IMPORTANT VALIDATION PRESS
RELEASE!
The NELSON LAW FIRM, pllc
Attorneys at Law
PRESS
RELEASE
January
5, 2010
It is now
“old news” that banks around the world are in troubling circumstances due to difficulties locating clients that
qualify for loans based upon underwriting policies that are now very restrictive. The effect of these
restrictive policies is that businesses, communities and commerce throughout the world are suffering from cash
scarcity.
The Nelson
Law Group has arranged, along with the acts of private clients, substantial funds, cash-like assets and
protocols that can provide direct benefits to banks, which include:
1. A program used by a bank of any size to
almost instantly create cash assets sufficient to resolve deficits caused by depletion of bank asset values.
2. Provide no-risk loan capability for any
bank to use permitting businesses of any size, including those affected with a negative set of circumstances, to
obtain financial support upon presentation of a solid socially and economically worthwhile business plan.
3. Instantly increase a bank’s depositors
along with funded deposits up to a valuation and number that would be legitimately negotiated with the Nelson
Law Group.
In order to
accomplish the aforementioned, the Nelson Law Group encourages participation from the following:
1. Banks desiring to immediately resolve cash
asset deficiencies.
2. Banks that desire to make riskless loans
with confidence.
3. Banks willing to take a proactive role in
their communities by strengthening businesses and promoting commerce which will have a positive local, national
and global impact.
4. Lawyers and law firms desiring to benefit
themselves, their firms, their clients and banks by affiliating with the Nelson Law Group in these efforts.
As a final
note, many private parties continue to join forces in this project to benefit the banking community and have
independently committed substantial funding which now exceeds $100 Billion in cash/cash-like assets and which
continues to grow.
FOR MORE INFORMATION: CONTACT THE PERSON WHO REFERRED YOU TO THIS SITE!
A MUST VIEW YOUTUBE VIDEO by Dr RON PAUL
Thank you Lucy R for this youtube submission!
Gold, Peace, and Prosperity: The Birth of a New
Currency By Ron Paul
The Ludwig von Mises Institute 2007
Gold, Peace, and Prosperity is the title of Ron Paul’s essay for a “modern” gold standard.
According to Paul, such a standard would end the relentless boom-bust cycle, and maintain the value of King
Dollar. However, King Dollar would have to be founded on a monetary standard that eschews government
tampering.
Paul begins his treatise by pointing out that “Congress alone is responsible for inflation, and Congress
alone can stop it.” Which means that the old scapegoats – OPEC, greedy CEOs, labor unions – are not the real
cause of inflation. To support his contention, Paul relates a story told by Marco Polo in his travels through
China. As Paul states, “Abuse of paper money led to the expulsion of the Mongol dynasty from China.”
The same thing happened when the Continental Congress began issuing paper money during the Revolutionary
War. Initially, one Continental paper dollar was worth one gold dollar. After a while, it took 1000 Continental
dollars to equal one gold dollar. In other words, it literally took a wheelbarrow full of money to buy a loaf
of bread.
Paul provides a short history “of our monetary decline.” During the 19th Century, the U.S.
operated on a gold standard. The economy was strong and healthy during that time. Then in 1913, the Federal
Reserve Act established the central banking system. That was the beginning of the end.
Paul asserts the Federal Reserve Act made America’s entry into World War I possible. It was accomplished by
inflation. And the end result of inflation was the 1921 depression. Further inflationary tactics “caused and
perpetuated the Great Depression of the 1930s.”
In 1934, the Gold Reserve Act “outlawed private ownership of gold, prohibited the use of ‘gold clause’
contracts, and abolished the gold coin standard.” In effect, the U.S. went on the gold bullion standard. Paul
points out that, contrary to Paul Samuelson’s declaration that “the Federal Reserve System was formed in the
face of strong banker opposition,” the exact opposite was in fact true. The biggest banks in the country were
all for the new system because it promoted “inflation that benefits bankers and big corporations.”
Bretton Woods – in 1944 – supposedly established a new gold exchange standard. In Paul’s opinion, Bretton
Woods was “nothing more than an international Federal Reserve System.” And of course, it didn’t do anything but
cause more inflation. Then on August 15, 1971, President Nixon “closed the ‘gold window.’” This was the
beginning of “managed fiat currency.”
Paul states that since 1971, the price of gold has increased “more than twentyfold.” The trade deficit has
increased by 1146%, and the Consumer Price Index has increased 79%. Due to these imbalances, he concludes that
the dollar is dead.
Rather than pronouncing the Last Rites over the dollar, followed by a mournful funeral and weeping and
wailing, Paul views the death of the dollar as an opportunity. “The time is ripe for the institution of a
trustworthy monetary system.” And it’s not all that difficult. The way to stop inflation is to “stop inflating
the money supply.” Paul then cites the three main reasons politicians, bankers, etc., desire inflation: greed,
power, and a way to pay the government’s bills without raising taxes sky-high.
Paul then proceeds to examine the roles of big business, banks and unions as the culprits responsible for
inflation. He concludes that each is partially to blame, but only because fiat currency encourages active
participation. If the Federal Reserve System were canceled, then “legitimate profits” would be the order of the
day. Which, according to Paul, is the way it should be.
Much of the guilt for the present interventionist monetary policy must be laid at the feet of the
economists, says Paul. They “endorse the process,” whether for power and prestige or because they actually
believe “it is in everyone’s interest.” Whatever their motivation, “the results are horrendous.” For in the
end, inflation destroys freedom.
The answer – the only alternative – to inflation is a moral society, along with honest money. Which means
money based on gold and silver. Paul advocates “free market money.” Such a system would allow “consumers to
decide about their money the way they decide about everything else.” This would mean the repeal of legal tender
laws that “force people to accept the government’s money.” Instead, a gold coin standard would be set in place,
and banking would be “an open, competitive business like any other.”
And as Paul points out, there is historical precedent for free market money. In 1879, Congress passed a law
making greenbacks redeemable “in gold on a one-to-one basis.” It could easily be done in today’s world.
Paul concludes his treatise by reminding the reader that “government’s only legitimate reason for existence
is to protect innocent life and property from aggression, foreign or domestic.” Therefore, when government
deliberately causes inflation and destroys freedom, it commits an “immoral act.” Essentially, inflation is
nothing more than “legalized counterfeiting.”
In Ron Paul’s opinion, failure to act – to change the system as it now stands – will result in chaos, war
and the possible rise of a dictatorship. A gold coin standard – and nothing else – “is compatible with the
humanitarian goals of peace and prosperity.”
Gold, Peace, and Prosperity is a wonderful book, full of wonderful truths. It deserves to be
read and considered. Paul’s persuasive arguments should dent the armor of even the most ardent Keynesians.
Still, power and control – the twin motivators for inflation – are powerful opponents. It will be interesting
to see what happens.
Thank you Merv H for your submission!
A “MUST READ” ARTICLE
Discovered by BUSINESS CANNONS Business Group
8/21/2009
November 07, 2008
Monetary Reform: Gold And Bills Of Exchange
by Antal E. Fekete
Address before the Civil Society Institute at Santa Clara
University
November 3, 2008
Introduction
The Great Depression of the 1930's was not due to the 'contractionist
propensities' of the gold standard as alleged by John M. Keynes. Nor was it due to fractional reserve banking as
alleged by Murray Rothbard. Rather, it was due to the government's
sabotaging the clearing system of the international gold standard, the bill market.
Adam Smith's Real Bills Doctrine reigned supreme in monetary science
throughout the 19th century, and rightfully so. It explained how it was possible to refine division of labor, and
to lengthen production processes in making them 'more roundabout' in order to improve the efficiency of labor and
capital -- without causing monetary contraction through unnecessarily invading the pool of circulating gold coins,
and without tying up savings in order to finance circulating capital. It also explained the 'miracle' how weekly
wages can be paid to workers whose product will not be sold for perhaps as long as 13 weeks. Clearly, additional
fixed capital can only be financed through increased savings. Additional circulating capital, however, need not
involve savings: it can be financed through improvements in clearing. Circulating capital can be self-financing,
provided that the goods involved are demanded urgently enough by the consumers.
In this address I look forward to the release of the gold
standard from a forty-year quarantine, to become one of the pillars of the reconstruction after the present credit
collapse has run its course. In order to be viable, the new
gold standard has to have a valid clearing system. Bill circulation would spring up spontaneously. In other words,
we have to have a gold standard of the type that prevailed in the world prior to 1914, when international
trade was financed not through gold flows across national boundaries, but through trading bills of exchange drawn
on London. It would not be a gold exchange standard as that of the years 1920-1971, with government promises to pay
replacing real bills. But it would not be Murray Rothbard's so-called 100 percentgold standard either, which is
phantasmagoria.
Self-liquidating credit
In spite of obvious differences between the two, it is customary to
extend the concept of credit to include clearing. In more details, in addition to credit arising out of
the propensity to save that finances fixed capital, we also consider self-liquidating credit arising out of
the propensity to consume that finances circulating capital. The latter does not involve lending; it involves
clearing.
Goods making up circulating capital must be in the final phases of production and distribution, and
they must move sufficiently fast to the ultimate, gold-paying consumer. Thus, then, the bill of exchange is the
embodiment of self-liquidating credit -- so called as the credit is liquidated directly with the gold coin
surrendered by the consumer in 91 days or less (91 days being the length of the seasons of the year in the
temperate zones, forcing a change of the types of merchandise in greatest demand).
Detractors of the Real Bills Doctrine studiously avoid reference to its prestigious pedigree and
its author, Adam Smith. They also ignore the fact that, as a matter of merchant custom, producers and distributors
hardly ever pay cash for the maturing merchandise as it is passed on from one hand to the next. Instead, they
endorse the bill of exchange and, in doing so, assume liability to pay it at maturity. This transaction is called
'discounting' as the payee applies an appropriate discount, calculated at the current discount rate, to the face
value of the bill, proportional to the number of days remaining till maturity. Banks need not be involved.
Chicken or egg?
Such a bill circulation was universal in the city-states of Italy during
the Quattrocento and, more recently, in 18th century in Lancashire before the Bank of England opened its branch in
Manchester. This was duly observed by Ludwig von Mises in his 1912 treatise The Theory of Money and Credit, although he stopped
short of investigating the economic forces animating spontaneous bill circulation.
Unlike the question whether chicken was first or the egg, the question whether bills or banks came
into existence first has a definite answer. Logically and historically, bills predated banks. What is more, it is
perfectly feasible to have an economy without banks, where circulating bills emerge as suppliers deliver
semi-finished consumer goods to the producers. Instead of recognizing this fact, detractors link bills and banks as
if they were Siamese twins. They are not.
A 'fairy' tale
Let us look at another historical instance of clearing that was vitally
important in the Middle Ages: the institution of city fairs. The most notable ones were the annual fairs of Lyon in
France, and Seville in Spain. They lasted up to a month and attracted fair-goers from places as far as 500 miles
away. People brought their merchandise to sell, and a shopping list of merchandise to buy.
One thing they did not bring was gold coins. They hoped to pay for their purchases with the
proceeds of their sales. This presented the problem that one had to sell before one could buy, but the amount of
gold coins available at the fair was far smaller than the amount of merchandise to sell. Fairs would have been a
total failure but for the institution of clearing. Buying one merchandise while, or even before, selling another
could be consummated perfectly well without the physical mediation of the gold coin. Naturally, gold was needed to
finalize the deals at the end of the fair, but only to the extent of the difference between the amount of purchases
and sales. In the meantime, purchases and sales were made through the use of scrip money issued by the clearing
house to fair-goers when they registered their merchandise upon arrival.
Those who would call scrip money "credit created out of nothing" were utterly blind to the true
nature of the transaction. Fair-goers did not need a loan. What they needed, and got, was an instrument of
clearing: the scrip, representing self-liquidating credit.
Goods in bottoms
Another example of clearing in action is world trade prior to 1914.
Suppose a cargo ship is ready to sail from Tokyo to Hamburg carrying in its bottom consumer goods in urgent demand.
The sea-voyage takes up to 30 days with several stops en
route. Does the importer need to raise a loan to pay the supplier for
the goods in the bottom prior to sailing? Hardly. The merchandise has a ready market upon arrival. The cargo is
insured against losses at sea. Accordingly, the supplier bills the importer for value received f.o.b. Tokyo,
payable in 30 days in London. The importer endorses the bill, attaches the insurance documents, and sends it back
to the supplier. The boat is now ready to sail. The supplier has an instrument he could use as ready cash to pay
his own suppliers, or he can keep the bill to maturity as an earning asset. When the boat docks in Hamburg, the
local wholesale merchant pays for the cargo with a sight bill on London with which the importer can meet his
maturing obligation. No loan or lending is involved in all this, only clearing. The pool of circulating gold coins
has not been invaded, nor are savings tied up for 30 days while the goods in urgent demand move from the Far East
to Western Europe.
The tale of the cuckoo's egg
1909 was a milestone in the history of money. That year, in preparation
for the coming war, the note issue of the Bank of France and of the Reichsbank of Germany were made legal tender.
Most people did not even notice the subtle change. Gold coins and bank notes kept circulating as before. It was not
the disappearance of gold coins from circulation that heralded the coming destruction of the world's monetary and
payments system. It was the advent of legal tender. It was the French and German government's decision to stop
paying civil servants in gold coin who were now forced to accept paper money. Private firms immediately followed
suit: they also started paying their employees with bank notes. Never mind that the bank notes were redeemable in
gold coin; this change effectively meant sabotaging the clearing system of the internationalgold standard
nevertheless. It short-circuited bill circulation. Bills were supposed to be paid at maturity in the form of
a present good, the
gold coin, obtained from the consumer who, in turn, was supposed to get paid in gold by his employer on every
payday. Now they were paid in the form of a future good, the bank note. Legal-tender coercion
created an irreparable leakage in the gold circulation process.
The banks continued using real bills as an earning asset to back the note issue. But other
subtle
changes were to alter the character of the world's monetary system beyond recognition. The cuckoo
has invaded the neighboring nest to lay her egg surreptitiously. In addition to bank notes originating in bills of
exchange, bank notes originating in finance bills (including treasury bills) have made their appearance for the
first time. In due course the cuckoo chick would hatch and push the native chick out of the nest. In five years, by
1914, the lion's share of bank portfolios would be replaced by finance bills. The real bill has become an
endangered species. In another few years it became extinct. Note that, unlike real bills, finance and treasury
bills are not selfliquidating. The
change-over from bank notes backed by real bills to bank notes backed by finance bills was the last nail in the
coffin of the clearing system of the international gold standard.
Borrowing short and lending long
Finance bills are backed by the odds, never the certainty, that a
speculative inventory of goods, or equities, or investments in brick and mortar, may be unwound without a loss. If
the odds do not play out in time, the finance bill will be 'rolled over'. This is tantamount to borrowing short and
lending long -- invitation to disaster. By contrast, a real bill is never ever rolled over. If not paid in gold
upon maturity, the drawer of the bill will go bankrupt and his name will be blacklisted at the clearing house for
good.
Finance bills made the portfolio of banks
illiquid. Potential demand for gold coins, should holders of bank notes want to exercise their legal
right to redeem them, could no longer be satisfied. To take away this right was the reason for making bank notes
legal tender in the first place. Redemption would never be a problem as long as the banks' assets consisted of real
bills exclusively. Every single day one-ninetieth of the outstanding bank notes would mature into gold coins, which
were available for redemption. Normally this would suffice to satisfy daily demand.
But what about abnormal demand? Well, a real bill is the
most liquid earning asset that a bank can have. At any time somewhere in the world there is demand for it. In
particular, banks that have a temporary overflow of gold would be more than anxious to exchange it for real bills.
Thus banks would not have the slightest difficulty to get gold in exchange for real bills in the international bill
market. The assumption that there will always be takers for real bills offered is just as safe as the assumption
that people will want to eat, get clad, keep themselves sheltered and warm tomorrow and every day
thereafter.
The chimera of fractional reserve banking
This explodes the blanket
condemnation of fractional reserve banking. Detractors are barking up the wrong tree. They should condemn the
practice of discounting finance bills. Actually, 'fractional reserve' as applied to banks with nothing but real bills in their
portfolio is a misnomer. The reserves are gold plus bills maturing
into gold. The reserves are not fractional, as they fully back the note and
deposit liability of the bank. By contrast, if the bank portfolio has a component of finance bills, the designation
'fractional reserve' is appropriate. Finance bills are not maturing into gold like real bills are. It may not be
possible to get gold in exchange for them when the crunch comes.
Reflux
The process of retiring bank notes, after the merchandise serving as the
basis for their issue has been removed from the market by the ultimate gold-paying consumer, is called 'reflux'.
Some authors, including Ludwig von Mises, have ridiculed the concept of reflux calling
it deus ex machina.
They argued that banks were only interested in credit expansion, not in reflux. Not for one moment would they
entertain the idea of voluntarily withdrawing bank notes from circulation when the underlying real bill
matured. Instead, they would lend them out at interest again and again, to enrich themselves at the expense
of the public.
This is not a valid argument. For the stronger reason, you could also ridicule the entire legal
system in asking the rhetorical question: "what is the point of making laws when they will be broken anyhow?" You
cannot judge the merit of an institution by the behavior of those who are set upon destroying it.
Birth of the wage fund
The havoc that the silent monetary revolution of 1909 ushering in legal
tender bank notes would wreak upon society had not been foreseen. Nor was the causal relation recognized between
the expulsion of real bills from bank portfolios and the massive unemployment that followed it. In Germany alone, 8
million people, or nearly 50 percent of the trade union membership lost their jobs after 1929. Economists have
failed to point out the causal nexus between the two events 20 years apart. Here is the explanation of what
happened.
Real bills finance the movement of consumer goods,
including wages paid to people handling the maturing merchandise through the various stages of production and
distribution. That part of the circulating capital paid out in wages is called the wage fund.
The birth of the wage fund is due to the real bills market. Without it, payment of workers
producing consumer goods would not be possible until the sale to the final consumer. The size of the wage fund
needed to move the mass of consumer goods through these stages, if financed out of savings, would be staggering.
Quite simply, it could not be done. No conceivable economy would produce savings so prodigiously as to be able to
finance circulating capital that society needed in order to flourish at present levels of security and comfort.
The highest achievement of the human spirit and
intellect
Fortunately, there is no need to employ savings in such a wasteful
manner. Circulating capital can be financed through self-liquidating
credit. The
discovery of this fact is one of the great achievements of the human spirit and intellect. The impact on human life
of the invention of the circulating bill of exchange is fully commensurate with that of the invention of the
wheel. Detractors of the Real Bills Doctrine have missed one of
the most exciting developments of ourcivilization: the discovery of self-liquidating credit as it emerges in the
wake of the disappearance of risks at the end of the production process, when maturing goods get within earshot of
the final gold-paying consumer. They have missed the fact, without real bills circulation, wages could not be paid
in advance of the sale of goods, except under the constant threat of unemployment.
Destruction of the wage fund
This near-perfect system was
allowed to disintegrate in the wake of the 1909 legal tender legislation. By 'crowding out' real bills from the monetary system, governments have inadvertently
destroyed society's wage fund. It was there to allow wages to be
paid as much as 91 days in advance of merchandise being sold to the ultimate consumer. When real bills were
replaced by non-self-liquidating finance bills, payment of wages has become haphazard. Employment was made
touch-and-go, hiring, 'hand-to-mouth'. This threatened with unemployment on a massive scale, unless governments
were willing to assume responsibility for paying wages. Eventually, to avoid undermining social peace, they had to
do just that.
Governments invented the so-called 'welfare state' paying
out so-called 'unemployment
insurance' to people who could have easily have found
employment had the wage fund been preserved through ensuring the proper functioning of the bill market, the
clearing system of the gold standard.
What has been hailed as a heroic job-creation program
appears, in the present light, a miserable effort at damage control by the same government that has destroyed the
wage fund in the first place. Economists share responsibility for the disaster. They have never examined the 1909
decision to make bank notes legal tender from the point of view of its effect on employment. They should have
demanded that, instead of treating the symptom: unemployment, governments remove the cause of the disease: the
destruction of the clearing system of the gold standard, the bill market. Had the governments allowed bill
circulation to return at the end of the hostilities in 1918, the wage fund would have been replenished at once.
Unemployment would not have arisen. Recall that it was not a problem before 1909.
The greatest fiasco of all times
The problem of destroying the clearing system of the gold standard by
expelling self-liquidating credit in 1909 was further aggravated in 1971 when the gold standard itself was
destroyed. By 2008 the festering crisis has become a fully blown credit collapse, encompassing the entire globe. We
must have the humility to admit that it was our reckless experimentation with irredeemable currency and synthetic
credit that resulted in this fiasco greater than any other man-made disaster in history. The runaway Debt Tower of
Babel is toppling, and the quadrillion-dollar-strong global derivatives monster is vaporizing. There is no bottom
to this collapse. The financial system is self-destructing. It is in a
death-spiral. Every wave of losses in the mortgage market, in the stock market, in hedge funds, or in derivatives
triggers a new wave of losses. This will continue until total exhaustion is reached. It is futile to expect the Fed
and the Treasury to regain control of the careening financial system, even if all the central banks of the world
pool resources. There are not nearly enough dollars in existence to cover the derivatives losses, despite the Fed's
endless stream of bailout money, and despite the Treasury's endless stream of bailout bonds donated to the Fed for
collateral, which the latter needs but hasn't got, to create more bailout money. Halving interest rates again and
again is oil on the fire. It has been the main cause for capital destruction, and contributes directly to
unemployment.
The way out
In discussing the necessary monetary reform to be introduced after the
dust settled, the rehabilitation of the gold standard and its clearing system, the bill market, must be a matter of
first priority. The main cause of the disaster was the elimination of self-liquidating credit from the
international monetary system, a process that started in 1909 with the introduction of legal tender bank notes. It
took almost a full century for the process to run its devastating course before the financial system started
unraveling in February, 2007. That is the date, it will be recalled, when the cost of credit-default swaps shot up
first, the salvo marking the beginning of the end. During that unfortunate century, the 20th, self-liquidating
credit based on positive value, gold, was forcibly replaced with 'synthetic credit' based
on negative value, debt. Once the regime of irredeemable currency was in place there was no way to rein
in the fast-breeder of debt in the system. We are forced to draw two conclusions:
1. There is just no alternative to self-liquidating credit.
That is to say, the production and distribution of consumer goods must be financed through bills of
exchange.
2. There is just no alternative to the gold standard. The
regime of irredeemable currency is based on debt. Once adopted, the fast breeder of debt is engaged and will,
before long, start spinning out of control.
Solving the problem of the monetary system will also solve
the problem of unemployment. Once real bills start circulating, the wage fund will be replenished at once, out of
which wages can be paid to all those eager to earn them for work in providing the consumer with goods and services
in most urgent demand.
If we want to exorcise the world of the incubus of
unemployment with which it has been saddled by greedy governments in making their bank notes legal tender, not only
must we return to the international gold standard, but we must also rehabilitate its clearing system, the bill
market. In this way the wage fund can also be resurrected. Then, and only then, can the so-called welfare state,
paying workers for not working, and farmers for not farming, be dismantled.
Reference:
The author has a course entitled The Real Bills Doctrine of Adam Smith, consisting of
thirteen lectures,that can be accessed at the website: www.professorfekete.com
Calendar of events:
Canberra, Australia, November 11-14, 2008
Gold Standard University Live, Session Five. (This is the last session of GSUL since our sponsor, Mr. Eric Sprott of Sprott
Asset Management, Inc., has withdrawn his support saying that in his opinion the results do not justify the
expenditure. Come along and judge for yourself.)
This 4-day seminar is a Primer on the Gold Basis -- Trading
Tool for Gold Investors, Marketing
Tool for Gold Miners, and Early Warning System for Everybody Else.
Inquiries: feketeaustralia@yahoo.com
Canberra, Australia, November 15, 2008
Panel Discussions: The chickens of 1933 and 1971 are coming home to roost and take out bank
capital.
Inquiries: feketeaustralia@yahoo.com
Szombathely, Martineum Academy, Hungary, March
2009
Panel Discussions: When Will the Gold Standard Be Released from Quarantine? The Vaporization of the Derivatives
Tower.
Further announcement will be made on the
website: www.professorfekete.com
Antal E. Fekete
Professor, Intermountain Institute of Science and Applied Mathematics,
Missoula, MT 59806, U.S.A.
DISCLAIMER AND CONFLICTS
THE PUBLICATION OF THIS LETTER IS FOR YOUR INFORMATION AND
AMUSEMENT ONLY. THE AUTHOR IS NOT SOLICITING ANY ACTION BASED UPON
IT, NOR IS HE SUGGESTING THAT IT REPRESENTS, UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES,
A RECOMMENDATION TO BUY OR SELL ANY SECURITY. THE CONTENT OF THIS
LETTER IS DERIVED FROM INFORMATION AND SOURCES BELIEVED TO BE
RELIABLE, BUT THE AUTHOR MAKES NO REPRESENTATION THAT IT IS
COMPLETE OR ERROR-FREE, AND IT SHOULD NOT BE RELIED UPON AS SUCH. IT
IS TO BE TAKEN AS THE AUTHORS OPINION AS SHAPED BY HIS EXPERIENCE,
RATHER THAN A STATEMENT OF FACTS. THE AUTHOR MAY HAVE INVESTMENT
POSITIONS, LONG OR SHORT, IN ANY SECURITIES MENTIONED, WHICH MAY BE
CHANGED AT ANY TIME FOR ANY REASON.
Copyright © 2002-2009 by Antal E. Fekete - All rights reserved
Image rendition and html coding Copyright © 2000-2009 SafeHaven.com
ADVERTISEMENTS
« BullionVault.com -- Buy gold online - quickly, safely and at low prices
»
« Honest Money: A History of U.S. Gold & Silver Currency -- by Douglas V.
Gnazzo
Maestro, My Ass! -- by Michael Ashton »
« Opinions expressed at SafeHaven are those of the individual authors and do not necessarily
represent the opinion of SafeHaven or its management. Articles are available via RSS/XML.
Please visit RSSHelp for instructions. »
MORE GREAT INFO:
http://www.profess
Now by
the Americans playing "both ends against the middle" with
their currency in defiance of the Triffin Paradox over these past four decades they have set themselves up
for an economic collapse the likes of which they have never seen, and by all accounts will greatly dwarf the
catastrophic effects they underwent as a Nation during last century's Great Depression, and which according
to the American future trends researcher Gerald Celente is set shortly to begin its final course in what he
calls the "Crash of 2010".
Joining Celente in trying to awaken the American people to the soon coming catastrophic collapse of the US economy
is their top military officer and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral Mike Mullen who warned this past
week that the United States debt was their countries "single greatest threat to their nation's
security".
Top American economists and economic experts, one of whom just named Obama's government as "the most fiscally irresponsible in US
History", further declared this week that the United States is now in a full blown
Second Great Depression and
that the US housing market is nearing "complete and total
collapse".
Except, of course, when these peoples seeming to be asleep is understood in the context of the vast American
propaganda media effort (who new reports say supported Obama with over 88% of these "reporters" and media executives giving him money) to keep
from them the truth of what is happening, and as evidenced this past fortnight when one of the United States top
financial guru's, named Tony Robbins, not only warned his investors that the US stock markets will be crashing
this fall, but also related how the US NBC Television Network's popular Today Show asked him to be a guest on
his show to "pump up" the American people so that they would not find out the truth.
To his credit Robbins "declined" to a part of this deception opting
instead to tell the truth, and his Internet posted video: http://www.metatube.com/en/videos/37911/An-Important-Note-Of-Caution-By-Tony-Robbins/ about
the coming Crash of 2010 should be viewed by everyone.
|