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Rassah
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September 18, 2014, 12:03:27 AM
 #401

Secession, not succession.


Also, unless "the powers that be" told Ukraine's president to become a dictatorial dickhead, they had nothing to do with what happened there. I had friends in high places there, and no one was paid to protest, or to stay and keep protesting when they were told doing so is going to land them 15 years in jail.
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September 18, 2014, 04:29:57 AM
 #402

http://www.corbettreport.com/yes-to-what-the-scottish-conundrum/

Yes to What? – The Scottish Conundrum

This week the Scots will go to the polls to answer a deceptively simple question:

“Should Scotland be an independent country?”

The question’s simplicity belies the enormity of what is being asked. In centuries past, such a sovereignty proclamation would only have been delivered at the end of a sword after the spilling of much blood. Today the fates of nations are decided by referendum…sort of.

You see, the question is extremely simple, and, in the words of at least one Canadian commentator who finds its precision refreshing after the convoluted tangle of Quebec’s sovereignty referendum questions, “crystal clear.” But is it really? After all, what does it mean to be an “independent country?” Does that mean passport sharing with the UK? Military association? An independent currency? EU membership? NATO membership? Will Scotland keep an allegiance to the crown? Will it become a commonwealth nation? There are no answers to these questions because none of those details have been worked out yet. For now, nationalist politicians are content to leave voters to fill in the blanks.

But these are not trivial questions to be asking. In fact, they go to the very heart of what is meant by “sovereignty” and “independence.” What’s more, Scotland, insofar as it is fast becoming the envy (and the role model) for independence movements around the globe, could potentially be setting precedents for future events in Catalonia or Veneto or elsewhere. In effect, they are setting down the definition of freedom for others to strive toward, so their answer to this string of questions might make the difference between true independence and what could very easily be just another form of dependence.

To see how this is the case, let’s examine some of these questions.

Military Matters

The question of what would happen to Scotland’s military facilities in the event of independence is not an idle one. HMNB Clyde is the Royal Navy service base in Scotland and is home to Britain’s nuclear weapon capability. This capability comes in the form of Trident missiles on the base’s nuclear armed submarines. Currently, Scottish First Minister Alex Salmond plans to remove all of the nuclear weapons from Scotland in the event of a “Yes” victory. This does not sit well with the usual chickenhawks in the corridors of power, who are hyperventilating over what such a “destabilizing” event would mean for the UK’s nuclear deterrant capabilities. Evidently we are meant to believe that if the submarines had to be moved to another base Putin and his band of marauding Russians would use the opportunity to launch a nuclear strike on England.

That specific concern plays into a larger question: would an independent Scotland be part of NATO? David Cameron used the opportunity of the recent NATO summit in Wales to announce that “a number of people” at the summit “raised their concerns about the referendum.” But could it maintain a spot at the NATO table? Salmond and the “Yes” campaign have made it clear they are interested in applying to NATO as a non-nuclear member. A spanner was recently thrown into the works, however, when NATO announced last week that the Scottish government would have to increase military spending by 500 milllion pounds (up from its proposed 2.5 billion pound budget) in order to be admitted into the alliance. Unnamed NATO officials have also been quoted in the media as noting that “you need every single NATO member to say Yes for you to join and even if one doesn’t, you’re stuck,” implying that a scorned UK could actually block an independent Scotland’s attempts to join the alliance.

Regardless of the back-and-forth wrangling over these details, though, the real underlying question is: should a free and independent Scotland seek to join NATO at all? Given its record in recent years in Yugoslavia, in Afghanistan, in Libya and in its continual push toward encirclement of Russia and China, it can no longer be doubted that NATO is one of the greatest threats to peace and stability on the planet at this point. Its mutual self-defence clause obligates member nations to become involved in the affairs of other nations. As we saw with last year, high-ranking Turkish officials have discussed staging a false flag event to blame on the Syrian government in order to go to war with the Assad government. In such an event, Turkey would almost certainly invoke the NATO mutual self-defence clause forcing Scotland to commit resources to a strike on Syria. A similar situation could take place if NATO-member Poland similarly feels itself “threatened” by Russia.

Why would a free and independent nation, finally un-yoking itself from centuries of subjugation to a foreign crown, immediately take on the yoke of a military alliance which would put its military at the beck-and-call of a proven pack of murderers and war criminals? It wouldn’t, of course, and the Scottish people should be worried that Salmond and the SNP have expressed their eagerness to join NATO as soon as they achieve “independence.”

The European Union

“An independent Scotland will be an enthusiastic member of the EU,” says Scottish First Minister Alex Salmond. You might want to read that sentence again to make sure you understood it correctly. To repeat: the leader of the Scottish independence battle wishes to maintain membership in the European Union, one of the most draconian and tyrannical governmental institutions in the world today.

This is the same European Union that made Ireland vote on the Lisbon Treaty a second time because it didn’t like the results of the first vote. The same EU that has spearheaded the disastrous Eurozone and the subsequent meltdown of the Eurozone economy. The same EU that is run by bureaucrats through an unelected an unaccountable European Commission. The same EU that ruled through its “Court of Justice” [sic] in 1999 that it is illegal to criticize the EU, a ruling that they actually used to formally reprimand UKIP MEP Nigel Farage in 2009 for calling the EU an unaccountable tyranny.

Why anyone claiming to be in favor of Scottish independence would be interested in immediately signing away their sovereignty is beyond my comprehension. But even for those “independence” advocates who are so inclined, it is doubtful they will find a cheerful ally in the European Union. The members of many of the EU nations will be concerned about the potential genie that Scotland is letting out of the bottle with this referendum. Spain will worry about Catalonia, Italy about Veneto, Belgium about Flanders.

Ironically, though, as long as these “independence” movements all follow the Scotland “Yes” campaign in clamoring for EU membership, it is the EU that will be the big winner of this trend. Brussels will have even more power over Europe when small, isolated local governments are gathering at the table. It is only by rejecting Brussels altogether that Scotland can have any hope of maintaining its sovereignty or achieving true independence.

Free Scotland and the Monarchy

Would a free and independent Scotland still recognize the Queen as its monarch? According to Alex Salmond, yes it would. In fact, he even went so far as to say that the Queen “will be proud” to be the monarch of an “independent” Scotland, and Scotland “would be proud to have her as monarch of this land.” The Queen, for her part, “is firmly of the view that this is a matter for the people of Scotland,” according to a royal spokesman.

The idea, presumably, is that Scotland would take its place in the Commonwealth alongside Canada, Australia and other former British colonies that have achieved independence from England but still recognize the Queen as head of state. In the case of Scotland, the bond between the crown and the country is more substantial; the 1603 “Union of the Crowns” united Scotland, England and Ireland under a single monarch. The Crown of Scotland remains distinct and separate, meaning that Queen Elizabeth is also formally “Queen of Scots,” a role that Salmond sees no problem with her maintaining after independence.

This is not such a popular position, however. Polls show that 46% of independence supporters also support the idea of Scotland breaking its ties to the crown. Yes Scotland campaign chair Dennis Canavan is on record saying that he is in favor of a referendum on the subject if the country wins its independence. An independent country would also have the ability to write the monarchy out of the picture politically by removing the Queen as “head of state” even if they did decide to keep some formal tie to the crown.

The anti-royalists face an uphill battle, however. The Queen spends a week each year at her official residence in Scotland, Holyrood Palace, and even more time at Balmoral Castle in Aberdeen; Prince Charles is the Duke of Rothesay; the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge are also the Earl and Countess of Strathearn. The royal roots in Scotland are deep, and a majority of the country is in favor of keeping the ties.

But why is this? What is “independence” if not the notion that a nation is sovereign; that is, not subject to any outside authority? Why would a free and independent Scotland want to bow down to any crown, rather than take their place amongst the nations of the world that recognize no special line of rulers who are granted their title, crown and ornate riches for no other reason than they were born into the right family?

If the independence movement wants to live up to their name, they will take Canavan’s suggestion, hold a referendum on the royal issue, and roundly reject the notion that any family has the right to rule over Scotland by virtue of their “blue blood.”

Scotland’s Own Currency?

By far the most important question facing an independent Scotland would be how to handle its monetary policy.

It may be surprising to anyone who has never shopped in Scotland, but the country already has its own currency, issued as banknotes by three of the country’s biggest banks: the Bank of Scotland, the Royal Bank of Scotland, and Clydesdale Bank. According to The Association of Commercial Banknote Issuers, these Scottish banknotes are “fully backed at all times by ring-fenced backing assets partly held in Bank of England notes and UK coin and partly as balances on accounts maintained by the issuing banks at the Bank of England.” Interestingly, some of this issuance is backed somewhere in the bowels of the Bank of England’s vaults by special 1 million pound notes called “Giants” and 100 million pound notes known as “Titans.”

But as viewers of “Century of Enslavement: The History of the Federal Reserve” will know, the paper money in circulation in the US only makes up a tiny sliver of the total money supply, and similarly in Scotland these Scottish banknotes only make up a fraction of the money supply there. Most of the money in Scotland (like almost every other country) is credit created by the private banks as accounting entries in their ledgers when customers took out loans.

But what would happen in the event of a “Yes” vote? Would the Scottish pound continue to be backed by Bank of England notes? Would it continue to trade at par with the English pound? Would the Bank of England continue to act as a lender of last resort and set monetary policy for Scotland? It is by no means clear, and depends on whether “independence” involves: Scotland entering into a formal currency union with the UK; Scotland continuing to use the sterling as its unit of account; Scotland creating its own, completely separate currency; or Scotland adopting the Euro.

In order to enter into a currency union with the UK, Scotland would have to negotiate an agreement with the Bank of England to set the terms of that relationship. Perhaps the Bank of England would remain Scotland’s central bank, or set monetary policy, or act as the lender of last resort. If so, there would be very little change to the status quo, although it would likely mean that the cost of borrowing for the newly-independent Scottish government would go up, depending on the terms it could reach with the BoE.

If Scotland adopted the Euro, it would need to set up its own central bank. As Ollie Rehn, the former EU commissioner for monetary union, noted earlier this month, any attempt to join the Eurozone would require “a monetary authority of its own” which he referred to as one of the “necessary instruments of the Economic and Monetary Union.” This central bank would presumably work something like the Bank of England does today; as a nominally “nationalized” bank that sets interest rates and purchases treasuries.

If an independent Scotland went the route of using the sterling without a formal agreement with the Bank of England, it could get by without a central bank. As many observers have noted, Hong Kong similarly relies on three private banks for the issuance of its banknotes and it does not have a central bank. Instead the Hong Kong Monetary Authority maintains the Hong Kong Dollar’s peg to the US Dollar by selling or buying US dollars as needed to balance supply and demand of the local currency. Similarly, a Scottish Monetary Authority could maintain a peg to the pound sterling by buying and selling Bank of England notes, all without the need for a central bank.

Perhaps the most exciting prospect of all, however, is for Scotland to become an example of some of the truly revolutionary (but historically proven) methods of securing national credit. The Scottish treasury could issue credit instruments directly. The inflationary pressures of this issuance could be controlled by offering a discount for use of these instruments in the payment of taxes. When the issuance is returned to the Exchequer the debt is cancelled out and extinguished or recirculated as required. As Chris Cook lays in a convincing article for Pieria, “Credit Scotland,” such a system could completely eliminate the need for banks to act as the middlemen of credit in the economy. As Cook argues, this would not only be possible, but has already been attempted in the past; in Alberta in the 1930s, for example.

Clearly, the “problem” of how an independent Scotland would secure its national credit presents a very serious challenge to the potential independence of the nation itself. A free Scotland could opt to immediately put itself back in the debt chains of the bankers-either by negotiating a deal with the Bank of England or the European Central Bank or creating its own system of central bank while keeping the currency-as-debt model-or it can truly strive to achieve “independence” in the deeper sense of the word, by throwing off the bankers’ debt chains and finding an alternative system.

Conclusion

Of course now that the polls are showing that the momentum is on the “Yes” side of the ledger, the powers that shouldn’t be are pushing every panic button they can find on their bought-and-paid for media wurlitzer. According to the propaganda pushers, a “Yes” vote for independence would mean: a possible Russian invasion (Business Insider), the abandonment of the country by the nation’s biggest banks (NY Times), higher prices for consumer goods (Herald Scotland), higher roaming charges for cell phone use in the rest of the UK (Sky News), soaring mortgage costs (Financial Times), a deep recession (The Daily Mail) and a litany of other doom-and-gloom scenarios. If the “Yes” momentum continues watch for these same media mouthpieces to bring out even more bombastic claims: the cancellation of Christmas! A rise in dental cavities! The opening of an interdimensional portal and releasing of the kraken!

No, the hyperventilation of the mockingbird media can be safely dismissed for what it is: transparent fearmongering. But there are serious pitfalls that the independence movement might sleepwalk into if they do not think through their actions carefully. After all, “independence” and “freedom” are not just words on paper; they are lived experiences of free and independent people. If that freedom and independence is not expressed – by the rejection of royal families and regional governments and banking oligarchies and military alliances – then they do not really exist. In a very real sense, even if Scotland does vote “Yes” this coming week, that will be only the first step in their journey toward independence.

And there is an added burden on the Scottish people. They are not just acting for themselves, but setting an example that will doubtless be aped by independence movements around the world.

Choose your actions carefully, Scotland. The world is watching.
TheFascistMind
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September 18, 2014, 04:39:35 AM
 #403

Secession, not succession.


Also, unless "the powers that be" told Ukraine's president to become a dictatorial dickhead, they had nothing to do with what happened there. I had friends in high places there, and no one was paid to protest, or to stay and keep protesting when they were told doing so is going to land them 15 years in jail.

Learn from the first person who ever communicated with Satoshi in a public forum.

http://blog.jim.com/war/cathedral-imperialism-revealed/

http://blog.jim.com/war/recap-on-ukraine/

http://blog.jim.com/war/arab-spring/
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September 18, 2014, 05:08:22 AM
 #404

http://armstrongeconomics.com/2014/09/15/conversation-between-downs-armstrong-sept-15th-2014/

http://armstrongeconomics.com/2014/09/17/predicting-the-future-not-so-hard/

http://armstrongeconomics.com/2014/09/17/edinburgh-1997-seminar-transcript/

http://armstrongeconomics.com/2014/09/16/us-number-unemployment/

http://armstrongeconomics.com/2014/09/16/china-prepares-for-war-with-japan/

http://armstrongeconomics.com/2014/09/15/china-russia-v-usa-europe/

http://armstrongeconomics.com/2014/09/14/the-five-eyes-arrangement/

http://armstrongeconomics.com/2014/09/13/chaos-of-war-the-next-will-be-no-cnn-tv-special/

http://armstrongeconomics.com/2014/09/16/healthcare-peak/

http://armstrongeconomics.com/2014/09/17/74-of-all-municipals-want-to-raise-taxes-hello-deflation/

http://armstrongeconomics.com/2014/09/16/florida-raising-property-taxes/
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September 18, 2014, 08:38:20 AM
 #405

Hope you don't mind, I am copying my reply to Armstrong, because both of you have part of it correct, and both of you have a myopia also. I will not repeat your words verbatim in public.

It is important both of you move closer to understanding each other.

Anonymous Female, I believe Armstrong is correct that the elite are NOT more powerful than the cycles. The elites are symbiotic because they are part of the cycle and the power vacuum of democracy is one of the natural causes of the cycle.

I also believe Armstrong is incorrect in that he can't see the cycle is leading to one-world government and global elite control. He stated in his recent audio interview that he doesn't understand how one-world government could bring peace and rather he thinks pushing for that would bring war. Martin is correct that the elite dominance is deflationary, megadeath, failure-oriented paradigm that would lead to war.

Martin's misunderstanding is that the majority gravitate towards being herded. The collectivism and centralization of control was always limited in the past by the lack of technology to herd the entire global population. Communication and tracking was technologically limited. Imagine how could you track someone 100 years ago.

But now the elite have the technology to herd the global population. So global herding is the natural outcome, because people need to be herded. This is the power vacuum of democracy as so eloquently explained by the 150-160 IQ genius who coined the term "open source":

http://esr.ibiblio.org/?p=984 (Some Iron Laws of Political Economics)

This is why I keep telling Martin that the only possible way to avoid a Dark Age is new disruptive technology that interrupts their totalitarian herding technology.

WTF do you think I am doing! Martin has the readership to be a very big help, but instead he is misdirecting his readership away from the solution and chasing the rainbows which are symbiotic with the elite's direction towards a total Dark Age, e.g. all this idealism Martin is displaying about Scotland's potential as independent, and the other myopic Armstrong had about Ukraine and the true symbiosis of the ANGST movement underway. The angst is driving humanity right into the lap of the elite's technological herding.

Martin will instead try to build political resistance to the surveillance, but the politics is by definition always symbiotic with the elite, as you and I so described below. Martin can't grasp that the only possible solution is technological disruption.

I hope the elites realize they are trapped in their own destruction, unless we succeed in disrupting their technological herding.

Is Martin too old to see? He was at one time technologically astute. For some reason he is blinded.

P.S. The Corbert report is public:

http://www.corbettreport.com/yes-to-what-the-scottish-conundrum/

Quote from: Anonymous Female (paraphrased)
Your commentary is great. The big psyop is the creation of ISIS by the elite to recharge the Big T(errorism) false flag and giving support to the DEEP STATE which operates without any congressional oversight. This meme was observable in new language in the MSM starting some 2 year ago. Part of the evidence which is beyond the scope of this email is Obama sending 3,000 troops to Africa to "fight" ebola.

Control over resources such as oil, independent states as a divide-and-conquer strategy, etc...

Feel free to use the concepts but please don't use my words.  Thanks, I appreciate it!  Smiley
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September 18, 2014, 10:15:47 AM
 #406

---------------------------- Original Message ----------------------------
Subject: Martin, I am not claiming the ANGST isn't real!!!
From:    AnonyMint
To:      "Armstrong Economics"
--------------------------------------------------------------------------

Would you please stop obfuscating my point!

http://armstrongeconomics.com/2014/09/18/ukraine-still-mad-at-politicians/

The point I made to you in the prior communication:

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=365141.msg8871381#msg8871381

Is that the ANGST is symbiotic with the trend towards global herding.

It is not just a CIA plot. Rather it is a confluence of the trend at all levels wherein the masses are symbiotic with the trend towards global herding.

Please don't have such a one-dimensional analysis.

You often claim that people don't see how things are interconnected. Now you use a simplistic dichotomy "CIA plot" versus "Grassroots uprising" to obfuscate what is really going on!

Damn it!

You are abusing and wasting the resources you've developed. You are so talented in one area and so deficit in another. It is so frustrating to both respect you and pull my hair out at the same time!

Grrrr!
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September 18, 2014, 12:48:23 PM
 #407

Bitmessage is dead.

Powers-that-be have defeated the only way to communicate anonymously.
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September 18, 2014, 03:45:31 PM
 #408

Secession, not succession.


Also, unless "the powers that be" told Ukraine's president to become a dictatorial dickhead, they had nothing to do with what happened there. I had friends in high places there, and no one was paid to protest, or to stay and keep protesting when they were told doing so is going to land them 15 years in jail.

Learn from the first person who ever communicated with Satoshi in a public forum.

Who cares if he was the first. Frankly, I would ask for proof, but it would be meaningless unless I thought Satoshi was some sort of an infallible saint.



"Presumably this phone call was tapped by the Russian KGB"  Ah! Proof it's a lie.


Sounds like this guy was stupid enough to fall for Russian propaganda. Which is understandable, since Russians have had over 100 years of practice. That, and he apparently doesn't know Russian history, or understands what is actually going on on the ground in Ukraine, with massive natural gas deposits that can threaten Russia's monopoly on gas, Russia's concern about neighboring countries joining NATO (it doesn't want military bases near its borders) and it disrupting such nations to prevent them from being able to join, and Russia's typical take-over tactic of other countries using claims of "anti-russian discrimination" and thugs that start protests.

Have your friend read this. Maybe he'll understand things a bit better: http://ukraine.popo.lt/2014/09/13/that-old-familiar-pattern-russian-invasion-of-ukraine/
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September 19, 2014, 06:13:53 AM
 #409

The banks will crash all at once, probably from some kind of solar EMP on the electricity of the world. Many governments will go down with them. Local groups will form their own governments as necessary to help the members of their group. Anonymity as we know it will be irrelevant. Small groups hidden in the hills will have anonymity because of their remoteness, and this will be the only anonymity that will count. Militaries will die because there will be no-one to support them. Some areas will be a disaster, with gangs preying on the weak, like in MadMax.

Of course, I could be wrong...

Smiley

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September 19, 2014, 01:26:23 PM
 #410

---------------------------- Original Message ----------------------------
Subject: No Apple did not fight back, they fooled you!
From:    AnonyMint
To:      "Armstrong Economics"
--------------------------------------------------------------------------

http://armstrongeconomics.com/2014/09/19/adam-smith-wins-apple-fights-back/

Don't you know the NSA has the ability to reprogram the microcode in the
CPU and other hardware, thus it doesn't matter what Apple has promised to
put in the software for iOS8.

This is just another means of sucking the masses into another false sense
of victory.
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September 22, 2014, 11:27:40 AM
 #411

---------------------------- Original Message ----------------------------
Subject: Global currency, BIS, and the Nazi connection
From:    AnnoyMint
Date:    Mon, September 22, 2014 7:24 am
To:      "Hamstrung Economecs"
--------------------------------------------------------------------------

http://i-uv.com/the-economist-mainstream-globalist-propaganda-reveals-eastwest-conflict-is-a-farce/
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September 22, 2014, 08:48:45 PM
 #412

---------------------------- Original Message ----------------------------
Subject: Global currency, BIS, and the Nazi connection
From:    AnnoyMint
Date:    Mon, September 22, 2014 7:24 am
To:      "Hamstrung Economecs"
--------------------------------------------------------------------------

http://i-uv.com/the-economist-mainstream-globalist-propaganda-reveals-eastwest-conflict-is-a-farce/


Occam's razor dictates that the eastwest conflict is being waged for way simpler reasons than that.
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October 14, 2014, 02:37:55 PM
Last edit: October 14, 2014, 03:56:16 PM by UnunoctiumTesticles
 #413

Acceleration towards Mad Max will ensue October 2015.

By 2019, we will be in full blown scorched landscape with global megadeath pandemic as well.
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October 15, 2014, 02:09:37 AM
 #414

Acceleration towards Mad Max will ensue October 2015.

By 2019, we will be in full blown scorched landscape with global megadeath pandemic as well.

Dont ever stop posting ! Thanks again for all your work.
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October 20, 2014, 04:37:02 PM
Last edit: November 05, 2014, 07:16:23 PM by UnunoctiumTesticles
 #415

Proof that Martin Armstrong predicted in 1998 all the major economic events of the 21st Century (thus far).

Proof that his computer model predicted in 1980, events that are transpiring today.

Proof that his computer model predicted in 1985, the exact day of the top of the real estate bubble in 2007.

Recent proof that his model predicted the exact number of Senate seats won by the Republicans.

You can add the predictions for the gold and silver top in 2011 and the decline to under $1200, as well the continued rise in the USA stock market since 2011 and rise in the dollar. I was reading his blog when his model made those predictions.
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October 29, 2014, 08:57:04 PM
Last edit: October 30, 2014, 03:44:11 AM by UnunoctiumTesticles
 #416

Global debt has continued to rocket up beyond egregious nose-bleed levels, while non-debt based commerce is free-falling into the abyss


Quote
Quote
AnonyMint,
You are obviously a very smart guy with a very broad range of interests and an unusually creative and flexible mind. Your trust in Armstrong is a harmless eccentricity in my eyes.

How much would you wager that Armstrong's model will be incorrect? I trust science. He has done all the science, meaning the model has been extensively back tested since Mesopotamia and forward tested from 1970s to current.

I haven't immersed myself in his work as you have. What specific event would you deem to be a falsification of his model?

There have been so many historically (ancient and recent) thus I consider the model already falsified. The next big turning point in the ECM (Economic Confidence Model) is 2015.75. If we don't see a shift from the ability to use debt to kick the can down the road towards collapse in global nominal GDP, the model failed.

I will make an explosive post in the Mad Max thread today.

http://moneymorning.com/jim-rickards-coming-great-depression/ (click this link if images below don't display)


Collapse of Commerce Driven Growth (i.e. velocity-of-money, instead massive loans create new money to barely sustain small GDP growth)



Declining Marginal Utility of Debt ($ of nominal GDP gained per $ increase in debt)



Total Debt as % of GDP (2008)



And Still Growing... (debt increasing much faster than GDP)
http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/tgm/table.do?tab=table&plugin=1&language=en&pcode=tipspd10
http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/tgm/table.do?tab=table&init=1&plugin=1&language=en&pcode=tsdde410





China Rocketed to 250%
https://www.google.com/search?q=china+total+debt+250
http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2014/06/16/china-surpasses-u-s-as-largest-corporate-debt-issuer/?_php=true&_type=blogs&_r=0 (Corp. 150% of GDP)
http://www.forbes.com/sites/jackperkowski/2014/01/21/chinas-debt-how-serious-is-it/ (Household 31%, Govt 54%)





Exceptions: USA, UK, & Australia Reaped Safe Haven Capital Ingress (as Armstrong predicted, haven't significantly deleveraged, & ingress isn't sustainable)



Fed Covertly Buying Treasuries (?) To Delay Collapse



Contagion Time Bomb of Mass Destruction Lurks



IMF One World Currency Lender of Last Resort After 2016 Collapse
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October 29, 2014, 11:12:25 PM
 #417

You maybe academically retarded.

Academia Retards By Fact Earth Has 1 Day When Dead Still, And 4 Days Within 1 Earth Rotation, losing 3 days retards humanity.

Are you stupid and evil?

If you are ignorant of natures harmonic time cube creation, then you were taught to be stupid and evil.














You are stupid and evil about the
Earth's top and bottom, front and
back and it's 2 sides. Most everything
created has these Cube like values.


Dear UnunoctiumTesticles,

You are a crackpot.

Good luck,

-iCEBREAKER


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whether we have a dictatorship or a real democracy." 
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October 30, 2014, 09:56:17 PM
Last edit: October 31, 2014, 12:40:53 AM by UnunoctiumTesticles
 #418

IMF One World Currency Lender of Last Resort After 2016 Collapse


In the video interview Obama Ending Alliance with Saudi Arabia and Killing the Petrodollar, Jim Rickards makes the astute and salient point echoed by Martin Armstrong that a reserve currency requires CONFIDENCE and the deep liquidity provided by it being dominant.

Armstrong makes the point that it is not the pricing of oil in dollars, that is the sole cause of the reserve status of the dollar, but rather a confluence of that along with the dollar never being canceled whereas Europe has regularly canceled its currencies, and the USA having the world's largest consumer market thus exporters needing to recycle their earned dollars into dollar investments.

The book Colder War argues that Putin is successfully attacking the USA's superpower status by outmaneuvering on energy and natural resources:

http://www.colderwar.com/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6zwxpRPb_M0
http://as.wiley.com/WileyCDA/WileyTitle/productCd-1118799941.html
http://www.forbes.com/sites/johnmauldin/2014/10/29/book-review-the-colder-war-by-marin-katusa/
http://www.caseyresearch.com/cdd/the-colder-war-and-the-end-of-the-petrodollar

While you can verify from my prior post that Russia (and former Eastern Bloc and developing countries such as India, Indonesia, and the Philippines) have significantly lower total debt ratios thus are poised to be more resilient in the coming sovereign debt collapse (after 2015.75, i.e. Sept 2015), there are several reasons it is impossible for a replacement reserve currency to the US dollar to come about within the next decade:

  • There is no politically viable pathway to transition away from the status quo Dollar-Euro-Pound dominant trilogy without bankrupting the pension and social system of the Western civilization. A real solution would require the developing world to take some responsibility for boomers, boomers downsizing, and thus with globalized coordination.
  • Investors aren't going to trust some currency managed by dictators, which is essentially what Russia and China's Communist Party are now, because this is too vulnerable to the whims of a few leaders and isn't free floating. The cure would be worse than the current illness. Russia and China are still largely top-down controlled economies with the entire Russian economy controlled by oligarchs close to Putin and China dominated by fixed capital investment (construction and exports) that favor the elite at the expense of the consumer (household) share of GDP. China will need a long period of time to rebalance their economy to norms of openness, and given the explosion of China's total debt to 250% of GDP documented in my prior post it looks like China will first run debt up high and crash and burn for reset and that reset will facilitate political change, i.e. domestic upheaval and external aggression against Japan (to divert public attention from the failure of the ruling elite).
  • I argued in the Economic Devastation, the Dark Enlightenment, and the Bitcoin adoption slowing threads that we are moving away from a resource driven economy to a Knowledge driven economy. Thus we won't be able to restore economic growth and confidence with some resource backing of the currency, as for example backing with land. Fundamentally technological unemployment is destroying the resource-based, fixed capital, finance-based global economy and nothing is poised to fulfill the demand for a currency compatible to the fledgeling non-financed, Knowledge-based economy which has great confidence. Even Bitcoin adoption fell short as I predicted.
  • Interim electronic currencies such as Apple Pay, Paypal, and Hong Kong's Octopus card, are merely payment systems and have very little network effects that would cause investors to hold reserve balances.

What this means is we headed into an abyss collapse because nothing can derail the mismanagement of the Dollar-Euro-Pound trilogy.

Out of the ashes can arise some global coordination for one world currency solution circa 2032 when the current Private wave ends in Armstrong's ECM model.

The one faint hope interim is for a Private wave solution of a decentralized virtual currency to rise that did have the network effects to serve the Knowledge Age and drive investment balances.

Armstrong is incorrect to assert that the powers-that-be can merely turn off the internet, electric power, or otherwise easily stop some viral network effects technology. There are ways around all such threats. Bitcoin didn't scale because it wasn't designed to, and it wasn't designed to be adopted as a widespread currency.


I posted the following comment:

http://blog.mpettis.com/2014/09/what-does-a-good-chinese-adjustment-look-like/#comment-80662

Quote
Michael, how would a resurgent global sovereign debt collapse in 2016 worse and more prolonged than 2008 factor into your calculus?

Couldn't the loss of aggregate demand for Chinese exports tip the balance towards the down spiraling scenario or wouldn't the real estate (fixed investment) sector need to be stimulated again further exacerbating total debt (which has skyrocketed to 250% of GDP)?

China not only financially repressed its own citizens, but it also repressed the global economy being a key cog in driving global total debt levels to 313% of global GDP and climbing.

Also Vinezi astutely implies a potential cultural problem—Chinese are culturally savers and investors not spenders. Heck even here in the Philippines, the Chinese are known to incredibly stingy, although perhaps that is a filtered demographic of Chinese that bother to migrate here to take up business.

I have this theory of Asian culture that they are prone to mercantilism. It seems throughout history they've always want to invest in external trade in order to boost their retained balances, e.g. even Rome was importing from Asia, next the British lost all their silver to China from doing it so had to addict them to opium to get it back (thus the existence of Hong Kong). For example, the filipinos who have 1/3 of their population working abroad to remit balances home. The new innovation I see from China is DHgate.com and Aliexpress.com for selling direct from exporters to consumers (formerly was only Jack Ma's Alibaba for B2B direct) sort of an international Amazon.com. This is innovative but still a mercantilistic culture.

I am not seeing China as a equitable participant in a global consumer economy (surely they cheated the global economy to get where they are now), rather similar to Japan and wanting to export more than it imports unless the government will run up a huge debt to subsidize consumption (as Japan has done).

Sorry I am not optimistic. But perhaps you can convince me that my concerns are unlikely.

Quote
Quote from: Michael Pettis
Falling housing prices, however, have two separate wealth effects. Those who own speculative property will feel poorer, but those who are short real estate (young people, poor people) will feel richer.

But with houses at 18 times annual income (versus 4.3 at the peak of the USA 2007 subprime bubble), the decline in prices and or rise in wages needs to be much greater than 50% to really make a difference for those buyers if they acting alone, thus house purchase will remain even with a -50% drop in prices a loan from someone wealthy (perhaps a relative) who views it as an investment.

Thus my logic is that China is trapped in its fixed income investment model and can only escape with a crash and reset.
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November 01, 2014, 04:30:09 PM
Last edit: November 01, 2014, 05:50:58 PM by UnunoctiumTesticles
 #419


I posted the following comment:

http://blog.mpettis.com/2014/09/what-does-a-good-chinese-adjustment-look-like/#comment-80662

Quote
Michael, how would a resurgent global sovereign debt collapse in 2016 worse and more prolonged than 2008 factor into your calculus?

Couldn't the loss of aggregate demand for Chinese exports tip the balance towards the down spiraling scenario or wouldn't the real estate (fixed investment) sector need to be stimulated again further exacerbating total debt (which has skyrocketed to 250% of GDP)?

China not only financially repressed its own citizens, but it also repressed the global economy being a key cog in driving global total debt levels to 313% of global GDP and climbing.

Also Vinezi astutely implies a potential cultural problem—Chinese are culturally savers and investors not spenders. Heck even here in the Philippines, the Chinese are known to incredibly stingy, although perhaps that is a filtered demographic of Chinese that bother to migrate here to take up business.

I have this theory of Asian culture that they are prone to mercantilism. It seems throughout history they've always want to invest in external trade in order to boost their retained balances, e.g. even Rome was importing from Asia, next the British lost all their silver to China from doing it so had to addict them to opium to get it back (thus the existence of Hong Kong). For example, the filipinos who have 1/3 of their population working abroad to remit balances home. The new innovation I see from China is DHgate.com and Aliexpress.com for selling direct from exporters to consumers (formerly was only Jack Ma's Alibaba for B2B direct) sort of an international Amazon.com. This is innovative but still a mercantilistic culture.

I am not seeing China as a equitable participant in a global consumer economy (surely they cheated the global economy to get where they are now), rather similar to Japan and wanting to export more than it imports unless the government will run up a huge debt to subsidize consumption (as Japan has done).

Sorry I am not optimistic. But perhaps you can convince me that my concerns are unlikely.

Quote
Quote from: Michael Pettis
Falling housing prices, however, have two separate wealth effects. Those who own speculative property will feel poorer, but those who are short real estate (young people, poor people) will feel richer.

But with houses at 18 times annual income (versus 4.3 at the peak of the USA 2007 subprime bubble), the decline in prices and or rise in wages needs to be much greater than 50% to really make a difference for those buyers if they acting alone, thus house purchase will remain even with a -50% drop in prices a loan from someone wealthy (perhaps a relative) who views it as an investment.

Thus my logic is that China is trapped in its fixed income investment model and can only escape with a crash and reset.

I posted a new comment there...

Co-inductive nature of time, i.e. irrevertible path dependencies, and China's prognosis


Quote
I am pondering if the Chinese political, economic, and social system is a Ponzi scheme in the sense that the fixed capital investment has to be continually recycled into new fixed capital investments along with a subsidy of new debt expansion in order to prevent implosion. I am visualizing that the imbalances are so great, e.g. housing at  18 times average annual income, that it is impossible to smoothly rebalance because (per the example in my prior post) there are no stable (non-volatile oscillation) proximate gradients of adjustment. I am contemplating that the system evolved from the 1980s to maximize the gains of the fewest people (under the pretense of providing full employment), thus it was always about where to place excess capital. It apparently evolved such that as the middle class grew, they piggy backed on that Ponzi system. I am contemplating this is because the manufacturing system did not evolve from the Henry Ford model of paying the workers enough to buy the cars the labored to create, but rather from a slave labor, predatory mercantile model to concentrate capital.

Years ago on this blog, I pointed out that simulated annealing (e.g. less cracks in ice when cooled slowly because the localized molecules are not as top-down coerced) is the only known generalized model of optimization in nature. This requires that the local actors be empowered with freedom. Highly concentrated capital is dead capital. I explained why in my seminal essays on knowledge and the inability to finance knowledge.

So my theory has always been that the slave labor model of economic developer was not invertible except by reverting all the dead capital. Whereas, Michael analyzes in terms of balances and ratios, I am analyzing in terms of co-inductive nature of time, i.e. time and path-dependencies are not invertible because no two events are very exactly the same because the external conditions can never be duplicated exactly. Since Michael has a Physics background, I think he may see some merit where I going with this line of though in terms of the Second Law of Thermodynamics.

I think China's economy can grow greatly if the dead fixed capital Ponzi is allowed to implode and to the ingenuity of its people can become the major component of the GDP. The problem is that the status quo doesn't want to go there pronto, the imbalances are worsening, and thus the prospect of external aggression against Japan as scapegoat is rising.

So sad that society gets stuck in such forms  of negative inertia. Again simulated annealing explains why collectivized systems can't optimize and do get stuck in negative inertia until the crash.

My contribution to the world is to try to create technology to subvert these collectivized inertia. It is only technology that has ever saved mankind of his own destruction via collectivism. That is my opinion which I could argue quite convincingly given a proper forum and sufficient preparation.
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November 02, 2014, 05:34:51 AM
 #420

Martinfoilhat Armwrong is getting called out and reamed on 0H for spewing idiotic anti-1st Amendment crap like "One good place to start is OUTLAW negative advertising."

Quote
Martin Armstr0ng was the gopher boy for Brit Neocon Sir Alan Walters. Armstr0ng's mentor was a card carrying member of the NWO. Walters is dead now but when he was alive this is how Walters spent his time:

> Monetarist econ advisor to Margaret Thatcher
> Adviser to the World Bank
> Vice Chairman of AIG Trading Group
> American Enterprise Institute

AEI, you may have heard, is the HQ for the NeoCon NWO Goat Worshipers who are responsible for damn near every bad thing happening in the world right now.

Armstr0ng's writings show he is trying to keep that NWO flame alive, doing his part by highlighting one side of a manufactured conflict. A manufactured conflict brought to you by his handlers in NeoCon central - the American Enterprise Instute. They have spent years pushing their Hegelian dialectic, order out of chaos game plan.

If you don't like the AEI you really won't like their scummy Atr0ngish partners over at the Husdon institute: http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p0295vks

Armstr0ng is one their minions. He may have arrived at this point against his will, via bribery, coercion etc, leveraging his trouble with the law. The outcome is he is a sold-out neocon pet and therefore a professional shit disturber.

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-10-31/martin-armstrong-what-point-does-revolution-take-place#comment-5400653

Agent Anonymint, you are doing a terrible job!   Wink


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Monero
"The difference between bad and well-developed digital cash will determine
whether we have a dictatorship or a real democracy." 
David Chaum 1996
"Fungibility provides privacy as a side effect."  Adam Back 2014
Buy and sell XMR near you
P2P Exchange Network
Buy XMR with fiat
Is Dash a scam?
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