This video post is almost a month old by now, but the content is timeless. Canadian economist professor Michel Chossudovsky is the author of “The Globalization of Poverty” and “America’s ‘War on Terrorism’”. He is also the Director of the Centre for Research on Globalization. In this video he sits down with The Corbett Report to discuss the real meaning of the “bank bailouts”. A very well summarized overview in just under 8 minutes.


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Here’s an interesting TV-interview with Max Keiser on the latest developments in The demise of the dollar released by The Independent that I’ve written about here at Mellgren.com. As I wrote earlier I believe the collapse of the US dollar will happen a lot faster than 2018 as The Independent suggests, and Max Keiser agrees on that as well:

Here’s a short radio interview with GATAs Bill Murphy on the latest developments in The demise of the dollar released by The Independent that I’ve written about here at Mellgren.com. Listen to Bill in your web browser or download this MP3-file.

Dear readers, interesting times to say the least. As stated in one of the most important articles in decades (discussed here on Mellgren.com), the denials from US media and officials are in, like clock-work:
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Dear readers. This might be the biggest financial news to hit the Internet since Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers. I, and many other experts with far better understanding than I have, such as Catherine Austin Fitts and Krassimir Petrov, have been saying this for years: Oil will not be priced in US dollars for long. When the move away from the Petrodollar happens, the US Empire will fall. From The Independent:
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The FDIC stands for ”Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation” and is the United States government corporation in charge of deposit insurance. If you have your money in the bank and your bank fail, the FDIC insures that you get your money back. There are equivalents to the FDIC in almost all countries at least in the western world.

“The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. proposed asking banks to prepay three years of premiums to replenish reserves dented by a rash of bank failures that the agency said will cost $100 billion through 2013.
The insurance fund will run a deficit as of tomorrow after 120 banks failed in the past two years, the agency said today.”
- Bloomberg.com

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Topics: What is money? Why is gold a smart investment?

I often get asked by non-economist friends and acquittances to explain the current economic crisis. I love those conversations because it helps me to keep my language free from the economic lingo with the complex acronyms that really helps nobody to understand what is going on around us. So, I thought I’d write articles that tries to encapsulate typical conversations I often get into in social settings. Almost always the conversation begins around the topic of how to invest in a smart way when the economy is as turbulent as it is. Since I’m a guy of the Austrian School of Economics, I think gold should be in everyones portfolio and this is often what makes people interested in what I have to say since it is not that common yet for people to advocate physical gold in your own possession. That is likely to change soon though since more and more people are moving into gold. So imagine a conversation something like this:
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Real Gold Highs 3, by Adam Hamilton of Zeal Speculation and Investment.

Summary:

“The bottom line is $1000 gold is certainly not the extreme the financial media is portraying. In the real inflation-adjusted terms that matter, gold is nowhere close to hitting new records. Using the watered-down CPI, gold’s all-time high is closer to $2350. And during and after the 1970s gold bull this metal spent the better part of 2 years continuously over $1000 in today’s dollars. This week’s $1000 is not excessive at all.

The bullish fundamental forces driving this gold bull remain very much alive and well. Until global gold supply growth exceeds demand growth, probably years away yet, the gold price has no choice but to continue climbing on balance. While $1000 is a sexy number exuding big psychological gravity, it is nothing special in a pure technical sense. It is just another temporary step on a long bullish journey.”

Big Inflation Coming 2, by Adam Hamilton
http://www.zealllc.com/2009/biginf2.htm

“The bottom line is the panic money-supply growth in the US has been very excessive, running at multiples of economic growth. And in the case of narrow M0 money, the doubling in 4 months is literally unprecedented. It scares me. With so much new money in the system, and the Fed totally unwilling to undo this terrible inflation over the 6 months since, rapidly rising prices are inevitable.

We’re on the verge of the first inflation scare of the modern era, a time when epic panic buying into hard assets and their producers is increasingly likely. Investors who ignore these dire tidings will probably get crushed by the inflation. But investors who prudently study the dangers and deploy their capital to thrive in them will make fortunes. Mark my words, the money-supply data shows big inflation is coming.”

Remark: Remaining fear-less is the best medicin against all crises.

A friend of mine just sent me this article. I’m glad he did. This is a very to-the-point no-bullshit kind of article of the Austrian School from Asia Times Online. My only wish is that journalism i Sweden and the rest of “the west” would be as up front as this…

Dollar’s fate written in history, by John Lee
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Global_Economy/KF04Dj03.html

Debt-based monetary systems are inherently unstable. Money is created out of thin air by the banks and lent to government, consumers and businesses. In order to service and repay those debts, the borrowers take on more debts. Asset prices are inflated, and the vicious cycle continues until the debtors are unable to borrow or the banks are unwilling to lend.

At that point the system snaps, everything is sold off, and we have a financial crisis at hand. Here, we examine what happens to equity and currency markets in the aftermath of financial crisis and deduce what will be the likely outcome for the United States as it emerges from the present crisis.





Johnny Mellgren is a Swedish entrepreneur with a keen interest in macro economics and macro politics. This is his web site where he blogs about the economic collapse of our time, what to do about it and the economic future we create together. Contact Johnny Mellgren.


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I provide advice on investment portfolios for private and corporate clients. I also hold lectures in the history of money and the current economic collapse and how to protect your wealth in a time of transition.