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Keep The Gold Filling

Postby otis gaye » Sun Jan 15, 2006 8:49 pm

Or pray you can afford one.........<br><br>This disturbed me..."the situation is quite alarming though it looks like a play being staged on purpose."<br><br><br>The dollar may fall this March <br>01/14/2006 16:41 <br>America's foreign debt currently standing at $8,184 trillion will hit the debt ceiling as early as February-March 2006<br><br>The United States is heading to financial crisis at top speed. That is correct, America will default on its foreign debt sooner or later if the actual trends remain unchanged. Consequently, the whole dollar-based world (including savings in U.S. currency) may crumble. In actuality, the public have grown tired of numerous forecasts regarding an imminent collapse of the U.S. economy. The picture looks pretty grim this time around. Several factors will have an extremely detrimental effect on the dollar, according to U.S. Secretary of the Treasury John Snow who forwarded a letter full of ominous predictions to 21 members of U.S. Congress. The letter was made public after the markets had been closed for Christmas and New Year's holidays - a rather appropriate precautionary move in terms of the international foreign exchange market, which is extremely sensitive to any sound produced by U.S. bureaucrats. <br><br>In his letter, Snow predicts a crisis in February this year. Citing U.S. government forecasts, Snow believes that America's foreign debt currently standing at $8,184 trillion will hit the debt ceiling as early as February-March 2006. For decades the White House has been borrowing money to cover expenditures that exceeded the real economic growth rates. As a result, the U.S. public debt currently totals to $8.1 trillion, a huge figure compared to the U.S. GDP that is slightly above $11 trillion. <br><br>U.S. Congress sets a debt ceiling which U.S. government must not exceed in borrowing. Exceeding the ceiling brings about the so-called technical default i.e. U.S. fails to pay its foreign debt in full at the right time. However, the government has been continuously raising the foreign debt limits over the last 50 years. <br><br>The United States has been on the verge of default for several times in the past. The recent pre-crisis situations occurred in 2002 and 2003. In the former case (the war in Afghanistan started in 2002), the then Secretary of the Treasury Paul O'Neil demanded to increase the limits a mere 10 days before the estimated expiry of foreign debt ceiling (about $6 trillion at the time). President George W. Bush had to step in to resolve the situation. The new Secretary of the Treasury John Snow raised the issue again in 2003, the year of U.S.-led invasion to Iraq.<br><br>The situation looks the same these days. An additional minimum amount of $171 billion in foreign loans over the limit is required to satisfy the needs of the U.S. economy (though growth rates are far from being spectacular), otherwise the U.S. will face the first foreign debt default in its history. <br><br>"We will run out of funds for financing the government operations by mid-March at the latest even if the U.S. Department of the Treasury takes all possible legal measures to keep the foreign debt ceiling from going up," says Snow. Under his scenario, the government will have to take "emergency measures" to pay the bills. The measures mostly boil down to cutting the spending in all areas from social sector to national security. <br><br>We should not forget that the United States is normally reluctant when it comes to taking steps that could lack popularity with the public and power bloc. By and large, the United States is not good at fighting its ever-growing appetites that result in technical default. The default will lead to a sharp drop of the dollar with respect to all world currencies on the international foreign exchange market. The dollar reserves and debt securities of all countries will depreciate. Time will show how bad things can get under the circumstances. The upcoming default will undoubtedly have an impact on the world economy. <br><br>Still, it is difficult to say how much damage the default will cause to the United States. Meanwhile, experts point out that America is definitely getting ready for default. <br><br>The thing is, a number of events are due take place in March. The events look very alarming to the world of the dollar. <br><br>First, Iran is to officially switch into the euro in its foreign trade operations including oil exports. Second, China is hinting at a potential increase of the euro share in its Central Bank basket of currencies. The dollar share currently holds 70% of the basket. The dollar will be severely affected should the two countries, an oil and gas producer and a manufacturer, take action in a simultaneous manner. <br><br>Besides, the U.S. Federal Reserve is going to stop publishing the so-called "M 3 aggregate" reports i.e. data on increase rates in money supply. Given the New Year's predictions by John Snow, the Fed's intentions look pretty suspicious. In other words, the international community will have no tool for measuring a real value of the dollar. Russia has no reason to panic over the coming changes since it keeps its M 3 aggregate data in the dark too.<br><br>The Fed is going to pull the plug on the data in March this year. Several events should occur in different countries more or less at the same time and thus damage credibility of the U.S. securities. Risk-averse investors get rid of speculative securities e.g. the dollar securities under the circumstances. <br><br>All in all, the situation is quite alarming though it looks like a play being staged on purpose. The currency market and the U.S. foreign policy are hard to foretell. It would be inappropriate to jump to conclusions. <br><br>Discuss this article on Pravda.Ru English Forum <br> <br><br> <br> <p></p><i></i>
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Spare Dime

Postby otis gaye » Mon Jan 16, 2006 3:22 pm

Something has got to give.........<br><br>Dusting off the Brown-shirts and Jackboots<br>Mike Whitney<br><br>January 15, 2006<br><br>The spiking gold market is a sure sign that the dollar is headed for the dumpster. Large institutional investors are hastily moving boatloads of cash into precious metals that promise to retain their value while the hemorrhaging dollar goes the way of Icarus.<br><br>We’re finally beginning to see the effects of Bush’s profligate spending, "unsustainable" trade deficits, and the economic master-plan to reorder American society. And, don’t think that that the poker-faced Sam Alito doesn’t factor heavily in this new paradigm of class-division and elite rule. He’s a vital part of the neocon strategy for tossing America’s struggling middle class overboard and paddling pell-mell towards the new world order.<br><br>Gold had already doubled in less than a year when (two weeks ago) the bad news began to dribble in. Since then the reports of America’s burgeoning trade deficit, China’s plan to move away from the weakening dollar, and finally, the saber-rattling over Iran, have the big-time investors scampering for the exits and gold prices headed through the ceiling.<br><br>Gold is the canary in the coalmine; it tells us when major investors see structural vulnerabilities in the system and begin to bail out.<br><br>All I can say is, it took them long enough to figure it out.<br><br>The Bush team has been spending $400 billion more than it takes in in tax revenues for 4 years, a practice it wants to enshrine as "permanent tax cuts".<br><br>Huh?<br><br>Question: How can anyone argue that the plundering of America is not intentional when deficits are defended as a "permanent" function of government?<br><br>Deficits are theft; and it is future generations that will have to pay for the criminal largesse of the Bush administration.<br><br>Secretary of the Treasury John Snow announced just last week that the national debt would have to be raised to $9 trillion by February to keep the government operating. That means that Bush has generated a whopping $3 trillion dollars of debt in just 5 years.<br><br>Unbelievable!<br><br>This is a strategy that is clearly designed to undermine the dollar and shift middle class wealth to the lucky 1% that Bush serves. It conflates perfectly Greenspan’s plan to sluice zillions into the economy via low interest rates and flawed lending practices ($0 down payments on homes; interest-only loans; ARMs) which create massive speculative bubbles designed to purge the middle class of their hard-earned savings.<br><br>The stock market bubble alone moved $7 trillion from (mainly) middle class investors in retirement funds and IRAs into the pockets of the cigar-chomping plutocrats in Bush’s inner circle. With housing prices on a downward trajectory, energy going up, and the dollar destined for life-support; we can expect to see a growing line at the food-banks and homeless shelters.<br><br>No kidding. America is marching in lockstep towards a depression that was planned at the highest levels of government.<br><br>Deregulation has produced a trade deficit that requires an infusion of $2 billion dollars (or 6.8% GDP) every day just to keep the good-ship Bush afloat. When the flow of borrowed money slows, the dollar will crash to earth like Humpty-Dumpty leaving wreckage strew throughout the American heartland.<br><br>Why else would Bush claim the extraordinary powers of a dictator?<br><br>In just months Bush has claimed that he has the right to torture prisoners, unilaterally declare war, spy on Americans, and incarcerate citizens without charging them with a crime.<br><br>Why?<br><br>Is Bin Laden somehow weakened by the steady erosion of civil liberties? Or, is the White House cabal anticipating massive civil disorder from their planned economic meltdown?<br><br>Even Greenspan has warned that the present path is "unsustainable", and darker days are just ahead. Regrettably, the administration has seized all the levers of power and is prepared for the worst.<br><br>Alito is the final piece in the neocon puzzle; the cornerstone for an American police-state. His backing of "executive signing statements" proves that he will support the president’s narrow reading of the law rather than the law itself. This is a fast-track to tyranny; elevating the president above the rule of law and the clearly-articulated will of the Congress.<br><br>If Alito is approved by the Senate, Bush will have his Federalist "rubber-stamp" on the high court and the Congress will be rendered powerless. No law will be able to check or balance the "unitary" authority of the executive.<br><br>It may be time to dust off the brown-shirts and jackboots; looks like they may be back in style.<br><br> <!--EZCODE AUTOLINK START--><a href="http://www.uruknet.info/?p=19659&hd=0&size=1&l=x">www.uruknet.info/?p=19659...size=1&l=x</a><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK END--><br> <p></p><i></i>
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