But I
don’t think you can have this go on forever. You can’t, forever, have
more claims on assets than there are assets, and a financial system
that’s in that condition is in a very serious situation. And it’s true
across the board, it’s not just in the gold market.
____________________
RT: Don't fight the Fed! So the mantra goes. Today, a twenty-two year old
Bangladeshi man was sentenced to thirty years for attempting to blow up
the New York Federal Reserve building. His fledgling terrorist cell was
infiltrated by the FBI, which supplied him with one thousand pounds of
fake explosives. According to the Justice Department, the attempted
bomber asserted the plan was his own -- and that his goal was to
"destroy America" by targeting its economy. Evidence was introduced in
court of him scoping out the New York Stock Exchange. He eventually
chose, or was helped to choose the New York Fed.
And, is the London Whale simply Jon Corzine slash MF Global redux? Two stories are being floated in the media today. The first by Bloomberg regards JP Morgan, which is negotiating with regulators over the derivatives debacle that cost the firm over $6 billion. According to -- quote -- "people", Mr. Dimon's firm will likely get off with only a fine, a wrist slap. And, according to -- quote -- "sources", the London Whale himself, Bruno Iksil will not face US charges. So why the possible Jon Corzine redux? The media was repeatedly used as a tool to float the idea Corzine would walk free. Now the London Whale doesn't have nearly the grass roots movement that MF Global did. But, hint, hint: members of Congress don't like angry phone calls.
Despite massive debts, the US is able to borrow at record low rates, thanks in part to Quantitative Easing. It is a world of disinformation and misinformation in which facts are fiction, and abstract theories are substituted for empirical reality. Not unlike the movie, the Matrix, in which an entire population lives in an alternate reality. Bob talks fake econ stats with former assistant treasury secretary Paul Craig Roberts, and Perianne profiles Purdue pharma.
And, is the London Whale simply Jon Corzine slash MF Global redux? Two stories are being floated in the media today. The first by Bloomberg regards JP Morgan, which is negotiating with regulators over the derivatives debacle that cost the firm over $6 billion. According to -- quote -- "people", Mr. Dimon's firm will likely get off with only a fine, a wrist slap. And, according to -- quote -- "sources", the London Whale himself, Bruno Iksil will not face US charges. So why the possible Jon Corzine redux? The media was repeatedly used as a tool to float the idea Corzine would walk free. Now the London Whale doesn't have nearly the grass roots movement that MF Global did. But, hint, hint: members of Congress don't like angry phone calls.
Despite massive debts, the US is able to borrow at record low rates, thanks in part to Quantitative Easing. It is a world of disinformation and misinformation in which facts are fiction, and abstract theories are substituted for empirical reality. Not unlike the movie, the Matrix, in which an entire population lives in an alternate reality. Bob talks fake econ stats with former assistant treasury secretary Paul Craig Roberts, and Perianne profiles Purdue pharma.
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