Sure, that is part of the scenario, attempting to dump increasingly worthless 
securities based on the US Dollar. Until the security comes due, the lender 
(e.g., Japan) can only get rid of the securities by selling them on the open 
market. The U.S. would probably not have the resources to call the bond back 
and return the money in now less valuable dollars, since in order to create the 
dollars they would have to sell more bonds, or just print money without 
anything to back it. To sell increasingly risky securities, the interest would 
have to rise substantially, and existing securities will then drop in value, 
resulting in more dumping. If you plot existing US employment, Gross Domestic 
Product etc., against real inflation, which is much higher than the rigged 
government indicators, the US economy is currently stagnant, basically still in 
a recession, so it is likely downhill from here. The US has spent itself into 
quite a financial hole, and the things that got by in the past are no longer 
going to work. 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <no_re...@yahoogroups.com> wrote :

 Thanks. You forgot to mention one very important scenario: what happens if 
some of the countries who have been buying American governmental bonds wants to 
cash in, would the US be able to pay ? Japan is and has been technically 
bankrupt for many years BUT they have trillions of $ in bonds issued by the 
American Government. What if they wanted to sell ? The crisis that would happen 
would plunge the world into a historic crisis, one which the Americans can't 
blame their banksters but their Government that borrowed all that money in the 
first place to use for unnecessary wars.
 It's interesting to note that Benjamin Crème predicted that a collapse of the 
stock-marked in Japan will start the global economic crisis.

 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <anartaxius@...> wrote :

 The theory here is, because the United States currency is heavily based on 
debt, once the the psychology of the US Dollar being a standard currency is 
broken, there will be heavy selling of the US Dollar as its true value 
equalises with the other currencies, and hyperinflation will result, interest 
rates will rise, the US government if it can sell more treasuries and bonds 
will have to pay much higher interest rates, further pushing the US into debt, 
a vicious cycle of doom. The worst case scenario is collapse of the economy, as 
Bhairitu mentioned, with a 'Road Warrior' scenario, paramilitary groups and 
warlords roaming the devastated country.
 

 Since no country seems to be on a gold standard any more, how serious this can 
be depends on how the other currencies stabilise against the US Dollar.
 

 As one economic advisor puts it:
 

 'Economic reality versus illusion: There will be no recovery, just plunge, 
stagnation and renewed plunge, re-intensifying the downturn already underway. 
The confluence of negative surprises, including new business and systemic woes, 
should hit US Dollar and spike inflation with hyperinflation to intensify the 
unfolding of a depression.'
 

 
http://goldsilverworlds.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/US_dollar_purchasing_power_vs_gold_1774-2012.gif
 
http://goldsilverworlds.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/US_dollar_purchasing_power_vs_gold_1774-2012.gif

 

 If you follow the news, and the news reports heavy selling of the US Dollar by 
other countries and investors in general, this is probably how the scenario 
will begin to play out.








 



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