Bank of Japan Prepares for Crash Triggered by Fed Tightening


An interesting analysis and could very well be the right move!

Money Smuggling v Money Laundering


big-stack-of-money

I have warned that when I am traveling these days, the question always posed is – “How much cash do you have?” Even traveling to Warsaw, there are big signs saying you may not have more than €10,000 in “value” on your person. In Italy, if it looks like you have a lot of jewelry, they weight it. The hunt for money by governments is getting desperate. They use terrorism and the drug trade as the excuse. Granted, there may be cash being smuggled into Mexico like the latest catch of $3 million in the trunk of a car at San Diego. But the problem becomes, we are all now suspects without doing anything.

What is the importance of such seizures to our liberty? Granted, the drug trade may have a bunch of cash. But unless you actually prove they were drug dealers, what they are calling this is “money smuggling” not “money laundering” or even “drug money” these days. That means they claim the right to just take whatever cash a person has without proving that it is the proceeds of a crime. That means, you have no right to travel with your own money.

When I was in the gold business back in the 1970s, an old farmer looking guy with a moth-eaten jacket and a cap, came walking into my office. He was watching the ticker tape display above the vault. Those were my younger days and then guy said: “Hey kid. How many Krugerrands would a half-million buy?” I just put it in the calculator just to answer his curious question. He then said: “I take then!” I was shocked and looked at him. He then handed me a brown paper bag from a food store and said: “Here’s $250,000. Watch this. I go get the other bag.” No bill was newer than 1934 and trying to count that much mostly in $20 and $50 bills that smelled really mildew, you felt you needed a shower afterwards.

Arab-Dinar-HoardI told the story to a friend. For he paid cash. I never knew his name. Back then we were free, not like today. There was no requirement to give up everything to do a transaction. My friend then told me his name and the story. His family was one of the largest landholders on the East Coast. He had sold all the land for Six Flags Great Adventure. The story went that his family had lost a lot of money in the bank failures during the 1930s. So they built their own vault in the basement of their house and never trusted banks again.

Roman-Hoard-BritainBetween “money smuggling” and “money laundering” regulations, you do not have the right to your own money anymore. The “money smuggling” is simply traveling with your money and that requires disclosure for $10,000 or more. Then they use “money laundering” for hiding your cash as in a safe deposit box. Read the fine print for such a box. You are not allowed to have cash or gold in a safe deposit box for that is now “money laundering” meaning you are hiding it from the government. In either case, they just confiscate your money. They need not prove it is the proceeds of a crime or that you didn’t pay a tax on it. Even if your cashed your pay check and kept it in cash accumulating your savings outside of a bank today in cash, that is now hiding your money from government and as such it is “money laundering.”

Had that family been around today, that would justify storming their house with swat teams. That family was not engaged in any criminal activity. They just didn’t trust banks after the failures of more than 9000 banks during the late stages of the Great Depression. Back then, it was not “money laundering” to keep your wealth in cash and in your own vault in the basement. Today, they just presume you are up to something and that justifies taking everything you have.

This is obviously the same human response that has unfolded over the centuries. This is why hoards of coins are still found buried in the ground in all cultures from all centuries. This is what happens with the collapse in the confidence of government. What you think is yours, they view as their’s. Hillary Clinton said in Detroit that Trump is worth $4 billion. She told the audience – think what we could do with that! This is how career politicians look at the world. What can they take from us next.

Analyst Warns Of Major September Event: “There’s A Lot Of Chatter Regarding A Market Crash”


I do not know if a CRASH is coming this tear or not but I do know it is not far off!

Japanese Government Squanders Pension Funds On Failed Stocks As Losses Reach $130 Billion In Past Year


This change would not surprise me it does go along with the New Word order that the powers to be want to impose on us!

Risks Of Loose Money – Exposing The Link Between Monetary Policy And Social Inequality


The current government policies based on the work of John Maynard Keynes are based on false assumption that do not work and will bring down any country that tries them.

Department of Labor Regulation on Pensions


Pension-Crisis

These changes which start next April will eventually lead to the take over of private pensions; for as all government programs they start in one direction and then take you in a few years someplace entirely different..

For those who would like to review the actual text of the new regulation, here it is.

savings-arrangements-final-rule

US Feds to End Private Prisons


Prison

The idea behind private federal prisons was to save money, but they did not. They billed the government the same and now they are losing their business. The US Justice Department has announced that it will phase out its use of privately owned prisons. They are citing safety concerns because of investigations that revealed rampant abuses with dozens of deaths stemming from substandard care and widespread medical neglect. Contracts with the 13 private prisons will be allowed to expire over the next five years.

The stock of Geo Group collapsed from almost $33 to under $20. The reason the Fed’s really went to private prisons was because the guards were then not government employees so it changed all the legal rights. They would have been subject to Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests on how they treated inmates, but after private prisons, suddenly, there were no FOIA requests since the guards were not government employees.

The Supreme Court recently declared that private prison companies who operate federal facilities cannot be sued by inmates for constitutional violations. Inmates can still sue the individual officers, but the court would not extend the protection to include the corporation — a much more lucrative proposition. In Richardson v. McKnight (1997), a prison inmate sued two guards at a prison in Tennessee that had been privatized. The plaintiff alleged that the guards had deprived him of a right secured by the Constitution. Hence, the plaintiff alleged that the guards were liable to him under 42 U.S.C. Section 1983. The district court held that the guards were not federal employees so they did not qualify for immunity and the court of appeals affirmed. However, the case went to the Supreme Court. There, Justice Breyer delivered the opinion of the court and noted several distinctions between government and private agents. He noted that government agents typically work within civil service rules that provide them some security and “may limit the ability to punish individual employees.”

However, firms in the marketplace face pressure to encourage sound decision-making. Also, firms do not have to contend with civil service restrictions — thus they can use inducements (carrots and sticks) to motivate employees. Thus, immunity would not improve the quality of decisions made by firms and agents. They assume giving government employees immunity is a good thing that improves “quality” rather than the reality that it removes the fear of going too far. Hence, police can kill anyone and get away with it 99% of the time.

Ultimately, in Richardson v. McKnight, the Supreme Court held that employees of private firms could not invoke the immunity defense available to state government actors. The court recognized that the incentive structure differs between government and private providers. They noted that private firms seek to maximize profits, which involves minimizing costs. Without meaningful oversight, the court argued that firms might engage in harmful activity to either increase revenue or lower the costs. Thus, liability rules are necessary to discourage such behavior.

The government also cheats people to save money. The court pretends this does not happen and simply assumes that government agents always act in the “public’s” best interest; thus, to ensure that the public’s interest is carried out properly, immunity should be granted like in Hillary’s case.

On November 27, the U.S. Supreme Court refused to hold corporations under contract with the federal government liable for constitutional violations in Correctional Service Corporation v. Malesko 122 S.Ct. 515 (2001). The case involved a federal inmate and a private contractor with the U.S. Bureau of Prisons (BOP). So, you could not even sue the company who operated the prison for murder. Only the guard could be charged.

Hence, private prisons are going away, at least in the Feds. In states, they can do as they like with impunity.

Corruption Knows No End


White House Hillarys Den of ThievesHillary’s connection to Ukraine is starting to surface. Oligarchs who once supported Viktor Yanukovych, the fourth President of Ukraine who fled during the revolution, have cleaned their image by donating money. The Ukrainian billionaire Victor Pinchuk, who spoke at Davos, was also the top donor for Clinton’s pretend charitable foundation. Since 2006, Pinchuk has given about 13.1 million dollars to the Bill, Hillary, and Chelsea Clinton Foundation. Why are foreign billionaires donating to Hillary’s charity in the USA?

Friday Night Funny: The Patton Doctrine — Fellowship of the Minds


As a former military office from back in the day I can tell you that the new Obama Army/Navy/Marines/Air Force will be hard pressed to beat and work power out there today. I was down to Ft. Benning last week an I was no pleased with what I saw!

kommonsentsjane's avatarkommonsentsjane

Too bad for America they do not make them like George S. Patton, Jr. anymore. We could definitely use a few right now: -Dave (h/t: My NB bud Hog_Flambe)

via Friday Night Funny: The Patton Doctrine — Fellowship of the Minds

Reblogged on kommonsentsjane/blogkommonsents.

Yes, any one out there know where we can recruit another George S. Patton, Jr. I feel we have one staring us in the face and that person is  businessman, Donald Trump.  If only the people would take a chance and vote for him.  What in the heck do we have to lose?  The track that we are in is certainly not working in our government.  We have to make a change.

Obama has wiped out our tough Generals on purpose so that he can make milk toast of the Military.. He has wiped out Christianity and injected Islam into the Military.  Obama and Hillary have embraced…

View original post 39 more words

World War 3 Coming Soon? Tanks Roll Across The Border As Turkish Invasion Of Syria Begins


Bad news for sure as may bring in Russia again!