Banking Panic - The Plan (4)
Banking Panic - The Plan (Prelude)
Banking Panic - The Plan (1)
Banking Panic - The Plan (2)
Banking Panic - The Plan (3)
Banking Panic - The Plan (5)
Banking Panic - The Plan (6)
Banking Panic - The Plan (7)
Banking Panic - The Plan (8)
Banking Panic - The Plan (9)
Banking Panic - The Plan (10)
Banking Panic - The Plan (Nearly There)
Banking Panic - The Plan (Arrival)
Banking Panic - The Plan (The Next Phase)
Banking Panic - The Plan (11)
Banking Panic - The Plan (12)
Banking Panic - The Plan (13)
Banking Panic - The Plan (Exit)
Banking Panic - The Plan (1st Encore)
Banking Panic - The Plan (2nd Encore)
Banking Panic - The Plan (3rd Encore)
Banking Panic - The Circus
The Private Banks
Bank of England
Bank for International Settlements (BIS)
Bank of Japan
European Central Bank
Federal Reserve System
Rockefeller
Rothschild
Essentially, all the perceived government-controlled 'banks' are no such entities. They are all private banks and governments borrow from them. When rhetoric spews forth that the Bank of England has 'rescued' facilities like Northern Rock, cynically it actually has done just that. The Bank of England has stepped into protect the monetary system. Self-protection. Government authority is simply that the UQ (aka UK) Ltd will pay (underwrite) the loan. The people will pay the interest through taxes. Money is never 'free'. Money costs money to borrow. It's how (theoretical) money is made. And the associated interest to make more money. It's a closed loop that spirals either upward or downward depending on the viewpoint. Both are completely dependent on faith. The private Bank of England has loaned the government £billions with the attached interest. People have been conditioned to expect attached interest. It is the cause of inflation and devalued worth. It's bizarre that an item does not need to change, but its worth can fluctuate. Mostly upwards as it ages like a painting or antique and then it's only what someone (private funds or an agent for an unknown individual, organisation or government) is prepared to pay for it. Unless, of course, it's the depreciation of an article that wears out like a car and must be replaced. There is never any question and it will be accepted that loans always attract interest and the system imposed profiteering. Virtual money attracts real interest. It's theoretical money. Imagine: actually lending £30billion of real money. But the interest is very real. The 'money market' is designed to fail (the people), but reward the few.
Create the widespread (global) problem,
provide a highly profitable solution
provide a highly profitable solution
What is real money? Gold? Only a relatively rare metal with no real worth in itself. Only its rarity and the quality of value is then perceived. Diamond is perceived as valuable, but by enforcing a scarcity of this allotrope of carbon, it raises the perception of its value. Diamond is plentiful, but circulation so tightly controlled by the exclusive 'ownership' of the De Beers Group that their value escalates. If sand were to be this rare, then it too would become valuable. Sand is actually removed from circulation by being tied up inside buildings. When a building is demolished, the sand is NEVER recovered. Or the water bonded into the structure. The water has effectively been destroyed.
Recycling sand would be regarded
as sheer lunacy, wouldn't it?
A diamond is forever: never sell it and so restrict the circulation of diamonds making them more 'valuable'.
Future events will cause sand to become expensive. Laws will be imposed to protect sand - a 'precious' building material and sand on the beach is already protected by law against removal: theft of a naturally occuring material. Coal, oil and water are natural, but have a (re)saleable value. When beach sand is washed to remove the salt this becomes a new source of salt. This essential component of human health will ultimately be regulated. It's so predictable. One day there will be a tax on all forms of excrement: not just horse manure. Regeneration involves demolishing buildings and rebuilding taller ones with the same footprint size or 'funding' the Olympic Games (a modern day euphemism for 'wealth creation' for some or 'debt creation' for others. It's a dog-eat-dog world and it pays well to be a BIG dog. Same ethic as the shark-minnow syndrome in the corporate world.
As a concept of interest, the Rockefellers, like almost all of the 'great' American billionaires, looked upon their wealth as spiritual stewardship. They believed that God gave them the money and they were just the caretakers of it and felt a duty to manage it for the betterment of others. They presumably enjoyed the immense wealth and 'making' money in the process. If every dollar they received was a gift from God, they were glad to pay 10% of it back. They could afford to do that. But keep and use the rest. Everybody else should be happy too, especially those who do not enjoy wealth, though pay interest on any loan. Following the example set by the 'well off'.
as sheer lunacy, wouldn't it?
- Who runs the World?
- Who is at the pyramid apex with the all seeing eye?
- Who monitors and controls events?
- Which comes first: the problem or the solution?
Banking Panic - The Plan (Prelude)
Banking Panic - The Plan (1)
Banking Panic - The Plan (2)
Banking Panic - The Plan (3)
Banking Panic - The Plan (5)
Banking Panic - The Plan (6)
Banking Panic - The Plan (7)
Banking Panic - The Plan (8)
Banking Panic - The Plan (9)
Banking Panic - The Plan (10)
Banking Panic - The Plan (Nearly There)
Banking Panic - The Plan (Arrival)
Banking Panic - The Plan (The Next Phase)
Banking Panic - The Plan (11)
Banking Panic - The Plan (12)
Banking Panic - The Plan (13)
Banking Panic - The Plan (Exit)
Banking Panic - The Plan (1st Encore)
Banking Panic - The Plan (2nd Encore)
Banking Panic - The Plan (3rd Encore)
Banking Panic - The Circus
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