Iraq
U.S. Government Planned Indefinite Detention of Citizens and Other "Post-9/11 Realities" LONG BEFORE 9/11
Submitted by George Washington on 08/23/2012 14:01 -0500NOT Because of the Attacks ...
Israel's Iran Strike Routes
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/22/2012 11:20 -0500The jury is still out whether Israel will or will not attack Iran, despite the endless and relentless (dis)information in the media from all sides, and certainly when such an attack might happen, but if it did take place, these are all the logistically possible formats what an airborne attack could look like.
Guest Post: Syria And Iran Dominos Lead To World War
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/22/2012 08:54 -0500
Syria and Iran are, in a way, the first dominos in a long chain of terrible events. This chain, as chaotic as it seems, leads to only one end result: Third world status for almost every country on the planet, including the U.S., leaving the financial institutions, like monetary grim reapers, to swoop in and gather up the pieces that remain to be fashioned into a kind of Frankenstein economy. A fiscal golem. A global monstrosity that removes all sovereignty whether real or imagined and centralizes the decision making processes of humanity into the hands of a morally bankrupt few. The only people celebrating at the end of the calamitous hostilities will be the hyper-moneyed power addicted .01%, who will celebrate their global coup in private, laughing as the rest of the world burns itself out, and comes begging them for help.
Niall "Hit The Road Barack" Ferguson Responds To The "Liberal Blogosphere"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/21/2012 12:41 -0500
Two days ago, historian Niall Fergsuon had the temerity to voice a personal opinion, one which happens to not exactly jive with the rest of the media's take on current events, on the cover page of Newsweek (Newsweek is still in print?) titled, succinctly enough, "Hit the road Barack: Why we need a new president." The response was fast, furious, and brutal, particularly emanating from what Ferguson has dubbed the "liberal blogosphere." Naturally in an election year, said blogosphere has much CPM-generating rumination to do (after all who knows what happens to all those ad revenues if the US corporate base implodes and all that cash on the sidelines stays there due to "policy uncertainty"), so Ferguson merely provided the chum in the water (once the time comes to pick up the calculators again after the presidential election, things will immediately quiet down but until then there is, sadly, at least two more months of ever rising cacophony). So did Ferguson back off having said his piece? Hell no. In fact, he has just made sure that the "liberal blogosphere" is will be burning the midnight oil for weeks to come engaged in completely meaningless point-counterpoint between itself and the historian, when, in reality nothing changes the simple fact that come August 2016, the US will have a simply idiotic 130%+ debt/GDP completely independent of who is in the White House, or in other words, there very well may not be another presidential election. For now, however, we have much needed bread and circuses. Below is Ferguson's just released interview from Bloomberg TV in which he responds to the salient accusations that have been leveled at him (a more essayistic version can be found here).
Major General: Why Are Domestic Government Agencies Purchashing Enough Lethal Ammunition to Put 5 Rounds In Every American?
Submitted by George Washington on 08/20/2012 10:40 -0500Why Do They Need So Much Ammunition?
Guest Post: Sanctions Force Iranian Retreat from Global Stage
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/18/2012 19:07 -0500The Organization of Petroleum Economies, in its August report, said Iranian crude oil production in part led to a decline in overall output from the Vienna-based cartel. OPEC said crude oil production for its members, not including Iraq, was reported at 28.1 million barrels per day in July, a decline of 270,000 bpd compared with the previous month. The decline in OPEC oil production in part was led by Iran, which saw its export options curtailed by sanctions imposed by the U.S. and European governments. Tehran announced it still had a viable consumer base in China, however, which received about 12 percent of its oil needs from Iran. The Indian government, meanwhile, said it would circumvent EU sanctions by extending government-backed insurance to tankers carrying Iranian crude because of the "definite need" for oil.
Syrian Humanitarian Crisis – As Food, Fuel Prices Soar al-Assad Desperately Attempts To Get Gold
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/14/2012 08:12 -0500
As was seen in Iraq, it is the people who suffer most from sanctions and economic and civil war and the Syrian people are indeed facing increasing hardships. Hunger is a problem that is growing more acute by the day. As the prices of what little food is available soar, there are increasing signs of desperation among parents seeking to feed families. Prices of fuel and medicine have also soared amid shortages compounding the misery of Syrians and leading to another humanitarian crisis. Professor Nouriel Roubini and other financial experts have pointed out that “you cannot eat gold.” However, people in nations suffering from currency and economic wars can testify as to how they can use gold in order to buy food, fuel and medicine for their families in difficult times. To wit, Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad announced measures facilitating imports of gold bullion coins and bars. Gold bullion imports no longer require a special permit and travellers are allowed to bring gold bullion coins and bars with them into the country, the decree said. Gold is, as it has done throughout history, protecting them and their families from the ravages of currency devaluation and economic collapse.
Guest Post: The Other Side Of Sanctions
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/10/2012 16:28 -0500
Iran has been pushed into a corner and is fighting for its life. The safest weapon in its arsenal is an economic strategy; and it is the one point where the United States is vulnerable. It is no secret that many governments object to the sanctions and are willing to deal outside of normal channels for a reduced price. If the Iranians should use the new private traders to dump a few million barrels of oil onto the market at a sharply discounted price, they just might encourage one of these governments to openly defy the United States for a bargain. As a persecuted minority, the Shia have learned that the weaker in a conflict must employ cunning rather than muscle. It is the inherent weakness of the alliance that is Iran’s strength. The unwillingness of Washington to pressure supposed allies and the simple fact that there are buyers willing to defy the sanctions secretly reveals the cracks in the system.
Is America the World’s Largest Sponsor of Terrorism?
Submitted by George Washington on 08/06/2012 11:07 -0500American Officials Admit that the U.S. Is a Huge Sponsor of Terrorism
Take Our Guns? Over our Dead Bodies!
Submitted by 4closureFraud on 07/31/2012 17:21 -0500Things are getting worse, not better. There will be more mass murders and horrific acts of violence, and they will not be fueled by guns but by the untreated mental illness produced by the stress of economic and social collapse.
The “War On Terror” Has Changed, And Not One In 1,000 Americans Has Noticed
Submitted by George Washington on 07/31/2012 13:19 -0500What You Should Know about this “Unthinkable” Development…
Why Do Progressive Liberals Fall for “Humanitarian War”?
Submitted by George Washington on 07/27/2012 17:25 -0500“Humanitarian” War Contradicts 200 Years of Liberal Thought
The Banker Most Responsible for Allowing the Too Big to Fail Banks Says We Must Break Them Up
Submitted by George Washington on 07/25/2012 13:59 -0500Even Sandy Weill Says We've Got to Restore Separation Between Banking and Financial Gambling
Reinventing Crony Capitalism
Submitted by ilene on 07/24/2012 14:06 -0500- Afghanistan
- Arthur Levitt
- Corporate America
- Corruption
- Credit Default Swaps
- default
- Fail
- FBI
- Federal Home Loan Bank
- Financial Regulation
- Ford
- Iraq
- Main Street
- Monetary Policy
- Neil Barofsky
- None
- Real estate
- recovery
- Savings And Loan
- Securities and Exchange Commission
- SIGTARP
- TARP
- Testimony
- Timothy Geithner
- Transparency
- Treasury Department
- World Bank
The three "de's:" deregulation, desupervision, and de facto decriminalization.
Frontrunning: July 20, 2012
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/20/2012 06:24 -0500- Gunman kills 14 in Denver shooting at "Batman" movie (Reuters)
- Full retard meets Math for Retards: Spain Insists $15 Billion Aid Need for Regions Won’t Swell Debt (Bloomberg)
- World braced for new food crisis (FT)
- Banks in Libor probe consider group settlement (Reuters)
- U.S. banks haunted by mortgage demons that won't go away (Reuters)
- Ireland Bulldozes Ghost Estate in Life After Real Estate Bubble (Bloomberg)
- China will not relax property control policies (China Daily)
- Russia, China veto U.N. Security Council resolution on Syria (Reuters)
- Kim to reform North Korean economy after purge (Reuters)






