Submitted by Mike Krieger via Liberty Blitzkrieg blog,
Bernanke and the Federal Reserve are nothing but criminal butlers for the oligarchy. The proof is undeniable at this point. While this unaccountable banking cartel promised us that 0% rates would help the economy, America’s growing underclasses are paying 100% rates for loans to buy sofas and pay for food, more than five years into this so-called “recovery. Meanwhile, the only segment of society with access to low interest rates are the very wealthy financial oligarchs who leverage this cheap money to speculate on financial assets and real estate. So yes, the Fed (Central Banking in general) is completely to blame for the world’s growing inequality, as are their submissive, compliant defenders in academia, “journalism” and within the halls of power in Washington D.C.
From the post: Another Tale from the Oligarch Recovery – How a $1,500 Sofa Costs $4,150 When You’re Poor
There is no recovery. The only thing we’ve experienced over the past eight years of Obama is a historic plundering and strip mining of the U.S. economy by a handful of oligarchs and their political and bureaucratic minions.
The evidence has been clear for years. Fully employed Americans have been borrowing from payday lenders at egregious rates in order to pay for normal everyday living expenses, while a small group of executives grab as much as possible for themselves. You can see this in corporate profits margins at historically high levels and in the use of cash to buyback shares as opposed to paying employees a living wage. To see just how grotesquely out of whack the economy has become under the crony policies of Obama and the Federal Reserve, let’s revisit what I like to call the “Serfdom Chart.”

If the above chart looks like the inverse of the S&P 500 index to you, this is no illusion. Share prices in America aren’t at all time highs because the country is doing well. Share prices are at all time highs because executives and shareholders are extracting a historically dangerous piece of the overall economic pie. If this trend continues, someone like Donald Trump will be the least of our concerns.
It appears companies are coming to the realization that their employees are so broke they’re resorting to payday lenders just to survive. Rather than boost wages, many are resorting to offering loans.
The Wall Street Journal reports:
Pam Dimitro, the controller at JNET Communications LLC, realized employees were often turning to payday lenders or high-interest credit cards in a financial pinch.
So the Warren, N.J., employer of call-center workers and cable installers began offering employees a new benefit: low-interest loans to help pay for things such as car repairs and health expenses.
Worried about their financially strapped workforce, a handful of companies are stepping in to offer employees alternatives to payday loans and other expensive financial products.
While few other employers go that far, managers know that financial worries are taking a toll on U.S. workers. A recent PwC survey of 1,600 full-time employed adults found that 40% find it difficult to meet monthly household expenses and 51% consistently carry balances on their credit cards.
Payday loans, which are typically made in small amounts and come due on a person’s next payday, can carry fees equivalent to an annual percentage rate of almost 400%, according to the federal Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
Some 12 million Americans use payday loans each year, according to Alex Horowitz, senior research officer with the Pew Charitable Trusts’ small-dollar loans project.
Retirement borrowing remains common, too. According to the Employee Benefit Research Institute, 20% of all eligible 401(k) participants had loans outstanding against their 401(k) plan accounts at the end of 2014, up from 18% in 2008.
As an alternative, employers are joining with firms such as Kashable LLC, Ziero Financial Inc. and Zebit Inc. to help fund and service loans. Some companies are offering those products in conjunction with employee-focused seminars about saving, budgeting and debt.
Such loans could end up putting employees further into debt, critics say, especially if workers are unable to keep their spending in check. Loans “need to be utilized with some caution,” said Kent Allison,national leader of consulting firm PwC’s employee financial wellness practice.
Some employers aren’t eager to offer loans, either, but say their employees lack other good options.
Barbara Snyder, vice president of human resources at Atlantic American Corp, said she didn’t want to get into the loan business.
Many of the 100 employees of the Atlanta insurance provider “live paycheck to paycheck,” she said, and were borrowing against their 401(k)s. After realizing the company wouldn’t be liable if employees defaulted, she signed up with Kashable about two years ago.
Kashable’s interest rates typically range from about 6% to the high teens, lower than what people with middling or low credit might get on their own, said founder Einat Steklov.
While a far better option than payday loans, “6% to the high teens” is still a huge interest rate considering pension funds can’t find anywhere to reasonably invest and earn such a return. It also shows you that the 0% interest rate targeted by the Federal Reserve doesn’t trickle down to the peasants. It only further enriches the financial parasite class.
Loan payments are deducted from employee paychecks, with loan terms lasting from six months to three years. If employees leave their jobs, they continue paying from their own bank accounts, said Ms. Steklov.
“Not offering a low-cost loan option is not going to prevent people from getting a loan,” she adds. “By not offering, we are going to force them to do something worse.”
Perhaps the above is true. Perhaps many of these companies really are trying to help. That’s actually besides the point. The much bigger point is that employed American citizens are so destitute they can’t survive without taking out loans for everyday expenses.
Perhaps Adam Smith was onto something when he wrote the following in The Wealth of Nations:
Our merchants and master-manufacturers complain much of the bad effects of high wages in raising the price, and thereby lessening the sale of their goods both at home and abroad. They say nothing concerning the bad effects of high profits. They are silent with regard to the pernicious effects of their own gains. They complain only of those of other people.
But the rate of profit does not, like rent and wages, rise with the prosperity and fall with the declension of the society. On the contrary, it is naturally low in rich and high in poor countries, and it is always highest in the countries which are going fastest to ruin.
If nothing else, this should prove to everyone that the U.S. economy has become a grotesque, unsustainable, cancerous monster. It’s an unethical creation of oligarchy for oligarchy; a parasitic blob that solely exists to reward the already rich and powerful. What no longer benefits the nation’s citizens in any meaningful way needs to be fundamentally transformed before the entire fabric of society snaps and we are left with a far worse outcome. The clock is ticking.
For more on this very disturbing and well established trend, see:
The Status Quo Plan – Convince the American Public to Accept Serfdom
Americans Have Been Turned Into Peasants – It’s Time to Fight Back
The Oligarch Recovery – U.S. Military Veterans are Selling Their Pensions in Order to Pay the Bills
The Oligarch Recovery – 30 Million Americans Have Tapped Retirement Savings Early in Last 12 Months
Another Tale from the Oligarch Recovery – How a $1,500 Sofa Costs $4,150 When You’re Poor
It’s way past the time to stop being suckers.






Ya gotta hand it them them smart-n-savvy people, they sure know how to tell a good joke.
The Company Store is Baaaaaaack!
Company token coins coming up... <rolling eyes>
The Fed is cranking out the company scrip and its cronies get richer by the day.
It so true, but impossible to convey to most people.
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Makes ya wonder if the coal miners getting paid in company script minded that much.
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I guess it would depend on the illusion of freedom.
If anyone can dig far enough back into ZH archives then they will notice that I said this would happen. Several times. Manipulated "Free markets". All products go to the highest bidder. Who are the highest bidders? Idiots that have been lent money. Sensible people won't bid above what they have, so idiots buy everything at the expense of sensible people. What is the limit to lending to idiots? The banksters. How do the banksters make money? By selling loans. When do banksters get held accountable for their actions? They don't. They get bailed out.
So in the future (starting now by the sound of it), peasants will earn, say $100 per week, plus BORROW an EXTRA $1000 per week, use the $100 to "pay some of the interest" on their current loans, use the $1000 to buy groceries and repeat next week. The debt will go up forever. Banksters won't care because they got theirs and it pays a hell of a lot more than doing honest work for a living. Sensible people will either starve to death or join the idiots because you cannot compete with someone who simply borrows money.
Hence my conclusion that if TPTB like you then they will lend you money. If they don't like you then they will make you pay it back. That is all.
As long as people are willing to borrow money, banks are willing to lend it to them and prices will only go up while wages stay low. Prices are supposed to be constrained by wages i.e. people's ability to pay. Borrowed money bypasses this constraint and allows prices to go to the stratosphere will wages (and profits) stay stagnant.
Simple example: Small town with 11 people.
All 11 earn $100 per week. One man's worker is another man's customer. Money flows.
Ten men make $100 per week, one man makes $1000 per week. Looks like all ten men work for that one man. That one man must also be spending $1000 per week buying what is produced by the other ten.
Ten men make $100 per week, one man makes $10 000 per week. How does he make the other $9000? He must be a banker, paying himself the extra $9k. The Ponzi has begun. It ends when people decide that earning $100 per week so they can get permission to borrow a million dollars per week (with very low repayments, of course) is a fucking stupid game. Other than that, it can go on forever.
They can't take it with them to Tel-Aviv if' they're lucky
And they can't take it with them to Hell if WE'RE lucky...and we have numbers and time.
i visited the company store today (wallymart) and got what i wanted, a bad-ass new kryptonite lock/chain - great price $16 , found a nice pair of shorts, that new dri-fit super light with stretch waist and the new micro-zippers, very cool & stylish - bike shops & athletic REI would want to charge $60-and up- wallys $16 ... and you bet they've got the signs up for the company tokens, with money back, reloadable ... the Wally Bank had customers lined up ... and of course they were saving money only using 4 of 20 cashier checkouts ...oh, Wally's always got the best price on lube too :)(
the greeter must've been over 80...
Maybe we should all pretend to work and they can pretend to pay us and we can pretend we have a life and everything will be just dandy.
Shits not looking to good folks.
Might want to buy "The complete Guide to Eatable Plants, mushrooms and other assorted items."
Exactly. "I owe my soul to the company store."
https://www.google.com/webhp?sourceid=chrome-instant&ion=1&espv=2&ie=UTF...
I've got a Winner with the "Go Go Dancing Girls" Version of "16 Tons"...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=92arUrGVt6k
What are those dancing girls on?
Debt peonage.
$15 loan per hour
On a $12 hourly salary. We're in the money!
Loving that trickle down image, it's so wrong, but absolutely on the button.
It's the trickle-on effect, I mean trickle-down ...
How did anyone ever accept that phrase? Trickle-down? It's worse than a "Let them eat cake" moment. It is actually the equivalent of "Let them eat crumbs". That "Trickle-Down" phrase has been around for a long time. Why has no-one ever called them out on it???
We did, we knew we were being pissed on.
Then the technology bump started, and we all got jobs, so we actually started to believe it.
Then Y2K and dotcom, along with silently offshoring a bunch of family-supporting jobs under the radar and unnoticed started, and again, we believed.
I woke up in 2000 and realized our gut, '80s, reaction were right, we WERE being pissed on.
Yep, trickle down.
Being strip-mined by the top and then led to hate and resent the poorest at the bottom for their tiny, tiny, bit of graft.
I do believe we are living real time, the fomenting of revolution, let us all pray we can avert the bloody parts.
Awesome. If one company tried to service its bank debt by issuing bonds its stock price would plummet. If the majority do it, then it becomes the new normal. Now, what if most companies issued bonds to loan to current and retired employees, so that these sorry souls can service their bank loan debt? Would that be considered normal too?
What is normal? Certainly not this chap http://davidwatkinson.blogspot.co.uk
Forgive and forget. Reagan was the Greatest ever.
Reagan made one epic mistake that squandered his legacy (that mistake is pictured 2nd from the right).
Trump should be extremely careful when picking his VP.
According to some, he was forced into it at the last moment with a threat that the "establishment" would insure his loss in 1980 if he did not choose Bush.
loss of life that is. Almost happened anyway
Don't worry! The way things are going, everything will be available for all employees at the company store.
The line, "You load sixteen tons and what do you get? Another day older and deeper in debt," came from a letter written by Travis' brother John.[1] Another line came from their father, a coal miner, who would say, "I can't afford to die. I owe my soul to the company store."[4]
"St. Peter don't you call me cuz I can't go . . .
I owe my soul to the company store."
RIP. Johnny Cash
Great Song, Great American. RIP Johnny Cash
Law of Supply and Demand. First Law of Economics.
More babies > more workers begging for same job > lower pay.
Fewer babies > fewer workers begging for same job > higher pay.
That's how the economy of feudal over-site broke in the 1100's. Black plague came through wiped out the work force, then employee shortages happened. As soon as a single farming season of a lack of hands to do the work happened, the idea of poaching labour from other 'vassal lords' begun overnight. As a result of that movement in the population schools and trade unions popped up over night to retool all those "peasants" into specialists of technical trades and since the plague didn't just kill field hands, there were massive shortages of labour in every sector. (except royals unfortunately)
Maintain a population balance, with a well tailored education system to REPLACE labour, not warehouse bodies, and any economy that's follows that system does just fine. Things might take a while to happen, but they do get there.
For instance, China managed to do it without any problems for longer than anyone else for the longest period of time by applying the concept of Tao, balance. Not rome. Not europe. Not the western world has been able to replicate the same effect of balance in a civilization. There was promise at the beginning of colonization of North America but the jews wearing crowns got involved, lots of people were killed for nothing and it all went to shit with the typical lies wrapped up in bankers bullshit. Funny thing is even after all the civilizations and churches and schisms, the western world still forgets that China has never changed it's name for thousands and thousands of years. Still on the map...can anyone at current say the same of where they live?
Doubtful, the failures of the past only highlight how exceptional things can be built...not run. I wouldn't trust anyone in the 'first world' to build a civilization that lasts...not even a "mother church" since they are listed as the cause of destruction more often than a builder.
Except you forgot the H1B Visa folks... they are not in the "baby" count
More Law of Supply and Demand:
Banksters lend moar money to idiots. Idiots buy stuff. Prices go up. Banksters get bailed out. Banksters lend moar money to idiots. Idiots buy stuff. Prices go up. Banksters get bailed out. Banksters lend moar money to idiots. Idiots buy stuff. Prices go up. Banksters get bailed out. Banksters lend moar money to idiots. Idiots buy stuff. Prices go up. Banksters get bailed out. Banksters lend moar money to idiots ...
Had a Boss that used to do just that, he was smart though never exceeded the hrs owed column..
case you know, them plebs skipped town ..
I owe my soul to the company store.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tfp2O9ADwGk
+1 for the video.
Tennessee Ernie Ford sang the original.
This music video by Johnny Cash is for all unjust company owners.
God´s gonna cut you down.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eJlN9jdQFSc
written and first recorded by Merle Travis (1946)
recorded by Ford (1955)
just sayin'
OMG we were like 1 sec apart
Time to bring back that classic!
Talk about a trap.. how awful to be enslaved to the company..
Tennessee Ernie Ford
Sixteen tons
"You load sixteen tons, what do you get
Another day older and deeper in debt
Saint Peter don't you call me 'cause I can't go
I owe my soul to the company store"
Everyone is hurting financially, I don't know of more than a handful who aren't somewhat squeezed. The farther down you look, the worse it is. Quit blaming the mythical 1%, this country is broke and we all are living way beyond our means. WE are the problem.
Banbait #89
This country is NOT broke. This country has been looted.
Looted via the Khazarian fifth-columns' fraudulent-reserve banking grift and Khazarian controlled US tyranny.
Exactly. Jobs sent overseas. Jobs given to H1B visa holders.
It is also called treason.
The "people" are "at fault" in only one sense. They have allowed themselves to be too easily fooled by fast talking scam artist politicians, MIC employees and all the others that have been living off the gravy train including all of Congress, the SC and just about every top and second level government employee in the US.
I think they can be forgiven for believing that their own people would never sell them out, don't you?
the fact that the Feral Reserve and the NSA were virtually unknowns to most of americans until the advent of the internet and the post 9-11 / Iraq invasion does show that try as hard as we did, by and large the apparatus of State Power was put into place while we were busy doing other things ... (as David Rockerfella famously congratulated the media bosses providing the cover and distractions)
the answer is to free up the nutrients that free the mind from the tyrannical ideas of power being worth the sacrifices of liberty to hold and metastasize ...
for starters, read all the Albert Hofmann, Sasha Shulgin, John Lilly and Terence McKenna you can find.... or just get on youtube and learn ...oh, here's the protip of the day,
get the podcasts over @ psychedelicsalon.com
The day soon arrives when every company is a "financial."
Banbait #88
Protocols 4:4 "...But again, in order that freedom may once for all disintegrate and ruin the communities of the GOYIM, we must put industry on a speculative basis: the result of this will be that what is withdrawn from the land by industry will slip through the hands and pass into speculation, that is, to our classes."
Like a fruitcake, A little of everything is in there.
+1 Financial fluff