Written by Jeff Nielson: How do you “stretch” an ounce of gold? Obviously if you want an answer to that question you ask the bankers.
Bankers have earned
their generalized contempt in our societies, going back literally
thousands of years. Formerly known as the “money-changers”, their
Original Sin is well-known to anyone who has studied the history of
these professional thieves.
As
money-changers, they would graciously offer to “hold” peoples’ (heavy,
bulky) gold for them; and exchange that for their convenient,
light-as-a-feather “gold certificates.” Always the banksters would end
up issuing far more certificates for gold than they actually had the gold to cover – and “fractional-reserve banking” was invented.
Eventually
the insatiable greed of the banker would result in him issuing such an
enormous surplus of “gold certificates” versus the actual gold he held
that this money-dilution would be noticed by the general population. The
bankers’ gold-scam would then quickly collapse and vast numbers of
ordinary people would be wiped out (and so “capital punishment” was
invented).
Thus
ask a bankster how to stretch an ounce of gold, and (for thousands of
years) his answer would be automatic: sell “paper gold.” Flash-forward
two thousand years or so, and we see the banksters looking to fall back
on their oldest crime to attempt to wallpaper over some of their newer
ones.
We
have a huge gold deficit (and silver deficit, as well) in the world
today. New, incremental demand for gold grossly exceeds annual
incremental mine-supply. This has become a permanent deficit, which by
itself is absolute proof of market-manipulation.
The
virtues of (actual) “free markets” are well-known to anyone familiar
with basic market dynamics: they self-correct. If supply exceeds demand,
the price falls to a sufficient level to discourage more supply and
encourage more demand – until those simultaneous dynamics achieve
equilibrium: supply and demand matching, with prices stable.
Conversely,
where demand exceeds supply; prices must rise sufficiently so that more
supply is encouraged and more demand is discouraged, until once again
equilibrium is achieved. Thus a permanent supply-deficit is ipso facto proof of price-suppression.
The problem with the price-suppression of any kind of physical “good” is always the same, one inevitably runs out of inventory as the repressed supply and excessive demand caused by artificially low prices means that buyers will always outnumber sellers.
In
the case of the banksters’ perennial gold-suppression scheme; their
supply-deficit dilemma has caused them to recently focus on one target:
the population of India. As the world’s most consistently voracious consumers of
gold, permanently under-pricing gold has caused a predictable effect.
There is a large “gold deficit” in India, as India must import vast
quantities of gold each year to satisfy the excessive demand for gold
caused by selling it at give-away prices.
As is generally the case, the Corporate Media has totally perverted its own explanation of this scenario. India’s large gold-deficit is being called a “current account deficit” – i.e. a paper deficit. This is absurd on multiple levels.
One aspect I already addressed in a recent commentary. Gold is
money. It is defined and treated as “money” in every meaningful way by
the bankers themselves. As a matter of the simplest logic, it is
impossible to create a “current account deficit” by swapping one form of
money for another.
On another level this media lie is even more perverse. Regular readers understand the basic equation of our 21st century financial system: fiat currency = worthless paper.
So we have the Western propaganda machine attempting to convince us
(and India’s government) that India is currently experiencing a
“currency crisis” because large quantities of the bankers’ worthless
paper is leaving the country, and large quantities of valuable gold is entering the country.
Understand that if the United States had encountered a similar “problem” 40 years ago that the world would have never abandoned the gold standard. Back then, the U.S. had a real
“currency crisis”: its national Treasury was being cleaned-out of all
its gold. At the (suppressed) price of that time period, all of the
world’s nations wanted to dump their U.S. dollars and exchange them for
gold.
History is unequivocal. A “currency crisis” is when a nation is losing its gold, and getting nothing in return but the bankers’ “magic beans.” The actual crisis
here is for the Western banking cabal, not the nation of India. It is
their gold-suppression Ponzi-scheme which is teetering on the verge of
collapse.
It is their
multi-billion dollar, ultra-leveraged short positions which are
threatened with being blown out of the water should gold ever be allowed
to rise to its fair market value (versus the banksters’ debauched
fiat-currencies). And so we see the Western Corporate Media offering us
“solutions” for what it continues to hilariously characterize as India’s
problem.
Only
a week ago, some Western “front” group suggested gold-confiscation in
India as a banker trial-balloon. However, as I pointed out in that same,
previous commentary; proposing to loot the gold from India’s religious
temples was not a promising avenue for the banker crime syndicate to
pursue.
So,
today, we see the bankers falling back on their 2,000 year-old solution
for dealing with a gold deficit: start issuing “paper gold.” The
absurdity here is that this is nothing less than an implicit confession
of fraud on the part of many/most of the floggers of “paper gold.”
When a media article suggests
that India’s gold-deficit can be fixed by “selling paper gold” (to the
Chumps), there is literally only one possible way this could ever
happen: by selling paper but calling it “gold.”
One
has to wonder if this article is causing anyone to squirm at HSBC –
Britain’s largest bank – and the world’s largest holder of paper gold
(by an enormous margin). Informed readers know that not only does HSBC
act as “custodian” for the world’s largest paper-gold fund (the SPDR Gold Trust), but it also permanently holds the largest gold short-position in the history of markets.
Fortuitously
(for HSBC) it has never been required by our pseudo-regulators to
actually demonstrate it has enough gold to cover more than one of these two massive gold-obligations. Et voila! One ounce of gold becomes two ounces of “paper gold.”
Of course as we all know thanks to Jeffrey (“100:1”) Christian,
the banksters’ leveraging of their paper gold (overall) exceeds a
paltry 2:1 level by many multiples. Indeed, some of the banksters have
been known to sell “paper gold” and not back it with any gold at all – just ask some of the (former) disgruntled clients of Morgan Stanley.
Yes,
no doubt about it! Selling “paper gold” would certainly address the
gold-deficit problem in India…for Western bankers. Unfortunately, it’s a
scheme which will almost certainly not work out nearly as well for any
Indian Chumps who purchase the bankers’ paper gold.
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