The Fed Admits To Breaking The Law

Yet another reason to support Ron Paul’s H.R. 1207 legislation to bring transparency to the Federal Reserve. The Fed destructs the possibility of a free economy, transfers wealth to the banks who carry a monopoly control over money and credit, and through inflation of a worthless paper currency the living standards of the poor and middle class decrease. The Fed is an enemy of liberty.

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April 1 (Bloomberg) — After months of litigation and political

scrutiny, the Federal Reserve yesterday ended a policy of secrecy over

its Bear Stearns Cos. bailout.

In a 4:30 p.m. announcement in a week of congressional recess and

religious holidays, the central bank released details of

securities bought to aid Bear Stearns’s takeover by JPMorgan

Chase & Co. Bloomberg News sued the Fed for that information.

The problem is this: The Fed is not authorized to BUY

anything other than those securities that have the full faith and

credit of The United States.

In addition Ben Bernanke has repeatedly

claimed that these deals would not cost anyone money.  But the current

value looks differently:

Assets in Maiden Lane II totaled $34.8 billion, according to the Fed,

which set their current market value in its weekly balance sheet at

$15.3 billion. That means Maiden Lane II assets are worth 44 cents on

the dollar, or 44 percent of their face value, according to the Fed.

Maiden Lane III, which has $56 billion of assets at face value, is

worth $22.1 billion, or 39 cents on the dollar, according to the Fed’s

weekly balance sheet. A similar calculation for the Bear Stearns

portfolio couldn’t be made because of outstanding derivatives trades.

In other words, they have lost more than half of their

value.

This was and remains a blatantly

unlawful activity.

The Fed has effectively usurped Article 1 Section 7 of The

Constituion which reads in part:

All bills for raising Revenue shall originate in the House

of Representatives; but the Senate may propose or concur with Amendments

as on other Bills.

http://market-ticker.denninger…..e-Law.html
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/…..&pos=4
http://caps.fool.com/Blogs/Vie…..0939784033

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Bernanke reelection?

Uncertainty on Bernanke Vote Raises Economic Fears

http://www.foxnews.com/politic…..mic-fears/ (from AP)

WASHINGTON — A defeat of Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke’s quest for another four-year term could raise the risk of a “double dip” recession if political jousting over a successor were to drag on for months, economists warn.

But Bernanke’s prospects appeared to brighten Sunday, with three more senators, including Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, predicting he’ll be confirmed. A vote is expected later this week.

Still, the chance of Bernanke’s defeat has unsettled Wall Street, contributing to last week’s 4 percent loss by the Dow Jones industrial average, its worst performance in 10 months. If Bernanke were rejected, uncertainty over a successor would further roil global markets, at least in the short run.

Anxiety, along with sagging investments, could cause consumers and businesses to cut spending. Joblessness, already at 10 percent, could worsen. And the recovery might fail.

You would think this guy was God.  “Oh no, if we don’t elect Bernanke we’ll have another recession!!” (i.e. The sky is falling, the sky is falling!)

Wake up people, we are going into another recession in about a year.  There is no doubt so I suggest you prepare.  It doesn’t matter who is elected to head the Fed, the damage is done and only God could bring about a miracle to save the US economy.  I hate to be the bearer of bad tidings, but the American people must be warned.

Unless Congress agressively cuts spending and welfare handouts, the American economy will fall, just like the Roman Empire and others since then.  If you want to see what is going to happen to America, study the Roman Empire.  The similarities between America and Rome are amazing.  In short, Rome once had a booming, thriving economy, but over the years due to taxation and handouts, the Empire was laid to ruin.  The same thing is happening to America.

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The Money Matrix – Who Owns the FED?

CARTEL – n. a combination of independent commercial or industrial enterprises designed to limit competition or fix prices (per Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary) (emblem)

__________________________________ fedseal

Banking was conceived in iniquity and was born in sin. The Bankers own the Earth. Take it away from them, but leave them the power to create deposits, and with the flick of the pen they will create enough deposits to buy it back again. However, take it away from them, and all the great fortunes like mine will disappear, and they ought to disappear, for this would be a happier and better world to live in. But if you wish to remain the slaves of bankers and pay the cost of your own slavery, let them continue to create deposits.

Josiah Stamp, President of the Bank of England in the 1920s (more…)

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How to Retire TODAY!

How to Double the Money

No matter who you are or what your income, you can retire today. Here’s how:

The Fed recently said it will leave interest rates unchanged at 0.00% to 0.25%. Helicopter Ben believes their is a low danger of inflation due to high unemployment. Let’s pretend for a moment that inflation is not strictly a monetary phenomenon and could simply be defined as “an increase in the money supply.” Don’t worry that the money supply has actually doubled. Just put your faith in Old Ben.

How to Retire Without Money

First, drive/fly/walk/run to your local Federal Reserve Bank, or go straight to the source in Washington, DC. Ask to talk to Ben. Tell him Nick sent you. Tell him that you understand how tough these economic times are, and that you want to do him a favor. Due to the lack of liquidity in the credit market you are going to help out the biggest of all “too-big-to-fail” banks. All he needs to do is give you a $1,000,000,000 loan at 0.00% interest. Heck, if you have bad credit you will even settle for the 0.25% rate.

In the Citi!

Now take your billion and head down to the nearest Citibank. Tell that you would like to make a deposit. I suspect the conversation will go a little like this:

Teller: Hi. Welcome to Citi. How can I help you.

You: I would like to open a savings account.

Teller: Excellent! How much would you like to deposit?

You: (pinky finger held at corner of mouth) One billion dollars!

Teller: Very funny sir.

You: (Show them your Federal Reserve check signed by Ben) Here you go.

Teller: (Mouth agape.) Let me get my manager.

Commercial Break

Living Off the Interest

Just a quick glance at Citi’s current savings account rates shows that their Ultimate Savings Account (which you will certainly qualify for….) pays an annual interest of 1.19%. Which means if you had good credit and got the 0.00% interest loan you are now making $19 million/year on the interest alone, and if you got the 0.25% (cause you had bad credit) you are making a measly $9.4 million. Either way you should be able to retire to the life of luxary.

Doin’ Nothin’, Nothin’ Doin’

While you are sitting on the beach somewhere sipping on an Italian Margarita you may start to wonder at this magic money trick, and how fractional reserve banking and fiat money managed to steal from the poor to give to the wealthy, but put that out of your mind. Instead, think about how cool a trick it is to be able to make money from nothing and to get your chicks for free!

After all, you have just injected a billion dollars liquidity back into the markets into a struggling bank that was really pressed for cash. They can now loan that money out to small business owners at exorbitant rates. The streets will flow with money again. House prices will rise forever. Buffett will buy an entire Railroad!

Don’t worry that you didn’t actually add any real production to the economy. Forget the fact that you didn’t have to work for an honest dollar like the common man. You are a member of the elite now. And when billions of dollars are involved you can afford not to have conscience.

Just remember that the Fed and all the banks they lend to have been getting away with the exact same practice for years now.

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Bubbles Do Not Just “Happen”

In the midst of the constant economic meddling we have grown accustomed to, it astonishes me when mainstream “economic experts” such as Ben Bernanke, Tim Geithner, and Nobel Prize winner Paul Krugman simply say that “bubbles happen.” It is commonplace, they say, for bubbles to appear and the role of government and central powers is to step in to prevent its popping. Essentially they are saying that the market created the problem, but it is too dangerous to let the market to correct itself; therefore new regulations and interventions must come into play to solve the problem.

The first flaw with this theory is that bubbles are not just created by accident. It is not the natural course of a strong economy to be either constantly on the upswing of a boom or the downswing of a bust. It is not the natural course of a currency to depreciate over time. It is not the natural course of prices to consistently increase. Yet over the past several decades, it seems that the economy is always on the verge of “overheating”, “deflating”, “slowing”, nearly any term you can think of.

It’s become a mainstream belief that too much economic growth and productivity is a bad thing, and will lead to a terrible recession. The Fed raises interest rates to slow growth, but subsequently lowers rates dramatically when the economy begins to slow down to make sure it doesn’t halt too much.

Through the laws of supply and demand, which people generally seem to think they understand, prices should go down over the long run, not up. In recent history, ever since the Fed came into existence and the gold standard was diminished, general prices are increasing due to the rapid expansion of the money supply. It is vital to realize that it is not prices that should go up, and the currency that should go down, but rather the currency that appreciates value and the prices that fall.

Even in the 19th century, probably the closest thing to a real free market in recorded history, the government’s intervention managed to create numerous financial panics. The U.S. had two central banks during the century that, along with various acts by Congress, played a large role in cheapening credit to artificial levels and encouraging unsustainable speculation. During the Civil War period the U.S. adopted both a fiat monetary system and income tax, which contributed to the 1873 panic. Escalated government intervention, central planning, and behind-the-scenes manipulation have been the natural trends of all countries throughout history, and they have never worked.

Bubbles are not created by voluntary, personal exchange that you have in a free market. Today, bubbles are created when interest rates and credit are constantly manipulated (by the Federal Reserve) beyond or below their natural levels, causing malinvestment and artificial wealth and opportunity. This provides short-term relief and optimism to the economy at the expense of the creation of a larger, irrational, unsustainable bubble that is fueled by the easy credit. Activating the printing presses and creating cheap credit appear to be some of the easiest illusions for government and central planners to work under in order to expand their power and presence within the economy.

Ever since we lost the last connection to gold in 1971, the U.S. has been on a path of self destruction by ignoring sound monetary policies that a lasting economy is built upon. We have followed the flawed Keynesian economics’ belief that you can devalue the currency and pile up debt with little consideration of the longer-term consequences.

The Fed injects money into the economy at low rates that would not be acceptable with a free market monetary system. This manipulation devalues the dollar, pressures the middle class (due to decreased purchasing power of the currency), and promotes irresponsible and unsustainable behavior such as excessive speculation, overvaluing assets, and discouraging wise saving practices. This is the reality that we will have to face sooner rather than later. No amount of government control and central intervention can sustain failed ideas and principles.

It is not the principles of the savings, production, and individual responsibility that create massive bubbles; rather, it is the Keynesian ideals of currency inflation, debt and borrowing, and interventionism that create messes like the one we face today.

Bubbles do not come out of nowhere, but they are pushed along by money and credit created out of thin air by an elite few. An economy built on corporatism, central planning, and government control is forever destined to suffer the perils of an unstable, manipulated, inflated foundation. The only lasting cures for these economic ills are the principles of hard work, savings and investment, with the freedom and responsibility of private property.

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