Archives: December 2011

IMF: World Economy at ‘Dangerous Juncture’

Editor’s Note: The IMF should know; they’re the ones moving the chess pieces in this game…

chief Christine Lagarde warned Tuesday that the world economy is at a “very dangerous juncture,” speaking of the potential impact on poorer nations during her first visit to Africaas head of the fund.

The International Monetary Fund managing director spoke of a crisis of confidence with high unemployment and slowing global growth.

“Currently the world economy stands at a very dangerous juncture,” Lagarde told a roundtable on Africa’s economic future in the Nigerian city of Lagos.

She said the IMF’s revised global growth forecast expected in January looked to be lower than the previous one in September, which was four percent, already down from June’s outlook.

“And what’s more, there are downside risks on the horizon that are really threatening the recovery process that had started” after the 2008-09 global financial crisis, she said.

The IMF has said Europe’s worsening economy and financial market turmoil meant it will revise downwards its predictions for global growth contained in its World Economic Outlook report published three months ago.

Early this month, the UN cut its 2012 world growth forecast to 2.6 percent from 3.6 percent, warning that the global economy is “teetering on the brink of a major downturn”.

Lagarde said on Monday during meetings with Nigerian officials that the European debt crisis posed a risk for “all economies of the world”.

The eurozone debt crisis eased slightly Tuesday with an agreement on extra funds for the IMF, strong data from Germany and a good bond sale in Spain which boosted stocks and the euro.

The IMF also said Tuesday that bailed-out Ireland was on track to complete its budget turnaround after the fund completed a fourth review.

But the broader deal on funds for the IMF — aimed at allowing the crisis lender to come to the aid of European nations caught up in the debt crisis — fell short of targets, with Britain again out of line with its EU neighbours.

Lagarde did not comment directly on the new pledges of funds from European nations for the IMF, nor did she respond to a question on Britain’s stance on the issue.

She said during the roundtable in Lagos that European leaders “have made some very strong decisions” but added later that “it’s going to boil down to implementation”.

Lagarde spoke of the impact on trade and finance, among other areas, that could cause trouble across the globe, and called on wealthy nations to enact policies that would send clear positive signals to investors and consumers.

“Those problems seem a world away but they are not a world away because what we see very clearly is channels of contagion between those advanced economies and the rest of the world,” she told the audience in Nigeria.

She earlier held talks with Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan after meeting Finance Minister Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, a respected former World Bank managing director who also participated in Tuesday’s roundtable.

Nigeria has long been held back by corruption and mismanagement despite its vast oil wealth.

Most of its population lives on less than $2 per day and electricity blackouts occur daily, while the country’s mainly Muslim north has been hit by scores of deadly attacks attributed to Islamist group Boko Haram.

The government is seeking to enact reforms, including a deeply controversial measure which would lead to an increase in petrol prices, to allow the country to invest more in its badly neglected infrastructure.

Lagarde later left Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation and largest oil producer, and travelled to neighbouring Niger, one of the world’s poorest countries and heavily dependent on trade with Europe, particularly France.

On Wednesday she was due to meet President Mahamadou Issoufou at 1100 GMT and deliver a speech on economic challenges amid the global uncertainty at 1500 GMT before the National Assembly.

Lagarde is also expected to visit South Africa, the economic powerhouse of sub-Saharan Africa, in the coming weeks.

A Look Behind the Paradigms – Andy Sutton

Co-Authored by Gregory Olson, CEO – GRO Enterprises

One of the traps all analysts fall into from time to time is their inability to see the forest through the trees. We are all guilty of this from time to time, and those who would deny this simple reality only set themselves up to miss important changes in the paradigms in which they operate.  Perhaps the most famous example of this happened in the life and times of Christopher Columbus. We’re sure you recall the mental model of that time; that the Earth was flat. Many very wise people in Columbus’ day felt he was going to sail the Nina, the Pinta, and the Santa Maria right off the edge of the Earth. And there are many other classic examples as well.

Today, we might call such a condition extreme dogmatism, which is essentially the clinging to a belief or set of beliefs despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary. These days we find the same type of dogmatism in our world. The belief that we can spend our way to prosperity is one. The belief that we can do so with borrowed money is another. However, even within the knowledge that both of these positions are completely reliant on fantasy, there is the danger to just pin our trust on the opposite side of the argument without really taking the time to consider what exactly we are espousing.

So one of the questions we obviously need to ask ourselves constantly is ‘what are we missing here?’ In looking at the current debt situation, we tend to focus on the ‘national debt’ and its continuing rise, but in truth, the national debt or public debt as it is also called is only a very small part of the total picture. The truth is it goes way beyond that. We have focused several times on consumer debt, and even that is only another small portion of the overall picture. Back in 2008, leverage was the word of the day and everyone was wrapped up in talking about which bank was leveraged the most. Guesstimates of 100:1 were flying around with regard to certain of the biggies that eventually would require an adrenaline shot to the heart in the form of the commitment of years of future GDP just to keep them alive.

The truth is that the debt problem is systemic. For the purposes of this paper, we are not going to even look at the future in terms of unfunded liabilities. Most understand that bleak picture fairly well. Instead we’re going to look at current information as reported by the (non)USFed and USTreasury. And when we’re done, we’re going to float the all-important question. Sorry, but you’ll need to read the rest of the paper to find out what that is. The balance of this essay is going to be from email conversations between Greg and Andy on this issue. The reaches were far and wide, but hopefully this will help readers to expand their thinking even further. Those that recognize the problems are becoming greater in number on a daily basis. Our goal is to enhance that understanding and hopefully to motivate people to action in their own lives where real reforms can take place. Starting at the top and working our way down has proven to be almost totally ineffective, and frustrating on top of it. Many people who have gone to ‘End the Fed’ rallies have come home euphoric, but that energy has dissipated quickly as they’ve seen the bankers just wave it all off and continue to sell our children and grandchildren into…. yes, debt slavery. So a bottom up fix it must be. And if you’re in a good spot, chances are you know a lot of people who aren’t. Encourage them to throw down the proverbial chains and dare to be free.

Here are some of the quotes from our email discussions. We only ask that you use/distribute this to enhance understanding of the reality of the current situation.

[Gregory Olson] “I’m not an economist, and in a way I’m glad I’m not.  I can look at the numbers with fresh open views without being forced into pre-defined boxes learned in college.  For example, after looking at the GDP, mortgages, and interest rates over 40 years, I don’t believe the interest rates have anything to do with the economy, but the Federal Reserve sets them for their own agendas.  The Fed slipped that fact out by their declaring the rates will not be raised for two more years.  The statement proves they are in complete control of the rates, not the markets.  Otherwise, they would not have said it so confidently.   In fact, if you look at the prime rate for the last 40 years, it changes direction like clockwork on average about every 5.5 years.  This leads one to believe on the surface that there are “cycles” in the economy, when the GDP is not affected significantly by the changes. 

Over the summer when I saw this pattern (or should I say no causal relationship), I pegged that the next year of change of the interest rates is about 2013.  One month later, sure enough, that is the exact time they are going to change the rates.  Basically, it means the Fed is full of BS, and they have deliberately lowered the rates, added debt, and then they will claim the market is raising the rates, when indeed, they are planning on doing it themselves to bankrupt the United States and set up an one world government.  The data does not support the Keynesian views at all in terms of the impact of inflation and interest rates.  Indeed, though it can’t be proven, I believe the spike in rates in 1970 was the Fed’s way to get us conditioned to ridiculously high interest rates on credit cards, which were being introduced into the economy at that time.  The prime rate decreases in the 1980s, but the credit card rates did not. 

The strategy was extremely successful.  I believe this is the correct answer based on the law of supply and demand.  There is no “economic law” when it comes to a fiat system, because the money supply is unlimited, removing the natural laws of the universe.  The Fed actually knows how the “real laws” work, but they lie about it and use the system to steal and cheat, profiting from the deception.  They deliberately lie, so they can control the rate.  So they (the Fed) feed the university economists and Ph.Ds junk ideas, based on their man-made system, claiming it follows the universal law of supply and demand, when it does not. 

So I’m glad I’m not an economist, and I can look at the data and think out of the box like this.  The “stagnation” idiot ideas of the 70s to explain the “inflation” that didn’t fit into the Keynesian models is simply a way to force fit an explanation that hides the more accurately and simple explanation, which is, the Fed raises and lowers the interest rate at its own bidding, to secretly promote their own hidden agendas. 

If I’m wrong about the interest rates, then prove it from the data over 50 years to me; I’m all ears. The data does not support a free market economy at all!  It supports a manipulated one.   The bottom line is the fiat system does not follow demand and supply laws because the money supply is unlimited, circumventing natural law. 

We’ve been duped.  That’s what I’ve concluded so far, among other things.

At first I thought everyone should know about this, or that the government should take control of the rate itself to prevent it from rising in two years according to the Federal Reserves’ hidden strategy.  (They will raise it 2 or 3 points to bankrupt the US and say it’s market forces driving it, doing the famous double-talk).  Then I realized the Fed has us over a barrel.  If we now let that idea gain traction, the credibility of the United States will be shot, and the whole globe will blame us and our greedy Fed for the world’s financial problems, and nobody will want our dollars.  So down goes the United States by telling the truth.

On the other hand, maybe telling the truth is better, and we should take the world’s rejection and transition slowly to a better system after being thrown into bankruptcy and poverty.”

[Andy Sutton] “I agree 100% there; the Fed has clearly used interest rates and the money supply to manipulate the economy. The irony is that the Fed was allegedly created to eliminate the prior boom-bust cycles, bank panics, and other financial and economic dislocations. It has done nothing but take those cycles and amplify them by an order of magnitude. Then when it all goes bad, the consumer is blamed – aka the ‘roaring 20s’ and the housing ‘crisis’. Sure, consumers signed the dotted line in both instances and so they’re ultimately responsible, but there was a good deal of misinformation propagated by the banking syndicate and the media to entice people to make bad decisions. Terms weren’t properly disclosed, nor were conflicts of interest. There was little due diligence on either part, but the bankers knew something the consumers didn’t. They knew (because of history) that when push came to shove that they would be made whole – at the consumer’s expense. Want proof? Just take a look at the government’s actions with regard to the scads of bank failures back in the early 1800s. Every time the banks over issued scrip and precipitated a run, the government bailed them out by allowing them to default rather than forcing them to come up with the silver that was owed to the depositors. Save Andrew Jackson, every instance of bad behavior resulted in a ‘bailout’. This is common knowledge in banking circles, but not consumer circles. A classic case of imperfect information. Would consumers have cared? I’ll give you two guesses, but you’ll only need one. So there is plenty of blame to go around on this one.

As to your comments about being an ‘economist’, I have been called one many times, but it is a title/label I really bristle at to be honest, mostly because of guilt by association. I reject all of Keynesianism out of hand, but that is a subtlety that many people don’t pick up on because all they know is Keynesianism. It is the prevailing thought process taught at all levels of education, with very few exceptions.

I think a final point here is that this is not ‘our’ Fed. That institution is owned by and large by 12 large banks that have no loyalty to any flag or other sovereign power including God Almighty. I have said this before, that they are men without a country, but seek to conquer all countries. I was having a conversation with a client yesterday and he mentioned a quote and I can’t attribute it to the author, but it is a very good one – Give a man a gun and he can rob a bank, but give a man a bank and he can rob the world.”

[Gregory Olson] “ I appreciate your attention to this important topic.  Bernanke let the cat out of the bag by his declaration of holding interest rates stable for two years.  I have vacillated over the solution of turning the setting of the rate to the government, rather than to a private banking cartel, wondering if it’s too late or not.  Your thoughts will be helpful to hear.

Indeed, these people are not stupid, and Bernanke’s comment appears to be a threat of sorts, in an extremely subtle manner, to those who are paying attention.  Those who want the United States to go down must be celebrating right now. He is communicating congratulations to those who are on his side. Their victory is only two or three years away. That is the message to them. After working on the destruction of the freedom of the United States for more than one hundred years, they no doubt are delighted to see the end in sight.”

[Andy Sutton] “That said, the interest rate conundrum is an interesting one because for a long time, there were two rate markets really – the manipulated short end (Fed Funds / Discount Rate) and the ‘free market’ long end from about one year out. So in theory, the USFed could drive the short end, but not the long end. I have opined and others have demonstrated that the USFed has been messing with the long end for a while now according to its own agenda. Those in charge certainly couldn’t give a rip about the US economy beyond its ability to further enrich them.

This said, I am not sure there is much to be gained by debating out the minutia of economic manipulations. We know the basic principles. Nobody borrows their way to prosperity, etc. There is no free lunch. These are facts. We can base what we do around them and leave the rest to the quants. I enjoy playing with the numbers just to try to understand a little deeper what is really going on and I suspect you’re the same way. In either case, if you know the trend, it is your friend. I think the biggest problem with returning monetary policy to the Congress at this point is that those people are also bought and paid for by the same people that own Bernanke, et al. So it really doesn’t matter. Congress certainly isn’t equipped to deal with this complex a monetary environment and that was done intentionally in my opinion to make it harder to dissolve the banking cartel.

As evidence of the inability of Congress to manage a complex environment, I’ll present several policy gaffes, namely the stimulus, which just prolonged the inevitable, the TARP mess, which further unequally yoked us to this corrupt system, and a complete failure to bring ANYONE to justice over the 2008 mess, and more recently the MF Global blowup. Although to be fair, the subpoenas just started flying and the denials by Corzine and others have only begun. I have zero confidence in Congress, given the fact that they allow Bernanke to testify on a regular basis and blatantly lie, refuse to provide information, and obfuscate without nary a word of protest. Congress would have a hard time managing a lemonade stand in my view, let alone interest rates. The only real answer there is to return rates to an unencumbered free market and take what comes with it. It certainly can’t be worse than what we’re dealing with now.”

The US Debt Mix

[Gregory Olson] The following numbers and graphs show the root cause of the financial problems of the US economy today and how we got there.  The Federal Reserve, or whoever had responsibility for the debt mix of the United States from 1946 to 2008, decided to reduce the % of government debt in favor of rapidly increasing debts in the financial sector, mortgages, the foreign sector, and the household sector, while simultaneously decreasing the business operational debt.  Only the business sector produces real wealth in the economy.   It is clear the economy has been manipulated by man to create cash from nothing, producing multiple bubbles in the economy as the fabricated cash changed into different forms over time.  The business sector cannot sustain the debt trends, and thereof, the economy has hit its financial limits.  Trading financial paper and flipping a home mortgage 4 times in 30 years does not create real wealth.  Rather, it inflates home prices. 

Please note, rather than the banks losing interest income due to decreasing debt after 2008 in mortgages, the household sector, and the financial sector, they have opted to increase government borrowing, swapping one debt for another one.  Otherwise, the total debt would actually have decreased after 2007.  Credit cards and mortgages decreased, for example.  The banks are not motivated to allow the total debt to decrease.  Thus, in spite of the economic troubles of the United States of America, the banks still have managed to keep the debt growing to sustain their income.   Tilt.  Game over.

Debt Breakdown

Debt By Sector

Debt Percentages

[Andy Sutton] Whether people want to admit it or not, the above chart shows a definite separation between debt and GDP in the 1970s, starting around 1974. Most conventional logic would tie this divergence into the abandonment of the gold standard, and for the most part, that is correct. It is very applicable, especially when considering the discipline that even the pseudo-gold standard imposed on the system at that point in time. Our external debts were still settled in gold prior to August 15, 1971. But there is likely a lot more at work here, and that is the agenda of the international bankers and their policy tool, the USFed.  When considering the big picture, it becomes fairly obvious that the gold really didn’t go to other countries per se, but rather into the pockets and vaults of the banking syndicate. They knew all along that eventually the US would run out of gold to settle foreign trade deficits. It wasn’t an accident, like most conventional sources of news and history books will try to assert. This was all part of the agenda, from the very beginning. It reeks of incrementalism, which is the signature of most subversive movements in history.

Total Debt / GDP

[Andy Sutton] The above chart is really a paradigm buster, when you think of all the emphasis that has been placed on the last several years and the massive ramp-up of America’s public debt. That ramping up can be seen clearly in the chart, but the debt profile has become much more even, with all areas of the system coming under equal pressure and more and more parties ‘making payments’ on various expenditures. This is a fiat money system’s dream come true: everyone making payments. These payments require real labor and other inputs to pay back something that was created from nothing.

The $56 Trillion Question

With all of this information out there, the obvious question becomes this: who exactly is all of this ‘money’ owed to anyway? The quick answer would be the banks, but if you look at them, they’re in hoc too. Sure, Ma and Pa Kettle owe the commercial banking side of BofA $150,000 for the mortgage, and another $25,000 in credit cards, while the investment banking side of BofA owes untold billions to who? Who exactly is the counterparty to all this debt? Who exactly are we committing at present count roughly 4 years of aggregate economic output to pay off? This debt is claiming our country, our families, our kids, and our way of life and we don’t feel that we’re overstating this in the least. Since we can’t even effectively answer this question in a specific manner, wouldn’t it seem prudent to rid yourself of as much of the ‘making payments’ mentality as humanly possible?

Greg Olson is the CEO of GRO Enterprises; a company devoted to helping people spend money at optimal levels, removing all debts in 12 years or less, including the home mortgage.  His company develops software solutions to unleash the power of spending money.  He has an Accounting degree and a MBA and has worked in finance for companies such IBM, CBS, Fox, and Paramount before changing his career focus to personal finances.

Jon Corzine – Permanent Amnesia

Editor’s Note: “No I don’t know where the money is”.. “No, I didn’t intend to break any rules”.. Does anyone really believe a word that comes out of the former Goldman boy’s mouth???

As the first former U.S. senator to be subpoenaed by Congress in more than a century, Jon Corzine testified Thursday about the “last chaotic days” of MF Global, the trading firm that declared bankruptcy under his watch.

Corzine said he was “stunned” to learn that the firm could not locate hundreds of millions of dollars in client money in the days before the firm’s collapse, and said he had no idea where the money had gone.

Corzine was chief executive of MF Global when the firm filed for bankruptcy protection Oct. 31. He resigned from his post five days later.

“I simply do not know where the money is or why the accounts have not been reconciled to date,” he said in testimony before the House Agriculture Committee.

Client money should have been held in segregated accounts separate from those involving the firms’ own trading activity. The disappearance of the money has led to speculation that MF Global used customer funds to shore up risky bets on European sovereign debt.

“I never intended to break any rules,” Corzine said when asked whether he had ever authorized a transfer of customer funds from segregated accounts.

“There were an extraordinary number of transactions during MF Global’s last few days, and I do not know, for example, whether there were operational errors at MF Global or elsewhere, or whether banks and counterparties have held onto funds that should rightfully have been returned to MF Global,” Corzine said.

Corzine said he “strongly advocated” the trading strategy that led MF Global to accumulate more than $6 billion in holdings in European sovereign debt. But he said the company’s sovereign debt positions were not the cause of the firm’s collapse.

The sovereign debt was “a concern to the marketplace, make no mistake about that,” Corzine said. But he said customers’ confidence in the firm also was rattled by ratings downgrades and a failure on the part of MF Global management to communicate the reasons for the company’s struggles.

“It often got conflated with Euro-sovereign positions, which there actually were no losses in,” he said.

Just When You Thought You’d Seen it All – Andy Sutton

As I wrote in the last installment regarding the situation in Europe, matters are progressing there much more quickly now as the continent sways back and forth between financial oblivion and a nervous peace brought about by paper promises (yes, paper promises) by central banks around the world. The purpose of this article is not to focus on the behind the scenes of these actions – we’ve already done that, but to examine some of the other outlying issues that are rarely mentioned.

Here in America, we are truly whistling past the graveyard. The financial press cannot stumble over itself enough to constantly remind us how extravagantly we spent money during this past week. The American shopper is back. Really? I still point at various consumer confidence polls, personal income numbers, and general indebtedness and wonder where the juice is coming from for all this consumer spending.

Manufactured Metrics?

One thing that has finally begun to see the light of day is the fact that many of our economic metrics have been and are being manipulated for the sake of public opinion. I’ve covered retail sales, labor market statistics, and GDP ad nauseum in these pages. Well, yesterday zerohedge made a posting showing three more important metrics – and the chicanery becomes even more obvious. In each case (ADP Employment Report, Chicago PMI, and Pending Home Sales), the reported number came in at a minimum of 4 standard deviations above the consensus. What does this mean?

Various media outlets, like Bloomberg, solicit predictions from economists and economic research firms on various economic data series. They take all the estimates and come up with a consensus forecast, which is essentially the average of the estimates they receive. They show the consensus and the range. Then when the actual number is reported, they show that as well. So in the series listed above economists were either off by 4SD or else something is seriously wrong. I think we all understand that the forecasts are never going to be precise on any regular basis, but to miss by 4SD? You could almost blindfold the forecasters and have them throw darts at a wall and get closer than this.

ADP Forecast Consensus

Chicago PMI Consensus

Pending Home Sales Consensus

To drive home the significance of these events, occurrences that are 4 standard deviations from the mean are generally considered ‘outliers’. They are spurious type events that really have no basis in the underlying process. Many times such observations are thrown out depending on the type of study being done. So to have three of them occur within a relatively short time window is a rather big deal. Big enough of a deal that it should at least be a page 2 type news event since there is something obviously wrong with either the forecasting methodology, the reporting methodology – or both

The obvious conclusion here – and zerohedge pointed this out very eloquently – is that we’re being fed a line of baloney and that these ‘positive’ numbers are being reported to keep up the illusion that the economy is recovering when in fact it is not. So, all this said, what about the cyber Monday blitz? I can tell you this much.  I have contacts at both UPS and Fedex and they are seeing very high shipping volume right now. People are in fact spending an awful lot of money. At this point, it appears as though a much smaller proportion of the country is doing the majority of the spending. We’ll see how much of this was on credit in the months to come.  It certainly doesn’t appear as though most people are even bothered by what is going on in the Eurozone even though it affects us directly. They seem either less bothered or less willing to admit that the movie now playing in Europe is coming to their neighborhood theater – and sooner than they’d like.

The Great Liquidity Pump – Take 12

One of the most important issues of all with regard to the Eurozone and its systemic crisis is the prognosis for economic growth. One might wonder why that even matters at this point since the Euro is on the ropes, banks from Paris to Rome to Budapest are in trouble, and nobody seems to have answers. Make no mistake about this – the Eurozone cannot be bailed out; at least not without causing a dislocation of equal magnitude somewhere else. There have been several mainstream economists making the TV circuit asserting that the US could bailout Europe. Really? Many of these same people will use the IMF/World Bank model to make the case for the bailout of the EU. Not going to happen. Not without dislocations. What did take place is that the USFed (among others) stepped in and said it would provide what are essentially unlimited ‘loans’ to European banks to stave off the crisis.

Now we’re back to the coup situation I discussed last time. Is it becoming more clear how this all works? By virtually ignoring the prospects for economic growth in the Eurozone, the central bankers are going to foist a tab on the people of those countries that they will be hard pressed to get out from under for generations – if ever. Economic growth is the one way that a country can pay off its debts. Growth, coupled with sound fiscal behavior, creates surpluses and those surpluses can be used to pay down debt. No economic growth means no paying down debt. The IMF is forecasting that the Eurozone will re-enter recession in 2012. I will assert here that the EU never left the recession that started back in late 2007. I’ve showed the data for the US; and the EU has clearly followed suit.

Much of the way the crisis is being handled in Europe is along the same lines as what was done here in America back in 2008. Focus was placed largely on saving banks whose bets had gone terribly wrong. Only cursory attention was given to the macroeconomic picture and you can easily see what happened here. We now have fat banks, bursting with ‘profits’ thanks to bailouts and accounting rule changes (FASB Rule 157, etc) while we have an economy that is still churning out foreclosed homes faster than a broken widget machine. Trading revenue is up at the big wire houses while our kids are paying over 10% on student loans and Mr. and Mrs. America are shelling out an average of 14% on credit card debt. This is precisely what is going to happen in Europe. And to make matters worse, the people of those countries are going to be on the hook for the bill, much in the same way we are on the hook for 2008.

And oddly enough, the same pledges were made back on September 16 of this year. Quoting a Bloomberg News article:

“The Bank of England joined the US Federal Reserve, the European Central Bank, the Swiss National Bank and the Bank of Japan on Thursday to announce that they would flood money markets with dollars over the coming months.

The move, on the third anniversary of the collapse of the US investment bank Lehman Brothers, sent shares soaring in banks heavily exposed to debt default by Greece and the other struggling members of the 17-nation Eurozone. The euro, which had been falling in recent days, rebounded, rising roughly 1% in European trading on Thursday.

Speaking in Washington, Christine Lagarde, the president of the International Monetary Fund, said: “They [the banks] are getting together and acting together. To me, that is the most important message.”

Perhaps the biggest untold byline of yesterday’s aberrant policy decision by central bankers was to point out that first it was illegal for our fed to do what it did. It has two mandates: price stability and maximum employment. Printing untold trillions to bail out banks in the Eurozone hardly seems like a recipe to ensure price stability to me. And they haven’t exactly done a banner job on the employment side either. So when government figures and policy analysts say that no taxpayer monies are being used, they are only partially correct. In fact it is much worse than if they had simply given over a year’s tax receipts to the ECB for the purposes of stemming the tide.

It is not so much your money that has been pledged to this completely unworthy endeavor, rather it is your future labor. You will work harder, longer, and enjoy less fruits of that labor all in the name of preserving the status quo of a financial system that will only be back for another round of feeding once the shock from these events has worn off.

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