網誌清單

編輯 關閉

How did we get into the current financial mess? Great question.

Turmoil in the Making

In 1910, seven men held a secret meeting on Jekyll Island off the coast of Georgia. It's estimated that those seven men represented one-sixth of the world's wealth. Six were Americans representing J.P. Morgan, John D. Rockefeller, and the U.S. government. One was a European representing the Rothschilds and Warburgs.

In 1913, the U.S. Federal Reserve Bank was created as a direct result of that secret meeting. Interestingly, the U.S. Federal Reserve Bank isn't federal, there are no reserves, and it's not a bank. Those seven men, some American and some European, created this new entity, commonly referred to as the Fed, to take control of the banking system and the money supply of the United States.

In 1944, a meeting in Bretton Woods, N.H., led to the creation of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank. While the stated purposes for the two new organizations initially sounded admirable, the IMF and the World Bank were created to do to the world what the Federal Reserve Bank does to the United States.

In 1971, President Richard Nixon signed an executive order declaring that the United States no longer had to redeem its paper dollars for gold. With that, the first phase of the takeover of the world banking system and money supply was complete.

In 2008, the world is in economic turmoil. The rich are getting richer, but most people are becoming poorer. Much of this turmoil is directly related to those meetings that took place decades ago. In other words, much of this turmoil is by design.

Power and Domination

Some people say these events are part of a grand conspiracy, and that might well be. Some people say they represent the struggle between capitalists, communists and socialists, and that might be, too.

I personally don't participate in the debate over a possible global conspiracy; it's a waste of time. To me, the wider struggle is for power and domination. And while this struggle has done a lot of good — and a lot of bad — I just want to know how to avoid becoming its victim. I see no reason to be a mouse trying to stop a herd of elephants from fighting.

Currently, many people are suffering due to high oil price, the slowdown in the economy, loss of jobs, declines in home values, increased bankruptcies and businesses closings, savings being wiped out, the plummeting stock market, and rising inflation. These realities are all direct results of this financial power struggle, and millions of people are its victims today.

An Extreme Example

I was in South Africa in July of this year. During my television and radio interviews there, I was often asked my opinion on the world economy. Speaking bluntly, I said that South Africans had a better opportunity of comprehending the global turmoil because they're neighbors to Zimbabwe, a country run by Robert Mugabe.

In my interviews, I said, "What Mugabe has done to Zimbabwe, the Federal Reserve Bank and the IMF are doing to the world." Obviously, my statements disturbed many of the journalists. I did my best to comfort them and assure them I was not an anarchist. I explained, as best I could, that Zimbabwe was an extreme example of an out of control power struggle.

After they were assured I was only using Zimbabwe to illustrate my point, I said, "If you want to understand the world economy, take a refugee from Zimbabwe to lunch." I advised them to ask the refugee these questions:

1. How fast did the economy turn?

2. When did you know that you were in financial trouble?

3. When did you finally decide to leave Zimbabwe?

4. If you could do things differently, what would you have done?

Three Approaches to a Crumbling Economy

I spoke to three young couples from Zimbabwe while I was in South Africa. Two couples were recent refugees now living in South Africa, and one couple still lives in Zimbabwe. All three couples had interesting stories to tell.

One couple said that they would have quit their jobs earlier. Instead, they hung on, hoping the economy would change. Then, virtually overnight, the value of the Zimbabwean dollar dropped and inflation went through the roof. Even though they received pay raises, the couple couldn't survive and soon depleted their savings. They left Zimbabwe by car with almost nothing. If they could've done something differently, they told me, they would have started a business in Zimbabwe and began exporting products to South Africa, so that they would have had South African currency and a bank account there before they fled.

The second couple that fled the country said they saved money and paid off their house and other debts even as the Zimbabwean dollar fell in value. Looking back, they say they would've saved nothing and gotten deeply in debt in Zimbabwe, allowing them to pay off their debt with the cheaper dollars. Instead, they fled after they lost their jobs, leaving behind their house and owning $200,000 in nearly worthless Zimbabwean dollars.

The third couple still lives in Zimbabwe. When they saw the writing on the wall, they set up a business in South Africa and, with the profits, began acquiring tangible assets in Zimbabwe. Often, they'll buy an asset in Zimbabwe and pay the seller in South African currency. They believe that once Mugabe is gone and order is restored, they'll be in a strong financial position.

Many Problems, Few Solutions

There are three major problems with the events of 1913, 1944, and 1971. The first is that the Fed, the World Bank, and the IMF are allowed to create money out of nothing. This is the primary cause of global inflation. Global inflation devalues our work and our savings by raising the prices of necessities.

For example, when gas prices soared, many people said that the price of oil was going up. In reality, the main cause of the high price of oil is the decreasing value of the dollar. The Fed, the World Bank, and the IMF, like Zimbabwe, are mass-producing funny money, thereby increasing prices and devaluing our quality of life.

The second problem is that our economic crises are getting bigger. In the 1970s, the Fed faced and solved million-dollar crises. In the 1980s, it was billion-dollar crises. Today, we have trillion-dollar crises. Unfortunately, these bigger crises mean more funny money entering the system.

Apocalypse Soon

The third problem is that in 1913, the Fed only protected the large commercial banks such as Bank of America. After 1944, the Fed, the World Bank, and the IMF began bailing out Third World nations such as Tanzania and Mexico. Then, in 2008, the Fed began bailing out investment banks such as Bear Sterns, and its role in the Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac debacle is well known. By 2020, the biggest of bailout of all will probably occur: Social Security and Medicare, which will cost at least a $100 trillion.

Even if we find more oil and produce more food, prices will continue to rise because the value of the dollar will continue to decline. The dollar has lost over 90 percent of its value since the Fed was created. The U.S. dollar will continue to decline because of those seven men on Jekyll Island in 1910.

Granted, the funny-money system has done a lot of good — it has improved the world and made a lot of people rich. But it's also done a lot of bad. I believe somewhere between today and 2020, the system will break. We're on the eve of financial destruction, and that's why it's in gold I trust. I'd rather be a victor than a victim.

引用(0)
  • 網誌分類:經濟人生 |
    網誌日期:2009-02-03 10:35
    最新一季負資產數字上升三倍多,重新喚起港人對上一次經濟衰退時期的「樓災」陰影,今次不同的是,現時住宅單位供求不如當年失衡,樓市回落是經濟調整的反映,要避免負資產大增影響消費,首...
    回應(2) | 引用(0)
  • 網誌分類:未分類 |
    網誌日期:2009-02-02 15:58
    金管局總裁任志剛呼籲投資者小心留意市場炒賣金融機構的情況,又建議政府可以考慮直接向中小企借貸。於金融海嘯中一直無接受英國    政府注資的匯控,較早前被多間外資大行唱淡,股價亦接連...
    回應(0) | 引用(0)
  • 網誌分類:個人理財 |
    網誌日期:2009-02-01 21:48
    炒家文邀約筆者品茗,賀其物業全數沽出,筆者問他何時重投市場,他指了指電視新聞一個畫面,謂那個人一天存在,他一天也不會在港置業。細看之下,筆者才明白投資物業除視乎經濟...
    回應(1) | 引用(0)
  • 網誌分類:閒情日趣 |
    網誌日期:2009-01-19 13:50
    (星島日報    報道)春節前夕,廣東加緊查處賴帳「走佬」的企業老闆。東莞虎門一名香港製衣廠老闆,拖欠十萬多元(人民幣,下同)廠房租金後潛逃,本月初在羅湖    口岸過關時,被邊檢人員拘...
    回應(2) | 引用(0)
  • 網誌分類:閒情日趣 |
    網誌日期:2009-01-15 01:08
    【明報專訊】布殊    在任8年失言無數,misunderestimated僅屬其一,外間更以「Bushism」來專稱他的離奇講話。以下是他部分經典語錄: ※「這明顯是一份預算案。它有...
    回應(0) | 引用(0)
  • 網誌分類:閒情日趣 |
    網誌日期:2009-01-05 08:34
    一連23日的工展會今日下午5時結束,入場人數在金融海嘯下大收旺場,主辦單位表示,截至下午2時,有大約46000人入場,累積入場人數超過212萬,較上屆總入場人數增近一成,打破歷屆紀錄。主...
    回應(1) | 引用(0)
  • 網誌分類:閒情日趣 |
    網誌日期:2009-01-04 19:37
    省港盃次回合,港隊主場以4:1擊敗廣東,總比數以5:4實現三連霸。 今日剛好在家收看省港盃, 在得知首回合落後2球時也是心中估計都幾難追, 但結果係今天大追三球,, 這不就是香港精神吧..  
    回應(0) | 引用(0)
  • 網誌分類:閒情日趣 |
    網誌日期:2008-12-27 23:34
    巳經過咗要講merry x'mas 的時候了,,, 所以只有偷步講新年快樂.. 祝大家在這發生咁多事一年的2008年希望有一個新的, 好的, 健康的, 開心的2009年. 雖然可能好多人會有機會在財富上損了...
    回應(1) | 引用(0)
  • 網誌分類:Heathy life |
    網誌日期:2008-12-05 09:50
    (星島日報    報道)本定於日前在曼谷    舉行的國際骨質疏鬆會議,不幸因當地局勢不穩而被逼取消。骨質疏鬆問題向備受關注,早前中文大學便有研究...
    回應(1) | 引用(0)

我的訂閱

編輯 關閉

我的訂閱

  • 碧桂園(2007-HK)大股東楊惠研成...

    2007-10-09 16:57

    美國《福布斯》披露最新內地富豪榜,26歲的中國女房地產商、碧桂園大股東楊惠妍以160億美元(約1,201.3億元人民幣)......

  • 停止此BLOG

    2007-09-16 14:36

    各位讀者!請轉往以下的地址繼續參觀!http://hk.myblog.yahoo.com/hongkongstock-analysis請訂閱的讀者從新訂閱, 謝......

  • 十一月

    2009-12-01 04:14

    大家,久違了。沒有更新一排,這裏就要被廣告所淹沒。 自從上次網頁更新,加馬一點點建滔後,我一直是冬眠狀態,......

  • 我的小說《命中注定,迷失的戀...

    2009-11-13 19:51

    一次遊走亞得里亞海之旅 一個不起眼的南歐小國──克羅地亞 一段一見鍾情似夢迷離的戀愛   最想不到的......

BLOG 搜尋

編輯 關閉

BLOG 搜尋


網誌分類

編輯 關閉

網誌分類

最新網誌

編輯 關閉

統計資料

編輯 關閉

統計資料

  • 昨日人次:3
  • 累積人次:183
  • 今日瀏覽:0
  • 累積瀏覽:20404
  • 網誌:536
  • 圖片:41
  • 回應:430

訂閱RSS摘要

編輯 關閉

更新日期

編輯 關閉

更新日期

2009-12-03 13:23
 

R H
G S
B V

#