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July 10, 2009 Whose Line (of Credit) Is It Anyway? |
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by Doug Wakefield with Ben Hill "Permit me to issue and control the money of the nation and I care not
who makes its laws." "And I sincerely believe that banking establishments are more dangerous
than standing armies." Knowing that I've been warning of a credit crisis for years, a securities firm owner I had not spoken with since 2007 called and said, "Well, you were right." To me, this is like a fellow crewmember on the Titanic coming up and telling me I was right about not wanting to go so fast through foggy, iceberg-infested waters. We are all in the same boat. I've been wrong several times in my life, and if there were one time when I really wanted (and want) to be wrong, it is now. Though I do not know, nor can I explain, all the nuances of what is transpiring in our economy, the situation unfolding in California serves as a good proxy. Like our federal government, and most of our nation's Fortune 500 companies and states, California has been running budget deficits for quite a while. But since it is not a banking institution, our federal government is unwilling to help them with their $26 billion dollar annual deficit, leaving the state to issue an estimated $3 billion worth of IOUs instead. A July 2, 2009, BBC article states:
Our nation's major banks said they would only accept these IOUs through Friday, April 10th. A July 7, 2009, Wall Street Journal article, noted:
Mind you, these are the same banks that received $700 billion in TARP funds, $345 billion of TGLP loans, and over $13.9 trillion in government guarantees - the same banks that created all of those crazy negative amortization, interest only, adjustable rate mortgages in the first place and loaned them to people who in many cases had no income, no job and no assets (NINJA loans) - and the same banks that went out and leveraged up these loans and spread them across the globe via the alphabet soup of derivatives, of which their U.S. exposure now stands at $202 trillion.
Would that California were as privileged as a bank. Then our federal government would give it multiple times its $26 billion need. If it were JP Morgan, it would have received $138 billion. If it were Bank of America, it would have received$118 billion. If it were Citibank, it would have received $300 billion. If it were AIG, it would have received $150 billion. While states and automakers plead for much smaller bailouts, banks look to have a blank check. And, some of this money might be justifiable if it were making its way back into the economy and the hands of the people who need jobs. Mike Shedlock's Global Trend and Economic Analysis shows that our current unemployment numbers are understated by over 2.5 million since the mainstream reporting does not include the Emergency Unemployment Compensation. Official unemployment shows that we are just approaching 10 percent, but John Williams' Shadow Stats shows that when we add back "discouraged workers" and take some of the bias out of the calculations, the number is closer to 20 percent. As Paul Kasriel's recent article states, 98 percent of the increased reserves sits on the books of banks:
In his June 26, 2009 article, It Is Economic, Doug Noland notes Fed credit has been on the rise:
The following table from The Chart Store verifies the same and shows that the build up in banks cash assets represents a 236 percent yearly increase.
With all the corruption entangled within the system, exemplified by the revolving door and blurred lines between the leadership of Goldman Sachs and the Federal Reserve, the US Treasury, and many aspects of US monetary and fiscal policy (see our May 2009 issue of The Investor's Mind: The Goose that Laid the Golden Egg or Rolling Stone magazine's July 2, 2009, article, The Great American Bubble Machine, which both implicate Goldman Sachs as one of the most politically connected Wall Street firm in modern history) Thomas DiLorenzo's May 13, 2009 article, Never-Ending Government Lies About Markets, was right to state:
So, we can sit idly by and allow the Wall Street banks to solidify their grasp on our government by setting new laws into motion that make their power absolute, or we can heed Lord Acton's words, "Power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely," and let our voices be heard in Washington. Congressman Ron Paul's fight to audit the Federal Reserve finally looks to be gaining support. A July 9, 2009, Reuters article, Bid to Clip Fed's Wings Gains Support in Congress, states:
And before we are duped into believing that we must allow the "honorable" members of our state enough "secrecy" to help our country, let's remember to wise words of Dr. Murray Rothbard:
On July 4, 1776, our nation's founding fathers signed a document that stated:
For the benefit of so many in the present, and our children, we must take actions to correct the abuses in our government so that it is once again a government of the people, by the people, and for the people. As it stands, I fear that songwriter Josh Groban's words, "Blinded by trust, asleep to the truth, awakened by disbelief," describe the majority of our fellow countrypersons.
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Doug Wakefield, Best Minds, Inc is a registered investment advisor that looks to the best minds in the world of finance and economics to seek a direction for our clients. To be a true advocate to our clients, we have found it necessary to go well beyond the norms in financial planning today. We are avid readers. In our study of the markets, we research general history, financial and economic history, fundamental and technical analysis, and mass and individual psychology. Copyright © 2005-2009 Best Minds Inc. Image rendition and html coding Copyright © 2000-2009 SafeHaven.com ADVERTISEMENTS
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