Wall Street

What role does Wall Street play in the growth of our economy?

And to Sum Up!

That is a really poor choice for a title of this last in Bernanke's series of lectures. 

Strange how history has a way of favoring the survivors. Nonetheless, much of the series has historic value. Some of it requires a suspension of common sense, other parts are bravely pastiched from the whole cloth of rhetoric, and every now and then, some facts do emerge. You will have to decide for yourself which is which 

Bernanke grades his lecturees on a proprietary curve which he learned while playing quoites with Baron Rotschild and his other cronies in the Bildesberger. It goes something like this: Depending on the students lineage and family ties, they will get either a Pass, Fail or Welcome Aboard!

Listen as he indoctrinates the next class of world leaders in this final lecture at George Wahington University.

A Further Lecture from Uncle Ben.

The following link will give you more on Chairman Bernanke's lecture series. Helicopter Ben 'splains the Fed to the next generation at George Washington University.

Dow Down 500 Points in 2 Days - No Problems Here!

Well, let's see here: The Standard & Poor’s 500 just closed below its August panic lows, Broward County, Florida cuts back it's 911 emergency service for lack of funds, Greece just barely won its current round of Russian roulette with the EU (...

Keeping my Promise!

I stated last Friday that I would have an overview of our financial affairs - and, as with any affair, it is going to cost us an awful lot of money! The question now facing the average investor (if there ever was such a critter) is "Do I buy or do...

Whither the Dow?

Whither the Dow? Or perhaps it's wither the Dow! Monday's stock market open is expected to be ... shall we say, negative? Certainly, if Asia is any indicator, we are in for a very bumpy ride this week. But, forget the Dow for a moment and let's...

#4 in Our Top 10 Mistakes

Moving on down our Top 10 List of mistakes: #4 - Buying stocks or ETF’s as substitutes for physical gold. While speculating in the stock market may be profitable, the risks, as we've all learned,  are formidable. A mining company may be taken ove...

Booyah This, Cramer!

Here’s the deal – If you were offered stock in Apple or Google at $35 a share – would you take it? And if you did, would you place a stop loss order, just in case your entry price was too high? That is exactly the prospect in front of you right no...

Heads Should Roll!

It's important here to mention the lineage of the Bank for International Settlements. It is the most obscure arm of the Bretton-Woods International Financial architecture but its role is central. John Maynard Keynes wanted it closed down as it was used to launder money for the Nazis in World War II. Run by an inner elite representing the world’s major central banks it controls most of the transferable money in the world. It uses that money to draw national governments into debt for the IMF.

The Bank for International Settlements was a joint creation in 1930 of the world’s central banks, including the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. Its existence was inspired by Hjalmar Horace Greeley Schacht, Nazi Minister of Economics and president of the Reichsbank.
Thomas Harrington McKittrick, American President of the BIS in 1944, sat down with his German, Japanese, Italian, British, and American executive staff one morning in May, to discuss such important matters as the $378 million in gold that had been sent to the Bank by the Nazi government after Pearl Harbor for use by its leaders after the war. Gold that had been looted from the national banks of Austria, Holland, Belgium, and Czechoslovakia, or melted down from the Reichsbank holding of the teeth fillings, spectacle frames, cigarette cases and lighters, and wedding rings of the murdered Jews.

Building Wealth

Gold and silver are the ultimate store of value and they are the only hedge during uncertain times.

Do you believe that gold and silver will rise in price and value or do you believe they are only barbarous relics of a bygone era, good for jewelry and some industrial uses, but nothing more?

If you believe that central bankers and the Treasury’s printing press is the answer to our financial dilemma then read no more!