Tuesday, February 18, 2014

"Give me control of the nation's money supply and I care not who makes the laws."

The current course of fascist amerika seems to be to make the average amerikan's life so bad that they have to work "hard" just to survive.  And as I said, they are "mad as hell" about it.  That's a quote from my last post.


Now,  I just read the following from a book on money:  "weakening people financially via taxes, debt, inflation and retirement allows for a government's greater consolidation of power.  When people are struggling financially, they are more willing to have the government "save them," unwittingly exchanging their personal freedom for financial salvation."  In other words, people become slaves just to financially survive.   Apparently I'm not the only "crazy" person who believes these things.


Of course, the politically correct way to look at the situation is to blame "big government" for all of the problems.  And who owns and runs government?  The wealthy and big corporations - the fascist state.  Blaming "big government" is a straw dog - the whole system is corrupt and rotten.  Most people believe the Federal Reserve and Financial Institutions are part of  "big government",  but technically they are not.  They are the tools of the wealthy to control the actions of the government which takes to blame for all the problems.  It is nice  and politically correct to blame "big government" and liberals for all of the nation's problems even if it isn't true.


If you have ever seen the video "Inside Job" which is about the financial meltdown of 2008, it begins with shot of then President GW Bush giving a speech.  The man standing to his right is a director of a large financial institution and he leans over and tells the President to wrap up his speech.  Now who is really running the country?  The President or the money people who tell him what to do?


NEWS TODAY:  "Household debt rose by $241B in Q4 to $11.52T, a NY Fed report shows, with the increase the highest since Q3 2007 - just before the great recession started. Mortgages rose by $16B on year to $8.05T following four consecutive years of declines. Retail analyst David Strasser is skeptical about what the figures mean. "The problem is you're not seeing job growth; you're not seeing wage growth," Strasser says. "We're still over-leveraged by any historical measure."


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