Oil And Gas • BP invests $2.85 Billion into Iraq’s Largest Oilfield
BP invests $2.85 Billion into Iraq’s Largest Oilfield
http://www.righands.com/news/news-detai … lfield-319
It is no secret that Iraq’s oil is coveted by many oil companies throughout the U.S, and other other countries. Several companies have acquired a small piece of the oil rich land and are able to have a taste of the Middle East’s major money maker.
by Gypsy Lyn | http://www.oilreviewmiddleeast.com/indu … a-oilfield | Friday, May 24, 2013
It is no secret that Iraq’s oil is coveted by many oil companies throughout the U.S, and other other countries. Several companies have acquired a small piece of the oil rich land and are able to have a taste of the Middle East’s major money maker. However, few have been able to make a sizable mark on the industry that is guarded by turmoil. BP has decided to brake the barrier and invest $2.85 billion into Iraq’s largest oilfield, The Rumaila Oil Field. British Petroleum’s announcement was made public on May 23, 2013, however this is not the companies first time investing in the massive field. They also signed a contract worth $15 billion in 2009 with a contract to develop the field, allowing them to hold a 38% stake in the company. From 2012 to 2013 the Rumaila field in the Middle East has increased financial stability by $2.2 billion, making the investment for BP that much more appealing.
The Rumaila Oilfield, located just west of Basra in Southern Iraq, is the largest field in Iraq and 6th largest in the world. It was discovered in 1953, however did not start operation until 1972, and continues production today with 1.1 million barrels of crude oil produced in a 6 month period. With British Petroleum’s contribution, they hope to expand production to 2.85 million barrels produced. Not only will this be a major financial gain for BP, but it will also help boost the struggling economy in Iraq. It is expected that this will also steep the economy for the states also. With the new investment, and share holding, BP is expected to be sending more of there own employees to help develop the newly expanded production oil fields, and will be looking to hire a vast majority of different levels of employees to help fill in the employment gaps. In regards to generating work, BP has already invited more than 20 firms to compete in the project that plans to drill another 300 wells in the area, and build a 300,000 bpd production facility on location. Employment generated will very from security, to construction, to drilling, and to all of the other necessary positions needed to work a rig. The prospects of this project are promising for both Iraq and the countries affiliated with BP’s services.
The growth and current success of this huge oilfield in Iraq has not come at an easy cost. The process has been slow, regardless of the production rate. Partially, because of the existent turmoil in Iraq and neighboring Iran. For example, in October 2010, 6 men were killed while working, when the old mines exploded near a rig site. Also, the field dropped to 700,000 barrels produced per day when the U.S. Troops were pulled from the country in December 2011, leaving the fields prone to bombing and attacks. Through it all, Iraq has been able to protect this wealthy land, and provide the country with 40% of its oil production. If the expansion is successful as predicted, Rumaila Oil field, will become the second largest producing oil field in the world, the first being the Ghawar Field in Saudi Arabia.
BP, or British Petroleum, has been, and continues to be, one of the major oil industry companies that, regardless of mishaps and lawsuits, still provides many with steady work. They continue to be a company with breaking ground capabilities. The company is proving that they can overcome adversity and continue to provide the world with a service. A necessary service that provides the world with energy, and countries with bargaining power. Oil is liquid money, it is work for the unemployed, it is bargaining power for political leaders, and it is financial stability for anyone with the power to invest. Thus making BP’s announcement on their investment in Iraq a monumental break thru in oil dominance.
WEAPONS OF MASS DESTRUCTION??????AFTER THE WRECK BP HAD IN THE GULF OF MEXICO RECENTLY THEY SHOULDN’T BE ALLOWED TO DRILL ANOTHER WELL ANYWHERE IN THE WORLD NOT EVEN IN IRAQ .BP IS ANOTHER WEAPON OF MASS DESTRUCTION
Statistics: Posted by DIGGER DAN — Sat May 25, 2013 12:18 am
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Gold and Silver • Largest Dutch Bank Unable To Deliver Gold To Customers
Largest Dutch Bank Unable To Deliver Gold To Customers
https://www.hardassetsalliance.com/inve … -customers
Hard Assets Alliance Team April 05, 2013
The Hard Assets Alliance has been warning readers and customers about the perils of big banks. The latest victim: ABN AMRO, which is the largest Dutch bank in the Eurozone. It recently defaulted on its gold deliveries to customers.
Largest Dutch bank defaults on physical gold deliveries to customers
GOLDAPRIL 3, 2013BY: KENNETH SCHORTGEN JR
http://www.examiner.com/article/largest … rs?cid=rss
Last week, a rubicon was crossed in the precious metals market as one of the largest banks in Europe defaulted on their gold contracts, and informed their customers there was no physical gold available for delivery.
ABN AMRO, the largest Dutch bank in the Eurozone, issued a letter to their gold contract customers of failure of delivery, and instead will pay account holders in a paper currency equivalent to the current spot value of the metal.
ABN AMRO, the biggest Dutch bank, has sent a letter to its clients stating that they will no longer be able to take physical deliveries of the gold they have bought through ABN. Instead they are offered money at the current market rate for gold. Basically, instead of owning a risk free, physical asset (a gold bar or a gold coin), the bank’s clients now own a monetary claim on ABN AMRO, being exposed to the bank’s credit risk. – Voice of Russia
Over the past two months, there has been a concerted effort by the major Western banks to bring down the price of gold and silver, even as countries like Russia, Iran, and China continue to accumulate the physical metal in large quantities. Like the folly of betting against the stock markets when the Fed is pumping up equities with $85 billion per month, going against the J.P. Morgan silver short machine in the futures market has been a losing proposition for silver bulls.
Interestingly for Europe however, since the Eurozone crisis spread from Greece to Spain, Italy, and Cyprus, the fastest growing currency being purchased by retail investors is Bitcoin. Bitcoin is a digital currency that is out of the control of sovereign central banks, and to this point, has not been manipulated by inflationary monetary policy.
In investing circles there is an adage which says, if you don’t hold it, you don’t own it. Whether it is land, metals, or other hard assets, if it is held in a bank, in a paper instrument, or in a paper currency, the documented owner has management control, but not physical control. And as the world saw last month in Cyprus, the government, or even a major bank like ABN AMRO, can change the terms of a contract at any time, and return to investors asset values set by the bank, and not the customer’s intention.
Statistics: Posted by DIGGER DAN — Wed Apr 24, 2013 7:58 am
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Gold and Silver • Comex Gold Inventories Collapse By Largest Amount Ever On Re

http://bullmarketthinking.com/comex-gol … on-record/
Statistics: Posted by yoda — Tue Apr 09, 2013 12:18 pm
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Gold and Silver • China becomes world’s largest consumer of gold
Chinese gold imports double-up on a year ago as China becomes world’s largest consumer of gold
Posted on 06 February 2013 with no comments from readers China replaced India sometime last year as the world’s largest consumer of gold and gold imports to mainland China from Hong Kong are presently running at more than twice the amount recorded a year ago.
According to data produced by Bloomberg gold imports from Hong Kong jumped by 94 per cent to 834.5 tonnes in 2012 with a monthly record of 114.4 tonnes in December. China is also the world’s largest gold producer but that has not been enough to satisfy its ravenous appetite for the yellow metal.
New gold champions
It was only a year ago that gold traders in the Sharjah Old Gold Souk told ArabianMoney that their biggest buyers were the Chinese looking to get out of the US dollar (click here). Gold is also a diversification against the risk that the Chinese economic miracle will one day run out of steam and local asset bubbles deflate.
We don’t really accept the argument offered by Bloomberg that the surge in gold consumption is simply down to the fact that the Chinese are getting wealthy. GDP growth is a fraction of the advance seen in gold consumption last year.
The Chinese read the same financial pages as everybody else and want to hedge against the rising risk of a bond market crash, just like many other investors. Their central bank has been pushing for gold to be included in a new IMF super-currency.
But they do appear to have been opportunist in taking advantage of the bargain gold prices available last year, with gold off its all-time high of $1,923 set back in October the previous year. The smart money has been moving into real assets (they are also buyers of Dubai property, for example) to diversify risk and the central bank will almost certainly emerge as the biggest buyer of gold.
Undercover buyers
Chinese gold buying is inscutable and often kept hidden for as long as possible. Bloomberg’s economists have done well to collate this data now to show this major change in global gold consumption.
Where do we go from here? Will the Chinese consumption of gold double again this year? Will it impact on the gold price? Well the trend is definitely up and not down and China is likely to get its first gold ETFs this year (click here).
As we have remarked before the advent of ETF investment for gold is likely to be big news for China’s 1.3 billion population. But as it happens gold imports have already doubled in advance of the gold ETFs.
http://www.arabianmoney.net/gold-silver … r-of-gold/
Statistics: Posted by yoda — Wed Feb 06, 2013 12:45 am
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Gold and Silver • Biggest Silver ETF Adds 572 Tons in Largest Gain in Five Yea
Biggest Silver ETF Adds 572 Tons in Largest Gain in Five Years
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-01-1 … years.html
By Maria Kolesnikova – Jan 17, 2013 8:23 AM MT.
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Assets in iShares Silver Trust, the biggest exchange-traded fund for the metal, climbed the most in five years as more investors are seeking an alternative to gold.
Holdings jumped 572 metric tons, or 5.9 percent, the biggest increase since December 2007, according to data on the iShares website today. BlackRock Inc. (BLK), the manager of the fund, confirmed the figures. The metal worth $579 million boosted assets to 10,735 tons, the most since May last year.
Global investment through all silver-backed exchange-traded products is a record 19,114 tons, or about nine months of mine output, according to data compiled by Bloomberg and Barclays Plc. Steps by policy makers from the U.S. to China and Europe to boost economies attracted investors to precious metals on bets that stimulus will stoke inflation.
“Some investors see poor man’s gold as a cheaper alternative to the yellow metal and are allocating to it,” Mark O’Byrne, executive director of Dublin-based GoldCore Ltd., a brokerage that sells and stores bullion coins and bars, said by e-mail today. “Allocations to silver remain very small which suggests that the holdings could go higher resulting in higher silver prices again in 2013.”
Silver will rise as much as 28 percent to $40.25 an ounce this year, based on the median of 49 analyst, trader and investor estimates compiled by Bloomberg in December. The metal for immediate delivery was at $31.3325 an ounce today in London.
Silver almost tripled since the end of 2008, and is up 2.9 percent this year compared with a 0.2 percent decline in gold and 9.4 percent jump in platinum.
To contact the reporter on this story: Maria Kolesnikova in London at mkolesnikova@bloomberg.net
Statistics: Posted by DIGGER DAN — Thu Jan 17, 2013 3:08 pm
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Gold and Silver • Re: Biggest Silver ETF Adds 572 Tons in Largest Gain in Five
They put 572 TONS of silver in there in one day and silver goes up 25 cents ???? AND THERE IS NO MANIPULATION IN THE MARKETS????? YA RIGHT.
Statistics: Posted by DIGGER DAN — Thu Jan 17, 2013 3:10 pm
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Agriculture • Brazil: Now Second Largest Exporter of Corn
Brazil: Now Second Largest Exporter of Corn
06 January 2013
South America – Brazil has bumped Argentina out as the world’s second largest exporter of corn, in a year in which Argentine harvests declined, according to a report by consultancy Informa Economics FNP.
Brazil had a record production of corn last year and exported a record high of almost 20 million tonnes, double the foreign sales of 2011, thanks to strong international demand following the US drought, reported America Economia.
"Argentina has not yet completed the shipment data of maize in the country, but according to the programming lineup (of ships) accounted for through December, exports should total 16.7 million tonnes," said the Brazilian division of Informa Economics.
The consultancy noted that the decline in maize production in the United States, the main global exporter, and low inventories in Argentina, created a vacuum in the external market benefiting Brazil. FNP also emphasized that "the increase in the exchange rate also helped competitiveness of the product originating in Brazil."
http://www.thecropsite.com/news/12764/b … er-of-corn
Statistics: Posted by yoda — Sun Jan 06, 2013 1:39 pm
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American • Welfare government’s single largest budget item in FY 2011 a
Report: Welfare government’s single largest budget item in FY 2011 at approx. $1.03 trillion
12:00 AM 10/18/2012
inShare.1
Caroline MayPolitical Reporter
The government spent approximately $1.03 trillion on 83 means-tested federal welfare programs in fiscal year 2011 alone — a price tag that makes welfare that year the government’s largest expenditure, according to new data released by the Republican side of the Senate Budget Committee.
The total sum taxpayers spent on federal welfare programs was derived from a new Congressional Research Service (CRS) report on federal welfare spending — which topped out at $745.84 billion for fiscal year 2011 — combined with an analysis from the Republican Senate Budget Committee staff of state spending on federal welfare programs (based on “The Oxford Handbook of State and Local Government Finance”), which reached $282.7 billion in fiscal year 2011.
The data excludes spending on Social Security, Medicare, means-tested health care for veterans without service-connected disabilities, and the means-tested veterans pension program.
According to the CRS report, which focused solely on federal spending for federal welfare programs, spending on federal welfare programs increased $563.413 billion in fiscal year 2008 to $745.84 billion in fiscal year 2011 — a 32 percent increase.
Further, spending on the 10 largest federal welfare programs has doubled as a share of the federal budget in the last 30 years: In inflation-adjusted dollars, according to Republican staff on the Senate Budget Committee, the amount spent on these programs has increased 378 percent in that 30 year time frame.
CRS reports that food assistance programs — the third largest welfare category behind health and cash assistance — experienced the greatest increase in spending, with 71 percent more spending in 2011 than in 2008. The agency explained that this spending increase was largely due to the growth in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or food stamps.
CRS further noted that the largest expenditure category, health, was 37 percent higher in fiscal year 2011 than fiscal year 2008. In that same period, cash aid increased 12 percent, education assistance increased 57 percent, housing and development assistance increased 2 percent, social services increased 3 percent, employment and training remained the same (though fluctuated in intervening years), and energy assistance was 67 percent higher in fiscal year 2011 than fiscal year 2008.
The total federal spending on federal welfare programs vastly outpaced fiscal year 2011 spending on such federal expenditures as non-war defense ($540 billion), Social Security ($725 billion), Medicare (480 billion), and departments such as Justice ($30.5 billion), Transportation ($77.3 billion) and Education ($65.486 billion) — a fact that alarmed the ranking member of the Senate Budget Committee, Alabama Sen. Jeff Sessions, who requested the report from CRS .
“These astounding figures demonstrate that United States spends more on federal welfare than any other program in the federal budget,” Sessions wrote The Daily Caller in an email. “It is time to restore — not retreat from — the moral principles of the 1996 welfare reform. Such reforms, combined with measures to promote growth, will help both the recipient and the Treasury.”
When state spending on federal welfare programs — specifically Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program — was thrown into the mix, the amount spent on federal welfare increased 28 percent, from $798.813 billion in fiscal year 2008 to $1.028.54 trillion in fiscal year 2011.
“No longer should we measure compassion by how much money the government spends, but by how many people we help to rise out of poverty,” Sessions continued. “Welfare assistance should be seen as temporary whenever possible, and the goal must be to help more of our fellow citizens attain gainful employment and financial independence. This is about more than rescuing our finances. It’s about creating a more optimistic future for millions of struggling Americans.”
With food assistance spending increasing the most out of every category, Sessions, who has been sounding the alarm on the expanding food stamp rolls, noted that the Obama administration has allowed for the food stamp increase through misleading promotion and a disregard for self-reliance.
“The administration ludicrously argues that every five dollars in food stamp spending results in nearly 10 dollars in economic benefit. They insist that communities ‘lose out’ when more people don’t sign up for benefits,” Sessions noted. “[The United States Department of Agriculture] even awarded a recruitment worker for overcoming people’s ‘mountain pride.’ Is this a hopeful vision for the future? Do these priorities make our country stronger and our economy more secure?”
Read more: http://dailycaller.com/2012/10/18/repor … z29cuZg171
http://dailycaller.com/2012/10/18/repor … -trillion/
Statistics: Posted by yoda — Wed Oct 17, 2012 11:43 pm
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American • The World’s Largest Money-Laundering Machine: The Federal
The World’s Largest Money-Laundering Machine: The Federal Reserve
October 8, 2012
The Fed policy’s first-order effect is to issue hundreds of billions in "free money" to banks; the second-order effect is to destroy the rule of law in the U.S.
Let’s start with a few questions about the proper role of the Central State and Central Bank: why should they bail out private banks? The answer boils down to something like this: "If the private banks absorbed the losses that are rightly theirs in a capitalist system, they would implode. Since the State and Central Bank have enabled these private banks to infiltrate and dominate the nation’s financial system, that system is now hostage to these private ‘too big to fail’ banks."
In other words, "capitalism" in America now means socializing losses and privatizing profits generated by State and Central Bank intervention. Imagine for a moment the "beauty" of this system for owners of private banks: in a truly socialized banking system, the taxpayers would absorb any losses, but the State would also benefit from any future bank-sector profits. In the U.S. system, the losses are socialized but the people draw no benefit; the profits flow to the top 1/10th of 1% private financiers.
This is the perfection of State-financier crony capitalism.
Let’s next ask why the Central State and Central Bank should subsidize and bail out the mortgage industry, a major component of private banking. Once again we find losses are neatly distributed to the citizenry while the profits all flow to private hands. Given that 98% of all mortgages are backed or guaranteed by Federal agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Ginnie Mae, FHA, VA, FmHA, etc.), the mortgage market is already completely socialized: the taxpayers are on the hook for any and all losses, but the profits from originating and servicing the loans are all private.
Meanwhile, 1 out of 6 FHA insured loans are are delinquent, and everyone who cares to examine the ledger knows the taxpayers will soon be bailing out FHA just as they did Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
But the socialization of losses and privatizing of profits is only the first-order effect of the banks’ capture of the State. The second-order effect is even more destructive: the rule of law has been subverted by the world’s largest money-laundering machine, the Federal Reserve.
Once again we can start by asking why a nation’s Central Bank should buy mortgages from private financial institutions. Once again the first answer is a variation on the same theme: the Central Bank prints money and buys the mortgages as a way of socializing private losses and passing through billions of dollars in "free money" to private hands.
The newly printed money robs purchasing power from every holder of the currency (the socialization of costs) while the immense flood of "free money" flows to private hands.
Here’s how it works. We know Fannie Mae is absorbing losses of 50% to 65% on its foreclosed properties (Nearly half of Fannie Mae REO unable to reach market, via U. Doran), and we also know that 31% of all homeowners with mortgages are "underwater," owing more than their house is worth (Housing, Diminishing Returns and Opportunity Cost).
We also know the Federal Reserve bought $1.1 trillion in MBS (mortgage-backed securities) in 2009-10, and the Fed has announced its intention to buy $40 billion more MBS a month until the housing bubble re-inflates or Doomsday, whichever comes first.

The Fed also bought $1 trillion in Treasury bonds, monetizing Federal debt:

Let’s say you own a portfolio of mortgage-backed securities and your pals at the Fed are willing to buy the garbage at full price, no questions asked: are you going to sell your few AAA-rated MBS, the good stuff, or are you going to sell them the absolute dregs, the MBS so stuffed with defaulted mortgages that you’ve never dared to even do a mark-to-market estimate of their real worth?
You dump the worst of your portfolio, naturally, and so in effect the $1.1 trillion in MBS the Fed bought with newly created cash was probably worth (charitably) $600 billion at best. That means the Fed not only wiped out the losses that should have accrued to the owners of the impaired mortgages by removing the MBS from their books, it handed the owners (banks, pension funds, etc.) a cool $500 billion in "free money" by paying full value for massively impaired assets.
Since there is about $9.7 trillion outstanding mortgages (down from $10.3 trillion at the top of the bubble–not much deleveraging going on here), the Fed could have paid off 10% of every outstanding mortgage in the country with that $1.1 trillion. The one-time payment of principle would have flowed right to the mortgage owners, just like the Fed’s "gift purchase" did, but in this case the money would have reduced the principle owed by homeowners, reducing their debt directly.
Setting aside the ethical implications (what about those who have no mortgage, etc.), the difference between the way the $1 trillion flows to the mortgage owners is remarkably different: in the first case, the homeowners get nothing and the banks get $500 billion in free money. In the second case, the banks still get the $1 trillion, but because it flowed through the borrowers, it reduces the mortgage principle.
Since the Fed can create unlimited money, why not pay off every mortgage in the land? That’s only $9.7 trillion, and if the Fed wanted to unleash an orgy of spending, that would certainly do it. Trillions in losses would be filled with "free money," since the Fed would pay the full value of all mortgages.
This thought experiment reveals the real agenda of the Fed’s asset purchases: it’s not about aiding the nation or borrowers, it’s all about funneling "free money" to the banks to restore their balance sheets and profits.
There’s another reason, one outlined by Catherine Austin Fitts: QE3 – Pay Attention If You Are in the Real Estate Market. Correspondent Jim S. has alerted me to the wide-ranging consequences of the Fed’s money-laundering, and correspondents Chad D. and Stephen N. also directed me to this article.
The second-order purpose of the Fed’s mass purchases of mortgages is to recycle dodgy phantom mortgages–in effect laundering the debt and money on a vast scale. Here is an excerpt from Fitts’ analysis:
The Fed is now where mortgages go to die. Thousands of mortgages on homes that do not exist or on homes that have more than one “first” mortgage are now going to the Fed to disappear. Thousands of multifamily and commercial mortgages will be bought up as well. As this happens, trillions of dollars that have been amassed offshore will be free to come back into the US to buy up and reposition land, farmland, residential and commercial real estate and other tangibles.
With documents shredded, criminal liabilities extinguished and financial institutions made whole, funds can return without fear of seizure.
QE3 proves beyond any shadow of a doubt that the extent of the fraud was as bad as I said it was. You can count up the bailouts and QE1, QE2, QE3 the numbers speak for themselves. The fraud was indeed in the many trillions of dollars.
In a nation in which rule of law existed in more than name, here’s what should have happened:
1. The scam known as MERS, the mortgage industry’s placeholder of fictitious mortgage notes, would be summarily shut down.
2. All mortgages in all instruments and portfolios, and all derivatives based on mortgages, would be instantly marked-to-market.
3. All losses would be declared immediately, and any institution that was deemed insolvent would be shuttered and its assets auctioned off in an orderly fashion.
4. Regardless of the cost to owners of mortgages, every deed, lien and note would be painstakingly delineated or reconstructed on every mortgage in the U.S., and the deed and note properly filed in each county as per U.S. law.
That none of this has happened is proof-positive that the rule of law no longer exists in America. The term is phony, a travesty of a mockery of a sham, nothing but pure propaganda. Anyone claiming otherwise: get the above done. If you can’t or won’t, then the rule of law is merely a useful illusion of a rapacious, corrupt, extractive, predatory neofeudal Status Quo.
The essence of money-laundering is that fraudulent or illegally derived assets and income are recycled into legitimate enterprises. That is the entire Federal Reserve project in a nutshell. Dodgy mortgages, phantom claims and phantom assets, are recycled via Fed purchase and "retired" to its opaque balance sheet. In exchange, the Fed gives cash to the owners of the phantom assets, cash which is fundamentally a claim on the future earnings and productivity of American citizens.
Some might argue that the global drug mafia are the largest money-launderers in the world, and this might be correct. But $1.1 trillion is seriously monumental laundering, and now the Fed will be laundering another $480 billion a year in perpetuity, until it has laundered the entire portfolio of phantom mortgages and claims.
The rule of law is dead in the U.S. It "cost too much" to the financial sector that rules the State, the Central Bank and thus the nation. Once the Fed has laundered all the phantom assets into cash assets and driven wages down another notch, then the process of transforming a nation of owners into a nation of serfs can be completed.
Here’s the Fed’s policy in plain English: Debt-serfdom is good because it enriches the banks. All hail debt-serfdom, our goal and our god!
In case you missed this:
The Royal Scam (August 9, 2009):
Once all the assets in the country had been discounted, the insiders then repatriated their money and bought their neighbor’s fortunes for pennies on the dollar, finding cheap, hungry, competitive labor, ready to compete with even 3rd world wages. The prudent, hard-working, and savers (the wrong people) were wiped out, and the money was transferred to the speculators and insiders (the right people). Massive capital like land and factories can not be expatriated, but are always worth their USE value and did not fall as much, or even rose afterwards as with falling debt ratios and low wages these working assets became competitive again. It’s not so much a “collapse” as a redistribution, from the middle class and the working to the capital class and the connected. …And the genius is, they could blame it all on foreigners, “incompetent” leaders, and careless, debt-happy citizens themselves.
But how is this legal plunder to be identified? Quite simply. See if the law takes from some persons what belongs to them, and gives it to other persons to whom it does not belong. See if the law benefits one citizen at the expense of another by doing what the citizen himself cannot do without committing a crime.
Frederic Bastiat, 1850
http://www.oftwominds.com/blog.html
Statistics: Posted by yoda — Sun Oct 07, 2012 10:03 pm
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