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That the
United States government, the U.S Federal Reserve, and a plethora of
financial institutions, are in breach of numerous U.S. laws in regards to
fraud and fiduciary duty to the American people, is held to be self-evident,
by a growing minority of individuals around the world. That this breach of
law and duty has resulted in the deterioration of the global marketplace,
diminished opportunities for workers, and effected
an acute decay in living standards for millions around the world, is without
doubt.
Since the founding of the houses of Rothschild and
Morgan in the 18th and 19th centuries respectively, banks and bankers have
progressively adopted the role of financiers to governments, who find
themselves placed in a position of obligation to their financiers. Laws and
regulations are thus influenced more by the interests of bankers than by the
public interest. This is the essential conflict that undermines the
possibility of real democracy in our world. Its not a case of who can get the most votes
– it’s a case of who’s got the most money.
These banking dynasties (and the people with the
most money who control them) have spawned an entire sub-race of human beings
who are characterized by a conviction of their superior intellect, and
entitlement to act outside of the laws of society, reinforced by the
governments who are obliged to aid and abet them as debtors. This has
resulted in a situation whereby the entire global economic engine is in the
control of these very rich and powerful dynasties, who now collude daily to
manipulate markets to their own benefit, and at the expense of the rest of
the world’s citizenry.
The operational platform of this global criminal
enterprise is the futures, derivatives, and debt markets. Far from market
efficiency mechanisms, they are the means by which the entrenched financial
dynasties hobble government and siphon off the earnings of everyone around
the world in regularly engineered financial expansions and contractions. It
is the means by which astronomic virtual profits are generated, and the
reason why banks no longer invest in businesses. Why invest in a business
when you can invest in your own fabricated market, where you control supply,
demand and price?
Without taking delivery of anything, without paying
for anything, and without doing anything more than publishing thousands of
contracts to purchase and/or sell vast quantities of commodities far in
excess of what can realistically be produced, delivered or utilized, the
inclinations and trading impulses of the vast majority of traders are dragged
into losses as markets gyrate between up and down, as the puppeteers
operating on behalf of the banking dynasties go long and then short.
It’s a fine tuned fraud on an international scale. And it can’t
be identified or detected, because the mechanisms for recognition and
enforcement of regulations are under the control of the banking dynasties.
After all, who is it that these governments are in debt to?
The closest that media has ever come to exposing
this criminal organization is in the film “Inside Job”, by
Charles Ferguson. The film does an utterly fantastic job of baring the
collusive relationships among government, bankers, and economists. But it
fails to identify the very root cause, which are these financial dynasties
acting in concert, populating governments with hand-picked puppets who do
their bidding, often naively. Charles Ferguson does an utterly sublime job of
tricking economists into revealing the conflicts inherent in their various
roles. The buffoons are disrobed and stand naked and ridiculous for the
viewer. This film should be required viewing for all economics students
entering university.
But that’s as far as real journalism has been
able to penetrate. After the front-line economists, the wily politician
handlers, more finely attuned to perception, stand behind their offices to
avoid public comment. There’s only so far up the food chain an
investigator like Mr. Ferguson can go.
World Domination: Not Just a Cartoon Ambition
Consequently, we have a globalized machine that efficiently causes all
valuable resources to be extricated prematurely from the earth’s crust
to satisfy the insatiable greed of this parasitic top layer of human society.
Through the issuance of thousands of long contracts, the appearance of robust
and perpetual future demand is distributed, and bankers and miners dutifully
get in line to finance and explore for deposits, many of which will never see
production in our lifetimes. The problem for these otherwise intelligent people
is, the closer you get to the top of the food chain, the farther up the food
chain you are driven to go. Its equal parts greed and addiction. (Greed is
really just the addiction to money and the sense of invincibility having lots
and lots of it gives).
From a macro-time perspective, we could be perceived
to be on the brink of the sixth mass extinction of species in the last 500
million years. Heretofore predicated by asteroids and natural climatic
shifts, this next one will be initiated by ourselves, global warming
naysayers notwithstanding. But that’s an unpopular reality, and so, we
continue in the default human mode, and pretend it isn’t happening.
We’ve got Hummers and Webers and iPhones and
Wii’s to buy, goddammit. Summer’s here – lets get drunk!
We are presently needlessly exhuming every element
of any use from the earth’s crust and shaping them into items of
ultimate distraction – computers, phones, cars and video games –
to the point where the business of information management is the most omnipresent
and important component of any business – even those unassociated with
the information business. Our countries are now referred to as
‘markets’ and the destruction of our natural environment as
‘our transformation of the earth’. Both are spun as desirable.
But demand is absent and deteriorating.
The massive outpouring of products stemming from
this wholesale pillaging the earth’s crust is only needed to support
the fallacious premise of modern economic theory that promotes perpetual
growth. The obvious outcome of such a mentality is apparently lost on all the
bankers and politicians employed by the global banking dynasties, and of
course, upon their minutiae-obsessed technicians, the economists. We still
don’t need more cars, yet the stimulus and quantitative easing that is
in fact the theft of a future generation’s equity has re-invigorated,
albeit superficially, demand for cars. We still don’t need more new
houses, and while hundreds of thousands of families around the world are
evicted from the homes they thought they owned but now understand they only
rented for an exorbitant sum, the same monetary deluge has resuscitated,
albeit temporarily, construction and sale of more homes.
People are at a loss on how to defend themselves
from the predation of this banking system, and the bankers’ media
machine is so thoroughly efficient, that the vast majority of citizens
question the validity of the idea that they are being raped repeatedly by
their financial institutions while their arms are pinned by the governments
they elect. Amid such culturally pervasive ignorance, a change in direction
is rendered impossible.
Non-mainstream market commentators bleat advice
continuously into the wind to buy gold and silver with increasingly useless
U.S. dollars, with limited effect. Those who began accumulating in the early
part of the last decade smirk at the fools on CNBC who suggest the gold
bubble has popped.
But the banking dynasties, having been inexistence
since the late 1800’s, have fine tuned the
relationships among its various apparatus, and now function so very well as
to be nearly invisible. It has among its tool kit the derivatives market to
make the advocates for monetary metals appear misguided and idiotic. Thus the
savage attack on gold and silver markets last month, with the results that
the Wall Street Journal, New York Times, and CNN are all furiously publishing
stories who feature the human examples of fortunes lost in gold and silver,
albeit temporarily, as their main topics. This amounts to so much noise, for
the well informed, and is thus ignored. Veterans of the gold and silver trade
understand that the more prices rise, the greater must follow the volatility
in these markets because the perpetrators of the criminal enterprise they
expose grow more motivated to try and derail the rise while capitalizing on
the opportunities they create to cover shorts and fleece the sheep.
For example, on May 5th, CNN published a story with
the headline, “Oil leads commodities price plunge”. According to
the story;
“Small investors, who had piled into the
precious metal for months, scrambled to sell their holdings, fearing heavy
losses. Silver fell 12.9 per cent on Thursday to below $35, bringing its
losses in the past week to 31 per cent.”
The story implies that losses were incurred by small
investors who bought at the high and sold at the low. The effect of
publishing such a biased statement (did the author quote or even speak to any
“small investors”? Of course not.) is to
sow fear into the hearts of small investors to induce them to sell.
Curiously, that story has since been moved from CNN’s web site. Note
there has never been a story by CNN that features the 300% gains investors
who bought precious metals in the first part of the last decade might have
won.
The chanted mantra of ‘globalization’ is
specifically designed and distributed through the mainstream media to
establish the expectation by the residents of main street for a single global
government. The bankrupting of governments in conjunction with the
destruction of the U.S. dollar are key milestones in the progress to that
ultimate objective. Its going to
The success of contrarians in accumulating and
preserving wealth through gold and silver is not lost on the banking
dynasties. They are acutely aware of this persistent hole in their one world
road map. And that’s why precious metals have been the focus of so much
attention by both investors, and the perpetrators of derivatives market fraud
in an effort to dissuade investors from investing. This month’s
concerted assault on precious metals through the futures market is a case in
point, and a classic pattern in the ten year bull market in precious metals.
Silver was singled out for special assault by the
banking dynasties, or ‘cartel’ as the Gold Anti-trust Action Committee
and its adherents refer to them, as its recent outperformance of gold has put
it firmly in the crosshairs of the cartel, as its new popularity drains even
more savings targeted by the cartel away from that strategy’s currency,
the U.S. dollar, and into silver, where the value is safe. Watch how quickly
silver bounces back, as more and more investors in physical silver and gold
use the pattern evident in the cartel’s bumbling strategy to snap up
cheap silver.
Gold too, but the veteran audience grows immune to
its gyrations, as they are now de rigeur for those
who follow the market. Silver is especially worrisome to the cartelset as the diminished inventory of the London
Metals Exchange, now below 33 million ounces, down from 90 million ounces,
threatens deliverability of silver should real futures traders recognize the
opportunity and demand delivery.
Gold and silver, despite being tiny markets in
comparison to the derivatives scam they support, are the focus of the cartel
apparatus and management for the simple reason that within the performance of
the unencumbered gold and silver spot price market, the smoke emanates from
the gun in use during the crime. And as everybody knows,
where there is smoke, there is, or soon will be, fire.
For now, however, the poor dumb bastards who bought
gold and silver, and in a panic, have sold at a loss are now back in the
hands of the pro-dollar-anti-gold majority that is the mentally enslaved canon fodder for the cartel. They will see gold and
silver rise strongly in the inevitable next leg up of the gold and silver
bull market, but they will willfully ignore the evidence of the broader
trend, and warn anyone sufficiently naïve to listen of the feckless
injustice and stupidity of buying gold and silver, and use the example of his
own stupidity to prove the veracity of his advice.
Such is the world we live in. Governed by
misanthropes, the world economy is on the ropes, and the banking dynasties
are in fine form. On August 9, 2010, Goldman Sachs reported to the Financial
Crisis Inquiry Commission that 25 to 35 percent of its revenue was from
derivatives. Something to keep in mind the next time you see the mainstream
financial press publish a story in which Goldman Sachs says ‘sell’
or ‘buy’ commodities.
James West
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