Before It’s News – by Tom Dennen
WAR IS THE CORE BUSINESS OF THE PRIVATE, FOREIGN-OWNED BANKS THE WORLD IS IN FORECLOSURE TO!
Do they really think we’re stupid or have the memories of goldfish?
Weapons of mass destruction in Iraq?
Nope.
Tony Blair’s “Dodgy Dossiers”
Yep.
CIA agents exposed, whistle blowers, Nigerian Uranium… Come on!
The FED is cranking up the monetization of the dollar for a war to “get us out of this Depression”
Come on!
Here’s the layout of Capitalism since Tulip Mania demonstrated the first ‘Pump ‘n Dump’ stock market manipulation in the Dutch Bourse in 1670 and set in motion in 1720 with the South Sea Bubble:
Once is an accident, twice is a coincidence, three times is a Declaration of War.
Four times is the realization that the Declaration fell on the deaf ears of sleeping fools, five times is simple daylight rape and plunder of the same fools – the sixth time, this time, Grand Theft, Planet © , is perhaps, hopefully, a lesson finally learned…
There has been a nine-year gap between commodity peaks and market crashes over the last five generations. Add forty-six years to that (the average number of years between the peaks and crashes) and you have a boom-bust cycle twice every hundred years or once EVERY OTHER generation, meaning every other generation of working and middle-class citizens, for the last three hundred years has been good and truly and thoroughly plucked by an orchestrated Capitalist Depression:
- First Time: Commodity prices peaked in London in 1711 (Long before America came into the economic picture). The South Sea Bubble burst exactly nine years later in 1720.
Depression followed.
- Second time: Producer prices peaked in London in 1763. The London stock market crashed again in 1772 (nine years later).
Depression followed.
- Third time: Commodity prices peaked in London in 1816.The London stock market crashed in 1825 (nine years later).
Depression followed.
- Fourth time: Wholesale prices peaked in New York in 1864. A worldwide assets crash began in May 1873 (nine years later).
Depression followed.
- Fifth time: Then followed our beloved Great Depression in the 30s, about which much has been said, from which, little learned.
- Sixth time: Commodity prices peaked some fifty years later in Tokyo , in 1980. The Tokyo stock market crashed in 1988 (again, nine years later). The depression following that crash is now upon us, with the smallest credit-driven boom period since the sixties, immediately followed by a ‘Double Dip Recession’ and a continued depression.It’s over… maybe.
Look around you and do the Greek, Spanish, Irish, French, English math and measure the amount of blood on the streets.
Yogi Berra couldn’t have said it better.I won’t even try.