G. Edward Griffin traces the history of a small group of people who control the money syst
G. Edward Griffin traces the history of a small group of people who control the money systems of the world. It shows how this monopoly is protected by governments and how the group's vast wealth is derived from creating money out of nothing. We see how this group wields power through government, foundations, education, and the mass media.
It has aided such regimes as Russia and China, not because it is pro-Communist, but because a visible enemy and the threat of war have been useful in persuading the masses to embrace the group's ultimate goal: a world government which they expect to control from behind the scenes. They are now working to replace fear of nuclear war with fear of global pollution as the motivation for world government. It is clear that the plan revealed in this program continues to unfold.
Monopoly is not an outgrowth of capitalism. Monopolists lobby for laws that give them advantages in the market place. Monopoloy is not based on free-enterprise competition, but the escape from it. It is not the product of capitalism but the bedfellow of socialism.
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Added: 2 months ago
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Ross Healy, CEO of Strategic Analysis Corporation, gives a great analysis on the subprime
Ross Healy, CEO of Strategic Analysis Corporation, gives a great analysis on the subprime mortgage crisis and hits the nail on the head.
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Added: 6 months ago
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Bank failures to surge in coming years
IndyMac, Corus, UCBH under pre
Recommended read: Bank failures to surge in coming years IndyMac, Corus, UCBH under pressure as credit crunch slows economy By Alistair Barr, MarketWatch Last update: 6:27 p.m. EDT May 23, 2008Comments: 394SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) -- By April, Gary Holloway was almost three years into retirement http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/weekend-edition-bank-f ailures-surge/story.aspx?guid=%7B2FCA4A0C%2D227D%2D48FE%2DB4 2C%2D8DDF75D838DA%7D
Many more bank failures likely after IndyMac Sun Jul 13, 2008 5:16pm EDT By Jonathan Stempel - Analysis
NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. banks may fail in far greater numbers following the collapse of the big mortgage lender IndyMac Bancorp Inc (IMB.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz), straining a financial system seeking stability after years of lending excesses.
More than 300 banks could fail in the next three years, said RBC Capital Markets analyst Gerard Cassidy, who had in February estimated no more than 150.
Banks face pressure as credit losses once concentrated in subprime mortgages spread to other home loans and debt once-thought safe. This has also led to investor worries about the stability of mortgage finance companies Fannie Mae (FNM.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) and Freddie Mac (FRE.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz); IndyMac is not related to either.
While analysts declined to say which banks will fail next, several smaller lenders and one large one, Washington Mutual Inc (WM.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz), appear already to have elevated levels of soured loans, relative to their sizes.
"You have to look at companies with the greatest exposure to the highest-risk assets, which include construction loans and exotic mortgages," Cassidy said. "The final nail in the coffin for any depository institution would be a funding crisis where it is unable to gather deposits at reasonable cost, or wholesale funding markets are cut off."
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp seized IndyMac on Friday after a bank run in which panicked customers withdrew more than $1.3 billion of deposits in 11 business days.... http://www.reuters.com/article/email/idUSN1336701420080713?s p=true
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