|

|
Welcome to Call to Decision
Current U.S.
monetary crisis explained well
I know people love their anecdotal evidence, especially in an
economic discussion. But the concern here is pretty straightforward.
From about 2001 - current the United States has funded a
comprehensive restructuring of domestic government agencies (i.e.
Homeland Security) with new and far-reaching
"anti-terrorism" programs (e.g. Federal subsidy of
enlarged state and local police, USVISIT, etc.), funded an invasion
and ongoing active occupation of Iraq (at a cost of about $1 billion
per month), while at the same time cutting taxes, and in September
2007 Congress raised the debt ceiling $9.815 trillion. The U.S.
Government went from an ostensibly balanced budget in 1999, to a
mind-boggling increase in spending, while at the same time
collecting less revenue (i.e. taxes). How do they afford it? They
increase the supply of money and credit through the Federal Reserve.
This is a stealth tax. By debasing the fiat currency of the dollar,
they spend the new dollars on the military-industrial complex to
"keep us safe"*, which dilutes the value of the dollars we
save in our bank accounts (or that we negotiated with our employers
to earn in our paychecks), but all of the other goods and services
are still just as scarce, so more dollars are needed for the same
value to exchange for them, which is inflation.
(*Recently "keep us safe" has been extended to including
bailing out financiers such as Bear Stearns and soon Lehman
Brothers.)
The "Three Trillion Dollar War" or whatever you want to
call it was all paid with inflation, which explains why the price of
gold went over $1000/oz, why oil and food prices are up, but people
are still generally acting as if dollars are worth what they used to
be worth before the new money was created. (Arguably his is also why
the Federal Reserve ceased publishing M3 data in March of 2006, and
why the Department of Labor and Statistics has redefined the
Consumer Price Index (CPI) to exclude energy (i.e. oil) and
agriculture from its "basket of goods" estimation of
dollar purchasing power.)
The economic crisis the United States can no longer ignore is the
unwinding of this inflation. However, economists who speak on
television or for politicians will tie themselves in knots and
circular logic to avoid ever saying the word "inflation"
-- it's like a taboo. So first they pitched this problem as a
"sub-prime mortgage crisis", until now the problem is
obviously not contained to just that market sector. Recently I've
heard people start saying "contagion" like when the Asian
Tigers melted down from their inflationary bubble in the 1990s.
But the crisis is simply that the Bush-Cheney administration has
spent more money than God by borrowing and printing it (i.e.
creating inflation), which in the central banking system of
fractional reserve multiplies several times over into even more
inflation. This creates an enormous market bubble -- that so-called
"economic recovery" Bush has claimed in his speeches of
yore. So this bubble didn't even feel like a bubble so much because
the "improvement" was marginal over the pre-existing
recession from the previous dot-com bubble and housing
"foam" created by Alan Greenspan. But soon all of that
inflation is about to collapse.
Think of inflation like those Warner Bros. cartoons where Wile E.
Coyte runs off the edge of a cliff, and he can keep running and
running on the air as long as he doesn't look down and realize that
there's no more dirt beneath him. But eventually he looks down and
plummets until he hits real dirt. That's what a correction for
inflation is like.
-- Comments
by Zuzu @ BoingBoing
http://alexmizell.livejournal.com/970401.html
Deflation is real and here and serious. I recommend the following
links, I read them daily:
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogs
pot.com/
http://calculatedrisk.blogspot.com/
http://bigpicture.typepad.com/
http://maxedoutmama.blogspot.com/
http://alexmizell.livejournal.com/970401.html
ALL KNOW it was an inside job,
they're in forced denial, and they just refuse to believe that their
leaders would execute them for profit and geo political maneuvering.
It’s called cognitive disassociation, its nothing really
complicated. Its just simple denial to keep them in a safe comfortable
bubble
"If there is a decay of conscience, the pulpit is responsible for
it. If the public press lacks moral discernment, the pulpit is
responsible for it. If the church is degenerate and worldly, the
pulpit is responsible for it. If the world loses its interest in
Christianity, the pulpit is responsible for it. If Satan rules in our
halls of legislation, the pulpit is responsible for it. If our
politics become so corrupt that the very foundations of our government
are ready to fall away, the pulpit is responsible for it." famed
Nineteenth Century revivalist Charles G. Finney
"Indeed
I tremble for my country when I reflect that God is just.":
Thomas Jefferson: "The man who reads nothing at all is better
educated than the man who reads nothing but newspapers."
This video is perfect for this picture. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xOIUYdO-0bY
How well do you know your celebrity gossip? Talk
celebrity smackdowns here.
|