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  1. #1
    Senior Member AirborneSapper7's Avatar
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    Suddenly Everyone Is Warning About The Next Financial Collap

    Suddenly Everyone Is Warning About The Next Financial Collapse



    June 1st, 2011
    56 comments
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    Are we about to see a repeat of 2008 (or something even worse)? Suddenly all kinds of people are coming out of the woodwork and warning that we could be on the verge of the next major financial collapse. Of course many economists and financial pundits just enjoy hearing themselves talk, and sometimes they will make outrageous claims just to get attention, but when so many ominous warnings come out all at once it does tend to make one sit up and take notice. The truth is that global financial markets are even more vulnerable today than they were in 2008, and all over the globe we are seeing trouble signs. Japan is trying to recover from the worst natural disaster that they have ever seen and they are dealing with a nuclear crisis that never seems to end. The Europeans are trying to put another bailout package for Greece together and about a half dozen more European nations that are drowning in debt will need bailouts after that. In the U.S., there are all kinds of signs pointing to the collapse of the economy and the politicians in Washington D.C. continue to "kick the can down the road" and hope that our economic problems will somehow fix themselves. Oil prices are incredibly high and turmoil is sweeping the globe. Conditions are certainly developing that could bring about a "perfect storm" and cause another global financial collapse.

    The following is just a sampling of the financial warnings that we have seen in recent days from some prominent voices....

    *Economist Nouriel Roubini: "I think right now we’re on the tipping point of a market correction. Data from the U.S., from Europe, from Japan, from China are suggesting an economic slowdown."

    *Jim Rogers: "I would expect to see some serious problems in the foreseeable future….By 2011, 2012, 2013, 2013, I don’t know when, we’re going to have an economic slowdown again."

    *Mark Mobius, the executive chairman of Templeton Asset Management’s emerging markets group: "There is definitely going to be another financial crisis around the corner because we haven’t solved any of the things that caused the previous crisis."

    *David M. Blitzer, Chairman of the Index Committee at S&P Indices: "Home prices continue on their downward spiral with no relief in sight."

    *Jeffrey Gundlach, CEO of DoubleLine Capital: "I think we're looking at some type of echo in the credit crisis coming up here. That's what I'm afraid of."

    *Carl Icahn: "I do think that there could be another major problem. Now, will it happen next week, next year, i don't know and certainly nobody knows, but i don't think that the system is working properly. I really find it amazing that we're almost back to where it was, where there's so much leverage going on in the investment banks today. There's just way too much leverage and way too much risk-taking, with other people's money."

    Sadly, the world really did not seem to learn much of anything from 2008. Global financial markets are still pretty much operating the same way that they did before the last crisis.

    But back before the crisis in 2008 things were much more stable around the globe.

    When the horrible earthquake and tsunami struck Japan earlier this year, most economists brushed it off and believed that Japan would be "resilient" and would bounce back very quickly.

    At the time, I went directly against the mainstream consensus with this article: "14 Reasons Why The Economic Collapse Of Japan Has Begun".

    I followed that up with another article entitled "The Japanese Economy Is In Much Bigger Trouble Than Most People Think".

    So who was right?

    Well, it turns out that Japan is now officially in a recession. Their economy contracted at a 3.7 percent annualized rate during the first quarter.

    As bad as that number is, just remember that the tsunami did not even hit until March 11th.

    So what is the 2nd quarter number going to look like?

    There is often a lag between a disaster and the economic effects of the disaster. The economic impact of this nightmare is going to be felt in Japan for many years to come. In fact, it is going to be very interesting to see what kind of earnings reports we seeing coming out of Japan in the months ahead.

    The economic problems in Japan are also really starting to be felt around the rest of the globe. The other day, USA Today published an article with the following headline: "U.S. economy damaged more than thought by Japan quake".

    Amazingly, everyone seems to be really surprised that the worst tsunami in modern history is having a significant economic impact.

    Meanwhile, the crisis at Fukushima just continues to get worse.

    In case you haven't noticed, the Japanese are not even close to finding a solution to this crisis.

    If you want to get a good idea just how bad things are getting around Fukushima, just read this article by Natural News: "Land around Fukushima now radioactive dead zone; resembles target struck by atomic bomb".

    The mainstream media has been doing their best to downplay the crisis at Fukushima, but the truth is that it is now a worse disaster than Chernobyl and life in that region will never be the same again.

    Conditions are also ripe in Europe for another financial collapse.

    Have you been watching what has been going on in Greece?

    It's crazy. Without another bailout the Greek government will soon start defaulting on their debts.

    The EU and the IMF don't want to give Greece more bailout money unless there are some significant "strings" attached. But they also know that if Greece is not bailed out it will cause complete chaos in the financial markets.

    The Greek population does not want more bailouts and more austerity. There have been protests all over the country. Greek citizens have been pulling billions out of Greek banks as the country descends into chaos.

    In the end, another bailout deal will get pushed through and the can will be kicked down the road a little while longer.

    But what about all of the other European nations that need bailouts?

    The government of Ireland is already indicating that they may need another bailout.

    Portugal, Spain and Italy (along with several other European nations) are also teetering on the brink of financial disaster.

    Most Americans do not realize it, but the European sovereign debt crisis really could set off another global financial crash. Everyone really should be watching Europe. It is going to be a very interesting summer.

    Of course the United States continues to be an economic basket case.

    More depressing housing data came out today. U.S. home prices are now 5.1% lower than they were a year ago and they have fallen back to mid-2002 levels. CNN is declaring that a housing "double-dip" has been confirmed.

    Sadly, U.S. home prices have now fallen farther during this economic downturn than they did during the Great Depression.

    Also, the consumer confidence index fell from 66 in April to 60.8 this month.

    Americans are becoming more pessimistic about the economy.

    According to Gallup, 41 percent of Americans believed that the economy was "getting better" at this time last year. Today, that number is at just 27 percent.

    We are seeing a tremendous about of inflation in 2011, but incomes are not rising. Unemployment is still rampant and very few jobs are being created. What is even sadder is that a very high percentage of the jobs that are being created are part-time or temporary jobs.

    But this was supposed to be the "recovery". Barack Obama and the Congress pushed through "stimulus package" after "stimulus package". We added trillions to our national debt. The Federal Reserve has been printing money like crazy. An all-out effort was made to pump up the U.S. economy in the short-term.

    So after all of that, is this what the "recovery" is going to look like?

    Meanwhile, all of those efforts have also made our long-term economic problems even worse.

    Because of our exploding national debt and the reckless money printing by the Federal Reserve, faith in the U.S. dollar is dying. Even the United Nations is warning of a potential dollar collapse.

    We are in big, big trouble.

    This is about as good as things are going to get for the U.S. economy. Despite unprecedented efforts, the U.S. economy is still struggling mightily and our long-term economic problems are scarier than ever.

    Sadly, most Americans still believe that wonderful economic times are on the way. Most believe that this downturn is just temporary and that things will soon be better than ever.

    How do you think they are going to feel when they find out the truth?

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    Senior Member AirborneSapper7's Avatar
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    Global Financial Markets Tremble As Bad Economic News Continues To Pour In



    June 2nd, 2011
    70 comments
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    As the U.S. economy starts to slow down once again, global financial markets are beginning to tremble. Over the past couple of weeks, all kinds of bad economic news has been pouring in. The ADP jobs report was a "disaster", the housing numbers are dismal, manufacturing has slowed way down and consumer confidence is dropping like a rock. The Democrats and the Republicans are bickering over the debt ceiling and this is causing a lot of uncertainty as well. All of this bad news is starting to spook investors. On Wednesday, the Dow was down 279 points and the NASDAQ was down 65 points. It was the worst day of the year for the Dow, and many are wondering what is going to happen next if we see even more bad economic data. QE2 is slated to end at the end of the month, and already the bond markets seem to be anticipating QE3. If the U.S. economy enters another significant downturn during the second half of 2011, it seems quite likely that the Federal Reserve would attempt to do something to stimulate the economy and that would probably mean more money printing.

    This article is essentially the second part to an article I wrote yesterday about how we are seeing warnings about the next financial collapse all over the place right now. Panic is building and a lot of investors are trying to figure out where to put their money. Suddenly everyone seems a whole lot less optimistic than they were a couple of months ago.

    Michael Sheldon, the chief market strategist at RDM Financial, believes that all of the bad economic news we are seeing right now is clear evidence that we are entering an "economic slump"....

    "Initially, we just had bad news from the weekly jobless claims data, but now we're starting to see a broad-based economic slump."
    So what are some of the numbers that have investors so concerned?

    Mike Riddell, a fund manager at M&G Investments in London, recently explained to CNBC why he is so alarmed right now....

    "US house prices have fallen by more than 5 percent year on year, pending home sales have collapsed and existing home sales disappointed, the trend of improving jobless claims has arrested, first quarter GDP wasn’t revised upwards by the 0.4 percent forecast, durables goods orders shrank, manufacturing surveys from Philadelphia Fed, Richmond Fed and Chicago Fed were all very disappointing."
    The bad economic news just keeps rolling in. It is almost as if someone has slammed on the economic brakes.

    The following are a few more examples of the bad economic numbers that have come out over the past couple of days....

    *According to the latest ADP Employment Services report, private employers in the United States only added 38,000 jobs last month. That number had been expected to be somewhere around 175,000. This jobs report is being called a "disaster".

    *Manufacturing activity in May was much lower than most economists were projecting. The following is how CNBC described the newest numbers from ISM....

    The Institute for Supply Management (ISM) said its index of national factory activity fell to 53.5 in May from 60.4 the month before. The reading missed economists' expectations for 57.7.
    *Moody's downgraded Greek debt again on Wednesday, and stated that they believe that there is a 50/50 chance that Greece will default. This time Moody's downgraded Greek debt by three levels all the way down to Caa1, and that caused the euro to fall like a rock.

    To get an idea of just how imbalanced the European financial system has become at this point, just check out this article.

    *Earlier this week it was announced that U.S. home prices have declined 5.1% from a year ago. Sadly, U.S. home prices have now fallen more than they did during the entire Great Depression.

    *As I mentioned yesterday, the consumer confidence index fell from 66 in April to 60.8 in May.

    So what is causing all of this?

    Well, the truth is that the "sugar high" that the U.S. economy has been enjoying is coming to an end.

    QE2 is almost over and the vast majority of the federal "stimulus money" has been spent. Now the federal government is talking about getting spending under control and we are seeing austerity programs being implemented on the state and local level from coast to coast.

    But without massive intervention by the Federal Reserve and by the U.S. government will the U.S. economy be able to stand?

    Douglas Borthwick, a managing director with Faros Trading in Stamford, Connecticut is not optimistic....

    "The sugar high that has buoyed the U.S. economy over the past six months is wearing out, and there is little in economic growth or foundation to show for it."
    The truth is that the Fed and the U.S. government went all-out in an attempt to keep the economy from falling into a total depression. The U.S. government has been running budget deficits well in excess of a trillion dollars and the Fed has been printing money like mad. If these measures are removed, the economic crisis we are experiencing might just get a whole lot worse.

    How much worse?

    Well, just check out what Peter Yastrow, a market strategist for Yastrow Origer, recently told CNBC....

    "Interest rates are amazingly low and that, thanks to Ben Bernanke, is driving everything," Yastrow said. "We’re on the verge of a great, great depression. The [Federal Reserve] knows it."
    Ben Bernanke and Barack Obama keep talking about the "economic recovery" but most Americans know better.

    According to one new poll, 66% of Americans believe that we are still in a recession.

    Perhaps this is a sign that the American people are starting to wake up to the new economic realities that we are facing.

    The U.S. economy is being ripped apart and shredded. Thanks to our short-sighted trade policies, the Chinese economy has roared to life while the U.S. economy continues to ship jobs and factories overseas.

    But instead of facing up to our economic problems and coming up with some solutions, our nation has been on a horrific debt binge over the last couple of decades in a desperate attempt to maintain our standard of living.

    One of the reasons why I pound on the economic news day after day is so that more people will really understand what is going on and will start to wake up.

    In fact, if you have a family member of a friend that just doesn't get it, the following is a great article to share with that person: "50 Things Every American Should Know About The Collapse Of The Economy".

    Look, even Barack Obama says that the present state of affairs is "unsustainable" and that changes have to be made.

    But if the U.S. government decided that it was going to go to a balanced budget tomorrow, that would suck approximately a trillion and a half dollars out of the economy.

    What do you think would happen if that came to pass?

    Of course by going into even more debt we are destroying the economic future of our children and our grandchildren.

    We have piled up the biggest mountain of debt in the history of the world and we expect future generations to pay it off.

    It is absolutely disgusting what we have done and it is thievery on the highest level.

    Everyone knows that we are living in the greatest debt bubble in the history of the world and that at some point it is going to pop.

    Perhaps the best we can hope for at this point is for a little bit more time before economic disaster strikes.

    Unfortunately, all of the latest economic news seems to be pointing toward another economic slowdown.

    Hold on to your seats.

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  3. #3
    Senior Member AirborneSapper7's Avatar
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    The Sky Is Falling, It Is Time To Panic And The U.S. Economy Has Fallen And It Can’t Get Up



    June 3rd, 2011
    18 comments
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    So many economists and financial pundits seem absolutely shocked that the U.S. economy is slowing down again. It is as if this latest wave of bad economic data has caught them completely by surprise. Now, in the mainstream media we are seeing all kinds of headlines declaring that the U.S. economy is headed for disaster. But anyone with half a brain could have seen this coming. This year alone, we have seen the worst tsunami in Japanese history, the worst U.S. tornado season in recent memory and the worst Mississippi River flooding in decades. In addition, chaos in the Middle East has pushed the price of oil up to very high levels. Of course all of those things were going to have an effect on the economy. In addition, all of the long-term trends that have been destroying the U.S. economy for decades have not been taken a breather. In fact, the truth is that all of our long-term economic problems have been accelerating. So yes, the sky is falling, it is time to panic and the U.S. economy really has fallen and it really can't get up. It is just that everyone in the mainstream media seems to have believed that Ben Bernanke and Barack Obama would just sprinkle a bunch of fairy dust on the economy and everything would just magically get better. Well, in the real world things simply do not work that way.

    Despite an unprecedented debt binge by the federal government and nightmarish money printing by the Federal Reserve, the economic downturn continues to drag on. Andrew Barber, a strategist at Waverly Advisors in Corning, New York recently told CNN the following....

    "People are starting to see that this sort of malaise is not just going to go away no matter what you do."
    And "malaise" is a really good word for what we have been experiencing. For those that remember the late 1970s, what we are going through today is similar in a lot of ways.

    But what is perhaps even more frightening is that 2011 is starting to look a lot like 2008 all over again.

    In particular, we are starting to see some real signs of instability in the financial markets.

    When Moody's downgraded Greek debt again on Wednesday all the way down to Caa1, I was only moderately alarmed. The truth is that everyone knows Greece is a basket case so a debt downgrade wasn't really all that surprising.

    When Moody’s announced that it plans to review the U.S. government’s AAA debt rating "if there is no progress on increasing the statutory debt limit in coming weeks" that got the attention of a lot of people around the world, but it was not totally unexpected. Moody's is telling Congress that they better raise the debt ceiling or else. A lot more pressure will be applied to Congress before this is over.

    When Moody's warned that it may downgrade the debt ratings of Bank of America, Citigroup and Wells Fargo, that really set off alarm bells for me.

    Do you all remember what set off the financial panic in 2008?

    Do the names "Bear Stearns" and "Lehman Brothers" ring a bell?

    Well, right now there are some frightening indications that we may see more trouble at some "too big to fail" institutions.

    But will there be any willingness to do more bailouts this time?

    Right now the financial markets are closely mirroring their performance just prior to the financial collapse of 2008. One great example of this is these charts which were recently posted by the Financial Armageddon blog. It looks like bank stocks may once again be leading the way down.

    Hopefully the financial system can hold together and we won't have a repeat of 2008 right now, because if it happens it is going to be really messy.

    But even without a "financial collapse" we already have all of the economic problems that we can handle.

    Robert Brusca, the chief economist at FAO Economics, is being quoted by CNN as saying the following....

    "We've had a poor economic recovery to begin with, and now it appears to be segueing into an end."
    At this point, U.S. consumer confidence is already lower than it was back in September 2008 when Lehman Brothers collapsed. U.S. consumers are holding on to their money more tightly these days and that is not a good sign for an economy that is so highly dependent on consumer spending.

    The latest manufacturing numbers have also been very distressing. Measures of manufacturing activity all over the world are indicating that we have now entered an economic slowdown. This is also similar to what we saw a few years ago.

    We should all feel really bad for anyone that is entering the workforce right now. We are in the midst of graduation season, and the only thing that our new graduates have to look forward to is an economic crisis that never seems to end.

    On a recent article entitled "Global Financial Markets Tremble As Bad Economic News Continues To Pour In" a reader named Esta left the following comment....

    I feel sad for yet another year of graduates entering a horrible job market. I recently read, and I think it was in the mainstream media, that only half the 2010 college grads have found jobs of any kind, only half of those have found jobs requiring a college education, and that 85 percent of all grads moved right back in with their parents. The job growth rate is so low that we keep employing fewer and fewer people as a percentage of our adult population. Why isn’t that still a recession?
    What a future our college graduates have to look forward to, eh? Moving back in with your parents, a crappy job (if you can find one) and a pile of student loan debt that will crush you financially for decades.

    We are always told that "more education" is the answer, but even many of our most highly educated young people can't find jobs. In fact, it turns out that a third of last year's law school graduates aren't even practicing law....

    The law school class of 2010 is making news for all the wrong reasons. The budding legal minds who managed to find employment last year have set a new record--only 68.4 percent of them are in jobs that require them to pass the bar exam, the lowest share since the Association for Legal Professionals began collecting data.
    Now it looks like the economy is going to starting heading downhill once again.

    What is that going to do to the job market?

    Last year, only 45.4% of Americans had jobs. That was the lowest figure since 1983.

    In some states it was even worse than that. In states like California, Arizona and Mississippi only about 37 percent of people had a job last year.

    The economic news just seems to get worse and worse and worse. The American people have been relatively calm over the past several years as they have waited for the promised "economic recovery", but what do you think is going to happen if we have another major economic downturn and unemployment spikes back up by several more percentage points?

    And what in the world can our "leaders" really do to "help" the economy if we do have a repeat of 2008?

    We are already running trillion dollar deficits.

    The Federal Reserve is already printing money like it is going out of style.

    So what would their next moves be?

    Most Americans have no idea how fragile our financial system and our economy really are.

    Let us hope and pray that things can hold together for as long as possible, because when the next wave of the economic collapse happens it is going to be really, really messy.

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  4. #4
    Senior Member AirborneSapper7's Avatar
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    Extreme Couponing: Desperate Economic Times Call For Desperate Measures



    May 31st, 2011
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    Even in the midst of a horrific economic decline, there are tools that all of us can use to make the most of our limited resources. This includes doing some things that many of us never imagined that we would do. A couple of months ago I never would have imagined that I would be doing an article on coupons. But in these desperate economic times you have to look for any economic edge that you can get. Did you know that it is possible to get $500 worth of groceries for less than 10 dollars? I didn't know that either until I started watching a show called "Extreme Couponing" on cable television. I was amazed as I watched person after person get over 95 percent off on their groceries. Personally, I have always thought that clipping coupons was a waste of time. Sure, you might save a few bucks, but I really didn't think it was worth the time or the effort. Well, my opinion has changed. There are a growing number of people out there that are using coupons to provide all of the groceries that their families need almost for free. In an economic environment where incomes are going down but food prices continue to go up, "extreme couponing" is a financial weapon that virtually anyone can use.

    Yes, not everyone can take it to the extent that many of these "extreme couponers" do. There are some women that spend 40, 50 or even 60 hours a week on their couponing. Most people cannot afford to do that.

    But even if you just spend a couple of hours a week you can still save significant money. At a time when many family budgets are tighter than ever, saving 50 or 100 bucks at the grocery store can mean a world of difference.

    Not only that, but "extreme couponing" is a great way to build up your stockpile of emergency food. Everyone should have enough food in their homes to feed their families for at least a year. Unfortunately, many people don't have that kind of money. That is where "extreme couponing" comes in.

    If you are willing to put a little hard work in, you can build a stockpile of emergency food for pennies on the dollar.

    Extreme couponing is not complicated and thanks to the new TLC show it is becoming extremely popular. The following is how a recent article on MSNBC describes these "extreme couponers"....

    Hard-core couponers are in it to win it — for free, if at all humanly possible. They plot their grocery-store trips with the precision of military commanders. They load up three or four shopping carts at a time. They test the mettle — and the congeniality — of cashiers by having them tally dozens of discounts on their behalf.

    And what do they get in exchange? Hundreds of dollars’ worth of merchandise for as little as $5 to $10, the applause of onlookers — and a surge of adrenaline that can be downright addicting.

    If you have never seen the show, you should check it out at least once. The following is a very brief preview of "Extreme Couponing"....

    Video: Extreme Couponing - Series Sneak Peek http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FORB0P3h ... r_embedded

    Mar 21, 2011

    In Extreme Couponing, meet the everyday people who save hundreds of dollars in a single trip to the store. Series premiere Wed, April 6 at 9|8c only on TLC! http://www.tlc.com/extremecouponing/#mkcpgn=yttlc1


    Yes, people are actually doing this. In fact, some of my readers are actually doing this.

    On a recent article entitled "Inflation 2011: Honey – They Shrunk Our Paychecks" one of my regular readers named Maria shared that her and her circle of friends have adopted extreme couponing as a way to fight back against the bad economy....

    In the last six months, I have seen a complete attitude adjustment in many of our friends and family. As a result, a resource sharing group has formed amongst us. We share work, ideas and tips on everything from budgeting to gardening. All of us have curtailed the “luxuriesâ€
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    Senior Member AirborneSapper7's Avatar
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    Inflation 2011: Honey – They Shrunk Our Paychecks



    May 30th, 2011
    45 comments
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    Do you ever have the feeling that there are holes in your pockets? These days our money seems to slip through our hands faster than ever. The Federal Reserve keeps telling us that the rate of inflation in 2011 is "close to zero", and this is causing confusion for many Americans because they are making just as much money as they did in previous years but it doesn't seem to go nearly as far. So what in the world is going on out there? Well, sadly, the truth is that we really don't even know what the government considers "inflation" to be anymore. The way that the U.S. government calculates inflation has changed an astounding 24 times since 1978. You see, it is always politically beneficial to have a low inflation rate, so recent administrations have been changing the formula constantly in an attempt to look good. But these days most Americans know something is up. All they have to do is stop at a gas station, go shopping for food or open up their bills. The reality is that inflation in 2011 is about as bad as we saw back in the 1970s, it is just that the government is much less honest about it now.

    Many years ago Kenny Rogers released a song that contained the following lyrics....

    You got to know when to hold em, know when to fold em
    Know when to walk away and know when to run
    You never count your money when you’re sitting at the table
    There’ll be time for counting when the dealer’s done

    Well, the U.S. middle class has been dealt a losing hand, but in the game of life you just can't fold.

    Over the past 3 decades, the average household income for the bottom 80 percent of Americans has been remarkably flat. In fact, over the past several years we have actually seen median household income decline several times. If you do not know about how the U.S. middle class is being ripped to shreds, just read this article. Without a doubt, America is getting poorer.

    Well, not the top 1 percent, but the vast majority of the rest of us sure are.

    Meanwhile, prices have started to rise with a vengeance.

    According to an article in the Daily Mail, a Memorial Day cookout will cost you 29 percent more this year than it did last year.

    That doesn't sound good.

    Will it be 29 percent more expensive again next year?

    Perhaps some of us will just have to stop having Memorial Day cookouts because we can't afford them anymore.

    The price of gas is also digging into our paychecks big time.

    A gallon of gas costs about a dollar more than it did a year ago, but we can't avoid buying gas. All of us have got to get to work and drive to the store.

    Sadly, each time the price of gasoline goes up 50 cents it takes about $70 billion out of the U.S. economy (on a yearly basis).

    A recent article in USA Today described the kind of impact these high gas prices are having on average American families....

    For every $10 the typical household earns before taxes, almost a full dollar now goes toward gas, a 40 percent bigger bite than normal.

    Households spent an average of $369 on gas last month. In April 2009, they spent just $201.
    But don't worry, according to Ben Bernanke we barely have any inflation at all in 2011.

    Some companies are trying to avoid raising their prices by reducing their package sizes. A recent article posted on Marketwatch entitled "Inflation diet: same price, less product" explored this phenomenon in detail. Millions of Americans are going to the supermarket and are finding that many of their favorite products are now 10 or 20 percent smaller and yet they are paying the same price as before.

    Another thing that is happening is that product quality is going down. Have you noticed how things just don't seem to be made the way that they used to? This is not a coincidence.

    According a recent article on CNBC, retailers are skimping on quality as a way to deal with rising costs....

    According to Global Hunter Securities Macro and Consumer Strategist Richard Hastings, retailers have been collaborating with their production contractors for about two years. They are trying to push back on the total volume, cost and weight of every unit.

    "Along the way, the consumer barely noticed. By now, everybody knows something is wrong," said Hastings. "If we had to put a number on it, it's probably a 7.5% decline in total quality and durability of products compared to a bigger increase in the cost of production per unit made outside of the U.S."
    But no matter how hard companies try to hide it, at some point the American people are going to wake up and they are going to realize that they aren't getting as much for their money as they were before.

    This is why so many people get upset when the Federal Reserve and the U.S. government devalue our money. Inflation is a "hidden tax" on every single one of us. When our dollars don't buy as much stuff, that means that we are all poorer than we were before.

    All of this inflation is coming at a time when the economy is really struggling. Personally, I am seeing all kinds of signals that the economy is really starting to slow down once again.

    What is going to make things even worse is all of the government austerity that is going to be implemented over the next couple of years.

    Once upon a time, a government job was the safest kind of a job you could have. Sadly, as a recent Reuters article noted, those days are long gone....

    Around 450,000 people who work for U.S. states, counties, cities, towns and villages could get pink slips in fiscal 2012, sharply up from the 300,000 positions shed this year, a report said on Monday.
    So should we, as many of our liberal friends insist, tax the rich so that we can pay for all of those government workers?

    Well, the truth is that the wealthy are already being taxed into oblivion. If you doubt this, just read this editorial in The Wall Street Journal: "A 62% Top Tax Rate?"

    Most of the "ultra-wealthy" have learned how to avoid most of this taxation by moving their wealth offshore. In fact, as I have written about previously, it is estimated that a third of all the wealth in the world is now held in "offshore" tax havens.

    So why are we seeing so much inflation right now?

    Well, I covered that in my previous article entitled "When Faith In U.S. Dollars And U.S. Debt Is Dead The Game Is Over – And That Day Is Closer Than You May Think".

    The Federal Reserve and our politicians in Washington D.C. have been very naughty. They have been systematically destroying the value of our dollars.

    Someday when you are using your money as toilet paper because toilet paper is actually much more valuable than dollars are you will wish that the American people had stood up and insisted on a different path.

    Don't laugh - during the hyperinflation that the Weimar Republic experienced in the 1920s, German citizens were actually burning stacks of money in their furnaces in order to keep their homes warm.

    100 years ago, a U.S. dollar had more than 20 times the purchasing power than it has today.

    Sadly, we are now in a terminal phase of dollar devaluation. It is only going to get worse from here. Someday we will look back and long for the days of "low inflation" that we had back in 2011.

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    Senior Member AirborneSapper7's Avatar
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    When Faith In U.S. Dollars And U.S. Debt Is Dead The Game Is Over – And That Day Is Closer Than You May Think



    May 27th, 2011
    95 comments
    many links on this post

    A day is coming when the rest of the world will decide that it no longer has faith in U.S. dollars or in U.S. debt. When that day arrives, the game will be over. Traditionally, two of the biggest things that the U.S. economy has had going for it were the U.S. dollar and U.S. Treasuries. The U.S. dollar has been the default reserve currency of the world for decades. All over the globe it was seen as a strong, stable currency that was desirable for international trade. U.S. government debt has long been considered the "safest debt" in the entire world. Whenever there was a major crisis, investors would flock to U.S. Treasuries because they were considered a rock. Sadly, all of this is now changing. Today the rest of the world is losing faith in the U.S. financial system. In fact, even the United Nations is now warning of the collapse of the dollar. But if the U.S. dollar and U.S. Treasuries collapse, that will be an absolute nightmare for the U.S. economy. If the rest of the world does not want our dollars someday, then what are we going to give them in exchange for all of the oil and all of the cheap imported goods they send us? If the rest of the world does not want our debt someday, then how in the world are we going to be able to continue to consume far, far more wealth than we produce?

    The rest of the world is watching the U.S. government run up record-setting budget deficits and they are watching the Federal Reserve print money like there is no tomorrow and they realize that the U.S. financial system is slowly imploding.

    As mentioned above, now even the United Nations is warning that the U.S. dollar could collapse. The following is a brief excerpt from a recent news report put out by Reuters....

    The United Nations warned on Wednesday of a possible crisis of confidence in, and even a “collapseâ€
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    Senior Member AirborneSapper7's Avatar
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    Extreme Paranoia



    May 26th, 2011
    40 comments
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    Have you noticed that our entire society operates on fear now? Everyone is afraid of everybody else. We are taught not to trust anyone that we do not know and that we should literally spy on our neighbors because they might be a threat. If you do not participate in all of the extreme paranoia that is going on then supposedly something is wrong with you. In fact, if you are not paranoid like everyone else is then you might be a threat. After all, according to FBI Director Robert Mueller, "homegrown terrorists" represent as big a threat to American national security as al-Qaeda does. But in the midst of all of this extreme paranoia, we have thrown common sense out the window. We are told that it is Islamic extremists that want to attack us, and yet we are so obsessed with being politically correct that the TSA will grope grandma, grandpa and all the little children they can get their hands on but they will allow men in full Islamic dress to walk right through airport security without even being checked. We will put up video cameras to watch schoolchildren eat their lunches and yet we are leaving our borders completely wide open. Thousands of real terrorists could be crossing our borders each day and we would never even know it. But this is what happens when extreme paranoia sets in - people (and governments) start behaving very irrationally.

    Recently, U.S. Representative Paul Broun went through airport security and what he witnessed absolutely shocked him....

    "I walked through there was right behind me there was a grandmother — little old lady, and she was was patted down. Right behind her was a little kid who was patted down. And then right behind him was a guy in Arabian dress who just walked right through. Why are we patting down grandma and kids?"

    What ever happened to common sense?

    The American people are constantly whipped into a state of fear by the mainstream media and so there is a never ending call for even more "security" so that we can all feel safe.

    Meanwhile, the most basic things that need to be done for our security, such as securing our borders, are totally ignored because they are not politically correct.

    Instead, most of the focus seems to be on keeping as many eyeballs on American citizens of possible.

    U.S. Senator Ron Wyden made headlines recently when he revealed that the U.S. government interprets the Patriot Act much more "broadly" than the general public does....

    "We’re getting to a gap between what the public thinks the law says and what the American government secretly thinks the law says."
    That doesn't sound good.

    According to Wyden, "the government is relying on secret interpretations of what the law says without telling the public what those interpretations are."

    Isn't that great?

    Now the government has such extreme paranoia that they won't even tell us what the rules are so we won't even know if we are breaking them.

    Have you noticed that everything seems to be "secret" these days?

    Everywhere you turn someone in the government is claiming that "national security" is at risk for one reason or another. The American people are being increasingly kept in the dark about everything because we cannot be "trusted".

    Secrecy and extreme security measures are now equated with patriotism.

    Recently, U.S. Representative Ron Paul gave a speech on "The Patriot Act" on the floor of the House of Representatives. The following is a brief except from that speech....

    Our Presidents can now, on their own:

    * Order assassinations, including American citizens,
    * Operate secret military tribunals,
    * Engage in torture,
    * Enforce indefinite imprisonment without due process,
    * Order searches and seizures without proper warrants, gutting the 4th Amendment,
    * Ignore the 60 day rule for reporting to the Congress the nature of any military operations as required by the War Power Resolution,
    * Continue the Patriot Act abuses without oversight,
    * Wage war at will,
    * Treat all Americans as suspected terrorists at airports with TSA groping and nude x-raying.

    And the Federal Reserve accommodates by counterfeiting the funds needed and not paid for by taxation and borrowing, permitting runaway spending, endless debt, and special interest bail-outs.
    Does that sound "patriotic" to you?

    The following is a short video that includes even more of Ron Paul's remarks....

    Video: The Last Nail - Floor Speech May 25 2011 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-olNr4Uu ... r_embedded

    Sadly, Ron Paul is vastly outnumbered in Congress by those that want even more secrecy and even more extreme security measures.

    America is becoming a much different place. The truth is that even if we give up all of our liberties and all of our freedoms we will still be extremely vulnerable to outside threats.

    Do you really want to live in a society where there is very little liberty or freedom? That is the direction America is going. We may feel slightly safer, but we will cease to be Americans.

    Recently, I wrote about the growing "big brother" control grid going up all over the country on The American Dream....

    Do you want your children and grandchildren to live in a futuristic "big brother" control grid where everything they do is watched, recorded, tracked and tightly controlled? Well, that is exactly where things are headed. We witnessed some really bad totalitarian regimes during the 20th century, but what is coming is going to be far more restrictive than any of the despots of the past ever dreamed was possible. Today, nearly every government on earth is tightening their grip on their citizens. Paranoia has become standard operating procedure all over the planet and nobody is to be trusted.

    All of this extreme paranoia must stop.

    Sometimes people will say something like this: "Well, I don't mind if the government watches me or searches me because I have nothing to hide."

    The next time someone tells you something like that, do the following....

    Pull out a chair and set it down six inches away from that person. Then sit in the chair and stare directly at him or her without moving. After a few moments that person will say something like: "What in the hell are you doing?"

    In response, just tell them that they just said that they didn't mind being watched.

    The truth is that none of us want eyeballs on us 24 hours a day.

    Our founding fathers included the Bill of Rights in the Constitution for a reason. The Bill of Rights is there to protect our most basic liberties.

    If we allow those liberties to be stripped away in exchange for a little bit more security we will only have ourselves to blame.

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  9. #9
    Senior Member AirborneSapper7's Avatar
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    May Jobs Report Paints Startling Picture Of Economic Recovery



    June 6, 2011
    by Personal Liberty News Desk

    The United States economy appears to be sputtering into the summer months, as the latest unemployment rate has reached its highest level since January.

    According to the Labor Department’s report, the jobless rate in May jumped to 9.1 percent, an increase from 9 percent in April. Nonfarm payroll employers added only 54,000 new workers last month, which is the fewest in eight months. Local governments took a big hit, losing approximately 28,000 jobs. Furthermore, private businesses hired only 83,000 new employees in May, the smallest monthly increase in nearly a year.

    CNN reported that economists expected the unemployment rate to fall to 8.9 percent. Instead, employer confidence seemed to dramatically dwindle compared to April, when U.S. companies added 232,000 jobs.

    Stock futures fell sharply after the government’s report was released on June 3. The Associated Press indicated that Dow futures dropped 146 points, or 1.2 percent, ahead of the opening bell. Standard & Poor’s 500 futures fell 16 points, or 1.3 percent.

    “The employment data have confirmed the markets’ worst fears about a marked slowdown in U.S. economic activity, to the extent that any one report can be relied upon,â€
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