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Thread: America will face Riots, Marches, and Revolution

  1. #181
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    Default Re: America will face Riots, Marches, and Revolution

    Consumer Prices Rise Only for Gasoline and Food


    Published October 15, 2010
    | Associated Press

    WASHINGTON -- Consumer prices rose slightly last month, driven up by higher costs for gasoline and food. But excluding those volatile categories, prices were flat.


    The Labor Department said Friday that the Consumer Price Index rose by 0.1 percent in September, after a 0.3 percent rise in August.



    Economists polled by Thomson Reuters expected a larger increase.


    Outside of food and energy, core consumer prices were unchanged for the second straight month. And in the past 12 months, core prices rose by only 0.8 percent, the smallest yearly gain in more than 49 years.


    The sluggish economy is keeping a lid on prices. Consumers are holding back on spending, with unemployment high and wages stagnant. That makes it difficult for retailers to pass on any price increases.


    The modest price increases mean that 58 million Social Security recipients won't receive any cost-of-living increases in their benefits next year, for the second straight year. It will be only the second year without an increase since automatic adjustments for inflation were adopted in 1975.

    Moderate price inflation also allows the Federal Reserve to keep the short-term interest rate it controls at a record low of nearly zero, where it has been since December 2008.



    Low inflation makes it more likely the Fed will launch another effort to reduce longer-term rates by purchasing Treasury bonds, a step known as "quantitative easing."


    Fed policymakers signaled at their last meeting in September that they were nearing such a step. Most economists expect the central bank will announce the program at its Nov. 2-3 meeting.

    A 1.6 percent increase in the price of gas drove energy costs higher by 0.7 percent. And the prices of meat, cereals and baked goods, and dairy products also rose, the department said.

    Clothing prices fell by 0.6 percent in September, the second straight drop. And weakness in the housing market sent housing prices down 0.1 percent, according to the government's index. That measure also includes hotel prices, which dropped by 0.2 percent in September.


    The flat reading on core consumer prices could raise fears of deflation, a widespread and crippling drop in prices, wages and the value of homes and investments. Deflation concerns arose earlier this year, after consumer prices fell for three straight months in the spring and early summer.


    But few economists expect deflation to take hold. Fed officials said last month that "inflation remained subdued," according to the minutes from the meeting, which were released earlier this week. At the same time, they saw "only small odds of deflation."
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    Default Re: America will face Riots, Marches, and Revolution

    Here comes QE2

    -----------
    Gold Explodes After Bernanke Gives QE2 Green Light: "Sees Case For Further Action"



    http://www.zerohedge.com/article/gold-explodes-aftger-bernanke-gives-qe2-green-light-sees-case-further-action



    More broken gospel from the Central Bank of faith and hope, as gold surges, despite what anti-gold bugs out there preach day in and out:

    • Fed's Bernanke says sees case for further action with too low inflation
    • Fed's Bernanke says Fed could buy assets, alter statement
    • Fed's Bernanke says hard to determine pace, size of any purchases, must weigh costs, benefits in deciding how aggressive to be
    • Fed's Bernanke says Fed has tools to ease when rates near zero, earlier bond-buying was successful in lowering long-term rates
    • Fed's Bernanke says risk deflation is higher than desirable, unemployment clearly too high
    • Fed's Bernanke says at current rates of inflation, short-term real interest rates are too high
    • Fed's Bernanke says unemployment to decline slowly, prolonged high unemployment would pose risk to sustainability of recovery

    "Far better it is to dare mighty things, to win glorious triumphs even though checkered by failure, than to rank with those poor spirits who neither enjoy nor suffer much because they live in the gray twilight that knows neither victory nor defeat."
    -- Theodore Roosevelt


  3. #183
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    Default Re: America will face Riots, Marches, and Revolution

    Sell! SELL!
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    Default Re: America will face Riots, Marches, and Revolution

    Buy on rumor, sell on news.
    "Far better it is to dare mighty things, to win glorious triumphs even though checkered by failure, than to rank with those poor spirits who neither enjoy nor suffer much because they live in the gray twilight that knows neither victory nor defeat."
    -- Theodore Roosevelt


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    Default Re: America will face Riots, Marches, and Revolution

    That's probably a better way to say it.
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    Default Re: America will face Riots, Marches, and Revolution

    'Real Panic Going on' in Dollar Index: Charts

    Published: Friday, 15 Oct 2010 | 6:24 AM ET

    By: CNBC.com

    Video:

    The dollar index looks set to continue its rapid decline and could fall below 72 point before the end of October, a level not seen since mid-2008, independent trader and technical analyst Bill McLaren told CNBC Friday.

    "This is a real panic going on," McLaren said. "My gosh, the way this thing is running down here we could see the 71s without a problem."

    McLaren expects the index to hit a low on October 29, but said there is a small chance the move could become exhausted on the 20th.

    McLaren added that he had expected the index to reach a bottom on October 20, but the speed of its decline lead him to change his forecast.

    The dollar index [.DXY 76.94 0.295 (+0.38%) ], which weighs the greenback against a basket of other currencies, held above 76 points Friday. It has suffered major declines since mid-summer after the Federal Reserve signaled further quantitative easing in a bid to boost the economy.

    The S&P 500 Index [.SPX 1172.45 -1.36 (-0.12%) ] will likely see a "last drive up" and the positive move could reach a peak in December or January, he said.

    - Watch the full interview with Bill McLaren above.

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  7. #187
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    Default Re: America will face Riots, Marches, and Revolution

    More Heroin Please

    One wonders if the futures market this morning is counting on more Bernanke heroin. Oh hell, we know it is. His remarks are about to be released from his "speech" today.

    Of course Ben's flapping gums cause the market to price in QE2 for the 4,203rd time by going higher.

    The dollar?

    Well, you can see what the dollar thinks of this:



    But Charles Hugh Smith adds to the problem that I've outlined - and QE-anything isn't going to fix a damn thing because the problem is a rot in the middle of the banks' balance sheets, which can only be fixed by forcing them to eat it - and that will bankrupt them:
    Either there is due process of law or you have a kleptocracy/"banana republic" oligarchy. At present, that is the decision we face as a nation. If the banking Elites and their partners in the Central State (Fed and Treasury) are allowed to "win" and gut the property laws of the states, then the U.S.A. will be revealed as a kleptocracy/"banana republic" oligarchy.

    If state laws are upheld, then the "too big to fail" banks are insolvent and they will fail. Then the question of kleptocracy arises once again: will the banks be allowed to fail as per Classic Capitalism, that is, their owners and managers will have to absorb the losses of that bankruptcy/failure, or will the Central State use its powers to collect taxes and cover the private losses of the Bank/Financial Power Elites?

    Privatizing profits and socializing losses has been the entire game plan since the global house of cards collapsed in 2008.

    It's decision time, citizens. Either the banks/Central State "win" and we are a kleptocracy/ "banana republic," or they lose and the U.S. mortgage/ banking sector implodes and is either formally socialized (i.e. owned lock, stock and barrel by the Central State) or rebuilt from scratch without big banks, Federal guarantees and the Fed's incestuous interventions. ("We create the credit that enables the mortgage, you issue the mortgage, and then we buy the mortgage.")

    There is no "fix" or half-measure that can patch this over now.
    Yep.

    The bottom line now is that Bernanke thinks he can continue to paper over this crap with yet more "QE" and other monetary games. He's wrong. All he's done, along with Greenspan, is enable not just bad behavior but outright lawlessness, while at the same time savers, senior citizens and those on fixed incomes are seeing their mandatory spending soar, destroying their savings.

    Instead of using his regulatory power to put a stop to it, he feeds the bankster criminals that in their drug-induced mania have trashed our nation with yet another shot of heroin laced with meth, empowering yet another wilding binge of destruction.

    Every time Bernanke speaks he talks about "more credit." But we're here because instead of capital formation we have shifted to relying on "more credit." Credit, however, is debt. Those policies great for the debt merchant, including of course The Fed, but highly-destructive to the capitalist who is trying to provide a good or service into the economy.

    He is slowly asset-stripped by the banksters through his reliance on these mechanisms, where he should be relying on asset accumulation - that is, capital formation.

    By destroying capital formation Bernanke both destroys those on fixed incomes and savers through intentional devaluation of their asset base and wrecks the structures that are necessary for productive investment and economic stability, say much less growth.

    In a very real sense, Bernanke is throwing Granny and Grandpa down the stairs - on purpose.

    He is literally threatening those at the lower end of the economic strata, along with all who are retired, with starvation and death, and in a just nation where the rule of law controlled instead of being abused by the kleptocrats he would be facing charges of Seditious Conspiracy, as his policies will inevitably lead to the destruction of our republic.


    We're at a crossroads folks.

    Either the rule of law is restored and the games stopped, with the removal from positions of power of those who have enabled the scams and frauds and the fraudsters themselves put out of business and jailed, or the spiral will tighten and the pressure build as capital flight and destruction of final demand continue until we get this:

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    Nikita Khrushchev: "We will bury you"
    "Your grandchildren will live under communism."
    “You Americans are so gullible.
    No, you won’t accept
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    outright, but we’ll keep feeding you small doses of
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    until you’ll finally wake up and find you already have communism.

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    ."
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    like overripe fruit into our hands."



  8. #188
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    Default Re: America will face Riots, Marches, and Revolution

    The Fed Has Gone Insane, So I'll Just Pick Up Some More Gold and Silver

    Interest-Rates / Inflation Oct 15, 2010 - 04:17 AM By: Richard_Daughty


    My stomach was hurting, so I decided to take a little time off and soothe the old midsection with a few medicinal brews and a dose of pizza. The reason that my stomach hurt was because I had just read the stupidest economic essay, which was, unbelievably, penned by another lackluster university professor, and surprisingly printed by The Financial Times newspaper.

    The guy's name is Michael Woodford, of Columbia University, and whose execrable and totally idiotic piece is titled "Bernanke Needs Inflation for QE2 to Sail."

    He writes, unbelievably, "The Fed should allow a one-time only inflation increase, with a plan to control it when the economy recovers."

    Hahahaha!

    Hahahaha!

    Why am I laughing so hard that I am doubled over and actually gagging up pieces of stomach lining?

    Why?

    I don't know where to start!

    Hahaha!

    Wiping the tears of laughter from my eyes, let's just begin where he began: "The Fed should allow a one-time only inflation increase"!

    Hahaha!

    It is so ridiculous to think that the Fed can produce a "one-time" inflation, when the fact is that the Fed has already engineered 50 years of constant inflation, sometimes simmering and occasionally roaring inflation! A "one-time" inflation!

    Hahahaha!

    I can hardly breathe from all this laughing, but He-Man Mogambo (HMM) gathers his strength and with a Herculean effort manages to control the laughing spasm that I know is coming when this dimwit says that the Fed can stoke inflation and then come up with "a plan to control it when the economy recovers"!!! Hahahahahahahahaha!

    That last, long laugh is where I really lost it! A plan to "control inflation"!

    Hahahahahahaha!

    Maybe he gets the idea for this stupidity from Allan Meltzer, a professor at Carnegie Mellon U. and a "visiting scholar" at the American Enterprise Institute, and who is regularly invited to attend Federal Reserve functions because he seems to kiss their butts a lot, and as such you don't expect much, which is just what you get.

    He does admit, to his credit, that inflation is the problem, and says that inflation is "another reason the Fed should give up this nonsense about more stimulus."

    If he had stopped there, I would've changed Mr. Meltzer's category on the famous Mogambo Enemies List (MEL) from "Them" to "Us (probationary)."

    Instead, he says, apparently anxious to show he has no idea what he is talking about and is ignorant of economics in general and the Austrian school of economics in particular, that instead of more stimulus, the Fed should "offer a credible, long term program to prevent the next inflation."

    Hahaha!

    Another plan!

    Hahaha!

    A "credible program!"

    Hahaha!

    It makes you want to scream out, "And just what in the hell would be a credible program to get out of a monstrous monetary inflation that has been raging exponentially for almost 50 years, which produced the economic disaster of constant, simmering inflation and the suicidal growth of a giant, bloated, twisted and disgusting government-centric economy supporting half the population and a bizarre economy based on the continual financing of grubby, childish, insatiable final consumption, so that all debt in the USA now totals somewhere around $60 trillion (with the federal government having accrued liabilities of at least five times as much), and where the entire freaking GDP is only $13.5 trillion? Exactly what in the hell is a 'credible program' to reverse that kind of horrible, end-stage metastasized cancer?

    Hahahaha!"

    In case you were wondering, as apparently Bigshot Economic Blowhards (MEB) wonder, the only "credible program" in an economy that relies exclusively on creating more and more money out of more and more debt, with which people buy more and more things and the government gives more and more money to more and more people, is different after these kinds of things have gone on too long (two weeks max), like this one that has gone on for Fifty Freaking Years (FFY)!

    If you stopped in the first few weeks of money creation and deficit-spending, you could just stop spending to let the Federal Reserve stop creating money. But now, after half a century, the only "credible program" available is to suffer a complete economic collapse, sort of like the collapse of critical thinking by neo-Keynesian econometric economists who got us into this mess by actually believing their own "consumption function" stupidities and then, to our ultimate regret, relying on them.

    Of course, this seeming abandonment of common sense is akin to astonishingly believing, like trusting, gullible children, all kinds of silly crap, like believing that it is possible for the population to finance comfortable retirements by investing in the stock market over the long term, or the bond market for the long term, or houses for almost any term, or any combination of the above!

    Hahaha!

    And this is not to even mention the tragedy of derivatives!

    Hahaha!

    Idiots!

    And the silliness doesn't stop there! For example, Mr. Meltzer laughably says, "The most important restriction on investment today is not tight monetary policy, but uncertainty about administration policy. Businesses cannot know what their taxes, health-care, energy and regulatory costs will be, so they cannot know what return to expect on any new investment."

    Since I am already laughing, it is easy to laugh with Rude Mogambo Scorn (RMS) - Hahahaha! - because the "most important restriction on investment today" is certainly NOT "administration policy."

    Instead, the "most important restriction" is identifying where customers are going to get the money to buy anything!

    I mean, if lots of customers show up with cash in their greedy, grubby little hands, and these customers are begging to buy, who cares about taxes, health-care, energy and regulatory costs? Nobody! Simply charge a high enough price, that the customers are obviously willing to pay, to cover all expenses, make a huge profit, give the executive staff large bonuses, buy up competitors, and donate lots of money to the corrupt politicians to make sure that the stupid government doesn't make any new laws that might ruin the cozy racket!

    So, if you see this Meltzer guy, you tell him that the Fab Fab Fabulous Mogambo (FFFM) says that "the most important restriction on investment spending" today is that all the customers are up to their freaking eyeballs in debt, staggering under the crushing weight of debt from two insane decades of the loathsome Alan Greenspan at the demonic Federal Reserve constantly creating more and more money to finance bubble economies in raw, naked consumption, insane speculative bubbles in stocks, bonds, houses, derivatives and the cancer-like growth of a treacherous, corrupt system of governments, from local to state to federal, as trillions and trillions of dollars were deficit-spent to add to the orgiastic deluge of tax revenues already pouring in, and then going right back out again as new spending, from the aforementioned bubble economies in stocks, bonds, houses and derivatives spawned by, at the root, the Federal Reserve creating the money necessary!

    It's too insane to continue, and so I will just pick up some more gold, silver and oil so that I can make a lot of money on the laughable economic foolishness rampant in the world and the universities, which makes it all so easy that one can only happily say, "Whee! This investing stuff is easy!"

    Richard Daughty (Mogambo Guru) is general partner and COO for Smith Consultant Group, serving the financial and medical communities, and the writer/publisher of the Mogambo Guru economic newsletter, an avocational exercise to better heap disrespect on those who desperately deserve it. The Mogambo Guru is quoted frequently in Barron’s, The Daily Reckoning, and other fine publications.

    Copyright © 2010 Daily Reckoning

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    Nikita Khrushchev: "We will bury you"
    "Your grandchildren will live under communism."
    “You Americans are so gullible.
    No, you won’t accept
    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.
    outright, but we’ll keep feeding you small doses of
    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.
    until you’ll finally wake up and find you already have communism.

    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.
    ."
    We’ll so weaken your
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    until you’ll
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    like overripe fruit into our hands."



  9. #189
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    Default Re: America will face Riots, Marches, and Revolution

    All I can say is... that's a stupid article.

    Why? There might be some facts involved, but all the bullshit laughing and the name calling, attempts at discrediting the "professor" at using this kind of method of writing is lame, idiotic and stupid.

    Certainly I will go on and on like this on occasion, but folks *I* am not a professional writer. I don't expect anyone to give a shit what I read or say.

    But if you're going to present FACTS, then present them in a manner that most people won't be insulted by.
    Libertatem Prius!


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    Default Re: America will face Riots, Marches, and Revolution

    Will the Federal Reserve Cause a Civil War?

    Posted by Stephen Gandel Tuesday, October 19, 2010 at 5:35 pm

    68 Comments • Related Topics: federal reserve, economy


    Bernanke critics are on the attack (Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

    What is the most likely cause today of civil unrest?

    Immigration. Gay Marriage. Abortion. The Results of Election Day. The Mosque at Ground Zero.

    Nope.

    Try the Federal Reserve. November 3rd is when the Federal Reserve's next policy committee meeting ends, and if you thought this was just another boring money meeting you would be wrong. It could be the most important meeting in Fed history, maybe.

    The US central bank is expected to announce its next move to boost the faltering economic recovery. To say there has been considerable debate and anxiety among Fed watchers about what the central bank should do would be an understatement.

    Chairman Ben Bernanke has indicated in recent speeches that the central bank plans to try to drive down already low-interest rates by buying up long-term bonds. A number of people both inside the Fed and out believe this is the wrong move. But one website seems to believe that Ben's plan might actually lead to armed conflict.

    Last week, the blog, Zerohedge wrote, paraphrasing a top economic forecaster David Rosenberg, that it believed the Fed's plan is not only moronic, but "positions US society one step closer to civil war if not worse." (See photos inside the world of Ben Bernanke)

    I'm not sure what "if not worse," is supposed to mean. But, with the Tea Party gaining followers, the idea of civil war over economic issues doesn't seem that far-fetched these days. And Ron Paul definitely thinks the Fed should be ended.

    In TIME's recent cover story on the militia movement many said these groups are powder kegs looking for a catalyst. So why not a Fed policy committee meeting. Still, I'm not convinced we are headed for Fedamageddon. That being said, the Fed's early November meeting is an important one.

    Here's why:

    Usually, there is generally a consensus about what the Federal Reserve should do. When the economy is weak, the Fed cuts short-term interest rates to spur borrowing and economic activity. When the economy is strong and inflation is rising, it does the opposite.

    But nearly two years after the Fed cut short-term interest rates to basically zero, more and more economists are questioning whether the US central bank is making the right moves. The economy is still very weak and unemployment seems stubbornly stuck near 10%.

    The problem is the Fed only directly sets short-term interest rates. And they are already about as close to zero as you can go. That's why Ben Bernanke has been recently talking about something called "quantitative easing."

    That's when the Fed basically creates money to buy the long-term bonds that it doesn't directly control, and drive down those interest rates as well. That should further reduce the cost of borrowing for large companies and homeowners. Some people are calling this "QE2" because the Fed made a similar move during the height of the financial crisis when it bought mortgage bonds. (See photos of the Tea Party movement)

    Not everyone agrees this is a good move. In fact, a number of presidents of regional Fed banks, not all of which get to vote at Fed policy meetings, have recently come out against Bernanke's plans. Some say it sets bad policy. Others think it will stoke inflation, which might be the point. Few, though, have warned of armed conflict. Here's how Zerohedge justifies its prediction of why the Fed's Nov. 3rd meeting will lead to violence:
    In a very real sense, Bernanke is throwing Granny and Grandpa down the stairs - on purpose. He is literally threatening those at the lower end of the economic strata, along with all who are retired, with starvation and death, and in a just nation where the rule of law controlled instead of being abused by the kleptocrats he would be facing charges of Seditious Conspiracy, as his policies will inevitably lead to the destruction of our republic.
    OK. The idea that Bernanke might kill large swaths of low-income neighborhoods or Florida by his plan to further lower interest rates is a little ridiculous. But there is a point in Zerohedge's crazy. Lower rates do tend to favor borrowers over savers. And the largest borrowers in the country are banks, speculators and large corporations.

    The largest spenders in our country though tend to be individuals.

    Consumer spending makes up 70% of the economy. And the vast majority of consumers are on the low-end of the income scale. So I think it is a valid question to ask whether the Fed's desire to drive down interest rates at all costs policy is working. Companies are already borrowing at low rates. They are just not spending.

    (Read a special report on the financial crisis blame game)

    That being said, civil war, probably not. "It is a gross exaggeration," says Allan Meltzer, who is a top Fed historian at Carnegie Mellon. "I cannot recall ever learning about riots or civil war even when the Fed made other mistakes." When I called, David Rosenberg was traveling and couldn't talk, but he did send me a quick e-mail to stress that he has never, ever suggested that any moves the Fed makes will lead to a militia uprising.

    Some smart people, though, including Meltzer, it appears, and Rosenberg do think the path of quantitative easing that the Fed looks likely to embark on is the wrong move. John Taylor, a top Fed scholar at Stanford, says eventually you will have to pull the support out, and when you do a year from now when the economy is recovering he thinks it could be quite disruptive. So even if you don't double dip now, you might double dip then. And even if you don't it would make for a slow recovery. Others, such as Raghuram Rajan, who has became famous for warning about the possibility of a financial crisis back in 2005, believe low-interest rates could be creating new bubbles in say gold or commodities.

    So it seems clear what the Fed is likely to do. How the economy, the militias and the rest of us react is up in the air. The count down is on. T minus 15 days to Fedamageddon. See you there, hopefully.

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    Nikita Khrushchev: "We will bury you"
    "Your grandchildren will live under communism."
    “You Americans are so gullible.
    No, you won’t accept
    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.
    outright, but we’ll keep feeding you small doses of
    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.
    until you’ll finally wake up and find you already have communism.

    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.
    ."
    We’ll so weaken your
    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.
    until you’ll
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    like overripe fruit into our hands."



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    Default Re: America will face Riots, Marches, and Revolution

    Others, such as Raghuram Rajan, who has became famous for warning about the possibility of a financial crisis back in 2005, believe low-interest rates could be creating new bubbles in say gold or commodities.


    I don't know much. But I know this..... Gold is going to crash and burn. It is going to drop in price, rapidly. Those who are buying in large quantities now are going to lose their asses.
    Libertatem Prius!


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    Default Re: America will face Riots, Marches, and Revolution

    He details some very specific time frames. This will make it much easier to follow.

    For what it's worth, he's been pretty accurate so far. His biggest point is that the FED is either reading or responding to the market wrong. 18 months left? Get your assets now.

    If this happens, those who have gold (real gold, not an account with gold in it) will come out as the new rich.


    ----------------
    http://www.marketoracle.co.uk/Article23901.html

    Signs Hyperinflation Is Arriving

    Economics / HyperInflation Oct 30, 2010 - 10:18 AM By: Gonzalo_Lira

    Back in late August, I argued that hyperinflation would be triggered by a run on Treasury bonds. I described how such a run might happen, and argued that if Treasuries were no longer considered safe, then commodities would become the store of value.



    Such a run on commodities, I further argued, would inevitably lead to price increases and a rise in the Consumer Price Index, which would initially be interpreted by the Federal Reserve, the Federal government, as well as the commentariat, as a good thing: A sign that “the economy is recovering”, a sign that “normalcy” was returning.

    I argued that—far from being “a sign of recovery”—rising CPI would be the sign that things were about to get ugly.
    I concluded that, like the stagflation of ‘79, inflation would rise to the double digits relatively quickly. However, unlike in 1980, when Paul Volcker raised interest rates severely in order to halt inflation, in today’s weakened macro-economic environment, that remedy is simply not available to Ben Bernanke.

    Therefore, I predicted that inflation would spiral out of control, and turn into hyperinflation of the U.S. dollar.

    A lot of people claimed I was on drugs when I wrote this.

    Now? Not so much.
    In my initial argument, I was sure that there would come a moment when Treasury bond holders would realize that they are the New & Improved Toxic Asset—as everyone knows, there is no way the U.S. Federal government can pay the outstanding debt it has: It’s simply too big.

    So I assumed that, when the market collectively realized this, there would be a panic in Treasuries. This panic, of course, would lead to the spike in commodities.
    However, I am no longer certain if there will ever be such a panic in Treasuries. Backstop Benny has been so adroit at propping up Treasuries and keeping their yields low, the Stealth Monetization has been so effective, the TBTF banks’ arbitrage trade between the Fed’s liquidity windows and Treasury bond yields has been so lucrative, and the bond market itself is so aware that Bernanke will do anything to protect and backstop Treasuries, that I no longer think that there will necessarily be such a panic.
    But that doesn’t mean that the second part of my thesis—commodities rising, which will trigger inflation, which will devolve into hyperinflation—will not occur.
    In fact, it is occurring.

    The two key commodities that have been rising as of late are oil and grains, specifically wheat, corn and livestock feed. The BLS report on Producer Price Index of commodities is here.

    Grains as a class have risen over 33% year-over-year. Refined oil products have risen just shy of 13%, with home heating oil rising 18% year-over-year. In other words: Food, gasoline and heating oil have risen by double digits since 2009. And the 2010-‘11 winter in the northern hemisphere is approaching.

    A friend of mine, SB, a commodities trader, pointed out to me that big producers are hedged against rising commodities prices. As he put it to me in a private e-mail, “We sometimes forget that the commodity markets aren’t solely speculative. Most futures contracts are bought by companies who use those commodities in their products, and are thus hedging their costs to produce those products.”

    Very true: But SB also pointed out that, hedged or not, the lag time between agricultural commodities and the markets is about six-to-nine months, on average. So he thought that the rise in grains, which really took off in June–July, would hit the supermarket shelves in January–March.

    He also pointed out that, with higher commodity costs and lower consumption, companies are going to be between the Devil and the deep blue sea. My own take is, if you can’t get more customers, then you’re just gonna have to charge more from the ones you got.

    Coupled to these price increases is the ongoing Currency War: The U.S.—contrary to Secretary Timothy Geithner’s statements—is trying to debase the dollar, so as to make U.S. exports more attractive to foreign consumers. This has created strains with China, Europe and the emerging markets.

    A beggar-thy-neighbor monetary policy works for small countries getting out of a hole of their own making: It doesn’t work for the world’s largest single economy with the world’s reserve currency, in the middle of a Global Depression.

    On the contrary, it creates a backlash; the ongoing tiff over rare-earth minerals with China is just the beginning. This could easily be exacerbated by clumsy politicking, and turn into a full-on trade war.

    What’s so bad with a trade war, you ask? Why nothing, not a thing—if you want to pay through the nose for imported goods. If you enjoy paying 10, 20, 30% more for imported goods—then hey, let’s just stick it to them China-men! They’re still Commies, after all!

    Furthermore, as regards the Federal Reserve policy, the upcoming Quantitative Easing 2, and the actions of its chairman, Ben Bernanke: There is an increasing sense in the financial markets that Backstop Benny and his Lollipop Gang don’t have the foggiest clue about what they’re doing.

    Consider:

    Bruce Krasting just yesterday wrote a very on-the-money précis of the trial balloons the Fed is floating, as regards to QE2: Basically, Bernanke through his WSJ mouthpiece said that the Fed was going to go for a cautious, incrementalist approach, vis-*-vis QE2: “A couple of hundred billion at a time”. You know: “Just the tip—just to see how it feels.”

    But then on the other hand, also just yesterday, Tyler Durden at Zero Hedge had a justifiable freak-out over the NY Fed asking Primary Dealers for their thoughts on the size of QE2. According to Bloomberg, the NY Fed was asking the dealers how big they thought QE2 would be, and how big they thought it ought be: $250 billion? $500 billion? A trillion? A trillion every six months? (Or as Tyler pointed out, $2 trillion for 2011.)

    That’s like asking a bunch of junkies how much smack they want for the upcoming year—half a kilo? A full kilo? Two kilos?

    What the hell you think the junkies are gonna say?

    Between BK’s clear reading of the tea leaves coming from the Wall Street Journal, and TD’s also very clear reading of the tea leaves by way of Bloomberg, you’re getting a seriously contradictory message: The Fed is going to lightly tap-tap-tap liquidity into the markets—just a little—just a few hundred billion dollars at a time—

    —while at the same time, the Fed is saying to the Primary Dealers, “We’re gonna make you guys happy-happy-happy with a righteously sized QE2!”

    The contradictory messages don’t pacify the financial markets—on the contrary, they make the markets simultaneously contemptuous of Bernanke and the Fed, while very frightened as to what they will ultimately do.

    What happens when the financial markets don’t really know what the central bank is going to do, and suspect that the central bankers themselves aren’t too clear either?

    Guess.

    So to sum up, we have:

    • Rising commodity prices, the effects of which (because of hedging) will be felt most severely in the period January–March of 2011.
    • A beggar-thy-neighbor race-to-the-bottom Currency War, that might well devolve into a Trade War, which would force up prices on imported goods.
    • A Federal Reserve that does not seem to know what it is doing, as regards another round of Quantitative Easing, which is making the financial markets very nervous—nervous about the Fed’s ultimate responsibility, which is safeguarding the U.S. dollar.
    • A U.S. economy that is weak to the point of collapse, where not even 0.25% interest rates are sparking investment and growth—and which therefore prohibits the Fed from raising interest rates, if need be.
    • A U.S. fiscal deficit which is close to 10% of GDP annually, and which is therefore unsustainable—especially considering that the total U.S. fiscal debt is well over 100% of GDP.
    These factors all point to one and the same thing:

    An imminent currency collapse.

    Therefore, I am confident in predicting the following sequence of events:
    • By March of 2011, once higher commodity prices reach the marketplace, monthly CPI will be at an annualized rate of not less than 5%.
    • By July of 2011, annualized CPI will be no less than 8% annualized.
    • By October of 2011, annualized CPI will have crossed 10%.
    • By March of 2012, annualized CPI will cross the hyperinflationary tipping point of 15%.
    After that, CPI will rapidly increase, much like it did in 1980.

    What the mainstream commentariat will make of all this will be really something: When CPI reaches 5% by the winter of 2011, pundits and economists and the Fed and the Obama administration will all say the same thing: “Happy days are here again! People are spending! The economy is back on track!”

    However, by the late spring, early summer of 2011, people will realize what’s going on—and the Federal Reserve will initially be unwilling to drastically raise interest rates so as to quell inflation.

    Actually, the Fed won’t be able to raise rates, at least not like Volcker did back in 1980: The U.S. economy will be too weak, and the Federal government’s balance sheet will be too distressed, with it’s $1.5 trillion deficit. So at first, the Fed will have to let the rising inflation rate slide, and keep trying hard to explain it away as “a sign of a recovering economy”.

    Once the Fed realizes that the rising CPI is not a sign of a reignited economy, but rather a sign of the collapsing dollar, they will pursue a puerile “inflation fighting” scheme of incremental interest rate hikes—much like G. William Miller, the Chairman of the Fed from January of ‘78 to August of ‘79, pursued so unsuccessfully.
    2012 will be the bad year: I predict that hyperinflation’s tipping point will be no later than the first quarter of 2012. From there, it will accelerate. By the end of 2012, I would not be surprised if the CPI for the year averaged 30%.

    By that point, the rest of the economy—unemployment, GDP, all the rest of it—will be in the toilet. By that point, the rest of the economy will no longer matter: The collapsing dollar will make 2012 the really really bad year of our Global Depression—which is actually kind of funny.
    It’s funny because, as you know, I am a conservative Catholic: I of course put absolutely no stock in the ridiculous notion that “The Mayans predicted our civilization’s collapse in 2012!”—that’s all rubbish, as far as I’m concerned.

    It’s just one of those cosmic jokes that 2012 will turn out to be the year the dollar collapses, and the larger world economies go down the tubes.

    As cosmic jokes go, all I’ve got to say is this:

    Good one, God.
    Source : http://gonzalolira.blogspot.com/2010...-arriving.html
    By Gonzalo Lira
    http://gonzalolira.blogspot.com/
    "Far better it is to dare mighty things, to win glorious triumphs even though checkered by failure, than to rank with those poor spirits who neither enjoy nor suffer much because they live in the gray twilight that knows neither victory nor defeat."
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    Default Re: America will face Riots, Marches, and Revolution

    Indiana Beefing Up Security At Unemployment Offices Ahead Of Holidays

    First Posted: 11- 1-10 12:02 PM | Updated: 11- 1-10 12:02 PM




    WASHINGTON -- The Indiana Department of Workforce Development is beefing up its security ahead of the holidays, when officials expect a seasonal surge in unemployment claims and extra stress for long-term jobless who might miss benefits because of Congress.

    If Congress doesn't reauthorize extended unemployment insurance, which expires at the end of November, the National Employment Law Project estimates that two million people will prematurely miss checks by the end of December.

    "There's obviously increasing stress, especially among the long-term unemployed, and also the upcoming expiration of these federal extensions will add additional stress," department spokesman Marc Lotter told HuffPost.

    Lotter said the agency is putting armed guards at each of the 36 WorkOne Centers that process unemployment benefits across the state.
    Lotter said that each center has already had security for the past two years; the agency is consolidating to one private contractor that will now handle security at each of the centers.

    It's part of a broader effort to prepare for the holidays, during which Lotter said Indiana sees more unemployment claims and also an effort to standardize services across the state.

    "We've had our staff undergo stress management," Lotter added. "It's much more than just adding armed security. We are trying standardize delivery of services, so that the WorkOne Center in Gary, Ind, will have same service as the one in New Albany."

    NELP's Judy Conti told HuffPost that so far Indiana is the only state that has boosted its security ahead of the holidays.

    "However, we are very aware that agencies are getting ready for the added volume of calls from the long-term unemployed who are going to be very worried and very anxious about Congress taking action in a timely fashion," Conti said.

    Over the summer, the Senate dithered for nearly two months as 2.5 million people who've been out of work for longer than six months missed checks. Congress will have only two weeks from the time it reconvenes until the deadline for reauthorizing the benefits.

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    Default Re: America will face Riots, Marches, and Revolution

    Here comes QE2

    This is already detailed up thread. This has been the plan all along.



    -------------
    http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/39990043/from/toolbar

    Fed takes bold, risky step to bolster economy

    Commits to buy $600 billion in bonds to further lower borrowing costs
    Video




    1. Fed acts to boost economy




    By Pedro da Costa and Mark Felsenthal
    Reuters
    updated 16 minutes ago 2010-11-03T19:02:10

    WASHINGTON — The Federal Reserve launched an unorthodox new policy on Wednesday, committing to buy $600 billion more in government bonds by the middle of next year in an attempt to breathe new life into a struggling U.S. economy.

    The decision, which takes the Fed into largely uncharted waters, is aimed at further lowering borrowing costs for consumers and businesses still suffering in the aftermath of the worst recession since the Great Depression.
    The U.S. central bank said it would buy about $75 billion in longer-term Treasury bonds per month as part of the new program. It said it would regularly review the pace and size of its purchases and adjust as needed depending on the path of the recovery.

    Story: The Fed’s big gamble: What could go wrong Nearly 90 percent of its purchases would focus on Treasuries with maturities ranging from 2-1/2 to 10 years, the New York Federal Reserve Bank said in a statement.
    "This provides the market with additional clarity," said Jeff Kleintop, chief market strategist at LPL Financial in Boston. "The question is whether this is enough."

    Prices for 30-year bonds fell sharply after the Fed announced its decision, while major U.S. stock indexes hit sessions lows. The dollar fell against the euro.

    The overall size of the program was slightly larger than the $500 billion that many analysts had looked for, however the pace of monthly buying fell short of expectations for something on the order of $100 billion.


    "I am slightly underwhelmed," said Richard Franulovich, senior currency strategist at Westpac in New York.
    In its post-meeting statement, the Fed's policy-setting panel described the economy as "slow," and said employers remained reluctant to add to payrolls. It said measures of inflation were "somewhat low."

    "Although the committee anticipates a gradual return to higher levels of resource utilization in a context of price stability, progress toward its objectives has been disappointingly slow," the Fed said.
    The central bank repeated its vow to keep overnight rates ultra-low for an extended period. Some analysts had speculated the Fed might broaden this commitment.


    Kansas City Fed President Thomas Hoenig continued his streak of dissents, saying the risk of additional securities purchases outweighed the benefits.
    In its statement, the New York Fed said it would temporarily relax a rule limiting Fed ownership of any particular security to 35 percent. It said holdings would be allowed to rise above that threshold "only in modest increments."

    Including the Fed's ongoing plan to reinvest maturing assets, the New York Fed expects to conduct $850 billion to $900 billion in Treasury purchases through the end of the second quarter of 2011.

    With the U.S. economy expanding at only a 2 percent annual pace in the third quarter of this year and the jobless rate seemingly stuck around 9.6 percent, the Fed had come under pressure to do more to stimulate business activity.
    The central bank had already cut overnight interest rates to near zero in December 2008 and bought about $1.7 trillion in U.S. government debt and mortgage-linked bonds.

    Those purchases, however, occurred when financial markets were stricken by crisis, and economists and Fed officials alike are divided over how effective the new program will be.

    Indeed, Hoenig and some other Fed officials worry further bond buying could do more harm than good by providing tinder for inflation that will ignite when the recovery finally gains traction.

    With the prospect of a long period of ultra-low returns in the United States, investors have flocked to emerging markets, pushing those currencies higher. Emerging economies, worried about a loss of export competitiveness, have cried foul.

    "We are all under attack by the relaxed monetary policy of the United States," Colombian Finance Minister Juan Carlos Echeverry told investors on Tuesday.

    The Bank of Japan, which meets on Thursday and Friday, is also poised to launch a new round of bond buying.

    The European Central Bank and Bank of England also meet
    As things now stand, the U.S. economy is not growing quickly enough to put a dent in the unemployment rate, although a report on Wednesday suggested private sector hiring is slowly picking up.

    With 14.8 million Americans unemployed, factories operating well short of capacity and inflation well below the 1.7 percent to 2.0 percent range the Fed shoots for, some officials at the central bank see the risk of a vicious deflationary cycle where consumers hold off on purchases, choking off economic growth.

    The U.S. central bank already owns roughly 12.5 percent of all outstanding Treasury bonds and notes. If it were to buy $1 trillion more, as some economists expect it eventually will, the portion of its holdings compared with all outstanding Treasuries could jump to 27 percent.

    A group of bond dealers that advises the U.S. Treasury expressed concerns about the possibility that a shortage of bonds could cause market disruptions, according to minutes from its November 2 meeting released on Wednesday.

    Full text of Fed statement
    Full text of the Fed's statement follows:
    Information received since the Federal Open Market Committee met in September confirms that the pace of recovery in output and employment continues to be slow. Household spending is increasing gradually, but remains constrained by high unemployment, modest income growth, lower housing wealth, and tight credit. Business spending on equipment and software is rising, though less rapidly than earlier in the year, while investment in nonresidential structures continues to be weak. Employers remain reluctant to add to payrolls. Housing starts continue to be depressed. Longer-term inflation expectations have remained stable, but measures of underlying inflation have trended lower in recent quarters.

    Consistent with its statutory mandate, the Committee seeks to foster maximum employment and price stability. Currently, the unemployment rate is elevated, and measures of underlying inflation are somewhat low, relative to levels that the Committee judges to be consistent, over the longer run, with its dual mandate. Although the Committee anticipates a gradual return to higher levels of resource utilization in a context of price stability, progress toward its objectives has been disappointingly slow.

    To promote a stronger pace of economic recovery and to help ensure that inflation, over time, is at levels consistent with its mandate, the Committee decided today to expand its holdings of securities. The Committee will maintain its existing policy of reinvesting principal payments from its securities holdings. In addition, the Committee intends to purchase a further $600 billion of longer-term Treasury securities by the end of the second quarter of 2011, a pace of about $75 billion per month. The Committee will regularly review the pace of its securities purchases and the overall size of the asset-purchase program in light of incoming information and will adjust the program as needed to best foster maximum employment and price stability.

    The Committee will maintain the target range for the federal funds rate at 0 to 1/4 percent and continues to anticipate that economic conditions, including low rates of resource utilization, subdued inflation trends, and stable inflation expectations, are likely to warrant exceptionally low levels for the federal funds rate for an extended period.
    Last edited by Malsua; November 3rd, 2010 at 19:23.
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    -- Theodore Roosevelt


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    Default Re: America will face Riots, Marches, and Revolution

    Hmmm

    Deep cuts coming in our budget, and we're buying stuff that aint worth anything with money that aint worth anything.

    No riots.
    Libertatem Prius!


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    Default Re: America will face Riots, Marches, and Revolution

    No riots yet. Read that article a couple up. He details time frames for the hyperinflation.

    1st quarter 2012...Let me quote Doc Brown "when this baby hits eighty-eight miles per hour... you're gonna see some serious shit!"

    • By March of 2012, annualized CPI will cross the hyperinflationary tipping point of 15%.
    Last edited by Malsua; November 3rd, 2010 at 20:24.
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    Default Re: America will face Riots, Marches, and Revolution

    I too shall quote Doc Brown, "Roads? Where we're going we don't need roads!"
    Libertatem Prius!


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    With the Fed announcement today and the resulting tremendous volatility in gold and silver, King World News interviewed the legendary Jim Sinclair. When asked about the action in gold Sinclair responded, “We had two periods today where the offerings were being made in huge amounts and the bids were running for cover. I mean it’s your standard manipulation. But you can be sure that there is a designed effort to hold the dollar and to oppose gold going to the positive side so that the action of the Federal Reserve will not be analyzed as extreme, even thought it is.”

    November 3, 2010

    Jim Sinclair continues:

    “I think the most salient point of what has taken place today is not the number but more so the fact that the Fed took a stand in the face of both national and international, in fact fierce international criticism of the policy.”

    How did you know that there was going to be a large number for QE?

    “Well you have to get a feel from people who do business with the Fed on a day to day basis, and what they found unusual was that Bernanke actually came out well before the meeting and gave an indication of exactly what he had intended to do. Now you have to look at what the cost would be of backing off from that. And you really wonder whether or not Bernanke actually set up all of this criticism, to come out and look for the first time like a very strong Fed, even if their direction might be misguided.

    I don’t think QE is good, and I wouldn’t defend the economics of it but I don’t think there was any alternative. The need for the QE basically to infinity and that’s I think what you can call today as a watershed event, the need basically is because the balance sheets of the financial community are all a product of FASB’s permission to value assets that don’t exist, that aren’t there, that are entirely fabricated.

    The Fed has a better picture of the financial condition of US entities than any central bank anywhere. The Fed has the entire picture of what it’s holding on its balance sheet, the Fed knows the extent and difficulty of the problem. The Fed has kicked the can down the road one more time because there is no other choice.

    If the Fed hadn’t acted to bail out the international investment banks when the over the counter derivative meltdown first came, you would have had a roll over you wouldn’t believe. So you are stuck between a rock and a hard place, it isn’t right what they are doing but there is no other alternative.”

    Why was QE reported at $600 billion when it is really $900 billion?

    “Because that’s management of perspective economics.”

    Are we in a depression?

    “We are in unchartered waters with business folding over. We don’t know what the name will be for this. One thing we do know is it’s not dollar positive and that the only insurance out there that would react positively to things we can’t control such as Fed decisions is gold.”

    Is it ok to let gold run in a day or two?

    “I don’t think you can really control it. I think that gold will run but as of today, whenever the boss speaks, we’ll call him the financial boss, there is always intervention to make the boss look good. It’s never failed, it will always be so, and it is so today.”

    When asked about the US dollar Sinclair responded, “72 right now is the price objective, then I think some modest strength, and then into the sixties.”

    Jim Sinclair also mentioned the dollar index, “could eventually fall to 56.”

    But theoretically if we can hold in that level and that’s the low, it’s not the end of the world?

    “I don’t think it has to be the end of the world, I think it’s the end of doing business as has been done. I think it’s the tail end of the darkest period we have ever had in finance and the dollar will reflect that.”

    When asked about how his father Bert Seligman and his business partner Jesse Livermore would be trading gold going forward Sinclair responded, “I believe firmly that Bert would have considered it (today) a bottom, and now they (Bert and Jesse) would be looking to pick it up on any dips.”

    Well there you have it from one of the greats, gold has bottomed. Assuming Sinclair is correct, for all of you dip buyers, if you blinked you missed it.

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    The Fallacy of Quantitative Easing in Pictures

    By John Galt
    November 3, 2010

    The unofficial start date of the current financial crisis is around the month of February 2007 and since that time to say Americans have witnessed history would be an understatement. The complete and total collapse our financial system was allegedly averted by the “bold” action of our political leadership and the first wave of Quantitative Easing engaged in by the Federal Reserve. Despite these false proclamations of hopeful change to our economic condition, the pictures of what has happened since the Fed expanded its reserves tells a different tale. I shall let you, the reader, decide if in fact the first wave of QE was effective before the second program is announced this afternoon.

    The conclusions should be quite obvious, unless you are blind.

    I. EMPLOYMENT



    No massive recovery or bang for the buck there.



    No massive recovery or bang for the buck there either.

    II. HOUSING




    Maybe it’s a time delayed recovery thing. Measured in decades.

    III. BANKING PLUS BUSINESS AND COMMERCIAL LOANS




    Obviously we need Nancy Drew, the Hardy Boys, Jim Rockford, and Scooby-Doo to find out why that QE didn’t go into loans from the banksters, right?



    No comment necessary.

    IV. WHERE THE MONEY WENT



    God Bless America and our obsession with $200 jeans and Video Games!



    The casino is still open but the returns underwhelming.



    At least the rest of the civilized world knows what “Quantitative Easing” means…..

    The bottom line? Everything QE1 was designated to “fix” or improve well, hasn’t. Pictures do not lie. I wish to

    thank Federal Reserve for providing those pictures of the effectiveness of Quantitative Easing.

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    like overripe fruit into our hands."



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    Default Re: America will face Riots, Marches, and Revolution

    The Done Deal: QE2.x, China To Cash in Treasury's, Dollar To Devalue, Yuan Rise

    By: Putting the Pieces Together Wednesday, November 03, 2010 11:48 PM

    Today's announcement of Quantitative Easement 2.x was not a surprise. QE2.x refers to the fact that the FED had previously revealed it would be purchasing Treasury's with incoming moneys from mortgage payments of principal and interest and mortgage payoffs. This had been estimated as between $200 and $300 billion over the next year.

    Today added $600 billion to that in instant money creation, also known as "printing" over the next six months. Hints have been dropping everywhere lately that the goal actually IS to create inflation and to devalue the US dollar in an orderly manner. Most aware investors have known intuitively for some time that inflation and devaluation is the inevitable outcome, but it has been confirmed by people in the know a number of times recently. The puzzling part has been why QE2.x is necessary at this time. It came down to "what do THEY know that we don't know?"

    We've all seen the lists of possible causes existing behind the screen. This in itself has resulted in political and market anxiety. Volatility. Where is the shoe that hasn't dropped yet? Bank failures we don't know about but they do know about? The lists go on.

    Why couldn't Bernanke produce a clear explanation?

    He's the self-admitted expert on curing depressions, but he's been amazingly silent or vague. Why did some peripheral FED officers--Kansas
    City's Hoenig comes to mind--keep insisting QE wasn't necessary and could be dangerous? It could be part of an overall plan or perhaps he's simply out of the loop. What were the G7, IMF/World Bank, G20, and US/Chinese meetings really all about? Did the looming elections keep a lid on it all.

    How does it all fit together? It comes together just the way it looks, as a friend always refers to clues being hidden "right out in the open". One key to "getting it" is the size of QE2.x, of about $900 billion which is close to the size of Chinese Central Bank holdings of US Treasury's. The real deal in QE2.x is that China and the US have negotiated to redeem China's T Notes and Bonds over the next six to twelve months during which time there will be a staged progressive float of the yuan.

    This deal is the inflation and devaluation the FED thinks we need, the currency float the Treasury and Congress think we need, and the cashing in of their huge hoard of Treasurys the Chinese think they need.

    This is the equivalent of Roosevelt's resetting the gold price in 1934, greatly devaluing the dollar, and supposedly jump-starting the economy.

    This is China's long hoped-for gain on their US bonds. This is the capstone of Bernanke's career of studying the 1930's. This will be done, they all hope, in an orderly manner. Only the citizens of the US will suffer an enormous loss of purchasing power! The clear judgement is that they are too dumb to know what's happening to them. Central banks never want us to know.

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    Nikita Khrushchev: "We will bury you"
    "Your grandchildren will live under communism."
    “You Americans are so gullible.
    No, you won’t accept
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    outright, but we’ll keep feeding you small doses of
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    until you’ll finally wake up and find you already have communism.

    To view links or images in signatures your post count must be 15 or greater. You currently have 0 posts.
    ."
    We’ll so weaken your
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    until you’ll
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    like overripe fruit into our hands."



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