Federal Reserve = private counterfeiting = massive inflation = Zimbabwe

Nelson

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From now on, think of the US as a bigger Zimbabwe

"I've been condemned by traditional economists who say printing money drives inflation," observed Gideon Gono last month. "But once the IMF advised America to print money, I decided God was on my side and had come to vindicate me."

By Liam Halligan
Last Updated: 7:32PM GMT 21 Mar 2009

For readers who may not know, Mr Gono is governor of the Central Bank of Zimbabwe. He'll be feeling particularly pious this weekend – as the mighty US has, indeed, just started printing money. We're supposed to call it "quantitative easing", I know. But if Mr Gono can tell it as it is, why can't we?

On Wednesday, the Federal Reserve finally pressed the panic button – unveiling plans to buy $300bn (?210bn) of treasury bills. The US government will also purchase an extra $750bn of dodgy sub-prime securities from investors stupid enough to own them (on top of $500bn already pledged).

The Fed's move sparked a 50 basis point drop in US 10-year government yields, while the dollar lost 3pc – its biggest one-day fall in more than two decades. This is monetary "shock and awe". Before last September's collapse of Lehman Brothers, America's monetary base amounted to 6pc of GDP. Wednesday's plan will swell that figure to 30pc.

Such unprecedented policies are needed, we are told, to "fight deflation". As regular readers know, I think deflation is largely a myth – an alibi for wildly expansionary fiscal and monetary policy concocted by Western governments and their media lackeys.

After all, where is deflation? Data released last week put annual US core inflation at no less than 4pc. So why is the Fed doing this, following the Bank of England's lead? Because the real solution – forcing banks to face the music, while rescheduling massive private and public debts – is too politically frightening for our so-called leaders to contemplate.

A decision has been made, but not announced: we'll inflate away our debts instead – another policy Mr Gono knows well. That's why gold, the ultimate inflation hedge, surged in response to the Fed's announcement.

Amidst this policy maelstrom, Barack Obama resorted to the comfort of Jay Leno's sofa last week. For a US President to appear on the well-known comedian's TV chat-show, at a time like this, shows the White House is now desperate.

America's economy is on a knife-edge, policy-making is out of control, and most posts in the Obama treasury team remain unfilled. Perhaps the President could sign up Mr Gono and Mr Leno? Could they really do any worse?
 

Nelson

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Zimbabwean dollar pronounced dead

HARARE, Zimbabwe, March 20 (UPI) -- Zimbabwean Finance Minister Tendai Biti told members of Parliament the country's currency was essentially dead.

"The death of the (Zimbabwean) dollar is a reality we have to live with," he said during a 2009 budget presentation. "Since October 2008, our national currency has become moribund,"

Along with his remarks, Biti announced "the removal of all foreign currency surrender requirements," New Ziana reported Friday.

Previously, Zimbabwe's central bank required currency traders to pay 5 percent of their gross earnings at the Zimbabwe dollar's exchange rate.

Inflation in Zimbabwe hit what has been called a "hyperinflation" rate, officially posted as 231 million percent, essentially wiping out the currency's value.
 

Nelson

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'Stimulus' = Deficit spending = Keynesianism = FAIL.

Lord Keynes was a British queer. He was a socialist, a Fabian socialist (one who believes in gradual, degree by degree expansion of government control over economy/society thru peaceful-democratic as opposed to communist-violent means). Keynes the queer ("In the long run we're all dead," so let's party like cock stars today and screw the future until we get AIDS and die) advised government to engage in what is usually called deficit spending. Deficit spending translates into "spend all the money you have and then borrow a boatload more and spend that too!" - THIS he advised as, cough, the way out of a recession!

It doesn't work. And that's not a matter of opinion, it's every bit as much a law as the law of gravity. It can't work.

What deficit spending does is GROW THE SIZE AND POWER OF GOVERNMENT. That is its real but undeclared aim. Use the crisis created by government (the financial meltdown brought on by Rep/Dem-backed money-printing flushed into housing/stocks thus inflating prices/creating an artificial unsustainable speculative bubble) as a pretext for EXPANDING government control over E-V-E-R-Y aspect of life.

That is the real mission behind borrowing and spending, as engaged in by Bush and now Obama, through the offices of the Federal Reserve. Don't be a partisan fool - both parties are owned by the people who give them their lifeblood, their operating funds. Both parties favored lowering credit standards to get unqualified thugz and invading aliens housing loans both greedy parties knew they weren't qualified to receive. Both parties and the media are on the same side - the side of massive, socialist, communist, one-world, totalitarian government, whatever you want to call it. If you're the average white sucker, that is, you get up each day and work for your living, you ought to be intelligent enough to perceive that government is essentially a conspiracy against YOU on behalf of the groups it is politically incorrect to criticize.

The end of the deficit-spending road, which leads thru the jungle of hyperinflation, is a dead currency, as currently on display in Zimbabwe, where they've finally given up the game of printing 100,000,000,000 notes and admitted the currency is kaput. Oh yes - accompanied by civilizational devolution back into third world conditions from which America was originally created by the one group you ARE allowed, nay encouraged, to criticize and legally discriminate against.

When the super rich are allowed to print money thru the fed, what they are doing is STEALING your money and enriching the government. one does well to keep in mind that government is an impressive and neutral term for what in reality is Clinton, Obama, Bush and his/her/their already-extremely-rich-but-wanting-to-get-richer cronies. Bush/Obama Inc. steals from you, if you work. It uses YOUR money, stolen directly thru taxation or indirectly thru legal counterfeiting via money-supply expansion, to buy more bureaucrats and dispense goodies to the scum lobbies keeping it in power.

Bush/Obama + the Fed + printing trillions of dollars = massive inflation (decreasing your purchasing power as you pay higher prices) + more government workers, more colonies of ghetto ferals, more wars for israel, more millions of Mexicans and other invader criminals.
 
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Nelson

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The way out of the mess we're in?

Stop printing money.

Shut down government departments.

Close the borders.

Get the troops out of Europe, Middle East and Asia.

Don't be fooled by the parties. There is no meaningful differnce between Obama and Bush any more than there is between Republicans and Democrats or Fox and MSNBC.
 

smurphy

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Thanks for bumping my thread, you darts-flinging twink.

Our team is 3-0 this season. I led the way for us last week in a drama-filled 7-6 upset over a superior opponent. It started well with 2-0 sweep in 301, finishing each game in 17 and 16 darts. Struggled a bit in cricket, then a put up a great fight in corker's choice against one of the top 3 people in the league. Lost it 2-1, but kept it close the whole way. Then threw a couple T's and and a T40 in doubles 501 on way to 2-1 win. It all came down to team 701 and we were not to be denied.

This week we play the worst team. One of our main guys is gone, but we should still have no problems getting to 4-0.

Thanks for asking!
 

Nelson

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Our team is 3-0 this season. I led the way for us last week in a drama-filled 7-6 upset over a superior opponent. It started well with 2-0 sweep in 301, finishing each game in 17 and 16 darts. Struggled a bit in cricket, then a put up a great fight in corker's choice against one of the top 3 people in the league. Lost it 2-1, but kept it close the whole way. Then threw a couple T's and and a T40 in doubles 501 on way to 2-1 win. It all came down to team 701 and we were not to be denied.

This week we play the worst team. One of our main guys is gone, but we should still have no problems getting to 4-0.

Thanks for asking!

You're welcome. What's a T?
 

Nelson

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The Weimar Way
Posted on March 23rd, 2009 by Patrick J. Buchanan

“The best way to destroy the capitalist system is to debauch the currency,” said Lord Keynes.

Ben Bernanke disagrees. A student of the Depression, the Fed chair appears far more fearful of deflation — a vicious cycle of falling prices, debt defaults, home foreclosures and rising unemployment.

Deflation is what America underwent in the 1930s. A Fed-created bubble burst, causing margin calls to go out to stockholders, who ran to their banks that, besieged, collapsed, wiping out a third of our money. As Milton Friedman, who won a Nobel for his thesis that the Federal Reserve caused the Great Depression, told PBS in 2000:

“For every $100 in paper money, in deposits, in cash, in currency, in existence in 1929, by the time you got to 1933 there was only about $65, $66 left. And that extraordinary collapse in the banking system, with about a third of the banks failing … with millions of people having their savings essentially washed out, that decline was utterly unnecessary.

“(T)he Federal Reserve had the power and the knowledge to have stopped that. And there were people at the time who were … urging them to do that. So it was … clearly a mistake of policy that led to the Great Depression.”

Is Bernanke fighting the war of 1929 in 2009? Surely, today, with the explosion in M1, the basic money supply, there is no shortage of dollars out there, even if they are not circulating fast enough.

To end our recession, Bernanke may be running an even greater risk: hyper-inflation. This has destroyed more nations than deflation or even depression.

Recall: It was French military intervention in the Ruhr in 1923, to force payment of war reparations, and Weimar’s decision to let the currency fall and pay the French in cheap marks that led to the wipeout of the German middle class, the discrediting of that democratic republic and the Munich beer-hall putsch of Adolf Hitler.

“The first panacea for a mismanaged nation,” said Ernest Hemingway, “is inflation of the currency; the second is war. Both bring a temporary prosperity; both bring a permanent ruin. But both are the refuge of political and economic opportunists.”

Which brings us to last week’s shocker.

The Fed will buy up $300 billion in long-term Treasury bonds and spend $750 billion more buying sub-prime mortgages to remove them from the balance sheets of ailing big banks, to get the banks lending again.

Bernanke is printing money to buy U.S. bonds.

This new gusher from the Fed, after the $700 billion TARP bailout, comes on top of a Congressional Budget Office estimate that this year’s deficit will be $1.85 trillion, 13.1 percent of gross domestic product, more than twice the share of the U.S. economy of the largest previous postwar deficit.

Concluding the dollar is being abandoned in a frantic Fed effort to stop the recession, markets reacted instantly. The dollar plunge was the steepest since the Plaza Agreement of 1985. Gold shot up to $950 an ounce. Silver had a 12 percent run-up, the sharpest ever. Oil prices surged above $50 a barrel. Commodity markets advanced.

The Fed seems to have confirmed the fears of Premier Wen Jiabao, who said that China is “definitely a little worried” about the value of the U.S. bonds Beijing has purchased with the dollars piled up from her trade surpluses with the United States.

Can one blame the Chinese? They have already been burned on their U.S. investments. And if the defense of the dollar against its ancient enemy inflation is being abandoned, and protecting the dollar is to take a back seat to the Fed’s fight to avoid deflation, than it is indeed time to get out of the dollar and dollar-denominated assets.

For inflation is theft. It make liars and cheats of governments. By eroding the value of a currency, inflation punishes savers and creditors and rewards debtors. And what nation is the biggest debtor of them all? The United States of America.

Insidiously, inflation consumes the value of cash, savings, municipal bonds, corporate bonds, Treasury bonds, and T-bills. Friends who lent America money, who bought our debt in good faith, are robbed and made fools of, while speculators who bet against America by shorting the dollar in the currency markets are vastly rewarded.

Given the $3.6 trillion budget Obama plans, the $1.8 trillion in red ink he will run by Oct. 1 and the trillions the Fed is pumping into the economy, gross domestic product should spike, as it did after the far smaller stimulus package of 2008

We will feel a healthy glow, and folks will begin to sing, “Happy Days Are Here Again.”

Yet one senses that we are doing again exactly what we have done before in this generation. Rather than endure the pain and accept the sacrifices to cure us of our addiction, we are going back to the heroin. And this time, with Dr. Bernanke handling the needle, we may just overdose.
 
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