…From the Rabbit Hole.
Facing the threats to humanity.
Is this (flip-flop) the IMF’s signal for escalating the Trade/Currency wars?
It took a few months, but the Fed’s mouth-to-mouth resuscitation brought gasping investment banks and hedge funds and giant corporations back to life. Wall Street rejoiced.
But the Fed’s academic models never addressed one basic question: What happens to everyone else?
Rational people don’t bet everything on hope; they have a Emergency Plan.
Are You Ready For Monetary Reform?
The volatility of national currencies has a big role in debt payments the nations pay to manage their human farms around the world.
That is the international monetary system, and they plan to “reset” it after the next “crisis” summit by finance ministers…
In 2010 the international community reached a new monetary consensus that called for a weaker U.S. Dollar, a stronger basket of reserve currencies (SDR)…
The major point I wish to make is that there are nonviolent solutions, options other than simply going to war with other nuclear powers!
Before dawn today I had a dream that included a towering giant, taller than the world’s largest skyscrapers. I had a brief struggle with myself to gather my will-power to scream up at the towering giant, thinking that he would…
The economic zone model is engineered, and we see it deployed or in the early stages of being deployed worldwide. The zone model was used for the European (EU, aka Eurozone) economic bloc.
We see its likeness in the UNASUR, NAFTA, ASEAN Economic Community (AEC), and elsewhere.
Who Trusts the PNAC Neocons promoting U.S. Military supremacy?
What nations want to rebuild the U.S.Dollar Empire?
What happens to “Allies” who abandon the Dollar supremacy?
Is Germany facing U.S. Dollar coercion?
Read details and piece together the world jigsaw puzzle …
…have clarity, confidence, and strong sense of survival in a emergency situation.
The U.S. could potentially veto the yuan’s inclusion in the SDR basket because the change would require the support of as much as 85 percent of voting shares on the IMF’s executive board. The U.S. has 17 percent of the votes. The IMF said it’s too soon to say whether the move would require 70 percent or 85 percent of the vote under the institution’s bylaws.
Holly Shulman, a Treasury Department spokeswoman, said in an e-mail that it’s too early to speculate on the outcome of the IMF review.
China probably hasn’t done enough to liberalize controls over its currency and financial markets to sway the U.S., said Edwin Truman, who was assistant secretary for international affairs at the Treasury Department during the Clinton administration.
Stage Set for Confrontation, Not Cooperation, at G20
Is China an opponent to the New World Order global governmental system or a witting collaborator with it?
The value of national currencies can collapse, literally, in seconds.
Computers in financial markets may be able to respond in that speed but you and I do not.
Be prepared as best you can…