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Welcome to Call to Decision
The price of gold in
dollars rises when the dollar drops.
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THE COLLAPSE OF
THE US DOLLAR
Imagine being sent forward in time
from 1967 to 2007. Instead of gas costing 25 cents a gallon, it's
$2.50. A decent home, intead of costing $15,000, costs $250,000 or
more. Imagine your shock that the average American family owes $9000
on their credit cards. Imagine entering a society where less than 2%
of the cars on the road are owned by those that drive them, and less
than 1% of the homes are owned by the people who live in them.
Welcome to the debt based slave state of America in 2007. It is all
symbolic of how the globalists have America right where they want
it, and are eager to finish it off. As the dollar continues losing
strength, what will this mean to the world? Many will be deceived
into believing that the economy is recovering; and then they will
suddenly wake up to find their money worthless. As with the
Argentina currency collapse a few years ago, so will the American
dollar collapse likewise. However, the collapse of the US dollar is
going to have much greater impact on the global economy and
international political landscape than the collapse of the
Argentinean peso ever did. The collapse of the dollar will reduce
America to third world status, and it's people to a chaos they are
woefully unprepared to face. It will be a period of tremendous
hardship and economic deprivation. It will be a time of great
tribulation.
With our money being worthless, there will no
longer be the ability to import fossil fuels. The gas lines of the
70's will seem like a pleasant dream compared to what this would be
like. Also, this will have a devastating effect upon the agriculture
and transportation sectors. The transportation system will not be
able to distribute food without gas or diesel. Industry will largely
grind to a halt. No longer will the economy be able to function. It
will be the end of....
http://64.233.169.104:80/search?q=cache:4lR2CqLOG7MJ:www.geocities.com/northstarzone/EURO.html
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The view from England....
The address of the Bank of England is Threadneedle Street , EC2
London. Martha and I could not have been closer. On Christmas day,
we were at the Threadneedles Hotel at 5 Threadneedle Street . But
proximity to the Bank of England is measured not by distance but by
influence. Those closest to the Bank of England are the
moneylenders.
England 's reign as a world power actually began on Threadneedle
Street . Then, no bank had its own building and bankers were but
goldsmiths who lent money and rented space to do business. But after
the moneylenders cut their bargain (and it was a bargain) with King
William of England , things were never to be the same, either for
England or the moneylenders—or the world.
In 1694, by bailing King William out of his debts incurred by
England 's war with France , the moneylenders achieved enormous
power and a new found respectability. They now called themselves
bankers and would profit by the vast sums of credit that were to
underwrite the greatest empire since imperial Rome —an era that is
now about to end.
In THE GREAT WAVE – Price Revolutions and the Rhythm of History
( Oxford University Press 1996), David Hackett Fisher chronicles
the rise and fall of prices and the accompanying rise and fall of
epochs. The ending of all such epochs, Fisher notes, are marked by a
wave of rising prices lasting from 80 to 120 years. Each wave
culminates in economic collapse and the resultant breakdown and
transformation of society.
We are now in the final stages of a price wave that began in 1896, a
wave that will end the era of England 's influence on our world. A
period David Hackett Fisher calls “Victorian England”. But it
could well be called “The Era of Credit”; for it was credit that
built the era of Victorian England; and, it is the collapse of
credit that will bring about its end—for just as day becomes night
so too does credit become debt.
WHEN CREDIT WAS KING
THE REIGN OF CREDIT I
England —the cradle of credit
England could not have achieved its immense power nor moneylenders
their extraordinary profits had not King William struck his Faustian
pact with the moneylenders in 1694, a bargain that was to grant the
King unlimited credit to wage war in exchange for the right of
moneylenders to issue credit-based money. Both parties were to
benefit immensely from the bargain—until now.
England ultimately leveraged its ability to.... http://www.marketoracle.co.uk/Article3325.html
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