I DONT THINK MOST PEOPLE REALIZE THAT THE FEDERAL RESERVE PRINTS OUR MONEY AND THE FEDERAL RESERVE IS NOT A GOVERNMENT AGENCY. THE FEDERAL RESERVE IS A PRIVATE BANK THAT EARNS 46 CENTS IN INTEREST FOR EVERY DOLLAR THEY PRINT. WHAT THE U.S. NEEDS TO DO IS TO GET RID OF THE FEDERAL RESERVE AND HAVE OUR TREASURY DEPT. PRINT THE MONEY AS NEEDED AND THEN THE U.S. CANT GO INTO DEBT.
Thanks for the video, but you don't really make a case for how inflation will be caused (or to be more precise how much)... you just say that it will happen. This may work for most average intelligent people but you'd need to try harder to convince those who are smarter. Of course some inflation will be caused, and that is the point ... but the debate is exactly how much will come.
Can someone clarify - what happens AFTER fed buys up the bonds (thereby increasing money supply). Does it get interest from treasury on those bonds? Isnt that income for nothing?! Eventually, does the treasury cancel those bonds by buying back from Fed? What does Fed do with that money?
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Don't worry about it, just keep eating your steroid inject beef bergers, wash it done with some coke, have a few twinkie bars, then take your medication and sit back on your couch and watch American Idol.
Fed buying T-bills from the public? I thought the Fed bought them at auction like everyone else, just in much higher quantities and bidding very low interest rates.
holy crap. Glenn Beck today talked about this, but when put into this light of simplicity, it really takes hold. Very VERY scary indeed. Can anyone say economic collapse within 5 years?!
You are a little wrong on the public being involved as an intermediary between the treasury and the Fed. The Fed buys US treasuries directly as do many banks buy municipal bonds. 50% of all Federal debt is owed directly to the Fed. That percentage is increasing.
“Tensions Rise in Greece as Austerity Measures Backfire”
The austerity measures that were supposed to fix Greece's problems are dragging down the country's economy. Stores are closing, tax revenues are falling and unemployment has hit an unbelievable 70 percent in some places. Frustrated workers are threatening to strike back
You should be prepping up some food! Get a foood dehydrator buying up some fruits like apples, peaches, pears food vacuum packer / start vacuum packing them. Dehydrated fruits are expensive to buy. And you can do this yourself. 3 times as much if you do it yourself. Hook up people and buy in bulk. Do this in an assembly line and you'll have fun doing this too! Find canned fruits on sale? Yes you can dehydrate them too! Just rinse, allow to drain off, then slice them into ¼” slices and dry!
The money changers will keep Americas head just above water because if they don't they could lose control of the money system. I believe that the best thing that could happen for the world is to stop the Banksters criminal enterprise even if it means we all have to go broke until we eliminate the thugs. American economy depends on the occupation, theft and by extension the murder of foreigners in other countries. Unregulated capitalism is evil. You will never be the part of the elite, ever!
@stophypocrisy there is also one hope. There could be fights among the elites themselves and they may destroy one another. As far as I know, there are one group of elites backing the oil-based economy and another group backing the carbon-based economy. Don't forget there are also other major opposing forces such as the Chinese and the German who may change the game entirely.
Even if all this money is being created, it has not gone through the fractional reserve banking system. With the banks not lending out money, it fails to multiply out and enter the circulating money supply, and its effect on inflation is vastly reduced. At least for right now, the banks simply are not lending. What do people think this means for the short vs. long term - could the inflation only come on suddenly, after a long delay, when banks finally start lending again?
@personzorz you are the only one who makes sense here. Ppl just keep saying hyperinflation but there is just no good project out there to utilize these money. I am afraid there won't be any neither in the near future. The only hope seems to be all the green projects, but they are all relied on the success of cap n trade. Only if they can pass cap n trade and inflate a green energy bubble, then you will need to worry about inflation.
Another great production, Daniel It's important that people know this, or at least start investigating on their own from this springboard. Great job! -Jim
The FED buys Treasury bonds through the Primary Dealers. The public doesn't just buy the Treasury bonds and then sales them to the FED. The FED buys the debt to hold interest rates (our costs of borrowing money) down. We are not printing anything. The government is 'borrowing and spending' money like crazy but it's not working to replace private consumer demand. All this so called printed money is on deposit at the FED but hasn't made it into the real economy.
@KrunchMonster1 I am aware of what Alex Jones and others believe. I tend to agree. But was wondering what VV thinks. I mean .. no one in these positions can be this dumb can they? it has to be with purpose.
This video suggests that the government issues bonds through the public and the Fed can then buy them from the public . I do not believe that this is necessary. Being a private concern, the Fed approaches treasury auctions as any other corporation or individual buyer and pays with newly created credit to buy from treasury in contrast to the public, which buys with preexisting credit. The Fed is also purchasing assets (notes) created in the lending process as part of the monetization.
This video suggests that the government issues bonds through the public and the Fed can then buy them from the public . I do not believe that this is necessary. Being a private concern, the Fed approaches treasury auctions as any other corporation or individual buyer and pays with newly created credit to buy from treasury in contrast to the public, which buys with preexisting credit. The Fed is also purchasing assets (notes) created in the lending process as part of the monetization.
Daniel, I was trying to read the title of the books behind you but I can not make them out. What are the titles of the three books facing us ??? The first round of money never hit the streets. Big banks used that money to offset their financial losses. Will the second round of stimulas hit the streets? What bubble will the govt blow up next?
@Mr2wings right now i would say gold is the final bubble. the fed prints money and causes inflation which means it requires more dollars to equal gold and thus dollar goes down and the value of gold gets INFLATED just like other assets remember the real estate bubble. if you want a rational, scientific, and spiritual understanding of key issues like this sub me and i will upload a trailer for the right book in due time. peace
Yup, I am afraid the NIA guys are right. I think inflation is eventually going to rage. Like you said, we are experiencing it at the super market yet it is not reported.
You explain things so well about how it all works. Great job in bringing it all down to fifth grade level (no pun intended). Most Americans are at that level when it comes to things about the economy. Great job. Keep up the good work.
Which only goes to show that there is no "fair" way to loan out money that doesn't exist while still charging interest to it, for which the money to pay the interest was never created. That then creates more reason to create even bigger loans/spending in the future so that money will exist in the money supply to pay all the previous loans interest payments. Ergo the need for a never-ending "need for growth" that is unsustainable in a finite world. Mathmatically impossible = fraud
I don't understand. Should I stop buying bonds for my 401k? I am completely out of stocks and bonds are all that's left. Can someone answer please? Should i stop putting money in my 401K?
@catsmew, please go to Bob Chapman's youtube channel and listen to him. He used to work on wall street for 28 years and he can help you with protecting yourself. While you're at it, please listen to Max Keiser's and Gerald Celente's youtube channels also. I hope this helps. Take care!
you should put that money where it achieves the greatest purchasing power. individual stocks may well serve you, albeit they don't decline in value and also beat inflation.
i am a precious metals broker and a cta that sells options on commodities for ongoing income.
brother... cheers.. Its good to know we have friends in all the right places..and reporting truth even of human digraces.. ... hope we meetsome day... and keep up THE "Great " work... its having results and were all together...
Fed is basically printing money that isn't backed by anything... unfortunately they don't seem to understand that fiscal(gov stimulus $) and monetary policy(fed lowering interest rates) are not having any effect on the current issues. The banks can borrow money from the fed for free and in turn they are hoarding it instead of lending it out... Printing money is probably the dumbest thing they could do... at the end of all this monopoly money is going be worth more than the dollar.
What I don't understand is why my $100,000 isn't worth spit to a bank. They will barely pay me one per cent to put it in their bank. But my credit card will charge me almost 25 % if I borrow its money.
interest on savings accts. are at all-time lows, and have remained below inflation forever, precipitating either paper investment, consumer spending or bankrolling a business. banks and gov't working together.
lower capital reserve ratios, federal guarantees and the other means of "usury" have eliminated the need for banks to build capital through savings deposits.
And that means it doesn't pay to save. Why bother? The banks can get their money cheaper from the Fed. I can't compete with the Fed. So my money is virtually worthless. I might as well sew it up in a mattress.
When I was a kid, savings accounts paid three percent? Mortages were at five? Interest was capped by usury laws. I still don't get it. All I know is we're getting screwed.
mattress? inflation is normally slower, but hyperinflation that is predicted here and elsewhere (sometimes as a sales pitch) = "In 1933 the price of 1 ounce of gold was $35.00. For $35.00 you could purchase a tailored suit, shoes, a belt and a tie. Today that same 1 ounce of gold now worth $950.00 can purchase a tailored suit, shoes, a belt and a tie. Had you held onto the $35.00 from 1933, you could barely purchase the tie as a result of gradual currency devaluations over the years."
moving away from the gold standard was akin to allowing reserve ratios and money-printing to balloon. totally debases what you might put under the proverbial mattress. encourages speculative investments, likely mal-investments, as economies first enjoy the rush
"In the 34 years before Nixon closed the gold window, the money supply in the U.S. grew less than two fold. In the 34 years after Nixon’s action, the money supply expanded 13 fold and the Fed Reserve has taken the US gold."
The picture is beginning to become clearer. My $100,000 means nothing to banks because they can get the money from the Fed. The Fed. can supply endless steams of money to banks to be lent out without fear of the loan going bad because the government will bail them out. No need to fear "bank failure" because the Fed. can't let the bank fail.
@jx14aby I wholeheartedly agree it is usury... in fact my good credit couldn't get me 500$ so I quit busting my butt to pay them on time and extra. I stopped worrying about whether or not I get some fruit from the grocery store.. I bought food we needed and wanted without any worry. I send them all a few bucks now and again but they can kiss me where the sun doesn't shine. I don't care about good credit and I don't want it... It is all a big fat LIE.
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This is 999.99% pure banana republic style inflation. Boat loads of new money that will eventually hit the streets and cause the velocity of the money to ramp up to a magnitude of the power of at least 10. I give us 18 to 24 months to hyperinflation never seen in this country before. But hey, I could be wrong, it could be less.
Cash may be king for while but the paper money jig is up. China knows this and is preparing itself to lose big time on it's dollar surplus. It's encouraging it's citizens to buy gold, and buying ore from all over the globe for it's own refineries it is alsos the largest producer of gold domestically, in the world . When they have enough, they will cut us loose
So, you believe the Fed & government when they talk inflation, but not believe them on anything else. This is very interesting, and completely inconsistent on your part.
the monetary system will collapse, and then we will either move to a one world currency, or revolutionize the entire system of managing resources. We have the technology to bring needed resources to everyone on the planet without a need of exchange. Would be stupid not to implement it, but hey we are humans, and we kill each other for being different, so wouldn't surprise me if we continue down the path of self destruction.
BOSTON (MarketWatch) - President Barack Obama on Saturday warned against a renewed call by some Republicans to privatize Social Security funds, claiming that such a move would add "trillions" to the budget deficit and place individual benefits at risk.
BOSTON (MarketWatch) - President Barack Obama on Saturday warned against a renewed call by some Republicans to privatize Social Security funds, claiming that such a move would add "trillions" to the budget deficit and place individual benefits at risk.
Quote from Bloomberg article: "Christopher Low, chief economist at FTN Financial in New York, said in a Bloomberg Television interview before the announcement. “The Fed is starting to worry about hitting that full-employment goal any time in the next three or four years.”
@vimeocomuk You are wrong. To monetize means to turn into money. That is what the Fed is doing when they buy treasuries. They are adding new money to the system which is instant inflation. Stop watching CNBC, they lie and distort.
By "the public" do you mean the world market at large who purchases US treasuries? I was under the impression that countries like China and Japan were not buying as much/at all and therefore the US needs to monetize it's own debt now. (read: we're screwed)
This is the first time I've seen/heard anyone actually explain what "monetising debt" means. If someone wanted to do a short series of video explanations of some of this political jargon, I think it could help lots of people understand how they are robbed.
You're right - Friday's vid was worth tuning in for.
@furyofbongos Japan is a different animal. With the exception of having the World Reserve Currency that allows us to cheat and make a bigger mess (debt, exportation of inflation or more), we are set up more like the Wiermar Republic. The Austrian School describes a deflationary period prior to an inflationary period. Because the deflationary period leads politicians to the false belief they can print money with impunity, they do. We are more sophisticated today, but no less foolish.
@InTheSticks1881 Thanks for your reply. I don't know what to think. Hyperinflation does seem like a very real possibility. Have you seen Mish Shedlock's blog? He's an Austrian guy who brings lots of data to bear to a "long drawn out Japanese style malaise" as the most likely outcome. You might check out his Aug 12 post, 'Quantitative Easing Take II; Uncharted Territory'.
I like to consider alternate points of view. Not Keynsiansim, however -- that's safe to flush down the toilet forever!
@furyofbongos Thanks for the reminder about Shedlock's blog. There is so much out there. They just might pull off a slow decline with only high inflation for a period, stagflation on steroids, and avoid a Wiermar Republic styled hyper inflationary senario with a currency revaluation, yet a comparison to Japan is a non starter for me. I'll have to take a look.
Great Vid!!! it would be easier to understand, though, if you had shown "the public" with a diminishing pile of money (loaned) and the treasury with an increasing pile of money (to pay debts). it would be easier to show that scenario 1 there is no creation new money, while in scenario 2 it's basically the Fed fueling the Treasury with new printed money. Cheers!
so US ppl, PLEASE try to find the truths... meanwhile don't be so worried about your economy as you can virtually sit there all day and let other ppl produce for you. They won't be able to dump your dollar anytime soon as long as you keep your troops there. On the other hand, if you pull your troops out, the dollar may actually collapse quickly. It's immoral but be careful of what you are asking for. Ron Paul seems like a good man but his policies can destroy the dollar faster than the Fed.
@page826 It sounds to me like you have read 'Confessions Of An Economic Hitman'. If not, you would thoroughly enjoy it.
As you probably know, we went off the gold standard in 1971 in order to go to an OIL standard. Gold is rare, but it doesn't do anything. Oil on the other hand, can produce over 6,000 different products. Therefore, oil became the 'currency of the world' when Kissinger went to the Middle East in 1971 and made the deal to buy their oil if they would buy our treasuries.
@RAMKING61 just finished watching the interview but I am afraid that he is only telling the 1st half of the story. I believe another team with likes of Al gore is trying to start a carbon-based economy, given that their control in the middle east is increasingly unsustainable. If the US$ collapses, they will just introduce a new world currency and the same elite's banking system will continue to run but this time the us ppl will suffer. One way or the other, the elites at the top always win.
@page826 Yes, Algore is Goldman Sachs frontman. You will definitely want to read 'How Goldman Sachs Runs Washington' July 09 - Rolling Stone; and ''How Goldman Sachs Scammed the Bailout' March 2010 - Rolling Stone. Both articles are by Matt Taibbi. 'Cap & Trade' is Goldman Sachs devious plan to turn CO2 emmisions into a commodity which THEY control. The Banksters run Washington, the printing press, the media, and the stock market.
@RAMKING61 Yeah that's why I have some doubts with Perkins' intention. He started a green energy company and received a lot of favors from the system. He should know a thing or two about the new CO2 scheme. If he is really working against the system then he should be removed by now. It seems to me that he is subtly promoting yet another NWO project for the so called system. His proposed US role is similar to cap n trade, which can transfer wealth from rich to poor countries as they claimed.
@page826 Kissinger's clever deal had one key component....the Middle East had to deal in DOLLARS only. That is the only reason why our dollar didn't crash years ago - we tied it to OIL.
unfortunately, many us citizens still think they r fighting wars for freedom in the middle east. In fact they are simply invading countries, setting up puppet governments and controlling their resources.
@page826 you got THAT Right! America now IS the Colonial Power that we originally fought against in the Revolutionary War! Only we're invading S.E. Asia, and the Middle East (and starting in Africa) to "capitalise" on their spoils. Our fascist government makes me ill to think what these hypocrites do in OUR name!
so now... do you know why the terrorists keep attacking their own governments and the US army? They know their governments are controlled by Washington. They just want to regain control of their own resources. From another angle, they are the real freedom fighters.
FedRes always created $ from thin air. Sovereignty=ability to create sovereigns. (States not really svrgn, can't create money.) Money isn't wealth!The economy(at least manuf/agro sectors, some inc. service sector)creates wealth, but only govt can create specie. Rt now about 40% of US M2's in China, so we have $hortage= defltn/recsn.Deficits only problem if gvts try to refinance. Print $ is solution to defaltion. US economy is strong, ignore the Dow. The US Republic is not going out of business.
so now... do you know why the US needs to keep fighting wars in the middle east? It's just the big fat guy holding his gun and keeping the resource as his own property. Of course the US is doing it in a more civilized way. They overthrew the local governments and set up puppet governments controlled by the US instead.
Before some similar events happen, the US dollar can decline in value gradually but it won't collapse. Imagine there are a group of survivors on a small island. There is a big fat guy with a gun guarding the only clean water supply and he automatically becomes the king. The remaining ppl will need to work hard and produce something to exchange for fresh water but he can sit there all day and enjoy all the goods produced by others. In theory the system can work well.
ok ppl really need to understand why some call US$ the petro dollar. As long as the US still has tight control in the middle east, the dollar WILL NOT collapse. It is backed by valuable natural resources and energy! The World can cry about it but they still need to buy US$ if they need to grow/survive. The only game changer is when someone can free the middle east from US control both politically and militarily, or when a challenger finds another energy source large enough to sustain.
ok ppl really need to understand why some call US$ the petro dollar. As long as the US still has tight control in the middle east, the dollar WILL NOT collapse. It is backed by valuable natural resources and energy! The World can cry about it but they still need to buy US$ if they need to grow/survive. The only game changer is when someone can free the middle east from US control both politically and militarily, or when a challenger finds another energy source large enough to sustain.
@page826 Tarpley mentioned that an attack on Iran would close the straits, drive oil up, $200/barrel, and support the dollar as a result. Lots of wild cards, yet the massive debt will only grow.
So instead of multiple citizens holding the bonds, the Federal Reserve consolidates them under one roof... all the while buying them with money backed by nothing (other than us) ??? As WE are the government; that's when it will again be of the people, buy the people. And the Federal Reserve backs away saying we tried to save you... don't blame us, we aren't even a part of the government..... pay up.
And if staggering debt and inflation weren't bad enough, it's all undemocratically executed. The people, for whom the government is supposed to function, are excluded from the process as are their elected representatives. This is managed by the private, for profit, unelected, uncountable, Federal Reserve. If the people aren't in charge of their finances particularly crucial ones such as debt monetization and inflation, you don't have democracy/a republic you have a kind of neo Feudalism
Dude, it is going to Deflation first buddy. Did you see what the dollar did this week? Yeah, that's right, it had a MASSIVE rally on this news you're talking about I predict you will see parity with the EUR soon. You will likely see the dollar go from $1.30 to $1.00 against the EUR. The market can stay irrational longer than you think. You are right about the ultimate endgame, but we still have a few more years before your inflationary armageddon situation pans out.
@visionvictory Great point on Weimar. Other than my home price losing value, personally have not seen this deflation everyone is talking about. Gas is still close to 3 dollars a gallon and food prices have actually went up. Taxes are going up along with the cost of education and healthcare. Money is chasing goods and services that our CPI conveniently leaves out. The consesus is screaming deflation, those in the investing world know that the consensus is usually wrong.Inflation is coming.
@nomoreserfs Food prices HAVE gone up! BIG TIME! But according to the BLOOMBERG article their "preferred" indicator does NOT include food in the inflationary Index! Go Figure!
Last week in Whole Foods market there was not a piece of fish one could buy that didn't have a DOUBLE DIGIT price tag! Jelly that cost $1.89 18 months ago is now $2.39, (and don't even THINK about raspberry - it's just under $4!) plus a jar of natural peanut butter is $3, a loaf of bread $4/$5 & gal/milk $3.29! WTF??
@philolson321 It's not just the threat of hyper inflation we gotta sweat, but the environment this threat creates, conditions that in the past started WW1 that lend to WW2, currency devalution( deliberate hyper price inflation), political corruption and loss of liberty, civil unrest, and starvation, severe deflation and high price inflation. Hyper inflation may begin in 6mos or in 2 years, or WW3 might be the game changer. Hell, let's get it over with, find Ground Zero and throw a party.
@philolson321 I would disagree agree with you slightly. I would contend that since our monetary system is based on nothing, the only thing backing our financial and monetary system is confidence. Without confidence in the money, that is where you will have high to even hyper inflation. The NIA boys do predict this event to happen around 2014 or so. What you had in the dollar is a relief rally, it was straight down for 7 to 8 weeks prior to this up tick indicating that inflation is coming.
Can't the Fed simply buy treasury bonds directly from the treasury? The treasury then pays its bills to the public, which causes inflation of the money supply. Why does the Fed have to buy the bonds from the public second-hand?
If you stop to look at the process of this debt machine, the interest is an exponential function that doubles very often. So the interest that we owe the Fed actually increases, just like a bad credit card. The only way to make up for this is taxing us more, which is teetering already. This is 110% unsustainable. It will come to an end within 3 years. It has to by design. I just hope those who are listening are prepared for that.
Austerity is a wonderful word., It means the people will gladly give up their savings and pensions to prevent what the MSM will call a "near miss" on an economic collapse. The people will gladly give up everything they have to prevent anarchy. Even to the cost of themselves.
If they could only see it is all a game; and more importantly; that they decide the rules. Look at Iceland for a solution. we wrote them off a year ago. The people said "NO"
@MikeRadmann Iceland indeed! However Argentina took to the streets ... and in the end, their gov't sold them down the tubes to American Banks and Corps., before the dust finally settled. (See historical videos at my channel page.) I think if you look at the history of Argentina's inflation, massive job losses, and general starvation, you will have an idea of what will likely come here. Question is, will enough Americans prepare to survive through the turmoil, so as to prevail?
There is something the Fed fears more than anything; and this inflation is trying to combat. Deflation. It will be painful to many. The Fed fears deflation beyond all else yet it is all around us. when you purchase that latest t-shirt at 80% off; you are feeding this cycle.It will be the underlying cause of all the Fed does. For infinite growth is a lie; they know it. You will soon also know it. The banksters are laughing thier fucking balls off; for they know what is next. "Austerity" cont'd...
Jct: Yes, inflation can be more money chasing the same goods, Shift A, but it can also be Shift B. How come you guys don't know about the same money chasing less goods after foreclosure? Economics teaches only Shift A, so you have to fall for Shift A, when it's really Shift B going on?
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I DONT THINK MOST PEOPLE REALIZE THAT THE FEDERAL RESERVE PRINTS OUR MONEY AND THE FEDERAL RESERVE IS NOT A GOVERNMENT AGENCY. THE FEDERAL RESERVE IS A PRIVATE BANK THAT EARNS 46 CENTS IN INTEREST FOR EVERY DOLLAR THEY PRINT. WHAT THE U.S. NEEDS TO DO IS TO GET RID OF THE FEDERAL RESERVE AND HAVE OUR TREASURY DEPT. PRINT THE MONEY AS NEEDED AND THEN THE U.S. CANT GO INTO DEBT.
stjohnsmanor 1 month ago
Thanks for the video, but you don't really make a case for how inflation will be caused (or to be more precise how much)... you just say that it will happen. This may work for most average intelligent people but you'd need to try harder to convince those who are smarter. Of course some inflation will be caused, and that is the point ... but the debate is exactly how much will come.
makeithappen42zx 4 months ago
Can someone clarify - what happens AFTER fed buys up the bonds (thereby increasing money supply). Does it get interest from treasury on those bonds? Isnt that income for nothing?! Eventually, does the treasury cancel those bonds by buying back from Fed? What does Fed do with that money?
abaswara 6 months ago
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TheWendypope 9 months ago
so buy gold and real estate.
hellfighter22 9 months ago
Don't worry about it, just keep eating your steroid inject beef bergers, wash it done with some coke, have a few twinkie bars, then take your medication and sit back on your couch and watch American Idol.
SpaceWalkTraveller 10 months ago 3
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FatReleaseSystem 10 months ago
Fed buying T-bills from the public? I thought the Fed bought them at auction like everyone else, just in much higher quantities and bidding very low interest rates.
ATL45 1 year ago
where do I belong in the party? sentence question in your error.
reel1840 1 year ago
the u.s was finished from 1930. from then on, its just got bigger.thats it.
makaveliguy 1 year ago
Abolish the private,jewish control federal serve,turn back to God and bring your army home...
We have exterminated the property owners in Russia. We are going to do the same thing in Europe and America.
(The Jew, December 1925, Zinobit)
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MsMihailescu 1 year ago
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@MsMihailescu You are retarded.
RNTcomeback 6 months ago
Also watch WHY WE ARE IN SO MUCH DEBT for a clear, simple explanation of our monetary system, and how it destroys our prosperity.
SilentNoMorePubs 1 year ago 2
so what would be the solution? give the money issuing power back to the government and remove all the middle-man banksters?
HumanityWins 1 year ago
holy crap. Glenn Beck today talked about this, but when put into this light of simplicity, it really takes hold. Very VERY scary indeed. Can anyone say economic collapse within 5 years?!
Benuhgan 1 year ago
The fed buys the bonds from the public ?? hmmmmm.
johnsenkenn 1 year ago
monetization is funny
TheBlitz1 1 year ago
Harrisburg Pa. has defaulted on several bond payments. It was several million dollars in payments missed.
Mr2wings 1 year ago
2000 NATO soldier killed
Search For
"BUSH OBAMA DESTROYED"
eliasmouawad 1 year ago
why does the public sell its bonds to the fed?
stealthpakfa 1 year ago
You are a little wrong on the public being involved as an intermediary between the treasury and the Fed. The Fed buys US treasuries directly as do many banks buy municipal bonds. 50% of all Federal debt is owed directly to the Fed. That percentage is increasing.
agentj001 1 year ago
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@agentj001
"The Fed buys US treasuries directly"
The Fed does not buy Treasuries directly.
" 50% of all Federal debt is owed directly to the Fed"
The Fed owns about $777 billion, out of public debt of about $8.7 trillion.
About 9%.
jimmyrtle 1 year ago
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LookUpAtSkyNow 1 year ago
This was headline from speigelonline on 8/18.
Entering a Death Spiral?
“Tensions Rise in Greece as Austerity Measures Backfire”
The austerity measures that were supposed to fix Greece's problems are dragging down the country's economy. Stores are closing, tax revenues are falling and unemployment has hit an unbelievable 70 percent in some places. Frustrated workers are threatening to strike back
This is heading our way!
LookUpAtSkyNow 1 year ago
nice illustration
hermbilliamherm18 1 year ago
You should be prepping up some food! Get a foood dehydrator buying up some fruits like apples, peaches, pears food vacuum packer / start vacuum packing them. Dehydrated fruits are expensive to buy. And you can do this yourself. 3 times as much if you do it yourself. Hook up people and buy in bulk. Do this in an assembly line and you'll have fun doing this too! Find canned fruits on sale? Yes you can dehydrate them too! Just rinse, allow to drain off, then slice them into ¼” slices and dry!
LookUpAtSkyNow 1 year ago
You flippn rock my friend !
morganslv 1 year ago
AMERICA IS BOOMING ALL IS VERY WELL LOOK AROUND
amcanmike 1 year ago
@amcanmike baby steps, just like Obama said yesterday.
visionvictory 1 year ago
@amcanmike Look around what? The record-producing poppy fields in Afghanistan?
goldcurrent1 1 year ago
@amcanmike "ALL IS VERY WELL";
You obviously have a warped sense of humor.
johnm295 1 year ago
good vid
my427corvette 1 year ago
The money changers will keep Americas head just above water because if they don't they could lose control of the money system. I believe that the best thing that could happen for the world is to stop the Banksters criminal enterprise even if it means we all have to go broke until we eliminate the thugs. American economy depends on the occupation, theft and by extension the murder of foreigners in other countries. Unregulated capitalism is evil. You will never be the part of the elite, ever!
stophypocrisy 1 year ago
@stophypocrisy there is also one hope. There could be fights among the elites themselves and they may destroy one another. As far as I know, there are one group of elites backing the oil-based economy and another group backing the carbon-based economy. Don't forget there are also other major opposing forces such as the Chinese and the German who may change the game entirely.
page826 1 year ago
Even if all this money is being created, it has not gone through the fractional reserve banking system. With the banks not lending out money, it fails to multiply out and enter the circulating money supply, and its effect on inflation is vastly reduced. At least for right now, the banks simply are not lending. What do people think this means for the short vs. long term - could the inflation only come on suddenly, after a long delay, when banks finally start lending again?
personzorz 1 year ago
@personzorz you are the only one who makes sense here. Ppl just keep saying hyperinflation but there is just no good project out there to utilize these money. I am afraid there won't be any neither in the near future. The only hope seems to be all the green projects, but they are all relied on the success of cap n trade. Only if they can pass cap n trade and inflate a green energy bubble, then you will need to worry about inflation.
page826 1 year ago
Hi Daniel, did you get a chance to watch "The Secret of Oz" ?
Loveseekingmissile 1 year ago
Why do you sound Canadian?? I smell a spy...
nomorecilings 1 year ago
Another great production, Daniel It's important that people know this, or at least start investigating on their own from this springboard. Great job! -Jim
CombatOasis 1 year ago
The FED buys Treasury bonds through the Primary Dealers. The public doesn't just buy the Treasury bonds and then sales them to the FED. The FED buys the debt to hold interest rates (our costs of borrowing money) down. We are not printing anything. The government is 'borrowing and spending' money like crazy but it's not working to replace private consumer demand. All this so called printed money is on deposit at the FED but hasn't made it into the real economy.
rocket754 1 year ago
@rocket754 I get new freshly printed bills everyday so I'd say that's not correct sir.
Loveseekingmissile 1 year ago
@Loveseekingmissile well old (worn out) bills get replaced with new bills though. Anyway, de money printing is totally out of control.
Michiel1972 1 year ago
China is dumping US treasuries now. This is not good news. Expect inflation not deflation to happen soon.
paxout 1 year ago
Are they just stupid or TRYING to destroy us?
themunz126 1 year ago
@themunz126 According to some people THEY are trying to destroy us check out AlexJones' Channel
KrunchMonster1 1 year ago
@KrunchMonster1 There are more than Alex Jones. I tend to agree, but was wondering what VV thought about it.
themunz126 1 year ago
@KrunchMonster1 I am aware of what Alex Jones and others believe. I tend to agree. But was wondering what VV thinks. I mean .. no one in these positions can be this dumb can they? it has to be with purpose.
themunz126 1 year ago
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This video suggests that the government issues bonds through the public and the Fed can then buy them from the public . I do not believe that this is necessary. Being a private concern, the Fed approaches treasury auctions as any other corporation or individual buyer and pays with newly created credit to buy from treasury in contrast to the public, which buys with preexisting credit. The Fed is also purchasing assets (notes) created in the lending process as part of the monetization.
freaklemon 1 year ago
This video suggests that the government issues bonds through the public and the Fed can then buy them from the public . I do not believe that this is necessary. Being a private concern, the Fed approaches treasury auctions as any other corporation or individual buyer and pays with newly created credit to buy from treasury in contrast to the public, which buys with preexisting credit. The Fed is also purchasing assets (notes) created in the lending process as part of the monetization.
freaklemon 1 year ago
There's two kinds of taxation:
* direct taxes approved by Congress (and we vote them out)
* sneaK taxes (inflationary printing press) and WE CAN'T VOTE THEM OUT.
adamitshelanu 1 year ago
Daniel, I was trying to read the title of the books behind you but I can not make them out. What are the titles of the three books facing us ??? The first round of money never hit the streets. Big banks used that money to offset their financial losses. Will the second round of stimulas hit the streets? What bubble will the govt blow up next?
Mr2wings 1 year ago
@Mr2wings How to become a bilderberg, doing videos as an undercover bilderberger, and bilderberg cookbook recipes. J/K lol :)-
1. Pearl Harbor
2. The Silver Lining
3. American Presidents
visionvictory 1 year ago
@Mr2wings right now i would say gold is the final bubble. the fed prints money and causes inflation which means it requires more dollars to equal gold and thus dollar goes down and the value of gold gets INFLATED just like other assets remember the real estate bubble. if you want a rational, scientific, and spiritual understanding of key issues like this sub me and i will upload a trailer for the right book in due time. peace
Playitalready 2 weeks ago
Yup, I am afraid the NIA guys are right. I think inflation is eventually going to rage. Like you said, we are experiencing it at the super market yet it is not reported.
nomoreserfs 1 year ago
You explain things so well about how it all works. Great job in bringing it all down to fifth grade level (no pun intended). Most Americans are at that level when it comes to things about the economy. Great job. Keep up the good work.
gsv67 1 year ago
Which only goes to show that there is no "fair" way to loan out money that doesn't exist while still charging interest to it, for which the money to pay the interest was never created. That then creates more reason to create even bigger loans/spending in the future so that money will exist in the money supply to pay all the previous loans interest payments. Ergo the need for a never-ending "need for growth" that is unsustainable in a finite world. Mathmatically impossible = fraud
dlucas90 1 year ago
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donatefreedom 1 year ago
No one cares anymore
charlesfuchs 1 year ago
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campaign4liberty 1 year ago
DD for President? -- It's up to You! youtube.com/watch?v=88AsArwYsTc
MrEuroheritage 1 year ago
@MrEuroheritage
I just watched his video. I'm game.
jx14aby 1 year ago
Deflation only if the govt desires to pay off it's debt.
ABETRMAN 1 year ago
I don't understand. Should I stop buying bonds for my 401k? I am completely out of stocks and bonds are all that's left. Can someone answer please? Should i stop putting money in my 401K?
catsmew 1 year ago
@catsmew, please go to Bob Chapman's youtube channel and listen to him. He used to work on wall street for 28 years and he can help you with protecting yourself. While you're at it, please listen to Max Keiser's and Gerald Celente's youtube channels also. I hope this helps. Take care!
delyparker777 1 year ago
@delyparker777 thanks. will do.
catsmew 1 year ago
@catsmew Buy gold and silver mining stocks.
zappos49 1 year ago
@catsmew
you should put that money where it achieves the greatest purchasing power. individual stocks may well serve you, albeit they don't decline in value and also beat inflation.
i am a precious metals broker and a cta that sells options on commodities for ongoing income.
pobaldy66 1 year ago
@catsmew
One word:
Mattresses.
jx14aby 1 year ago
@catsmew Buy physical silver and gold. Stock up on food and other items. Also pay off credit cards. Some Individual stocks will perfom well.
Mr2wings 1 year ago
Comment removed
cuff1944 1 year ago
brother... cheers.. Its good to know we have friends in all the right places..and reporting truth even of human digraces.. ... hope we meetsome day... and keep up THE "Great " work... its having results and were all together...
DJ
Sukshma 1 year ago
america on fail blog
Petar1985 1 year ago
Fed is basically printing money that isn't backed by anything... unfortunately they don't seem to understand that fiscal(gov stimulus $) and monetary policy(fed lowering interest rates) are not having any effect on the current issues. The banks can borrow money from the fed for free and in turn they are hoarding it instead of lending it out... Printing money is probably the dumbest thing they could do... at the end of all this monopoly money is going be worth more than the dollar.
KrunchMonster1 1 year ago
@KrunchMonster1
What I don't understand is why my $100,000 isn't worth spit to a bank. They will barely pay me one per cent to put it in their bank. But my credit card will charge me almost 25 % if I borrow its money.
Whatever happened to usury?
jx14aby 1 year ago
@jx14aby
interest on savings accts. are at all-time lows, and have remained below inflation forever, precipitating either paper investment, consumer spending or bankrolling a business. banks and gov't working together.
lower capital reserve ratios, federal guarantees and the other means of "usury" have eliminated the need for banks to build capital through savings deposits.
pobaldy66 1 year ago
@pobaldy66
And that means it doesn't pay to save. Why bother? The banks can get their money cheaper from the Fed. I can't compete with the Fed. So my money is virtually worthless. I might as well sew it up in a mattress.
When I was a kid, savings accounts paid three percent? Mortages were at five? Interest was capped by usury laws. I still don't get it. All I know is we're getting screwed.
jx14aby 1 year ago
@jx14aby
mattress? inflation is normally slower, but hyperinflation that is predicted here and elsewhere (sometimes as a sales pitch) = "In 1933 the price of 1 ounce of gold was $35.00. For $35.00 you could purchase a tailored suit, shoes, a belt and a tie. Today that same 1 ounce of gold now worth $950.00 can purchase a tailored suit, shoes, a belt and a tie. Had you held onto the $35.00 from 1933, you could barely purchase the tie as a result of gradual currency devaluations over the years."
pobaldy66 1 year ago
@pobaldy66
The price of gold was regulated. Was it not?
jx14aby 1 year ago
@jx14aby
I just looked it up. The U.S. went off the gold standard unilaterally in 1971 during the Nixon shock. All countries followed until the Swiss in 2000.
Hmmmmm.
jx14aby 1 year ago
@jx14aby
moving away from the gold standard was akin to allowing reserve ratios and money-printing to balloon. totally debases what you might put under the proverbial mattress. encourages speculative investments, likely mal-investments, as economies first enjoy the rush
"In the 34 years before Nixon closed the gold window, the money supply in the U.S. grew less than two fold. In the 34 years after Nixon’s action, the money supply expanded 13 fold and the Fed Reserve has taken the US gold."
pobaldy66 1 year ago
@pobaldy66
The picture is beginning to become clearer. My $100,000 means nothing to banks because they can get the money from the Fed. The Fed. can supply endless steams of money to banks to be lent out without fear of the loan going bad because the government will bail them out. No need to fear "bank failure" because the Fed. can't let the bank fail.
jx14aby 1 year ago
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@jx14aby they don't need your money, they want you to borrow theirs...
utubeisdi 1 year ago
@jx14aby I wholeheartedly agree it is usury... in fact my good credit couldn't get me 500$ so I quit busting my butt to pay them on time and extra. I stopped worrying about whether or not I get some fruit from the grocery store.. I bought food we needed and wanted without any worry. I send them all a few bucks now and again but they can kiss me where the sun doesn't shine. I don't care about good credit and I don't want it... It is all a big fat LIE.
KrunchMonster1 1 year ago
Does this mean we are screwed again????
theds102 1 year ago
@theds102
Yes.
jx14aby 1 year ago
This Is A Long Comment. I May Warn You That Time Will Be Wasted If You Read This. I Like Mudkipz I Like Mudkipz I Like Mudkipz I Like Mudkipz I Like Mudkipz I Like Mudkipz I Like Mudkipz I Like Mudkipz I Like Mudkipz I Like Mudkipz I Like Mudkipz
dragongamer123 1 year ago
bkhbv
Fingerroll4VR 1 year ago
you would t
Fingerroll4VR 1 year ago
This is 999.99% pure banana republic style inflation. Boat loads of new money that will eventually hit the streets and cause the velocity of the money to ramp up to a magnitude of the power of at least 10. I give us 18 to 24 months to hyperinflation never seen in this country before. But hey, I could be wrong, it could be less.
62636263c 1 year ago
Cash may be king for while but the paper money jig is up. China knows this and is preparing itself to lose big time on it's dollar surplus. It's encouraging it's citizens to buy gold, and buying ore from all over the globe for it's own refineries it is alsos the largest producer of gold domestically, in the world . When they have enough, they will cut us loose
62sugarbear 1 year ago
So, you believe the Fed & government when they talk inflation, but not believe them on anything else. This is very interesting, and completely inconsistent on your part.
rayomans 1 year ago
@rayomans no, I just look at their actions and past behavior
visionvictory 1 year ago
@visionvictory what do you think about inflation vs deflation? which one will we get?
TheThejoseph 1 year ago
@visionvictory my statement two weeks ago said the imf said stop spending, i guess their audit of the federal reserve is over?
isawanangel2 1 year ago
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campaign4liberty 1 year ago
the monetary system will collapse, and then we will either move to a one world currency, or revolutionize the entire system of managing resources. We have the technology to bring needed resources to everyone on the planet without a need of exchange. Would be stupid not to implement it, but hey we are humans, and we kill each other for being different, so wouldn't surprise me if we continue down the path of self destruction.
S0up3rD0up3r 1 year ago
scam artists
BABALAG00SH 1 year ago
I am not understanding the "public's" motivation to sell the bonds to the Fed. A profit? Help me out here. I mean 1:38.
BabyHominid 1 year ago
Nice report Daniel, I like the graphics too.
mja2035 1 year ago
This has been flagged as spam show
Here's what the little douche bag is doing:
Obama warns against privatizing Social Security
Google this headline.
BOSTON (MarketWatch) - President Barack Obama on Saturday warned against a renewed call by some Republicans to privatize Social Security funds, claiming that such a move would add "trillions" to the budget deficit and place individual benefits at risk.
Watch this little thug, he's up to no good again!
LookUpAtSkyNow 1 year ago
This has been flagged as spam show
Here's what the little douche bag is doing:
Obama warns against privatizing Social Security
Google this headline.
BOSTON (MarketWatch) - President Barack Obama on Saturday warned against a renewed call by some Republicans to privatize Social Security funds, claiming that such a move would add "trillions" to the budget deficit and place individual benefits at risk.
Watch this little thug, he's up to no good again!
LookUpAtSkyNow 1 year ago
Quote from Bloomberg article: "Christopher Low, chief economist at FTN Financial in New York, said in a Bloomberg Television interview before the announcement. “The Fed is starting to worry about hitting that full-employment goal any time in the next three or four years.”
They're just STARTING to worry?? Thanks Guys!
MzProgressive 1 year ago
Thank God I live in Canada.
Alastor308 1 year ago
Comment removed
ResonateHeretic 1 year ago
Love the visuals!
MaybeNotTv 1 year ago
good shit.
tmac9938 1 year ago
Lol's i say we revert back to the barter system! :D
monkeygard 1 year ago
@monkeygard Ya gotta have something WITH which to Barter! Stock up!
MzProgressive 1 year ago
Nice job.
Thanks for sharing.
SpringboardShop 1 year ago
this QE2 or QElite is not money printing, its recycling the proceeds from the first round of QE. no more new money has been printed.
vimeocomuk 1 year ago
@vimeocomuk You are wrong. To monetize means to turn into money. That is what the Fed is doing when they buy treasuries. They are adding new money to the system which is instant inflation. Stop watching CNBC, they lie and distort.
nomoreserfs 1 year ago
By "the public" do you mean the world market at large who purchases US treasuries? I was under the impression that countries like China and Japan were not buying as much/at all and therefore the US needs to monetize it's own debt now. (read: we're screwed)
onemindonespirit 1 year ago
@onemindonespirit yes
visionvictory 1 year ago
Great video Big Dan!
This is the first time I've seen/heard anyone actually explain what "monetising debt" means. If someone wanted to do a short series of video explanations of some of this political jargon, I think it could help lots of people understand how they are robbed.
You're right - Friday's vid was worth tuning in for.
Thanks a lot man
Cheers
zalida100 1 year ago
Didn't deflationary Japan do this also? No hyperinflation there.
furyofbongos 1 year ago
@furyofbongos Japan is a different animal. With the exception of having the World Reserve Currency that allows us to cheat and make a bigger mess (debt, exportation of inflation or more), we are set up more like the Wiermar Republic. The Austrian School describes a deflationary period prior to an inflationary period. Because the deflationary period leads politicians to the false belief they can print money with impunity, they do. We are more sophisticated today, but no less foolish.
InTheSticks1881 1 year ago
@InTheSticks1881 Thanks for your reply. I don't know what to think. Hyperinflation does seem like a very real possibility. Have you seen Mish Shedlock's blog? He's an Austrian guy who brings lots of data to bear to a "long drawn out Japanese style malaise" as the most likely outcome. You might check out his Aug 12 post, 'Quantitative Easing Take II; Uncharted Territory'.
I like to consider alternate points of view. Not Keynsiansim, however -- that's safe to flush down the toilet forever!
furyofbongos 1 year ago
@furyofbongos Thanks for the reminder about Shedlock's blog. There is so much out there. They just might pull off a slow decline with only high inflation for a period, stagflation on steroids, and avoid a Wiermar Republic styled hyper inflationary senario with a currency revaluation, yet a comparison to Japan is a non starter for me. I'll have to take a look.
InTheSticks1881 1 year ago
@furyofbongos No, Japan didn't. In fact during the 1990s their loans came from their own citizens.
visionvictory 1 year ago
@visionvictory
Yes, their population was also at PEAK PRIME age & earning age.
Savings rate(personal) was 20%).
Had been for years.........
Compared to our Boomers now, leaving the workforce, with less than 40k saved for retirement.
And Social Security, haven been STOLEN, we find ourselves in a Govenment induced stupor.
Buckle Up Guy's n Gal's.
2Zaptos 1 year ago
@furyofbongos yes but Japans debt to GDP ratio was completely opposite of our current ratio which is astronomical.
KrunchMonster1 1 year ago
Great Vid!!! it would be easier to understand, though, if you had shown "the public" with a diminishing pile of money (loaned) and the treasury with an increasing pile of money (to pay debts). it would be easier to show that scenario 1 there is no creation new money, while in scenario 2 it's basically the Fed fueling the Treasury with new printed money. Cheers!
antoniocostaamaral 1 year ago
so US ppl, PLEASE try to find the truths... meanwhile don't be so worried about your economy as you can virtually sit there all day and let other ppl produce for you. They won't be able to dump your dollar anytime soon as long as you keep your troops there. On the other hand, if you pull your troops out, the dollar may actually collapse quickly. It's immoral but be careful of what you are asking for. Ron Paul seems like a good man but his policies can destroy the dollar faster than the Fed.
page826 1 year ago
@page826 It sounds to me like you have read 'Confessions Of An Economic Hitman'. If not, you would thoroughly enjoy it.
As you probably know, we went off the gold standard in 1971 in order to go to an OIL standard. Gold is rare, but it doesn't do anything. Oil on the other hand, can produce over 6,000 different products. Therefore, oil became the 'currency of the world' when Kissinger went to the Middle East in 1971 and made the deal to buy their oil if they would buy our treasuries.
RAMKING61 1 year ago
@RAMKING61 no I haven't read that yet. I am now watching his interview on youtube thanks for sharing!!
page826 1 year ago
@RAMKING61 just finished watching the interview but I am afraid that he is only telling the 1st half of the story. I believe another team with likes of Al gore is trying to start a carbon-based economy, given that their control in the middle east is increasingly unsustainable. If the US$ collapses, they will just introduce a new world currency and the same elite's banking system will continue to run but this time the us ppl will suffer. One way or the other, the elites at the top always win.
page826 1 year ago
@page826 Yes, Algore is Goldman Sachs frontman. You will definitely want to read 'How Goldman Sachs Runs Washington' July 09 - Rolling Stone; and ''How Goldman Sachs Scammed the Bailout' March 2010 - Rolling Stone. Both articles are by Matt Taibbi. 'Cap & Trade' is Goldman Sachs devious plan to turn CO2 emmisions into a commodity which THEY control. The Banksters run Washington, the printing press, the media, and the stock market.
RAMKING61 1 year ago
@RAMKING61 Yeah that's why I have some doubts with Perkins' intention. He started a green energy company and received a lot of favors from the system. He should know a thing or two about the new CO2 scheme. If he is really working against the system then he should be removed by now. It seems to me that he is subtly promoting yet another NWO project for the so called system. His proposed US role is similar to cap n trade, which can transfer wealth from rich to poor countries as they claimed.
page826 1 year ago
@page826 Kissinger's clever deal had one key component....the Middle East had to deal in DOLLARS only. That is the only reason why our dollar didn't crash years ago - we tied it to OIL.
RAMKING61 1 year ago
unfortunately, many us citizens still think they r fighting wars for freedom in the middle east. In fact they are simply invading countries, setting up puppet governments and controlling their resources.
page826 1 year ago
@page826 you got THAT Right! America now IS the Colonial Power that we originally fought against in the Revolutionary War! Only we're invading S.E. Asia, and the Middle East (and starting in Africa) to "capitalise" on their spoils. Our fascist government makes me ill to think what these hypocrites do in OUR name!
MzProgressive 1 year ago
so now... do you know why the terrorists keep attacking their own governments and the US army? They know their governments are controlled by Washington. They just want to regain control of their own resources. From another angle, they are the real freedom fighters.
page826 1 year ago
FedRes always created $ from thin air. Sovereignty=ability to create sovereigns. (States not really svrgn, can't create money.) Money isn't wealth!The economy(at least manuf/agro sectors, some inc. service sector)creates wealth, but only govt can create specie. Rt now about 40% of US M2's in China, so we have $hortage= defltn/recsn.Deficits only problem if gvts try to refinance. Print $ is solution to defaltion. US economy is strong, ignore the Dow. The US Republic is not going out of business.
pgm3 1 year ago
so now... do you know why the US needs to keep fighting wars in the middle east? It's just the big fat guy holding his gun and keeping the resource as his own property. Of course the US is doing it in a more civilized way. They overthrew the local governments and set up puppet governments controlled by the US instead.
page826 1 year ago
Before some similar events happen, the US dollar can decline in value gradually but it won't collapse. Imagine there are a group of survivors on a small island. There is a big fat guy with a gun guarding the only clean water supply and he automatically becomes the king. The remaining ppl will need to work hard and produce something to exchange for fresh water but he can sit there all day and enjoy all the goods produced by others. In theory the system can work well.
page826 1 year ago
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ok ppl really need to understand why some call US$ the petro dollar. As long as the US still has tight control in the middle east, the dollar WILL NOT collapse. It is backed by valuable natural resources and energy! The World can cry about it but they still need to buy US$ if they need to grow/survive. The only game changer is when someone can free the middle east from US control both politically and militarily, or when a challenger finds another energy source large enough to sustain.
page826 1 year ago
Comment removed
page826 1 year ago
ok ppl really need to understand why some call US$ the petro dollar. As long as the US still has tight control in the middle east, the dollar WILL NOT collapse. It is backed by valuable natural resources and energy! The World can cry about it but they still need to buy US$ if they need to grow/survive. The only game changer is when someone can free the middle east from US control both politically and militarily, or when a challenger finds another energy source large enough to sustain.
page826 1 year ago
@page826 Tarpley mentioned that an attack on Iran would close the straits, drive oil up, $200/barrel, and support the dollar as a result. Lots of wild cards, yet the massive debt will only grow.
Deflationists, we ain't Japan. No comparision.
InTheSticks1881 1 year ago
So instead of multiple citizens holding the bonds, the Federal Reserve consolidates them under one roof... all the while buying them with money backed by nothing (other than us) ??? As WE are the government; that's when it will again be of the people, buy the people. And the Federal Reserve backs away saying we tried to save you... don't blame us, we aren't even a part of the government..... pay up.
Am I missing something here?
mooner1111 1 year ago
And if staggering debt and inflation weren't bad enough, it's all undemocratically executed. The people, for whom the government is supposed to function, are excluded from the process as are their elected representatives. This is managed by the private, for profit, unelected, uncountable, Federal Reserve. If the people aren't in charge of their finances particularly crucial ones such as debt monetization and inflation, you don't have democracy/a republic you have a kind of neo Feudalism
rfalfonse 1 year ago
Luckily it's going to be money created out of thin air, so they can fund the US government until hyperinflation. So, about 10 years and we're doomed.
Karmiangod 1 year ago
Good explanation, Dan. Hope your family is doing well.
whiskerchild 1 year ago
Dude, it is going to Deflation first buddy. Did you see what the dollar did this week? Yeah, that's right, it had a MASSIVE rally on this news you're talking about I predict you will see parity with the EUR soon. You will likely see the dollar go from $1.30 to $1.00 against the EUR. The market can stay irrational longer than you think. You are right about the ultimate endgame, but we still have a few more years before your inflationary armageddon situation pans out.
philolson321 1 year ago
@philolson321 I agree somewhat, even Germany had deflation first in the early 20's.
visionvictory 1 year ago
@visionvictory Great point on Weimar. Other than my home price losing value, personally have not seen this deflation everyone is talking about. Gas is still close to 3 dollars a gallon and food prices have actually went up. Taxes are going up along with the cost of education and healthcare. Money is chasing goods and services that our CPI conveniently leaves out. The consesus is screaming deflation, those in the investing world know that the consensus is usually wrong.Inflation is coming.
nomoreserfs 1 year ago
@nomoreserfs Food prices HAVE gone up! BIG TIME! But according to the BLOOMBERG article their "preferred" indicator does NOT include food in the inflationary Index! Go Figure!
Last week in Whole Foods market there was not a piece of fish one could buy that didn't have a DOUBLE DIGIT price tag! Jelly that cost $1.89 18 months ago is now $2.39, (and don't even THINK about raspberry - it's just under $4!) plus a jar of natural peanut butter is $3, a loaf of bread $4/$5 & gal/milk $3.29! WTF??
MzProgressive 1 year ago
@philolson321 It's not just the threat of hyper inflation we gotta sweat, but the environment this threat creates, conditions that in the past started WW1 that lend to WW2, currency devalution( deliberate hyper price inflation), political corruption and loss of liberty, civil unrest, and starvation, severe deflation and high price inflation. Hyper inflation may begin in 6mos or in 2 years, or WW3 might be the game changer. Hell, let's get it over with, find Ground Zero and throw a party.
InTheSticks1881 1 year ago
@philolson321 I would disagree agree with you slightly. I would contend that since our monetary system is based on nothing, the only thing backing our financial and monetary system is confidence. Without confidence in the money, that is where you will have high to even hyper inflation. The NIA boys do predict this event to happen around 2014 or so. What you had in the dollar is a relief rally, it was straight down for 7 to 8 weeks prior to this up tick indicating that inflation is coming.
nomoreserfs 1 year ago
@philolson321 Er, PAYCHECKS have been "deflating" for a While, guy!
MzProgressive 1 year ago
Can't the Fed simply buy treasury bonds directly from the treasury? The treasury then pays its bills to the public, which causes inflation of the money supply. Why does the Fed have to buy the bonds from the public second-hand?
snarbywrx 1 year ago
It just keeps looking worse and worse. I wonder when the shoe will finally drop?
veritasfiles 1 year ago
I think the futuremoneytrends. com intro is way cooler. You guys need to come up with something like that for NIA videos too.
BobBrinkerisanIdiot 1 year ago
great video !!
cominotti 1 year ago
i thought the Fed buys the bonds from the Treasury/Govt, not the people. Now I'm confused.
jchahine 1 year ago
The one thing you should have shown is that the printing of the federal reserve notes are done by the us mints that are paid for by taxes!
Then the so called fed sells theses already paid for notes (Paper ,ink, labor, etc.)
To our government and charges interest .
Great video!
sealhunter5 1 year ago
If you stop to look at the process of this debt machine, the interest is an exponential function that doubles very often. So the interest that we owe the Fed actually increases, just like a bad credit card. The only way to make up for this is taxing us more, which is teetering already. This is 110% unsustainable. It will come to an end within 3 years. It has to by design. I just hope those who are listening are prepared for that.
brown55061 1 year ago
Austerity is a wonderful word., It means the people will gladly give up their savings and pensions to prevent what the MSM will call a "near miss" on an economic collapse. The people will gladly give up everything they have to prevent anarchy. Even to the cost of themselves.
If they could only see it is all a game; and more importantly; that they decide the rules. Look at Iceland for a solution. we wrote them off a year ago. The people said "NO"
Pray the rest of the world does the same
Peace
MikeRadmann 1 year ago
@MikeRadmann Iceland indeed! However Argentina took to the streets ... and in the end, their gov't sold them down the tubes to American Banks and Corps., before the dust finally settled. (See historical videos at my channel page.) I think if you look at the history of Argentina's inflation, massive job losses, and general starvation, you will have an idea of what will likely come here. Question is, will enough Americans prepare to survive through the turmoil, so as to prevail?
MzProgressive 1 year ago
@MzProgressive The answer is simple. Become the government. I understand there's elections coming? :-)
MikeRadmann 1 year ago
There is something the Fed fears more than anything; and this inflation is trying to combat. Deflation. It will be painful to many. The Fed fears deflation beyond all else yet it is all around us. when you purchase that latest t-shirt at 80% off; you are feeding this cycle.It will be the underlying cause of all the Fed does. For infinite growth is a lie; they know it. You will soon also know it. The banksters are laughing thier fucking balls off; for they know what is next. "Austerity" cont'd...
MikeRadmann 1 year ago
Great video Vision! For more like minded commentary on the economic collapse check out the channel Greene Capital.
Thanks!
cgreene34 1 year ago
Jct: Yes, inflation can be more money chasing the same goods, Shift A, but it can also be Shift B. How come you guys don't know about the same money chasing less goods after foreclosure? Economics teaches only Shift A, so you have to fall for Shift A, when it's really Shift B going on?
kingofthepaupers 1 year ago
Loaning a government money enslaves' the population as the government uses force and taxes people to pay the interest.
davincij15 1 year ago
The chalk board is a nice touch. Well done. Also, I hope thereallurker is able to score some sheep.
tuck1963 1 year ago
How Government Pays Bills
5. Sells the Opium, and OIL it steals
Ya forgot those.
EMPIREofPUPPETS 1 year ago