Corruption
Guest Post: Has The Perfect Moment To Kill The Dollar Arrived?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/07/2012 08:45 -0500- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- Central Banks
- China
- Corruption
- ETC
- Eurozone
- Federal Reserve
- France
- Global Economy
- Greece
- Guest Post
- Iran
- Israel
- Italy
- LIBOR
- Martial Law
- Meltdown
- MSNBC
- National Debt
- Obama Administration
- Quantitative Easing
- Reality
- Reserve Currency
- Reuters
- SWIFT
- TARP
- Trigger Event
- Unemployment
The idea of “collapse”, social and financial, comes with an incredible array of hypothetical consequences ranging from public dissent and martial law, to the complete disintegration of infrastructure and the devolution of mankind into a swarm of mindless arm chewing cannibals. In an age of television nirvana and cinema overload, I have found that the collective unconscious of our culture has now defined what collapse is based only on the most narrow of extremes. If they aren’t being hunted down by machete wielding looters or swastika wearing jackboots, then the average American dupe figures that the country is not in much danger. Hollywood fantasy has blinded us to the tangible crises at our doorstep. In 2012, we still await that trigger event, which I believe will be the announcement of QE3 (or any unlimited stimulus program regardless of title), and the final debasement of the dollar. At the beginning of this year, I pointed out that we were likely to see such an announcement before 2012 was out, and it would seem that the private Federal Reserve is right on track. Last month, the Fed announced that it was formulating a plan to “expand its tool kit”.
Guest Post: What Democracy?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/05/2012 11:33 -0500
Rather than give the people a voice, democracy allows for the choking of life by men and women of state authority. When Occupy protestors were chanting “this is what democracy looks like” last fall, they wrongly saw the power of government as the best means to alleviate poverty. What modern day democracy really looks like is endless bailouts, special privileges, and imperial warfare all paid for on the back of the common man. None of this is to suggest that a transition to real democracy is the answer. The popular adage of democracy being “two wolves and lamb voting on what’s for lunch” is undeniably accurate. A system where one group of people can vote its hands into another’s pockets is not economically sustainable. Democracy’s pitting of individuals against each other leads to moral degeneration and impairs capital accumulation. It is no panacea for the rottenness that follows from centers of power. True human liberty with respect to property rights is the only foundation from which civilization can grow and thrive.
Will We Have to Wait for a 21st Century Peasants’ Revolt Before Seeing Any Real Change?
Submitted by George Washington on 08/04/2012 14:21 -0500Will the Peasants Go Medieval?
Roosevelt: “To Dissolve the Unholy Alliance Between Corrupt Business and Corrupt Politics is the First Task”
Submitted by George Washington on 08/02/2012 13:05 -0500A Fight Both Liberals and Conservatives Can Rally Around ...
In Gold, Silver, Diamonds, & Stock Markets, Controlling Perception is the Banker Weapon Du Jour
Submitted by smartknowledgeu on 08/02/2012 04:48 -0500- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- Capital Markets
- Central Banks
- Citigroup
- Corruption
- European Central Bank
- Fail
- Financial Derivatives
- Fisher
- Great Depression
- John Maynard Keynes
- KIM
- Market Crash
- Maynard Keynes
- New York Times
- Purchasing Power
- Real estate
- Reality
- Recession
- recovery
- SmartKnowledgeU
- Volatility
When it comes to building wealth, muddying the difference between perception and reality is the key manipulation tool that banksters use to goad people into wrong choices.
The Main Driver of GDP Growth: A Strong Rule of Law
Submitted by George Washington on 07/30/2012 15:39 -0500GDP Growth More Strongly Correlated with Rule of Law than Anything Else ...
The Unbearable 'Factual' Lightness Of The Chinese Economy
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/30/2012 11:02 -0500
Factual data point after factual data point is indicating more than a little stress in the Chinese economy (and the Asian engine of growth in general). Whether it is bank loan losses escalating, shadow-banking stress, real-estate corruption, dismal retail spending, the shrinking textile industry, the artificial production in the crushingly slow metals industry, the construction industry's contraction, or the massive '50%-above-demand' channel-stuffing now occurring in the Chinese auto market, Diapason Commodity's Sean Corrigan succinctly notes: "China bulls will not heed any of this, of course, for they are prisoners of the nested illusion that all increases in outlay represent genuine growth (cf, Occidental property bubbles) and that higher growth must imply greater profitability. They will also argue, on any uptick in the macro numbers, that the worst is not only behind us, but that it has been more than fully priced in." Given a picture paints a thousand words; Asian trade volumes have ended their rebound and are now exhausted, just as Chinese authorities are still giving off signals that they will not repeat the indiscriminate orgy of spending of 2009-10.
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
Corrupt Government Officials Should Be In Jail … Alongside Corrupt Banksters
Submitted by George Washington on 07/26/2012 19:38 -0500Those who Benefited from Wall Street Fraud Must be Prosecuted … Including Rogue Government Officials who Aided and Abetted the Crimes
Guest Post: 4 Reasons Why You Should Stop Believing In Chinese Leadership
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/26/2012 12:23 -0500
Did you know that Chinese government officials are all corrupt? Did you know that many of Chinese statistics look either weird or totally unreliable to a point that even the Vice Premier can’t help admitting it? People outside of China have never really trusted the Chinese Communist Party as far as politics are concerned, and probably never will. However, the seemingly unstoppable growth engine of China has produced a remarkable level of complacency among investors that China is going to do well. While recent economic data from China are mixed at best, the market consensus is unanimously biased towards believing that the second quarter is the bottom. We do not understand the reasons behind the faith in the Chinese leadership as far as running the economy is concerned. Here are a few reasons why you should just stop believing in the Chinese leadership when it comes to running the economy.
Fed “Independence” Is a Scam … And No Reason to Prevent a Full Audit
Submitted by George Washington on 07/25/2012 00:53 -0500- AIG
- Alan Grayson
- Alan Greenspan
- B+
- Bank of New York
- Bernie Sanders
- Cato Institute
- Central Banks
- Consumer protection
- Corruption
- CPI
- Dell
- ETC
- Excess Reserves
- Federal Reserve
- Federal Reserve Bank
- Federal Reserve Bank of New York
- Foreign Central Banks
- General Electric
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Grayson
- Great Depression
- Housing Bubble
- John Paulson
- Joseph Stiglitz
- Lehman
- Lehman Brothers
- Monetary Policy
- Money Supply
- Morgan Stanley
- national security
- Paul Volcker
- Private Equity
- Quantitative Easing
- recovery
- Regional Banks
- Ron Paul
- San Francisco Fed
- Steny Hoyer
- TARP
- Testimony
- Transparency
- Unemployment
- World Bank
Independent from Congress … or from the American People?
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.
Guest Post: You’ll Love The New Nickname They Have For The Dollar Here…
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/23/2012 11:27 -0500
No doubt, Eastern Europe is a part of the world where people are accustomed to being abused by politicians. After decades of Soviet Rule, the cultures in places like Ukraine, Moldova, Azerbaijan, Belarus, etc. have been inculcated with a strong mistrust of government. All government. One obvious sign of this is how little confidence people have in their own national currencies. Here in Ukraine, for example, people who have any level of wealth whatsoever hold hard currency– dollars and euros, rather than the local hryvna. (Naturally, their relative confidence in dollars and euros is misplaced, though I was pleased to see that gold is starting to penetrate the cultural psyche here.) They even have a funny nickname for these regional currencies that get inflated and devalued by corrupt central bankers and politicians– rabbits… because they grow and multiply in such huge numbers so quickly. As two different economics students this weekend told me, ‘we are starting to look at the US dollar in the same way…’ I guess that makes the euro a dodo bird.
Floodgates Open As Four More Spanish Regions Seek Bailout; German Nürburgring Faces Bankruptcy
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/22/2012 09:36 -0500Even as Europe has become an utterly dysfunctional experiment in everything relating to modern economics and monetary theory, it has one redeeming feature: it has proven that the Defection regime under Game Theory is 100% correct. It says that once the defections from an unstable Nash equilibrium begin, there is no stopping until the entire system collapses under its own weight. This is precisely what has happened in Spain, where first Catalunya, then Valencia on Friday, and now virtually everyone else is set to demand a bailout. From Bloomberg: The Balearic Islands and Catalonia are among six Spanish regions that may ask for aid from the central government after Valencia sought a bailout, El Pais reported. Castilla-La-Mancha, Murcia, the Canary Islands and possibly Andalusia are also having difficulty funding themselves and some of these regions are studying plans to tap the recently created emergency-loan fund that Valencia said it would use yesterday, the newspaper said, without citing anyone."
Guest Post: The Eminent Domain Mortgage Heist
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/22/2012 08:22 -0500And you can restructure all you like, but many underwater homeowners with a serious income shortfall will still not be able to pay their mortgages. Who carries the can? If the mortgage has been sold on then the loss will be on the new owner. In reality this is far more likely to be the taxpayer. Simply, the taxpayer may well end up carrying the can for a whole lot of bust mortgages. What Taibbi — who usually has a very good sense of moral hazard — and MRP effectively seem to be considering is not only the continuation and expansion of Kelo, but also potentially the transfer of liability from bust irresponsible lenders to the taxpayer. While this is sure to enrich the bureaucracy and well-connected insiders — and admittedly, while it may help some underwater homeowners — it seems incredibly risky for the taxpayer. While debt-forgiveness is one way out of the debt trap, we should be careful and recognise that many so-called debt-forgiveness schemes may instead be dressed-up scams and frauds that end up enriching special interests while putting the taxpayer deeper into a hole.






