Tag: Quantitative Easing

The Current Bailout Totals

This is the amount of money that the Federal Reserve has doled out to the major global banks from 2007 through 2010. Over 16 trillion! Trillion! Dollars……strike that, I mean Federal Reserve Notes. There was no vote, no public debate, simply a private corporation printing money the American taxpayer will be held accountable for, and handing it out to their global banking cartel friends. The global banking cartel now lends out that money to countries like Greece, Italy, Spain, etc. and creates a massive sovereign debt issue in those countries. Bottom line, those governments and countries are now beholden to the central banks. They are bought and paid for. Now add the passage of the new law that allows the POTUS to declare any American he wants as a terrorist or enemy of the state and that person will now be arrested by the MILITARY, incarcerated by the MILITARY, and can be held indefinitely without trial, representation, or due process. Every single libertarian-independent Tea Party and every single Occupy protester, organizer, leader had better pay attention to this, because both of our groups are about to be taken out along with any other potential voice of dissent. Here is the list…

Quantitative Easing Explained

If you haven’t seen this video yet, it is worth your time.  It has been out for a while.  Thanks JK for bringing it to my attention! [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PTUY16CkS-k]

From The National Inflation Association – Sarah Palin Food Inflation Controversy

Here is the link: Sarah Palin Food Inflation Controversy Food prices are out of control. Here is an excerpt from NIA’s story: The U.S. government is currently printing money just to survive. The Federal Reserve has held the Fed Funds Rate at 0-0.25% for nearly two years and just announced that it will be printing an additional $600 billion in new U.S. dollars by the end of June 2011. Since the beginning of September until now, just in anticipation of the Fed’s upcoming quantitative easing, we have experienced the largest ever short-term increase in the history of agricultural commodity prices with corn rising by 32%, soybeans rising by 32%, orange juice rising by 12%, coffee rising by 19%, and sugar rising by 66%. These agricultural commodity price increases will begin to work their way into grocery stores nationwide in the weeks and months ahead, as food manufacturers and retailers are forced to raise their prices.