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Who wants to be a millionaire?
From BSC
Central banks start to abandon the U.S. dollar – From the Wallstreet Blogs, Fortune, CNN
“Just last week, America’s debt lept $166 billion in a single day. That one-day run-up is greater than the entire U.S. annual deficit in 2007. And Americans, the world’s consumers, continue much of the behavior that helped the U.S savings rate drop so low.
The dollar has been in free-fall since 2007.
Last year, both China and Russia have questioned why the dollar should be the world’s reserve currency. (Naturally, they were advocating for the ruble and yuan).
A new report from Morgan Stanley analyst Emma Lawson confirms what many had suspected: the dollar is firmly on its way to losing its status as the reserve currency of the world.
And just last week, the United Nations released a report concluding that the dollar should no longer be the world’s reserve currency because it is not stable enough. The dollar is down 5% over the past month, and even currency traders don’t see it as a safe haven any more.
There is certainly an element of economic competitiveness in those statements from foreign bodies and governments, but at the same time, Americans houldn’t be surprised that, in these touchy times, central banks want more of a measure of security than the dollar can afford right now – particularly when we’re running up an enormous deficit through the costs of stimulus programs and two simultaneous wars.”
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The US Dollar is losing reserve currency status because it is being over inflated to near worthless proportions, by being printed with wreckless abandon by PRIVATE CORPORATE BANKS.
If we do not take back the power to issue our own currency, as provided by the US Constitution, we will never escape the DEBT SLAVERY that occurs by allowing private central banks to loan us our own money at interest! This currency black hole creates inflation and loss of value because every dollar “borrowed” comes with debt attached, and in order to pay the interest on the first dollar we have to borrow more dollars, again with more interest! These bankers have run this same scam in other, less sophisticated countries. Now they’re running it here.
These are real images of devalued, inflated currencies from the last 60 years. Some so worthless that the people use them as wallpaper or simply throw them away. Imagine a loaf of bread costing 200 billion dollars! Thats what they pay in Zimbabwe.
DON’T BE A SUCKER!
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Citigroup announces possible bank holiday
Warns customers it “reserves the right” to delay withdrawals from checking accounts for seven days.
This notice was sent to customers nationwide:
“Effective April 1, 2010, we reserve the right to require (7) days advance notice before permitting a withdrawal from all checking accounts. While we do not currently exercise this right and have not exercised it in the past, we are required by law to notify you of this change,”
Citigroup later claimed that it was a mistake and only applied to residents of Texas. They later released the following statement:
Citibank has now released the following statement by way of explanation: “When Citibank moved to unlimited FDIC coverage in 2009, we had to reclassify many checking accounts to allow for immediate withdrawals in order to ensure all customers qualified for the additional coverage. When we moved back to standard FDIC coverage with most major banks in 2010, Citibank decided to reclassify those accounts back to make them eligible again for promotional incentives. To do so, Federal Reserve Reg D requires these accounts, called NOW accounts, to reserve the right to require a 7-day notice of withdrawal. We recently communicated this technical requirement to our customers. However, we have never exercised this right and have no plans to do so in the future.” [futureofcapitalism.com]
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Kucinich calls on Congress to take control of the Fed, end fractional reserve banking system
Dennis Kucinich speaks to the participants of the 2009 American Monetary Institute’s 5th Annual Monetary Reform Conference:
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Fractional reserve, banks, and foreclosures
I’ve been thinking a lot recently about the banking system in the USA and how banks create money out of thin air (if they have the reserves).
Under the fractional reserve system, banks are allowed to create money through a multiple of their reserves. When they create the money, it becomes the reserves for the next bank and so on and so forth. The reason why this is corrupt is because the banks don’t create value. They only create money. They only create money through loans, meaning they own the real value until you pay them back with their fake, newly minted, money
As this crisis continues they have stopped lending…. This has an important side effect. When a bank lends, they create new money. This is the only way a bank will lend because it’s virtually risk free for them. They now see money creation as too risky.
The problem we are running into now is that the banks aren’t creating new money, ahem, they aren’t lending. This can be seen here in the recreated M3:
As banks continue to go bankrupt, their creation of new money dwindles. The effects of which can be seen in the decreasing M3 over the last few months.
This is why the banks continue to get preferential treatment over average citizens. They create the money. New money is ESSENTIAL to the functioning of our economy.
The reason is quite simple actually. When the bank system loans new money, they don’t lend out the interest payment. Meaning, a new loan must be taken out by the economy in general to pay the interest of that person (or company). Thus, new money is essential to keeping the race going.
Without new money, more and more people won’t be able to pay back their loans. We are already seeing this happen with the never ending “foreclosure crisis.”
Until new money is being created by the banks then there is less and less money to be able to pay the banks their interest.
What’s really cool about this is that the government has been doing EVERYTHING they can to buoy the balance sheets of banks and they still aren’t creating new money. In fact, the banks don’t want government money because they can’t give themselves billions in bonuses.
The decreasing M3 is due to people paying off their loans. This has an amazing effect of causing less money to be in the system. In essence, if all loans were paid off, there would be no money anywhere.
So in the mean time, more foreclosures will occur both in residential and now commercial real estate. The banks will continue to be in bad shape regardless of how much they legally or illegally manipulate their books. This will cause no new money to be issued thus making the problems worse.
All those people talking about a “recovery” have no idea what’s really going on. A company’s balance sheet may look good but until the banks start issuing new money, the public will stay in a world of hurt. Foreclosures will remain high and jobless numbers will keep being massaged downwards.
So what are we to do? Well, the government has been trying to fund projects to inject money into the system. The problem here is that the government is getting the money… from the banks! Our government must pay back the interest on that… meaning…. you, me, our children, grandchildren, and, well, generations will be paying back that money.
If the government actual did the constitutional thing, and took the money creation powers back from the banks and reinstalled it with Congress, we may actually have a chance to make it. As it is, I am very pessimistic about the economy due to the fraudulent ponzi scheme run by the Federal Reserve.
Last note, the Federal Reserve has a mission to have a stable currency and try to maintain high employment. They have failed on both account horribly. They have debased the dollar by 95% over the last century, and unemployment is now 20%+ using actual numbers and not the fudged ones produced by the government. A stable currency would mean 0% inflation/deflation over 100 years. A target of 2% inflation per year is NOT stable. It’s exponential growth.
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Debt is Not Money
CommonDreams.org by Thom Hartmann“Everything predicted by the enemies of banks, in the beginning, is now coming to pass. We are to be ruined now by the deluge of bank paper. It is cruel that such revolutions in private fortunes should be at the mercy of avaricious adventurers, who, instead of employing their capital, if any they have, in manufactures, commerce, and other useful pursuits, make it an instrument to burden all the interchanges of property with their swindling profits, profits which are the price of no useful industry of theirs.”
–Thomas Jefferson letter to Thomas Cooper, 1814.
Are we standing at the edge of a Great Inflation (like Weimar Germany), a second Republican Great Depression, or a return to the middle class prosperity of the Roosevelt/Eisenhower New Deal era? Until Americans understand the difference between “money” and “debt,” odds are its going to be one of the first two, at least over the next few years.
Money
“Money” is a convenient replacement for barter in an economy. Instead of my giving you five pounds of carrots, so you wash my car, then you trade the carrots for a new shirt, and the clothing store then trades the carrots to a trucker that brings them their inventory, we all just agree to use a ten-dollar bill. Because a nation’s money supply represents that nation’s “wealth” – the sum total of goods, services, and resources available in an economy/nation – it needs to have a fixed value relative to the number/amount of goods, services, and resources within the nation.
As an economy grows – more factories, more goods, more services – the money supply grows so one dollar always represents the same number of carrots. (And with a fractional reserve banking system like we have, that growth is created mostly by banks lending money and creating it out of thin air in the process.)
If the money supply contracts, or grows slower than the economy, then we experience deflation – the value of money increases, goods and services become less expensive (fewer dollars to buy the carrots), but because the value of money has increased it becomes harder to get. When this happens quickly, because of its economically destabilizing influence (businesses and people can’t get current money – cash – or future money – credit – because money is more valuable), it’s called a Depression.
On the other hand, if the money supply expands or grows faster than the economy, there are more dollars than there are goods and services so the number needed to buy a pound of carrots increases. This is inflation, and when it happens suddenly and on a large scale, it’s called hyperinflation.
Therefore, one of the most important jobs overseen by Congress and executed by a Central Bank (or the Treasury Department if we were to go with the system envisioned by the Founders and Framers of the Constitution) is to “regulate the value” of our money (to quote Article I, Section 8.5 of our Constitution) by making sure the number of dollars in circulation always steadily tracks the size of the overall economy. If the economy grows 2%, then that year there should be 2% more dollars put into circulation. More than that will create inflation; fewer will create deflation.
Debt
“Debt” is not money. Instead, it’s a charge against future money. But even though it’s a charge against future money, it can still be spent as if it was today’s money – except that it must be repaid with interest. And therefore debt must have some sort of a balanced relationship to the total size of the economy – albeit the future economy – for it not to be destabilizing.
In other words, if over the next twenty years (the term of a typical and healthy mortgage) the economy is expected to grow by X percent or X number of dollars, then the total amount of twenty-year debts that can be issued should be limited to X. But if it’s greater than X, then when the future arrives there won’t be enough circulating money to repay the debt, because the economy (and the money supply) won’t have grown as great as the debt repayment demand. The only two options are for debt holders to default (bankruptcies, foreclosures, etc. – Depression), or for the government to suddenly increase the supply of money (inflation).
The same is true of one-year debt (credit cards), four- or five-year debt (car loans, typically), and all other forms of debt. In aggregate, if the amount of debt is allowed to grow faster than the economy will grow over the term of the debt, when the debt is due there will be a problem, and if it’s grown hugely, a disaster.
This is what we’re experiencing right now. Over the past three decades – largely since Reagan – debt (both private and public/government) has expanded much more rapidly than the economy has grown. “Now” was “the future” when the debt was issued, but the economy hasn’t grown to the point where there are enough dollars (in reality, enough value – goods and services) to repay that debt. Thus we are experiencing a “wringing out” of that debt – bankruptcies and foreclosures – relative to the current wealth of the economy.
This is the most critical thing to see clearly – without adhering to this simple concept, a government or central bank will always either create boom/bust cycles (depressions/recessions) or inflation. Without regulating debt, a government will be taken hostage and an economy destroyed by for-profit institutions that are able to create debt without regulation (banks).
Panics
Although Thomas Jefferson and Alexander Hamilton – two opposite sides of the national bank debate – both understood this simple concept, it wasn’t brought into the realm of law until the mid-1930s with a series of strict regulations on the abilities of banks to create debt (loan money), and strong political limits on the ability of government to go into debt outside of wartime. That’s why from the founding of this nation until 1935, we experienced a “banking panic” at least once every 10 to 15 years from 1776 until 1935.
Then Roosevelt took the banks in hand, by creating a series of regulatory agencies and empowering them with strict laws. The result was that for fifty years in the United States – roughly 1937 to Black Monday of 1987 – we didn’t experience a single national “panic” or consequential bank failure. The stock market grew steadily (allowing for the blips surrounding WWII).
It was also hard to get a credit card (short term debt), buy a car (medium-term debt), or get a mortgage (long-term debt) without proving that you would be able to repay the amount in the future – in other words, that there would be future expanded-economy dollars that you could lay claim to because of your particular job and skills. Credit was regulated.
Reagan changed the rules of the game, particularly when he brought in the anti-regulation Libertarian Alan Greenspan as Chairman of the Fed. He ran up a massive federal debt – greater than that of every president from George Washington to Jimmy Carter combined – in just eight years, and began the process of loosening the power of bank regulators.
That process was finished by a Republican Congress (particularly Phil Gramm) and President Bill Clinton (with help from Rubin and Summers) and then booted out the door by George W. Bush, who borrowed even more than Reagan. Bush even used an obscure 19th century law to fight states’ attorneys general who wanted to regulate or prosecute fraud among banks and mortgage lenders in their states (see the article by Eliot Spitzer in the Washington Post just before his being outed for sleeping with a hooker).
Green Eyeshades
During the “Great Stability” – that period from the 1935 onset of the New Deal and the beginning of its end with Reagan’s massive tax cuts of 1981 and 1986, leading directly to the stock market crash of 1987 and the S&L debacle – banking was, as Paul Krugman noted in a recent column, “boring.” Credit and currency were considered part of the commons, not something off which a small elite should profit. Like the utilities in the game Monopoly, banks provided a predictable but relatively low profit. Nobody got rich, but nobody lost anything, either.
Bankers were the safe and predictable guys who wore green eyeshades at work and pocket protectors in their shirts. The nation’s main products were goods and services; nobody “made money with money” in any big way.
Since the serial deregulations of the financial services sector brought on by Reagan, Bush, Clinton, and Bush, however, bankers became fabulously rich. They called themselves the “Masters of the Universe.” They came to dominate contributions to politicians, and facilitated the takeover of most major US newspapers, all the while using debt as their mail tool to make money (burdening those newspapers with such debt that many are now going out of business because they can’t repay it).
By 2005, fully 40 percent of all corporate profits in the US came from the financial services sector – a group of people who didn’t produce anything at all of value, nothing edible or usable, nothing that would survive into future generations. They invented fancy derivative “products” that they “sold” at high commission rates around the world so others could “make money with money.” In fact, they weren’t making money – they were taking money. Behavior that would have been criminal during the Roosevelt, Truman, Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon, Ford, and Carter administrations became “normal” and was even encouraged: more than half of all the graduates from many of America’s top colleges and universities went into finance so they could get in on the very lucrative scam.
They created debt. As Ellen Brown notes at www.webofdebt.com, according to the Bank of International Settlements, they created and sold at a profit over 900 trillion dollars worth of debt- and risk-based “instruments.” That’s a pretty mind-boggling number when you consider that the GDP of the United States is around 14 trillion and the GDP of the entire planet is around 65 trillion.
All of these “products” were made and sold based on the assurance that when “then” became “now” the economy would have grown fast enough for there to be enough dollars to pay it back. But the reality of a debt bubble that exceeds the world’s GDP many times over came crashing in on us in 2007 – and still hasn’t fully crested – producing the “crisis” we currently face.
Are we there yet?
Are we recovering from it all now? Will things soon be back to normal?
If by “normal” we mean like life during the “Great Stability,” the answer is: “Not a chance.” Back then we had in place tariffs and trade policies, first initiated in 1791 by Alexander Hamilton, that protected our domestic manufacturing industries. We still made things – in fact, the USA was the world’s largest exporter of manufactured goods, and the world’s largest creditor. Like today’s China, for over 100 years we’d loaned other countries money so they could buy our stuff!
On the other hand, if by “normal” we mean how things were over the past 28 “Reaganomics” years – a stagnating middle class, disintegrating manufacturing sector, and piles of money being made by bets and debts – then maybe. After just the first decade of Reaganomics, we went from being the world’s largest exporter of manufactured goods to being the world’s largest importer; we went from being the world’s largest creditor to being the world’s largest debtor.
None of that has changed. We haven’t repealed Reagan’s disastrous tax cuts, which have exploded our nation’s budget deficits. We haven’t repudiated NAFTA and the WTO and gone back to an international trade policy that puts American interests over those of transnational corporations. We have not re-regulated the banks, and have not brought back 6000-year-old laws against usury (excessive interest rates on debt).
The bankers, in fact, are fighting it tooth and nail – the financial services industry in whole has spent over $5 billion lobbying Congress over the past ten years – and their acolytes like Lawrence Summers and Tim Geithner play major and consequential roles in the Obama administration.
It appears that the plan today is not to regulate the amount of debt that banks can create, but instead to both print more money and do everything possible to reinflate the debt bubble. (Lacking a return to Hamilton’s national manufacturing and trade policy, as a nation we just continue to slip deeper and deeper into Third World status as an importer and debtor – this may be our only choice if we don’t wake up soon.)
If followed, the Summers/Geithner policy can have only one of two outcomes: inflation or another, more serious crash. It’s possible we could have both. Apparently the bankers and Summers/Geithner’s hope is that neither or both don’t happen for at least three and a half years…
Thom Hartmann (thom at thomhartmann.com) is a Project Censored Award-winning New York Times best-selling author, and host of a nationally syndicated daily progressive talk program The Thom Hartmann Show. www.thomhartmann.com His most recent books are “The Last Hours of Ancient Sunlight,” “Unequal Protection: The Rise of Corporate Dominance and the Theft of Human Rights,” “We The People: A Call To Take Back America,” “What Would Jefferson Do?,” “Screwed: The Undeclared War Against the Middle Class and What We Can Do About It,” and “Cracking The Code: The Art and Science of Political Persuasion.” His newest book is Threshold: The Crisis of Western Culture.
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It’s The End Of The World As We Know It — And I Feel Fine…
September 19, 2008 at 6:16 pm“Like scores of evangelists and hypocrites and moralists who spew and praise family values and pretend to be holier than thou and are then regularly caught cheating or found to be perverts, these Bush hypocrites who spewed for years the glory of unfettered Wild West laissez-faire jungle capitalism allowed the biggest debt bubble ever to fester without any control, and have caused the biggest financial crisis since the Great Depression.
They are are now forced to perform the biggest government intervention and nationalisations in the recent history of humanity, all for the benefit of the rich and the well connected. So Comrades Bush and Paulson and Bernanke will rightly pass to the history books as a troika of Bolsheviks who turned the USA into the USSRA.”
From this article. Great summary. Here’s another good one: stock market cheers financial insanity. Our denial is staggering. As if throwing another trillion at the problem is going to fix it. Neither will two trillion. Or three. Or fifty. Want to know what the problem is in simple terms? This picture will illustrate it:

That’s the problem. The small number on the left is the amount of dollars in existence, which is directly tied to our purchasing power. The slightly larger number is the productive capacity of the entire world to deal with the problem. The number to the right of that is the total value of all the monetary assets.
The bomb on the right — well, that’s the debt that is now being called due. Not national debt — but phantom monetary credit called CDS (credit default swaps) that is basically fake money big banks lend to each other to protect each others’ assets. If you’re shaking your head, it’s because the concept is absurd. How can there be $516 trillion in credit/debt relationships when there is only $15 trillion in existence?
Good question. THAT IS THE PROBLEM. The problem is not greed, nor “lack of regulation,” nor poor oversight, or any of that. The problem is our entire fiat money-based system, which uses fractional-reserve lending, at the core of which is our Federal Reserve, which allows an infinite amount of fake money, and derivatives thereof, to spring into existence, by the whim of a few bankers. Back when currency stood for a fixed amount of gold and silver, like checks represent actual money in the bank, there was no problem. But now that money is decoupled from gold and silver, there can be an infinite amount of credit issued based upon it, and an infinite amount of it created. Its value, and all debt relationships based upon it therefore, can become worthless. Just ask Zimbabwe.
Now, can the government create $516 trillion to unwind those derivatives? Sure, they can add as many zeroes to banks’ databases as necessary; they don’t even have to pay for the ink and paper to print the money. But then, if there are suddenly 50 times the amount of dollars in existence, how much do you think your dollars are worth in purchasing power? Well, the answer is $0.02. Good thing you’ve been saving up!
Of all the people talking about our financial system over the past year, they were all wrong; all except one. All gave varying degrees of “well, the basics are okay, we’ll just ride this out. We’ll think of something. The system just needs a few tweaks.” Whether it’s McCain’s tax cuts, or Obama’s tax cuts, or talk about earmarks, or curbing spending, or shuffling of this or that, blah blah blah blah blah, none of it hits the mark. It’s arguing over property boundaries in Nagasaki after the bomb drops. It’s irrelevant. No one said, “Hey, we’re in meltdown! This is the second great depression! Wake up! Our dollar will be worthless!” No one, except one person.
Bernanke was wrong.
Paulson was wrong.
Greenspan was wrong.
McCain was wrong.
Obama was wrong.
Bush was wrong.
Pelosi was wrong.
Giuliani was wrong.
Clinton was wrong.Not until recently, in the past few months, have any of these people started to admit that something is wrong. If you listen to their comments from a year ago, they were all sunshine and lollipops.You know who was right? That “crackpot” — the one no one would vote for. The crazy guy. Ron Paul. Ron Paul was right. Period. Everyone else was wrong. From this:
Back in September 2003, Mr Paul told a House Financial Services Committee that: “Ironically, by transferring the risk of a widespread mortgage default, the government increases the likelihood of a painful crash in the housing market.
“This is because the special privileges granted to Fannie and Freddie have distorted the housing market by allowing them to attract capital they could not attract under pure market conditions.” Of course, if we are going to give Mr Paul credit, than we should also highlight the efforts of Peter Schiff, his economic advisor and long-time economic hawk.
A year ago, he warned about the impending crash of the dollar and pointed the finger directly at the Fed. For everyone who wasn’t paying attention, here is a video summary from last year:
Ron Paul on the economy in 2007:
Ron Paul on the economy yesterday:
The politicians are predictably pointing fingers at each other, lamenting the greed of anonymous culprits, and telling us the solution is that we, the common people, should pay for it all, even though we had nothing to do with it. And, predictably, we are agreeing to that, bowing to the benevolent wisdom of our leaders, and crossing our fingers, hoping two plus two won’t equal four this time.
Today’s article of doom: just pick up a newspaper.
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Emergency Jobless Insurance Claims Surge By Most Ever In Prior Week
zerohedge.com
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/10/2009 09:16 -0500The number you won’t hear mentioned anywhere in the Mainstream Media: 327,729. That is how many people shifted to Emergency Unemployment Compensation programs in the last week alone, hitting an all time record high of 4.2 million! So as everyone is focused on the benign picture of initial claims in the last week which was “only” 474,000, the number of people rolling off continuing benefits has exploded and is now a stunning 592,579 only in the last two week. Look for this number to keep going into the stratosphere as the 6 month continuing claims cliff keeps getting hit by more and more people who are unemployed and keep looking not only for believable change, but actual jobs to go with it.
And here is the chart that the administration would love to keep under lock and seal: the cumulative number of people on Emergency Insurance. At this rate those collecting EUC will surpass those on continuing claims (5.5 million) within a month.
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The Dollar Bubble [video]































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