Saturday, 30 October 2010

CASE 134 - Neo / financial Feudalism



Our current economy is a shell game. A grand chess board fraud designed to siphon more and more tangible wealth (not fiat wealth) from the average person and transport it post-haste into the silk lined pockets of a corporate banking minority. The goal? To reduce the self sufficiency of the worlds citizens and erradicate the middle classes to the point of total fiscal and social dependence on the top 1% richest men in the world. Conspiracy theory? Not in the slightest. Just a cold hard fact of history. “Feudalism” is, sadly, rampant in the annals of human culture. Anyone who believes that our modern era is somehow different is simply fooling themselves. Elitists seek power over others, they always have and they always will, and, the most efficient way to gain control over the lives of the masses is through engineered imbalances in economy and control of the resources, land, food and water.

Every time you hear the term “bailout”, or “quantitative easing”, just think “wealth transference”. Every dollar that is printed from thin air by the private Federal Reserve and handed to a globalist entity like Goldman Sachs or AIG through our Treasury represents yet another worthless instrument of debt (and another percentage of interest) that you, the taxpayer and your children, are expected to eventually pay for without ever seeing any benefits. Right now, at this very moment, you and your descendents for generations to come are being enslaved by forcefully imposed usury. Our country has been “volunteered” for a financial debasement on a scale that dwarfs the Great Depression or even the Weimar catastrophe. We ignore this reality at our peril.

Since the initial meltdown began in 2008, we have seen two and a half years of stall tactics and skewed statistics designed to prolong total collapse while central banks position themselves for optimal gain. Simultaneously, the concrete underlying factors of our economy, including employment and purchasing power, have gone down the tubes. True, the system was an illusion long before its many flaws were openly revealed, and it needs to be dissolved, but should it be dissolved to the advantage of the elites who designed its flaws in the first place, and to the detriment of the rest of us? I think not…

Today, as Autumn 2010 begins to settle upon us, many notable and even dire trends are beginning to break the surface of the water and circle the sinking wreckage of our financial system. I believe these factors signal an extreme acceleration in the possibility of “trigger events”, and herald a new dynamic, a process that will directly contribute to a final breakdown of the present system.

Very deep mathmatical banking terminology on how Wall street crashed
http://www.wired.com/images/press/pdf/quant.pdf

The Identifiability of the Mixed Proportional Hazards Competing Risks Model
http://dare.ubvu.vu.nl/bitstream/1871/8839/1/326.pdf

Dow Bubble Until November Elections?

If you look back at the history of economic collapses across the world, you’ll find a strange and ironic constant preceding most breakdowns; the disproportionate values of stocks and securities when compared to actual profits and consumer activity. The Great Depression saw record breaking rallies in the Dow and relentless financial propaganda claiming recovery was imminent just before total derailment. In many cases, investor confidence seems to be most heightened just before a brutal plunge. Perhaps it’s the power of reactionary denial, or maybe it’s the increase in false data supplied by establishment economic goon squads.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/17/us/17poverty.html?_r=1

Food Stamp usage has hit a record high every month for the past 18 months:

http://www.zerohedge.com/article/food-stamp-usage-hits-18-sequential-record-high-408-million

The income gap between the very rich and the very poor has hit a record high:

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/09/28/income-gap-widens-census-_n_741386.html

Consumers have cut back on their credit use for 23 consecutive months:

http://www.usatoday.com/money/economy/2010-09-08-consumer-credit_N.htm

Median household incomes fell in 34 states last year, the worst income depletion since the Great Depression, according to Census data released this month:

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-09-28/michigan-florida-lead-34-states-with-drop-in-median-income-census-says.html

Stock Market volume has been dismal, down in some cases by 50% (which would explain how the Dow has been so easily pumped up):

http://www.businessinsider.com/today-on-wall-street-horrible-volume-layoff-news-and-another-crash-2010-9

The Federal Government has now had to bailout three large credit unions, making the American taxpayer responsible for the backing over $30 billion in bonds while at the same time managing $50 billion worth of troubled assets inherited from the same institutions:

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703499604575512254063682236.html?mod=WSJ_hpp_LEFTWhatsNewsCollection

Music: Mr resonate Feat. Legs MC - Video produced: Unknown

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