breathing hostage in a lunatic asylum. That asylum is the U.S. and world financial systems which are on the verge of collapse.

The inmates are the world’s central bankers, along with most of the financial magnates big and small. The fact is that the economy of much of the world is in a decisive downward slide which the financiers cannot stop because the systems they operate are the primary cause. As often happens, the inmates rule the asylum.

The problems aren’t confined to the U.S. Unemployment worldwide is increasing, debt is rampant, infrastructures are crumbling, and commodity prices are rising.

In such an environment, crime, warfare, terrorism, and other forms of violence are endemic. Only the most naïve, self-centered, and deluded jingoist could describe such a scenario in terms of the freedom-loving Western democracies being besieged by the “bad guys.”

Rather what is happening highlights the growing failures of Western globalist finance whose impact on political stability has been so corrosive. As many responsible commentators are warning, we are likely to see major financial shocks within the next few months. The warnings are even coming from high-flying institutional players like the Bank of International Settlements and the International Monetary Fund.

We may even be seeing the end of an era when the financiers ruled the world. At a certain point, governments or their military and bureaucratic establishments are likely to stop being passive spectators to the onrushing disorder. It is already happening in Russia and elsewhere.

The countries that will be least able to master their own destiny are those like the U.S. where governments have been most passive to economic decomposition from actions of their financial sectors. The financiers are the ones who for the last generation have benefited most from economies marked by privatization, deregulation, and speculation, but that may be about to change. Whether the change will be constructive or catastrophic is yet to be seen.

THE HOUSING BUBBLE SETS THE STAGE FOR THE U.S. COLLAPSE

Within the U.S., foreign investors, above all Communist China, have been propping up our massive trade and fiscal deficits with their capital. To keep them happy, interest rates—after six years of “cheap credit”—must now be kept relatively high. Otherwise the Chinese, et.al., might bail-out, leaving us to fend for ourselves with our hollowed-out shell of an economy.

Even so, these investors are increasingly uneasy with their dollar holdings and are bailing out anyway. Foreign purchase of U.S. securities has plummeted. And our debt-laden economy, where our manufacturing base has been largely outsourced, is no longer capable of providing our own population with a living by utilizing our own productive resources.

For a while we were floating on the housing bubble, but those days are now history when, according to a Merrill-Lynch study, the artificially pumped-up housing industry, as late as 2005, accounted for fifty percent of U.S. economic growth.

As everyone knows, the Federal Reserve under Chairman Alan Greenspan used the housing bubble, like a steroid drug, to pump liquidity into the economy. This worked, at least for a while, because consumers could borrow huge amounts of money at relatively low interest rates for the purchase of homes or for taking out home equity loans to pay off their credit cards, finance college education for their children, buy new cars, etc.

When the final history of the housing bubble is written, its beginnings will be dated as early as 1989-90, when credit restrictions on the purchase of real estate first began to be eased. According to mortgage industry insiders interviewed for this article, they began to be taught the methods for getting around consumers’ weak credit reports and selling them homes anyway in the mid to late 1990s.

The Fed started inflating the housing bubble in earnest around 2001, after the collapse of the dot.com bubble, which failed with the stock market decline of 2000-2002. Then, over a trillion dollars of wealth, including working peoples’ retirement savings, simply vanished.

Also according to mortgage specialists, it was in March 2001, two months after George W. Bush became president, that a “wave of intoxicated fraud” started. Mortgage companies began to be instructed, by the creditors/lenders, on how to package loan applications as "master strokes of forgery," so that completely unqualified buyers could purchase homes.

There could not have been a sudden onset of industry-wide illegal activity without direction from higher-up in the money chain. It could not have continued without reports being filed by whistleblowers with regulatory agencies. Today the government is prosecuting mortgage fraud, but they certainly had to know about it while it was actually going on.

The bubble was coordinated from Wall Street, where brokerages “bundled” the “creatively-financed” mortgages and sold them as bonds to retirement and mutual funds and to overseas investors. Portfolio managers were directed to buy subprime bonds as other bonds matured. It’s the subprime segment of the industry that has now collapsed, triggering, for instance, the recent highly-publicized demise of two Bear Stearns hedge funds.

And it’s not just lower-income home purchasers who are affected. The Washington Post has reported that for the first time in living memory foreclosures are happening in Washington’s affluent suburban neighborhoods in places like Fairfax, Loudon, and Montgomery Counties.

The subprime bonds were known to be suspect. One reason was that they were based on adjustable rate mortgages that were actually time bombs, scheduled to detonate a couple of years later with monthly payments hundreds of dollars a month higher than when they were written. Many of these mortgages will reset to higher payments this October.

Purchasers were lied to when they were told they could re-sell their homes in time to escape the payment hikes. Now the collapse of the market has made further resale at prices high enough to escape without losses impossible.

One way the system worked was for mortgage lenders to maximize the “points” buyers were required to finance, making the mortgages more attractive to Wall Street. Of course bundling and selling the mortgages relieved the banks which originated the loans from exposure, pushing a considerable amount of the risk onto millions of small investors. This was in addition to the normal sale of mortgages to quasi-public agencies like Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae.

Was it a scam? Of course. Did the Federal Reserve know about it? They had to. Did Congress exercise any oversight? No.

What did the White House know?

Amy Gluckman, an editor of Dollars and Sense, reported in the November/December 2006 issue: “During the Clinton administration, Greenspan was relatively ‘unembedded’—averaging only one meeting per month at the White House….

“But when George W. Bush moved into 1600 Pennsylvania Ave., Greenspan’s behavior changed. During 2001, he averaged 3.3 White House visits a month, more than triple his rate under Clinton and much more often with high-level officials like Vice President Cheney. His visits rose to 4.6 a month in 2002 and 5.7 in 2003.

“Whatever White House officials were whispering in Greenspan’s ear, it worked: Greenspan abruptly changed his tune on tax cuts, lending critical support to Bush’s massive 2001 and 2003 tax giveaways, and he loosened the reins by cutting Fed-controlled interest rates repeatedly beginning in January 2001, a gift to the Republicans in power.”

Along the way, the bubble caused housing prices to inflate drastically, which officialdom touted as economic “growth.” Even today, periodicals like Barron’s naively boast that this inflation boosted American’s “wealth.”

But this source of liquidity for everyday people has been maxed out, like our credit cards, and there is nothing to replace it. There is no cash cushion anymore, because years ago people stopped earning enough money for personal or household savings.

As purchasers lose their homes to foreclosure, the real estate is being grabbed at bankruptcy prices by the banks and by any other investors with ready money. Whole neighborhoods of cities like Cleveland or Atlanta are turning into boarded-up ghost towns.

What we are seeing are the results of an economic crime on a fantastic scale that implicates the highest levels of our financial and governmental establishments. It spanned three presidential administrations—Bush I, Clinton, and Bush II—though the worst of it came with the surge of outright lending fraud after 2001.

As usual when hypocrisy is rampant only the small fry are being called to account. Commentators, including a sleepwalking Congress, have self-righteously railed at consumers who got in over their heads. The Mortgage Bankers Association is even lobbying Congress to allocate $7 million more to the FBI to go after the supposedly rogue brokers within their own industry who are being scapegoated.

THE BUBBLES ARE ONLY SYMPTOMS

But there’s much more to it than that. These bubbles are symptoms. They are created because our wage and salary earners lack purchasing power due to stagnant incomes and various structural causes. These causes include the outsourcing of our manufacturing industries to China and other cheap labor markets and the super-efficiency of the remaining U.S. industry which is able to manufacture products with ever-fewer workers.

Also, our farming, mining, and other resource-based industries are in a long-term slide. This and the decline of hard manufacturing have been going on since our oil production peaked in the 1970s, followed by the Federal Reserve-induced recession of 1979-83. Next came the deregulation of the financial industry. It was all part of the economic disintegration that led to today’s “service economy.”

Now, for the first time in modern U.S. history, there are no new economic engines at all. The last real engine was the internet which has now reached maturity with marginal players being weeded out.

Our biggest sources of new private-sector jobs today are food service, processing of financial paperwork, health care for the growing numbers of retirees, and menial low-paying jobs, like landscaping and building maintenance. These are increasingly being performed by immigrants who are also underpricing U.S. citizens in many service jobs like childcare and auto repair.

Today the rank-and-file of our population must increasingly turn to borrowing in order to survive. Only the banks and the credit card companies are the beneficiaries. The total societal debt for individuals, businesses, and government is over $45 trillion and climbing. This is happening even while the real value of wages and salaries is decreasing.

What I have just been saying is bad enough, but here’s where the real lunacy enters in.

A major factor connected to the decline in the value of employee earnings is dollar devaluation in the overarching financial economy due to the proliferation of huge quantities of bank credit being used to keep the stock market afloat and to fuel the speculative games of equity, hedge, and derivative funds.

In other words, while our factories continue to shut down, the Wall Street gambling casino—like its Las Vegas counterpart—is running full-bore, 24/7. This, along with financing of the massive federal deficit, is what critics are talking about when they speak of the Federal Reserve “printing money.”

The main growth factors for federal spending are Middle East war expenditures and interest on the national debt. But within the private sector it’s leveraged loans to businesses which The Economist recently said “mirror….interest-only and negative-amortization mortgages” in the subprime market. But here’s the big difference: in the leveraged business economy, the amount of assets at stake are even greater than with the housing bubble.

The financial world, which Dr. Michael Hudson calls the FIRE economy—Finance, Insurance, and Real Estate—has been producing millionaires and billionaires among those who know how to play the game.

The Wall Street hedge funds stand out as the most irresponsible financial scams in history. Unregulated and secretive, they account for a third of all stock trades, own $2 trillion in assets, and pay their individual managers over $1 billion a year. Think about this the next time someone you know has their job outsourced to China or when his adjustable rate mortgage resets and drives up his monthly house payment past the level of affordability.

The hedge funds borrow huge sums from the banks which generate loans under their Federal Reserve-sanctioned fractional reserve privileges. Often this money is used by the hedge funds to “short the market,” thereby earning profits when stock prices decline.

In other words, the hedge funds and their banking enablers use banking leverage to bet against the producing economy. In doing so, they may actually drive stock prices down, causing ordinary investors to lose a portion of their own wealth. Can this be called anything other than a crime?

The livelihood of much of the U.S. workforce and perhaps half of the rest of the world’s population—maybe three billion people—is being threatened by such financial lawlessness. The justification that was first used for financial deregulation and tax cuts for the rich was that the trickle-down effect of wealthy peoples’ earnings would spill over to the rank-and-file.

The Reagan administration ushered in these policies in the 1980s under the heading of “supply-side economics.” But the opposite has happened. The system has institutionalized an increasingly stratified worldwide culture of haves and have-nots.

THE ROOT CAUSE OF THE CATASTROPHE

How did today’s looming tragedy come to pass?

Looking for causes is like peeling an onion. What we are really seeing are the terminal throes of a failed financial system almost a century old. It’s happening because, since the creation of the Federal Reserve System in 1913—even during the period of the New Deal with its Keynesian economics aimed at full employment—our economy has been based almost entirely on fractional reserve banking.

This means that under the regime of the world’s all-powerful central banking systems, money is brought into existence only as debt-bearing loans. Interest on this lending tends to grow exponentially unless overtaken by real economic growth.

Remember that every instance of bank lending, from purchase of Treasury Bonds, to credit cards, to home mortgages, to billion-dollar loans to hedge funds for leveraged buyouts or sheer speculation, must eventually be paid back somewhere, somehow, sometime, by somebody, with interest. In the end, it all comes back to people who work for a living, whether in the U.S. or elsewhere, because that is the only way the world community ever creates real wealth.

In an anemic economy like that of the U.S., growth cannot catch up with interest in a deregulated financial marketplace where interest rates are high. Rates may not seem high compared with, say, the twenty percent-plus rates of the early 1980s, but they are high in an economy with, at best, a two percent GDP growth rate.

And they have been high on average since the 1960s, as the banking industry became increasingly deregulated. Interestingly, since 1965, the U.S. dollar has lost eighty percent of its value, which tends to validate the contention by some observers that higher interest rates not only do not reduce inflation, as the Federal Reserve contends, but actually cause it.

The situation today is worse in many respects than 1929, because the debt “overhang” vs. real economic value is much higher now than it was then. The U.S. economy was in far better shape in the 1920s, because so much of our population was gainfully employed in factories or on farms.

The question is not when will the system start to come down, because this has already begun. It’s shown most clearly by the fact that according to Federal Reserve data, M1, the part of the money supply most readily available for consumer purchases, is not only lagging behind inflation but has actually decreased in eleven of the last twelve months. This means that the producing economy is already in a recession.

The federal government is trying to figure out what to do. Their biggest concern is that foreign investors have started to pull out of dollar-denominated markets.

The government’s “plunge protection team”—known officially as the President’s Working Group on Financial Markets—is trying to engineer what they call a “soft landing.” It’s been likened to the process by which you cook a frog in a pot where you raise the temperature one degree a day. The frog doesn’t hop out because the heat goes up gradually, but before long it’s too late. The frog has been cooked.

Even if the plunge protection team succeeds, and the frog cooks slowly, there will be a massive de facto default on dollar-denominated debt and a long-term degradation of the U.S. standard of living. The inside word is that we are likely to see major monetary shocks and a possible stock market crash as early as December 2007.

The worst off will be people locked into retirement funds which have a heavy load of mortgage-related securities. Entire investment portfolios are likely to disappear overnight.

The banks, along with the bank-leveraged equity and hedge funds, are preparing for the biggest fire sale in at least a generation. Insiders are going liquid to get ready. If you think Enron was “the bomb,” you won’t want to miss this one.

WHAT CAN BE DONE?

There are so many flaws in the system that it’s time for real change.

As I have been pointing out in articles over the last several months, the key to a rational solution would be immediate monetary reform leading to a fundamental shift in how the world conducts its financial business. It would mean taking control of the world’s economy out of the hands of the private bankers and giving it back to democratically elected governments.

I spent twenty-one years working for the U.S. Treasury Department and studying U.S. monetary history. For much of our history we were a laboratory for diverse monetary systems.

During and after the Civil War (1861-5) we had five different sources of money that fueled our economy. One was the Greenbacks, an extremely successful currency which the government spent directly into circulation. Contrary to financiers’ propaganda, the Greenbacks were not inflationary.

Another was gold and silver coinage and specie-backed Treasury paper currency. The third was notes lent into circulation by the national banks. The fourth was retained earnings—individual savings and business reinvestment of profits—which was the primary source of capital for industry. The fifth was the stock and bond markets.

After the Federal Reserve Act was passed by Congress in 1913, the banks and the government inflated the currency through war debt and destroyed most of the value of the Greenbacks and coinage. The banks never entirely displaced the capital markets but eventually took them over during the present-day era of leveraged mergers, acquisitions, and buyouts, while the Federal Reserve created and deflated asset bubbles.

The banking system which rules the economy through the Federal Reserve System has produced the crushing debt pyramid of today. The system is a travesty. Banks, which can be useful in facilitating commerce, should never have this much power. Many intelligent people have called for the Federal Reserve to be abolished, including former chairmen of the House banking committee Wright Patman and Henry Gonzales and current Republican presidential candidate Ron Paul.

Some might call such a program a revolution. I prefer to call it a restoration—of national sovereignty. Central to the program would be the elimination of the Federal Reserve as a bank of issue and restoration of money-creation to the people’s representatives in Congress. This is what our Constitution says too. It’s the system we had before 1913.

THE MONETARY PRESCRIPTION

The fundamental objectives of monetary policy should be to secure a healthy producing economy and provide for sufficient individual income. The objectives should not be to produce massive profits for the banks, fodder for Wall Street swindles, and a blank check for out-of-control government expenditures.

Note I referred to income. I did not say “create jobs.” That is the Keynesian answer, because Keynes was a collectivist, and the main thing collectivists like to come up with is to give everyone more work to do, even if it’s just grabbing a shovel and digging ditches like they did with the WPA during the Depression.

It’s what President Clinton did with his welfare-to-work program that threw hundreds of thousands of mothers off the welfare rolls and into a job market where sufficient work at a living wage did not exist. It’s another reason the government is constantly borrowing more money to fuel the military-industrial complex by creating more military, bureaucratic, and contractor jobs.

Back to income. The idea of “income,” as opposed to “jobs,” is a civilized and humane idea. When are we going to realize that everyone doesn’t need a paying job in order for an industrial economy to provide all with a decent living? When are we going to realize that the productivity of the modern economy is part of the heritage of all of us, part of the social commons?

Why can’t mothers have the choice of staying home with the kids like they could a generation ago? Why can’t some people choose to do eldercare? Why can’t others comfortably go into lower-paying occupations like teaching or the arts? Why can’t some just opt to study or travel for a while or learn new skills or start a business without facing financial ruin as they often must today? Why can’t retirees enjoy their retirement instead of having to stay in the job market or worrying about Social Security going broke?

The U.S. and world economies are on the brink of collapse due to the lunacy of the financial system, not because we can’t produce enough.

Contrary to so many doomsayers, the mature world economy is capable of providing a decent living for everyone on the planet. It cannot because the monetary equivalent of its bounty is skimmed by interest-bearing debt.

These are things that monetary reformers have known about for decades. The first steps within the U.S. would be 1) a large-scale cancellation of debt; 2) a guaranteed income for all at about $10,000 a year, not connected to whether a person has a job; 3) an additional National Dividend, fluctuating with national productivity, that would provide every citizen with their rightful share in the benefits of our incredible producing economy; 4) direct spending of money by the government for infrastructure and other necessary costs without resort to taxation or borrowing; 5) creation of a new system of private lending to businesses and consumers at non-usurious rates of interest; 6) re-regulation of the financial industry, including the banning of bank-created credit for speculation, such as purchase of securities on margin and for leveraging buyouts, acquisitions, mergers, hedge funds, and derivatives; and 7) abolishment of the Federal Reserve as a bank of issue with retention of its functions as a national financial transaction clearinghouse.

While these proposals are basically simple, the overall program is so different from what we have today with our financier-controlled system that it takes careful reading and a great deal of thought to understand exactly how it would work. One way to approach it is to look at the likely effects.

These measures would immediately shift the basis of our economy from borrowing from the banks to a mixed system that would include the direct creation of credit at the public and grassroots level. The size of government would shrink, our producing economy would be reborn, debt would come down, economic democracy would become a reality, and the financial industry could be right-sized. Finally, the international situation could be stabilized because we would no longer be driven to a constant state of warfare to seize other nations’ resources as with Iraq and to prop up the dollar as a reserve currency abroad.

Such a system would work by creating indigenous sources of credit needed to mobilize the natural wealth and productivity of the nation. There are people who could implement this program. Systems to do so could be installed within the U.S. Treasury and the Federal Reserve within a matter of months.

Fundamental monetary reform implemented to restore economic democracy is what America’s real task should be for the twenty-first century. One thing is for certain. The out-of-control financial system that has wrecked the U.S. and world economies over the last generation cannot be allowed to continue.

How the outcome will play out may well depend on whether there is a Jefferson, Lincoln, or Roosevelt waiting in the wings. The success of each of these great leaders was due to one critical factor: their ability to implement monetary reform at a time of national emergency.


Richard C. Cook is the author of “We Hold These Truths: The Hope of Monetary Reform,” scheduled to appear by September 1, 2007. A retired federal analyst, his career included service with the U.S. Civil Service Commission, the Food and Drug Administration, the Carter White House, and NASA, followed by twenty-one years with the U.S. Treasury Department. His articles on monetary reform, economics, and space policy have appeared on Global Research, Economy in Crisis, Dissident Voice, Arizona Free Press, Atlantic Free Press, and elsewhere. He is also author of “Challenger Revealed: An Insider’s Account of How the Reagan Administration Caused the Greatest Tragedy of the Space Age.” His website is at www.richardccook.com . He appears frequently on internet radio at www.themicroeffect.com on Saturday mornings at 11 a.m. Eastern.


Richard C. Cook is a frequent contributor to Global Research.
More articles fro R.C. Cook at http://wordpress.com/tag/cook-richard-c/
"The conflict between corporations and activists is that of narcolepsy versus remembrance. The corporations have money, power and influence. Our sole influence is public outrage. Extract from "Cloud Atlas (page 125) by David Mitchell.
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http://news.goldseek.com/GoldSeek/1209999600.php
The Great Depression of the 2010s

-- Posted Monday, 5 May 2008

Economics is not rocket science. Neither is power.

Depressions are monetary phenomena caused by central bank issuance of excessive credit. In 1913, the newly created US central bank, the Federal Reserve, began issuing credit-based money in the US. Within ten years, the central bank flow of credit ignited the 1920s US stock market bubble; and shortly thereafter, following the collapse of the bubble in 1929, the world entered its first Great Depression in 1933.

Investment banks are the undoing of central banking. While all banks, central, commercial and investment, view credit as the opportunity to exploit society’s growth and productivity, investment bank exploitation of growth and productivity exposes society to extreme risks—for investment banks use society’s savings to make their volatile and speculative bets.

The speculative risks undertaken by investment banks is done by leveraging the savings of society; and, when investment bank bets are sufficiently large enough and the bets go bad—as they inevitably do as the luck of investment bankers is due more to their proximity to credit than to their ability to foresee the future—it is society that will bear the brunt of the pain in the loss of its savings.

Inevitably, investment bankers cannot resist the temptations of excessive credit and, like the buyers of teaser-rate home mortgages, they will always overreach themselves—an overreaching that will have disastrous consequences for the society whose savings they bet.

The leveraged overreaching by investment banks in the 1920s caused the Great Depression of the 1930s and their more recent overreaching in this decade, the 2000s, is about to cause another Great Depression in the next, the 2010s.

It is the proximity of investment banks to the pools of savings that allows investment banks to profit. By their access to society’s savings, investment banks use society’s wealth as the foundation of their highly leveraged bets in financial markets; and in so doing, they have now placed all of us in harms way.

GOVERNMENT

THE DEVICE BY WHICH

THE FEW CONTROL THE MANY

The collapse of financial markets in the first Great Depression led to the US Congress to enact laws that would hopefully insure that such a collapse would never again happen. To that end, in 1933 the Glass-Steagall Act was passed by Congress and signed into law.

Acknowledging the role that investment banks had played in the Great Depression, the passage of the Glass-Steagall Act in 1933 separated investment banking and commercial banking to insure that investment bank speculation would not again destabilize commercial banks as it did during the Great Depression leading to the loss of America’s savings.

What bankers hath joined together let no man put asunder

However, in 1999, the US Congress repealed the Glass-Steagall Act and America was once again vulnerable to the highly leveraged shenanigans of Wall Street. This time, however, it was not only the US but the entire world whose futures were to be bet and lost by Wall Street gamblers.

The globalization of financial markets had spread the dangers of US investment banking to banks, insurance companies, and pension funds around the world. Now, the savings of Europe and Asia as well as the US were to be impacted by the wagers of Wall Street who in the 2000s literally bet the house on the possibility that subprime CDOs were actually worth their AAA ratings.

Glass-Steagall, the law enacted in1933 to prevent another Great Depression was repealed at the behest of bankers. While it is true that at certain times the US government will act in the best interest of society, usually (and usually in the guise of so doing) the US government is the pawn of the special interests that benefit from the trough of government largesse and regulation. The repealing of the Glass-Steagall Act in 1999 was therefore a reversion to the mean.

We are today in the initial stages of another collapse that will lead to another Great Depression. The safeguards put in place to prevent such from happening were not only disassembled in 1999; but, now in 2008, the US government has moved even closer to exposing its citizenry and indeed the world to the speculative carnage and folly of investment banking excess.

THE RULE OF LAW IS A WONDROUS THING—ESPECIALLY IF YOU WRITE THEM.

Bloomberg.com April 8, 2008

As credit markets seized up, the Fed gave the 20 primary dealers in U.S. government bonds the same access to discount- window loans that had previously been reserved for banks. The central bank now auctions as much as $100 billion to lenders a month, and has cut the cost on direct loans to just a quarter- point above the overnight rate on loans between banks.

The US Federal Reserve is now underwriting, i.e. subsidizing, the commercial activities of global private investment banks. The 20 primary dealers in US government bonds include the world’s largest investment banks—BNP Paribas Securities Corp. (French), Barclays Capital Inc (British), Banc of America Securities LLC (USA), UBS Securities LLC (Swiss), Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein Securities LLC (German), Daiwa Securities US Inc. (Japan) etc.

In truth, these investment banks are global entities and have no actual nationality no matter what jurisdiction in which they are legally domiciled. As such, they also have no allegiance except to their own self-interests.

QUESTION:

Why is the US government allocating public resources for the benefit of private international investment banks?

ANSWER:

US resources are subsidizing international investment banks through the Federal Reserve Bank, a quasi private entity which was given governmental powers in 1913 (some allege in violation of the US Constitution). That a quasi private bank is bailing out private banks with public monies does make sense. What doesn’t make sense is why the public allows it.

There is much discussion as to the justification and reasons for US, UK, European, and Japanese central banks bailing out private banks with public money. Issues such as moral hazard are now being raised in questioning the right and consequence of so doing.

In truth, such issues are irrelevant. Not that they are in themselves not important, but issues such as moral hazard will have no effect whatsoever on what is going to happen.

Intent is the underlying motive that explains what is about to occur. The intent of private bankers is not public stability, nor growth, nor productivity—it is the pursuit of private profit via the use of public credit and debt.

Today, most governments, especially the US and UK, are controlled by private bankers—which is why government policy continues and will continue to favor the interests of private bankers over the public good.

THE MELTDOWN OF MAMMON

I am sure that in some quarters of the Catholic Church objections were raised (perhaps even on theological grounds) about the torture used by the Church during the Spanish Inquisition; just as today, there have been objections raised by some in the US in regards to the use of torture in its “war on terror”.

Objections are always tolerated by those in power as long as the objections do not rise to the level of action. The objection to central bank credit and influence in our monetary affairs is therefore rhetorical. The influence of private bankers and central banking in our monetary affairs will not change until their influence has run its course—which is now
about to happen.

The present epoch of central banking will perhaps be known as the period when bankers roamed the earth. Just as during the Jurassic Age, when dinosaurs roamed freely eating whatever and whomever they encountered, bankers did much the same in the present epoch that is now about to end—profiting by the productivity of society and the public and private debts incurred as a result of bankers’ induced credit-based spending.

Bankers achieved their immense power during this era by exploiting flaws in human nature and systemic flaws in the economic system they constructed for their own benefit. But as with all flaws, human or economic, the consequences of so doing are exposed over time. That time has now arrived.

Money is not credit, nor is money created de jure by circulating paper coupons imprinted with a government stamp stating the coupons are now legal tender to be used in the settlement of debts.

The idea that central bank coupons/paper money, sic debt, can be used to settle another debt is astounding. That we have been led to accept it is so is even more astounding. Throughout history, every experiment with paper “money” as a settlement of debt has failed. Our experiment with paper money towards that end will be no different.

The recent correction in the price of gold and silver is just that, a correction in an otherwise direct repudiation of the on-going attempt by governments and bankers to substitute paper coupons for real money.

A paper yen, a paper euro, a paper dollar, when no longer backed and convertible to gold or silver is but a paper coupon masquerading as money—a coupon with an expiration date in invisible ink.

In truth, the bankers’ real gambit is not their bet that paper money can be substituted for gold and silver or that subprime mortgages can be passed off as AAA securities. Their real gambit is that central bank issuance of debt as money and their control of governments will never be discovered by the public.

HUBRIS FOLLY AND DISASTER

The world of credit and debt and all it has created has been made possible by bankers and their debt based system of money and central banking. Its cost, however, will be born by future generations who were not present when the debts were incurred.

Those who utter in pious simplicity those wonderful words, “our children are our future”, have no idea what they have done to those very children and their future by spending today what future generations will have to earn tomorrow.

Here, in the US, an entire generation has grown up on the suspect promises of easy credit and paper money. That generation is now beginning to suspect that something is wrong, that the price of their gas, food and healthcare is rapidly rising and their dream of home ownership is a trap from which bankruptcy is increasingly their only escape.

Still, this generation has no idea of how terribly wrong it actually is and why it has happened; and their ignorance of such will give them little comfort during the Great Depression that lies directly ahead.

The chickens are coming home to roost; and they closer they come, the more they are looking like vultures.

Note: I will be speaking at Professor Antal E. Fekete’s Session IV of Gold Standard University Live (GSUL) July 3-6, 2008 in Szombathely, Hungary. If you are interested in monetary matters and gold, the opportunity to hear Professor Fekete should not be missed. A perusal of Professor Fekete’s topics may convince you to attend (see http://www.professorfekete.com/gsul.asp). Professor Fekete, in my opinion, is a giant in a time of small men.

Darryl Robert Schoon

www.survivethecrisis.com

www.drschoon.com

-- Posted Monday, 5 May 2008
"The conflict between corporations and activists is that of narcolepsy versus remembrance. The corporations have money, power and influence. Our sole influence is public outrage. Extract from "Cloud Atlas (page 125) by David Mitchell.
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Post by blackbear »

Maybe of interest:

Federal Reserve losing control........300+ posts on this thread....

http://www.rigorousintuition.ca/board/v ... 90&start=0

Antiaristo....started it back in Oct.....
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http://elainemeinelsupkis.typepad.com/m ... n-and.html
China, Japan And Korea Sign New Monetary Union Accords
May 4, 2008

Elaine Meinel Supkis

Big news, so we won't see it in the US: China, Japan and South Korea have finalized the second stage of their currency unification project! The euro has blazed this path quite clearly. The IMF and the US hates this development and tried mightily to stop it. But we have no 'leverage' anymore. This union is the joining up of the world's biggest FOREX reserves and will be used to build a huge financial fortress to protect Asia if the US decides to cheat them by either devaluing the dollar against their currencies or going bankrupt! Japan was tempted for a year to side with the US and Europe against China's currency but last summer showed how the Chinese soundly defeated the Japanese in this matter. Japan surrendered last September and now is joining China against the other G7 partners. And I predicted this! HA.

The release of "Foreign Exchange Rates (Monthly)" will be stopped as of April 2008. (March 31, 2008)

First off, a Russian reader alerted me to this notice at the Bank of Japan's official web page. I read their press releases a lot but fell behind this week due to all the breaking stories. Well! Just like the Bank of England unilaterally deciding to keep the information about banks seeking help because they are insolvent or the private bankers of the Federal Reserve last year unilaterally deciding to hide the M3 statistics from us even as they still collate these numbers, so it is with the Bank of Japan! In this case, unlike England trying to prevent bank runs by withholding vital information or the US hiding inflation by hiding vital information, Japan is hiding CURRENCY information vis a vis the dollar, I might add. So this news alerted me the other day that something big was about to happen in the currency news markets. And it happened yesterday.
Continued at above site, which includes gems like :-

"JAPAN, CHINA AND OTHER ASIAN EXPORTERS ARE PREPARING FOR THE LOOMING US BANKRUPTCY AND ECONOMIC COLLAPSE!"

and

"Since late July, the G7 banking system has collapsed due to 'no liquidity'. NO ONE bothers telling us who generated all the previous liquidity, of course. This is simple: THE TOP G7 BANKERS ARE ALL LYING BAST@RDS. They lie about everything. Note how, on a weekly basis, I bring news about these guys either lying about obvious facts and figures as well as their pathetic attempts at hiding information by curtly telling us that we have no need or any right."

and

"The fantasy that banking would be more stable and safe if it is SECRET is the key to the business of making wealth out of thin air: the magicians can't operate in the open, they have to have darkness surround their actions!"

and something I never realised:-

"Last fall, I pointed out that a huge shift has happened: China and Japan do more trade with each other than either does with the US! This is a historic and important shift!"
"The conflict between corporations and activists is that of narcolepsy versus remembrance. The corporations have money, power and influence. Our sole influence is public outrage. Extract from "Cloud Atlas (page 125) by David Mitchell.
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help please

Post by slower »

does anyone know what these graphs mean, as they look pretty horrific to me



http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series/BOGNONBR

http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series/BORROW
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http://www.falkvinge.com/2008/03/why-us ... psing.html
Saturday, March 22, 2008
Why the US is collapsing

Hello, visitors from Digg, Reddit, StumbleUpon, and Slashdot. Summary in one paragraph: This is the leader of the Swedish Pirate Party explaining how the US went bankrupt in 1971, and has been covering it up through an accelerating whack-a-mole borrowing frenzy that is bursting right now. It has been paying rapidly growing VISA bills using MasterCard and vice versa for 37 years. The creditors are catching up, and the US is about to go extinct as a superpower. Become irrelevant. It is not yet on its death bed, it is still walking, breathing and capable of entertaining a conversation in public. But there are ominous bloodstains on its hands used to cover the painful coughing.

Last summer, I wrote (in Swedish) about how the US is in grave danger of becoming the Fourth Reich. I also said that such a state would not last for more than 15 years, because of a number of factors I would elaborate on later.

I was right about the sequence of events, but horribly off on the timing. Where I had expected them to happen gradually in about ten or 15 years, instead they are unfolding before my eyes at an accelerating pace.

Some people believe that pirate politics is somehow about the right to obtain music and movies without paying. Some, a bit more initiated, believe it is for fight for civil liberties. In that, they are correct. But few understand the scope of this fight. It is not against the music industry. It is not against entertainment cartels.

I see the pirate fight as being against corrupt governments that systematically curtail civil liberties as the primary and only defense of a gigantic and growing financial bubble, built over four decades. A fight against a small elite that are literally killing people to be able to keep living in luxury without paying the bills for it. Some bloggers have called this Fascism 2.0. The entertainment cartels are just a small part of this bubble, and fascism is used here in its most lexical sense.

fascism n. a merging of the interests of big corporations and government, adjoined with a systematic curtailment of civil liberties

In order to understand what pirate politics are really about, you need to understand global economic politics in ways that most people will never encounter. You need to understand the gold coin of Bretton-Woods, Toyota's impact on Detroit, the strategic dollar advantage of the Marshall Plan, why the WTO and UN WIPO are rivals, how and why the US uses threats of trade sanctions, and how money is created and ceases to exist on today's financial markets. I will cover the basics in this blog post.

The most prominent of these bubble-pumping governments is the US. And their bubble is bursting. The dollar is not just falling in exchange rate, as in "oh, the curves are on a downslope, interesting, btw I wonder what's for lunch today". The US dollars are about to become as irrelevant as the rubles, the deutschmarks, and the sesertii.

For these empires - the Soviet, German and Roman empire - followed the exact same pattern. And if history is a teacher, future empires will do so too.
lengthy article continues at link above - including such statements as:-
In short, while Andrew Jackson was able to remove the central bank, he wasn’t able to eliminate unsound fractional reserve banking. When one such unsound bank in Massachusetts collapsed, it was discovered that its bank note circulation of $500,000 was backed by exactly $86.48. Why is this obvious absurdity, and the banks’ protection from criminal prosecution if they suspended payments, not called into question?
"The conflict between corporations and activists is that of narcolepsy versus remembrance. The corporations have money, power and influence. Our sole influence is public outrage. Extract from "Cloud Atlas (page 125) by David Mitchell.
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http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/g ... t=printTop
Megabubble waiting for new president in 2009
'Numbers racket' exposes potential disaster for economy, markets

By Paul B. Farrell, MarketWatch
Last update: 10:13 a.m. EDT May 20, 2008

This update of a story originally published May 19 fixes the title of Kevin Phillips book "Bad Money: Reckless Finance, Failed Politics & the Crisis of American Capitalism."

ARROYO GRANDE, Calif. (MarketWatch) -- Remember that big ah-ha moment in the 1939 classic "The Wizard of Oz?" Dorothy wants to see the Wizard. His voice booms: "Do not arouse the wrath of the Great and Powerful Oz! Come back tomorrow!" Afraid, Lion, Tin Man, Scarecrow shake. Dorothy's dog runs up, tugs on a curtain. She chases Toto, pulls curtain open:
"Who are you?" Dr. Marvel stutters: "Well, I - I - I am the Great and Powerful, Wizard of Oz." Dorothy: "You are? I don't believe you!" He replies: "No, it's true. There's no other Wizard except me." Dorothy's miffed: "Oh, you're a very bad man!" Wizard: "Oh, no, my dear. I'm a very good man. I'm just a very bad Wizard."
2009 Sequel: Script exposes diabolical cover-up conspiracy
Flash forward: Real life, Washington, new leaders, a new Congress, old wizardry. Be forewarned: No matter who's elected president, America will soon see a massive statistical curtain pulled back, exposing a con game of historic proportions. And when that happens, you and I will suffer another ear-splitting global meltdown, bigger than today's housing-credit crisis, dragging us deep into a recession and bear market for years.
Cast: New 'leading man' from old Nixon political machine
Yes, the lead character pulling back the curtain is none other than Kevin Phillips, a former Republican strategist for Nixon, and today America's leading political historian. Phillips just published "Bad Money: Reckless Finance, Failed Politics & the Crisis of American Capitalism," everything you need to know about today's credit meltdown.
Scene 1: Numbers racket hiding behind Washington curtain
Opening shot: Phillips pulling back the curtain, exposing charlatan Wizards in a brilliant Harper's Magazine article: "Numbers Racket: Why the economy is worse than we know." Far worse. Buy it, read it -- this is essential reading if you really want to understand the depth of today's political as well as economic impending meltdown, and the harsh realities facing Washington, Wall Street, Corporate America, and Main Street in 2009 and beyond ... harsh because we cannot cover up the truth much longer.
Scene 2: Statistics, Washington's new WMDs, a time bomb
"If Washington's harping on weapons of mass destruction was essential to buoy public support for the invasion of Iraq, the use of deceptive statistics has played its own vital role in convincing many Americans that the U.S. economy is stronger, fairer, more productive, more dominant, and richer with opportunity than it really is. The corruption has tainted the very measures that most shape public perception of the economy," especially three key numbers, CPI, GDP and monthly unemployment statistics.
Scene 3: Backflash, 'It's always the cover-up, stupid!'
As I read further I couldn't help but think about similar traps politicians get themselves (and us) into. Remember nice guys like Scooter Libby and Bill Clinton: The crime wasn't their original stupidity, but their lying during the cover-up. Here, Phillips reviews endless statistical cover-ups since the 1960s and concludes there was no "grand conspiracy, just accumulating opportunisms." I call it plain old greed. And every step of the way the media went along with the con game played by politicians and economists.
Scene 4: Real numbers torture us ... like water-boarding!
How bad is it? "The real numbers ... would be a face full of cold water," says Phillips. "Based on the criteria in place a quarter century ago, today's U.S. unemployment rate is somewhere between 9% and 12%; the inflation rate is as high as 7% or even 10%; economics growth since the recession of 2001 has been mediocre, despite the surge in wealth and incomes of the superrich, and we are falling back into recession."
Scene 5: Most economists hushed, work inside conspiracy
Compare that to the phony stats Washington feeds the press and public: Unemployment 5%, inflation 2% and long-term growth at 3%-4% (actually more like 1%). For example, just last week the L.A. Times reported that while "gasoline prices are up more than 20% from a year ago and food prices have risen 5%," Washington says "inflation was fairly mild last month." A Wells Fargo economist shook his head in disbelief: That report isn't "worth the paper it was printed on." Most economists are quiet, working for the conspiracy.
Scene 6: No integrity, they cannot be trusted to tell truth!
The same can be said of any government report, every speech made by today's leaders: All hype, lies and propaganda intended to deceive us. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson's clearly playing the game: Remember what the former Goldman Sachs CEO told Fortune last July as our credit meltdown was metastasizing into a worldwide contagion: "This is far and away the strongest global economy I've seen in my business lifetime." He has no credibility. He knew the truth. He knew the government's "numbers racket;" after all, he helped create the problems years earlier at Goldman.
Scene 7: There's enough Kool-Aid for everyone to drink
The plot's unraveling: The lies accumulate and compound one on top of the another ... get passed on ... keep mounting ... forcing successive new generations of politicians to drink the same poisonous Kool-Aid ... keep the lies alive ... going strong ... till everyone believes the lies are really "the truth," or at least an inconvenient truth ... as the hoax becomes the conventional wisdom ... not only by Washington, Wall Street, Corporate America and the media, but also 300 million Main Street Americans.
Scene 8: Inflation statistics are America's new 'guillotine'
The biggest of all lies is with inflation. Understating inflation "hangs over our heads like a guillotine," says Phillips. Yet if Washington told us the truth "it would send interest rates climbing and thereby would endanger the viability of the massive buildup of public and private debt (from less than $11 trillion in 1987 to $49 trillion last year) that props up the American Economy." So we keep sipping the Kool-Aid.
Scene 9: Washington and Wall Street delusional in 'Land of Oz'
"Were mainstream interest rates to jump into the 7% to 9% range -- which could happen if inflation were to spur new concern -- both Washington and Wall Street could be walking on quicksand," warns Phillips. "The make-believe economy of the past two decades, with its asset bubbles, massive borrowing, and rampant data distortion, would be in serious jeopardy."
Scene 10: Cover-up failing ... king really has no clothes
Yet everyone still acts paralyzed, unable (or unwilling) to do anything to stop this lethal musical chairs charade ... till it's too late, or a catastrophe wakes us. Meanwhile, we act as if we had no choice but to put up with the crashes of 1987 and 2001 and 2007. Just "normal" bull/bear cycles. So like lemmings driven over a cliff, we'll blindly accept the next crashes, as each increase in frequency and intensity. Next in 2011? As war debt piles? As reforming health care, Social Security and Medicare are delayed? As we deny and deceive ourselves, perpetuate the lie ... except notice, out of the corner of your eye, at the edge of the screen, a curtain's being pulled open, slowly, our once-mighty statistical king, the Wizard of Washington really has no clothes on.
Scene 11: Millions of co-conspirators in massive cover-up
Still, we let ourselves be conned. Why? "The rising cost of pensions, benefits, and interest payments -- all indexed or related to inflation -- could join the cost of financial bailouts to overwhelm the federal budget," says Phillips. But it's a heads-we-lose-tails-we-can't-win bet. "As inflation and interest rates have been kept artificially suppressed, the United States has been indentured to its volatile financial sector, with its predilection for leverage and risky buccaneering" Yes, Wall Street and the rich love playing this game.
Scene 12: Rich get richer hiding under 'statistical camouflage'
So who really "profits from the low-growth U.S. economy hidden under statistical camouflage?" he asks rhetorically. Certainly not the masses: "Might it be Washington politicos and affluent elite, anxious to mislead voters, coddle the financial markets, and tamp down expensive cost-of-living increases for wages and pensions?" Yes, yes, yes, a voice screams off-camera! Then a gun shot rings out ... dull thud ... silence ... haunting music builds, filling the theater ... signaling the end of this tragi-comedy ... although like Sartre's "No Exit," you know this drama will never end ... until ... the next sequel ...
Roll credits: Who was that masked man?
Kudos to the masked curtain-puller. Yes folks, it's the same Kevin Phillips who wrote "American Theocracy, The Peril and Politics of Radical Religion, Oil, and Borrowed Money in the 21st Century;" "The Politics of Rich and Poor: Wealth and Electorate in the Reagan Aftermath;" "American Dynasty: Aristocracy, Fortune, and the Politics of Deceit in the House of Bush" and others. In his "Wealth and Democracy: A Political History of the American Rich," Phillips warned us that "most great nations, at the peak of their economic power, become arrogant and wage great world wars at great cost, wasting vast resources, taking on huge debt, and ultimately burning themselves out." Slowly, fade to black ....
"The conflict between corporations and activists is that of narcolepsy versus remembrance. The corporations have money, power and influence. Our sole influence is public outrage. Extract from "Cloud Atlas (page 125) by David Mitchell.
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http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/main.j ... ros126.xml
George Soros: 'We face the most serious recession of our lifetime'
Last Updated: 12:53am BST 27/05/2008


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George Soros, 'the man who broke the Bank of England', tells Edmund Conway of his fears for the economy

'This is a period of wealth destruction. The people who make money will be few and far between. There will be a lot more money lost than made." When George Soros - the phenomenally successful hedge fund manager - says this, you know something is wrong, very wrong. And indeed it is. The 77-year-old billionaire sinks back into the sofa in his Chelsea townhouse and exhales.

He has managed to make money almost consistently for over half a century - from his early days as one of the world's first major hedge fund traders to his involvement in Black Wednesday as the man who "broke the Bank of England", and in the latter years generating multi-billion-dollar annual profits throughout the 1990s. The conditions today are almost uniquely dismal, however.
Rest of article and video at above link.
"The conflict between corporations and activists is that of narcolepsy versus remembrance. The corporations have money, power and influence. Our sole influence is public outrage. Extract from "Cloud Atlas (page 125) by David Mitchell.
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http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/main.j ... ebt129.xml
US and European debt markets flash new warning signals
By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, International Business Editor
Last Updated: 12:38am BST 30/05/2008

The debt markets in the US and Europe have begun to flash warning signals yet again, raising fears that the global credit crisis could be entering another turbulent phase.

The cost of insuring against default on the bonds of Lehman Brothers, Merrill Lynch and other big banks and brokerages has surged over the last two weeks, threatening to reach the stress levels seen before the Bear Stearns debacle. Spreads on inter-bank Libor and Euribor rates in Europe are back near record levels.

Credit default swaps (CDS) on Lehman debt have risen from around 130 in late April to 247, while Merrill debt has spiked to 196. Most analysts had thought the coast was clear for such broker dealers after the US Federal Reserve invoked an emergency clause in March to let them borrow directly from its lending window.

But there are now concerns that the Fed itself may be exhausting its $800bn (£399bn) stock of assets. It has swapped almost $300bn of 10-year Treasuries for questionable mortgage debt, and provided Term Auction Credit of $130bn.

"The steep rise in swap spreads this week is ominous," said John Hussman, head of the Hussman Funds. "The deterioration is in stark contrast to what investors have come to hope since March."

Lehman Brothers took writedowns of just $200m on its $6.5bn portfolio of sub-prime debt in the first quarter even though a quarter of the securities had "junk" ratings, typically worth a fraction of face value.

Willem Sels, a credit analyst at Dresdner Kleinwort, said the banks are beginning to face waves of defaults on credit cards, car loans, and now corporate loans. "We believe we're entering Phase II. The liquidity crisis has eased a little, but the real credit losses are accelerating. The worst is yet to come," he said.

The jump in corporate bankruptcies has not yet been picked up by the usual indicators, which tend to lag the market, lulling investors into a false sense of security. The true losses are already known to specialists in the business, said Mr Sels.
"The conflict between corporations and activists is that of narcolepsy versus remembrance. The corporations have money, power and influence. Our sole influence is public outrage. Extract from "Cloud Atlas (page 125) by David Mitchell.
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