It is all layed out in: THE PROTOCOLS...so, if one has not read THE 
PROTOCOLS...they deserve to be ripped off....
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


 
SEMPER FI...by their countenance you shall know them....
Super Baby:   http://www.linkedin.com/in/buildasuperbaby  
Pic's: http://www1.snapfish.com/photolibrary/owned_view=owned_2007/t_=100091828
    
    

--- On Wed, 10/22/08, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [APFN] Economic depression in America:
To: [email protected], [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL 
PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Wednesday, October 22, 2008, 2:38 PM

I am totally stunned that 4 1/2 months after this was sent out, the
only relief the Democrat Senate and Democrat House have passed is what
the president has brought forward. Why do we need a do-nothing
Congress. Certainly they knew everything below and much more from
their govt sources.

Maybe it is their effort to destroy the ecomony of the USA hoping that
the Republicans will get blamed?

Even if they can't get past a Senate silent filibuster, at least they
could bring the issues they support to the attention of the voting
public. This prez doesn't use his veto pen. The last guy vetoed so
many bills no one kept track.

I think the lesson here is the govt's only concern is self-serving.
More power, more riches more political protection. Protection from
people like Joe the Plumber, Rush Limbaugh, and everyone in between.
The below article along with Congress's inaction proves this to be the
case. They are all bums that aren't worth defending individdually or
collectively. Their country is not worth defending. bring the boys
home to help oust the rotten-to-the-core govt to comply with their
oath to protect the Constitution from enemies within.

Rich Martin



From:
"New World OrderLies" [EMAIL PROTECTED]


http://www.globalre search.ca/ index.php? context=va&aid=9162

Economic depression in America:
Evidence of a withering economy is everywhere


by Mike Whitney

Global Research, June 2, 2008
Information Clearing House





Look around.
The evidence of a withering economy is everywhere. In "good times"
consumers shun the canned meat aisle altogether, but no more.

Today, Spam sales are soaring;
grocery stores can't keep it on the shelves.
Everyone is looking for cheaper ways to feed their families.
The Labor Dept. assures us that core-inflation is only
4 per cent, but everybody knows it's load of malarkey.
Food prices are going through the roof.
White bread is up 13 percent, bacon is up 7 percent
and peanut butter is up 9 percent.

Inflation is rampant and there's no end in sight.
The dollar is closing in on the peso and working people
are struggling just to get by. The bottom line is that
more and more people in "the richest country on earth"
are now surviving on processed pig-meat.

That says it all.

In Santa Barbara parking lots are being converted into hostels
so that families that lost their homes in the subprime fiasco
can sleep in their cars and not be hassled by the cops.
The same is true in LA where tent cities have sprung up
around the railroad yards to accommodate
the growing number of people who've lost their jobs
or can't afford to rent a room on service-industry wages.

It's tragic.
Everywhere people are feeling the pinch; that's why
9 out of 10 Americans now believe the country is now headed
in the wrong direction and that's why consumer confidence
is at its lowest ebb since the Great Depression.

This is the great triumph of
Reagan's free trade "trickle down" Voodoo economics;
whole families living out of their cars
waiting for the pawn shop to open.

The economy is on life-support.
The rest of the world would be doing us all a favor
if they decided to chuck the dollar
and boycott US financial products altogether.

That would put an end to Wall Street's chicanery once and for all.

Foreign investors should be demanding restitution and impounding
American assets to compensate for the trillions of dollars
they lost in the subprime/securitiza tion swindle.

Litigate, litigate, litigate;
that's the only way
to make the guilty parties pay for their crimes.

Either that or set up a gallows on Wall Street
and get down to business.

The pundits on the business channel are telling us that the
"worst is over"; that the Force 5 hurricane
in the financial markets has weakened to a squall.
Don't believe it.

The corporate bond market is still frozen,
housing is in free fall, and the banking system is buckling
from the overload of bad investments.
The FDIC is even trying to lure former employees
out of retirement to deal with the tsunami of bank failures
set to touch down later in 2008.

Corporate defaults are on the rise
and and commercial real estate is crashing.

"Commercial property prices in the US in February
saw their sharpest decline since records began nearly
15 years ago as sources of finance for deals has dried up,
according to data from Standard & Poor's out yesterday.

Sales of commercial properties were down 71 per cent
in the first quarter compared with a year earlier."
(Financial Times) Commercial real estate is following
the same downward trajectory as residential housing.

They're both headed for the bottom of the fish-tank.
Any slump in CRE will send unemployment skyrocketing
while adding to the solvency problems facing the banks.

We're not out of the woods by a long shot,
and won't be for years to come. According to Bloomberg News,
soaring raw material costs have caused a sharp rise in costs
to producers that they won't be able to pass on
to cash-strapped consumers.
That means that corporate profits
will fall and stock values will plunge.

Last week, Oppenheimer analyst Meredith Whitney
announced that:

"The real harrowing days of the credit crisis are still ahead of us

and will prove more widespread in effect than anything yet seen.

Just as strained liquidity pushed so many small

and mid-sized specialty finance companies to the brink,

we believe it will do the same to the US consumer.

We believe losses will only accelerate further

and far worse than the most draconian estimates."

Whitney has been one of the few consistently
accurate analysts of the current market meltdown.

The fate of the larger investment banks is just as uncertain
as the smaller "depository" banks. Carlyle Group Chairman
David Rubenstein summed it up like this last week,

"US and European banks and financial institutions have
enormous losses from from bad loans they haven't yet recognized
and may have a harder time wooing sovereign fund rescuers.

Based on information I see, it will take at least a year before
all losses are realized, and some financial institutions may fail.
Many financial institutions aren't going to be able
to survive as independent institutions. "

That means there will be greater consolidation and
more formidable banking monopolies,
all of which is bad for the consumer.

The banks and financial institutions have never been in worse shape.
They've already written down $344 billion
since the credit crisis began last August and
they'll write down another $200 billion next year.

By the time the crisis is over, they will have racked up
an estimated $1 trillion in losses. That represents
a $3 trillion contraction in loans to consumers and businesses.
Also, these estimates don't take into account the losses of revenue
from the slowdown in consumer spending, shrinking GDP,
and massive business failures;
all of which will wreak further havoc on the financial sector.

The amount of stress on the banking system is unprecedented.
The Fed is loaning out money hand-over-fist
just to keep the scaffolding in place.
Take a look at what is going on at the Fed's so-called
"auction facilities" where the Fed is providing loans
and US Treasuries for "unsellable" mortgage-backed junk
and other toxic bonds. The numbers are staggering.

According to the Seattle Times:

"The Federal Reserve's emergency loans to banks climbed
to the highest level on record even as Wall Street
investment companies scaled back their borrowing
....Banks stepped up their borrowing, according to the Fed report.
They averaged $15.95 billion in daily borrowing for the week
ending May 28, compared with
$13.5 billion for the previous week, and the total was a record.
The previous high of $14.4 billion
came in the week ending May 14

...In the broadest use of the central bank's lending power
since the 1930s, the Fed in March scrambled to avert
a market meltdown by giving investment houses
a place to go for emergency overnight loans.
...The Fed also announced Thursday it will make a fresh batch
of short-term cash loans available to banks as part
of an effort to ease stressed credit markets
...The Fed said it will conduct three auctions in June;
each will offer $75 billion in short-term cash loans.
It would mark the latest round in a program that the
Fed launched in December to help banks overcome
credit problems so they will keep lending to customers."
("Banks step up Fed loans, investment firms scale back",
Seattle Times)

Another $225 billion?!?

The Fed is trashing its balance sheet--to the tune of
$225 billion--when the money could be used to provide
free college tuition and universal health care.
What a waste.
Instead, the money is being used to throw a lifeline
to dodgy speculators would were trying to snooker
foreign investors with garbage securities.
At the same time, the Fed's emergency facilities
have done nothing to restore trust between the individual banks
who are more reluctant to lend to each other than ever.

The ongoing scandal surrounding Libor (the interest rate
that banks charge each other and which determines the rates
on $3 trillion of financial products including mortgages)
strongly suggests that the banks are lying about the true rate
they are paying so the public doesn't find out
how battered they really are.

Bloomberg News:
"Banks routinely misstated borrowing costs to the
British Bankers' Association to avoid the perception
they faced difficulty raising funds as credit markets seized up."

Consumer spending is sluggish too, since lending standards
have tightened and home equity continues to vanish.
Subprime problems have migrated from Wall Street to Main Street
as credit trends appear to be getting worse.
Consumers are maxed-out on their credit cards, student loans,
mortgages and car loans. The lack of personal savings
is not the result of a profligate lifestyle
 (as the right wing media likes to opine) but 30 years
of stagnant wages and class warfare waged via big business
and the federal tax code.

None of the baby boomers are counting on Social Security
to pay the bills when they retire but, still,
that doesn't justify the money being ripped-off
from their paychecks every week and slipped
into the general fund where it is used to pave roads
and purchase cluster-bombs.

Social security is nothing but a flat tax for paupers.
(The rich get a free-ride after the first $87,000 income)
These are some of the factors that are bearing down
on an American economy like a Daisy Cutter.

2009 is looking is looking more and more
like a chapter out of Revelation.

An article is this week's The Economist summarizes
the malaise in housing in particularly apocalyptic terms:

"America's house prices are falling even faster
than during the Great Depression.
As house prices in America continue their rapid descent,
market-watchers are having to cast back ever further
for gloomy comparisons. The latest S&P/Case-Shiller
national house-price index, published this week,
showed a slump of 14.1% in the year to the first quarter,
the worst since the index began 20 years ago.

Now Robert Shiller, an economist at Yale University
and co-inventor of the index, has compiled a version
that stretches back over a century.

This shows that the latest fall in nominal prices
is already much bigger than the 10.5% drop in 1932,
the worst point of the Depression.
And things are even worse than they look.
In the deflationary 1930s house prices declined less in real terms.
Today inflation is running at a brisk pace,
so property prices have fallen by a staggering
18% in real terms over the past year." ("The Economist")

The country is undergoing a collapsing real estate market
that surpasses the Great Depression and former
Fed-chief Alan Greenspan's book is still on the
New York Times Best Seller list.
How's that for irony?

Regrettably, there's no sign of a bottom yet in housing.
Some markets have already dropped by 30% costing
the states (like California and Florida) billions in tax revenue
and triggering a steep increase in foreclosures.

In California, sales are not only down by roughly 50 per cent,
but 40 per cent of new sales are sales of foreclosed homes.
The pool of potential buyers has dried up.
Now the vultures are circling and picking up homes
for $.50 on the dollar. The losses are enormous.

If the downward trend continues, (as many now expect)
and housing prices drop 30 per cent nationwide;
the market will shed $6.5 trillion in aggregate value
and lower household spending by $300 billion.

That means GDP will shrink at least another full percentage point.

The crisis in the financial markets won't be resolved
until housing prices stabilize, that's why the Fed
and Congress are scrambling to put together a plan
(Hope Now) that will slow the rate of foreclosures.

Trillions of dollars in complex bonds and mortgage-backed
securities will continue to be downgraded until investors
see that it is safe to "dip their toes in the water" again
and reinvest in a (currently) moribund market.

So far, Congress has made little headway in keeping homeowners
from defaulting on their mortgages. Credit Suisse predicts
that foreclosures will be somewhere north of 6.5 million
homeowners over the next few years.

It is the equivalent of Hurricane Katrina
sweeping from one side of the country to the other.

The next administration- --whether it's McCain or Obama-
--will be forced to restore the Resolution Trust Corp.,
which was created in 1989 to dispose of assets
of insolvent savings and loan banks.

The RTC would create a government-owned management
company that would buy distressed MBS from banks
and liquidate them via auction.

The state would pay less than full-value for the bonds
(The Fed currently pays 85 per cent face-value on MBS)
and then take a loss on their liquidation.

"According to Joseph Stiglitz in his book,
Towards a New Paradigm in Monetary Economics,
the real reason behind the need of this company was to allow
the US government to subsidize the banking sector
in a way that wasn't very transparent
and therefore avoid the possible resistance."

There it is; a taxpayer-funded bailout of Biblical proportions
looming on the horizon, possibly as soon as 2009. Ultimately,
it is the only sure-fire way to stabilize the crumbling
banking system and put a floor under housing prices.
The effects on the dollar, however, will be catastrophic.
Don't expect the greenback to survive as the world's
"reserve currency". Those days are about over.

The troubles in the financial markets will be with us for some time.
The massive expansion of credit has created numerous
equity bubbles that are unwinding at an unpredictable pace.
Author James Howard Kunstler calls the present process
"the remorseless algebra of a deflationary death spiral".
That's about as close to a perfect description as imaginable.
There's bound to be considerable disagreement about the origins
of the bubble and who is to blame.

Was it the Fed's "low interest " policy following the dot.com
bust
in 2000, or the lack of government regulation in the securitzation
process, or was it just the natural corollary of a political system
which invariably bows and scrapes to Wall Street?

The real origin of the problem is ideological.
It's rooted in the prevailing "trickle down" orthodoxy which
opposes any increases in wages or benefits for working people.

Henry Ford realized what today's captains of industry
and finance refuse to accept; that if workers a
ren't adequately paid for their labor---and wages
do not keep pace with production-- -then the economy
cannot grow because consumers do not have the money
to buy the things they make.
It's just that simple.

Greenspan and his ilk believed that they could prosecute the class war
and make up the difference by relaxing lending standards,
changing bankruptcy laws, and by creating a nearly endless array
of exotic financial products that expanded credit.
But shifting wealth from one class to another has its costs.

By crushing the worker, the Friedmanites

have killed the golden goose.

The world's most prosperous consumer society

is in terminal distress and

no amount of "free market" gibberish

will keep it from crashing.

Mike Whitney is a frequent contributor to Global Research.
Global Research Articles by Mike Whitney




============ ===



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