Who's A Conspiracy Theorist?: G20 Moves The World A Step Closer To A Global Currency

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Any Predictions For This Weeks G-20 Meeting?

Mine? the birth of the New World Order run by the IMF on behalf of the International Bankers! Possibility of the introduction of a Global Carbon Tax. its just a prediction.

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Re: Any Predictions For This Weeks G-20 Meeting?

QueEx,

Check your links. :confused:

Mine? the birth of the New World Order run by the IMF on behalf of the International Bankers! Possibility of the introduction of a Global Carbon Tax. its just a prediction.

NEW WORLD DISORDER
Gary North

The G-20 meeting begins this week in England. Here, political leaders from 20 major nations meet to share ideas on how to solve an international financial crisis that their central banks created, following the lead of Alan Greenspan's FED. They never saw it coming. Not any of them – not the central bankers, not the politicians, not the regulators. They were all caught flat-footed.

Then they assemble at a meeting and send out press releases. These press releases are designed to assure the investing public that they, the creators of this crisis, know what went wrong – they don't – and that by discussing the causes of the crisis, which they don't understand, they will be able to come up with a joint solution that does not involve either (1) mass inflation or (2) a worldwide depression that lasts for years.

It is a song and dance. It is shuck and jive. It is bait and switch. It is Custer's last stand.

These people don't know what to do. If they did, there would be two or three well-defined, fully documented proposals out there, each with national co-sponsors. All of them would have major flaws. They would be mutually exclusive. Economists of various schools of opinion would be mobilizing behind one or another program.

Instead, there are no published plans. There are no working papers. There are only vague promises of joint action. Like what?

There are no detailed plans out of which this team of egomaniac politicians might conceivably hammer into an acceptable plan.

There is no centralized international planning agency.

There is no international enforcement agency. There is no agreement among central bankers.

There is no unanimity to do anything.

There is not going to be, either. The G-20 meeting will issue some sort of bland statement of hope, and everyone will go home.

They refuse to adopt the only system that every brought unity to governments and central banks: an international gold coin standard. The politicians and central bankers could not control the movements of gold out of inflating nations and into non-inflating nations, 1815–1914. They resented the ability of common people to exercise control over domestic monetary policy simply by going down to a bank and demanding payment in gold coins. They all took away this authority in the summer of 1914, when World War I broke out.

These deal-doers, these politicians, these seekers of power don't trust each other. That is the famous bottom line. They do not trust the common people, which means that they do not trust a gold coin standard. But they do not trust each other.

They are trapped by the dollar standard. They have told their voters that their nations can get rich by exporting to the United States. They have not explained that in order to export lots of goods to the United States, their central banks must create fiat money to buy depreciating dollars at a favorable rate of exchange.

They have not told the voters that modern mercantilism depends on lending tax money and central bank fiat money to the U.S. government, which will not pay back the loans. Ever.

So, the G-20 nations' politicians will not come to any agreement that can be enforced institutionally. They do not trust the United Nations Organization. They will have to stick with Treasury bills, just as they have ever since 1946. They will conduct business as usual, namely, export-driven mercantilism.

In every nation, the national state will command its central bank to debase the national currency in order to buy more Treasury debt. But they will not buy as much as before.

Two weeks ago, the G-20 finance ministers adjourned their fruitless meeting in Horsham, England. They came to no conclusion. The Telegraph reported.

For all this rather predictable grand verbiage, however, there was a profound sense as the G20 finance ministers departed for their respective corners of the globe that the thing was, at heart, a disappointment.

That assessment was accurate. Nothing in the past two weeks has indicated that anything substantive has been accomplished.

The event concluded with a sense of ambition half-thwarted. On the one hand there was no great blow-up between the Europeans, who wanted the focus to be further regulation of financial markets, and the Americans, who wanted more specific targets for government bail-outs of both banks and broader economies.

There you have it. The Europeans, being Europeans, want more government regulation. The Americans, being Americans, want more bailouts. Nobody wants a free market.

Now all hope rests on the prima donnas: the politicians.

As indeed was the hope that the G20 summit would produce a conclusive answer for the final crisis. The lie is that there could be one moment – or indeed one menu of options – that will be either a silver bullet or supreme catalyst for solving this mess. The sooner people realise that this is too much to expect of the G20, and at the London Summit on April 2, the better.

This is rather a depressing thought. However, the solace is that, at least, no-one now doubts the scale of the problems before them and, most importantly that the world's biggest economies are still talking to each other.

The scale of the problems is indeed gigantic. The solutions are more of the same. The likelihood of agreement is minimal.

The politicians will huff and puff, but none of them will sacrifice his career or his nation's autonomous policies of inflation in order to surrender sovereignty to a new international central bank controlled by no nation. That is what the gold coin standard did, but at the same intolerable price: surrendering national political autonomy.

Nobody in power trusts his peers. He knows how they rose to power. They all did the same untrustworthy things.

THE SYSTEM WILL UNRAVEL MORE

The international banking system is shaky. We are in the early stages of huge corporate losses, huge national deficits, falling trade, and monetary inflation.

The finance ministers suggested no program of reform. The politicians will not come up with any clear-cut coordinated program to increase profits, increase trade, increase output, and stabilize the money supplies of each nation. Investors are looking for hope. It need not be plausible hope – just hope.

Morgan Stanley's spokesman sees that there is no hope over the next two quarters for corporate profits. This barely describes the nature of the threat to prosperity. The American banking system is still undercapitalized and suffering from massive losses due to bad real estate loans and defaulting credit card debtors.

There are no proposed solutions to any of this, other than more bailouts. There are lots of reassurances that there is a solution that will not involve mass inflation or mass depression. None of them explains how.

The investors are easy marks for hype. They don't know why they invested in stocks instead of gold, 2000 to 2008. They don't understand why nobody in authority saw this crisis coming. They don't understand monetary theory. They only understand that corporate profits are falling, but somehow the government has a solution.

Over time, this hope will fade, and with it the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the S&P 500.

CONCLUSION

Monitor the G-20 meeting. See if there is any program announced by all 20 members. See if it anything more than pious assurances that Something Will Be Done, Real Soon Now.

How much faith should you place in such pronouncements? None.
 
Well, I'm sure it's all a coincidence.


The G20 moves the world a step closer to a global currency

The world is a step closer to a global currency, backed by a global central bank, running monetary policy for all humanity.


A single clause in Point 19 of the communiqué issued by the G20 leaders amounts to revolution in the global financial order.

"We have agreed to support a general SDR allocation which will inject $250bn (£170bn) into the world economy and increase global liquidity," it said. SDRs are Special Drawing Rights, a synthetic paper currency issued by the International Monetary Fund that has lain dormant for half a century.


In effect, the G20 leaders have activated the IMF's power to create money and begin global "quantitative easing". In doing so, they are putting a de facto world currency into play. It is outside the control of any sovereign body. Conspiracy theorists will love it.

It has been a good summit for the IMF. Its fighting fund for crises is to be tripled overnight to $750bn. This is real money.

Dominique Strauss-Kahn, the managing director, said in February that the world was "already in Depression" and risked a slide into social disorder and military conflict unless political leaders resorted to massive stimulus.

He has not won everything he wanted. The spending plan was fudged. While Gordon Brown talked of $5 trillion in global stimulus by 2010, this is mostly made up of packages already under way.

But Mr Strauss-Kahn at least has resources fit for his own task. He will need them. The IMF is already bailing out Pakistan, Iceland, Latvia, Hungary, Ukraine, Belarus, Serbia, Bosnia and Romania. This week Mexico became the first G20 state to ask for help. It has secured a precautionary credit line of $47bn.

Gordon Brown said it took 15 years for the world to grasp the nettle after Great Crash in 1929. "This time I think people will agree that it has been different," he said.

President Barack Obama was less dramatic. "I think we did OK," he said. Bretton Woods in 1944 was a simpler affair. "Just Roosevelt and Churchill sitting in a room with a brandy, that's an easy negotiation, but that's not the world we live in."

There will be $250bn in trade finance to kick-start shipping after lenders cut back on Letters of Credit after September's heart attack in the banking system. Global trade volumes fell at annual rate of 41pc from November to January, according to Holland's CPB institute – the steepest peacetime fall on record.

Euphoria swept emerging markets yesterday as the first reports of the IMF boost circulated. Investors now know that countries like Mexico can arrange a credit facility able to cope with major shocks – and do so on supportive terms, rather than the hair-shirt deflation policies of the old IMF. Fear is receding again.

The Russians had hoped their idea to develop SDRs as a full reserve currency to challenge the dollar would make its way on to the agenda, but at least they got a foot in the door.

There is now a world currency in waiting. In time, SDRs are likely evolve into a parking place for the foreign holdings of central banks, led by the People's Bank of China. Beijing's moves this week to offer $95bn in yuan currency swaps to developing economies show how fast China aims to break dollar dependence.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy said the summit had achieved more than he ever thought possible, and praised Gordon Brown for pursuing the collective interest as host rather than defending "Anglo-Saxon" interests. This has a double-edged ring, for it suggests that Mr Brown may have traded pockets of the British financial industry to satisfy Franco-German demands. The creation of a Financial Stability Board looks like the first step towards a global financial regulator. The devil is in the details.

Hedge funds deemed "systemically important" will come under draconian restraints. How this is enforced will determine whether Mayfair's hedge-fund industry – 80pc of all European funds are there – will continue to flourish.

It seems that hedge funds have been designated for ritual sacrifice, even though they played no more than a cameo role in the genesis of this crisis. It was not they who took on extreme debt leverage: it was the banks – up to 30 times in the US and nearer 60 times for some in Europe that used off-books "conduits" to increase their bets. The market process itself is sorting this out in any case – brutally – forcing banks to wind down their leverage. The problem right now is that this is happening too fast.

But to the extent that this G20 accord makes it impossible for the "shadow banking" to resurrect itself in the next inevitable cycle of risk appetite, it may prevent another disaster of this kind.

The key phrase is "new rules aimed at avoiding excessive leverage and forcing banks to put more money aside during good times." This is more or less what the authorities agreed after the Depression. Complacency chipped away at the rules as the decades passed. It is the human condition, and we can't change that.


Ambrose Evans Pritchard


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/...world-a-step-closer-to-a-global-currency.html
 
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Re: Who's A Conspiracy Theorist?: G20 Moves The World A Step Closer To A Global Curre

George Bush tried to tell you: So now, Can we finally admit that Repubs and Dems are working towards the same Globalist Agenda? This was the plan years ago, GOTCHA!

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Sean Hannity now admits conspiracy theorists were right!

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Soros: If G20 Fails, Global Depression Ahead

Soros: If G20 Fails, Global Depression Ahead

Wednesday, April 1, 2009 10:33 AM

By: Gene J. Koprowski Article Font Size




If the G20 meeting of world leaders this week results in nothing but more hot air, billionaire George Soros says all bets are off — the global economy is heading for a huge meltdown.

“That could push the world into depression. It’s really a make-or-break occasion. That’s why it’s so important. The chances of a depression are quite high — even if that is averted, the recession will last a long time. Look, we are not going back to where we came from. In that sense it’s going to last forever.”


While most investors are worried about the sorry state of the global markets, Soros finds the economic gloom-and-doom "exhilarating," and reckons a full-blown depression is inevitable.


“I have to admit that actually I flourish, I’m more stimulated by the bust,” Soros said in an interview with the Times of London.


"On the one hand, there's the tremendous human suffering, which is very distressing. On the other hand, to be able to handle the situation is exhilarating."

This recession, Soros said, is a “once-in-a-lifetime event,” particularly in Britain and the United States.

“This is a crisis unlike any other. It’s a total collapse of the financial system with tremendous implications for everyday life. On previous occasions when you had a crisis that was threatening the system the authorities intervened and did whatever was necessary to protect the system," said Soros.

"This time they failed.”

A financial mystic — Soros believes his body aches and pains give him signals as to when to invest, or when to short — he does not know how long the current climate will continue.

“That depends on how it’s handled. Allowing Lehman Brothers to fail was the game-changing event. That’s when the financial crisis went over the brink. The size of the problem is actually bigger than in the 1930s,” said Soros.

Soros refuses to say what he is doing in the markets now. Has he shorted the pound recently? “I had shorted it last year, but I’m not shorting the pound now.”

Is the euro under threat? “There is stress in the euro because of the differential in the interest rate that the different countries have to pay,” he said.

Though one would be hard pressed to find another economist who agrees with Soros that the recession is an "exhilarating" experience, his hypothesis that the debt burden by governments of the world is the real problem for the economy is shared by many.

"A Congressional office asked me what the estimated national debt in President Obama’s fiscal year 2010 budget submission would be on a per-U.S.-household basis. I think the answer is worth sharing," writes Tad DeHaven, an analyst with the libertarian Cato Institute in Washington D.C.

"According to the White House budget, the estimated national debt, or debt held by the public, in fiscal year 2010 would equal approximately $81,000 per U.S. household
 
Re: Soros: If G20 Fails, Global Depression Ahead

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Re: Who's A Conspiracy Theorist?: G20 Moves The World A Step Closer To A Global Curre

Exactly, those fools on the main board are talking about "I can't wait for the New World Order" and "fuck you conspiracy theorists" and shit like that.

I guess when you get all your news from the mainstream media, you tend to have that mentality.
 
Re: Who's A Conspiracy Theorist?: G20 Moves The World A Step Closer To A Global Curre

subbed for later
 
Re: Who's A Conspiracy Theorist?: G20 Moves The World A Step Closer To A Global Curre

<font size="5"><center>
Pittsburgh to host fall G-20 summit</font size>


<font size="4">The White House said the September event
would show the city's economic renewal.</font size></center>



Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
By Ed Blazina and Rich Lord
Fri, May. 29, 2009



A little more than two weeks ago, White House officials contacted Pittsburgh Mayor Luke Ravenstahl and other officials with two questions: Would they be interested in hosting an international event, and could they keep it a secret?
That set off a frenzy of meetings and calls among government, business, and hotel officials that culminated in yesterday's White House announcement that Pittsburgh would host the Group of 20 economic summit Sept. 24-25 at the David L. Lawrence Convention Center.

The key - besides not letting word leak out before the announcement - was clearing blocks of hotel rooms and making them available at rates that world leaders were willing to pay.

The summit will draw the leaders of the top 20 economic powers, who are responsible for 85 percent of the world's spending. The event follows an April meeting in London; it will serve as an update on the world economic crisis and will highlight the economic benefits of environmentally friendly practices.

Expected at the summit, besides President Obama, are the leaders of Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, South Korea, Turkey, the United Kingdom, and the European Union - along with the European Central Bank.

Joseph McGrath, president and CEO of VisitPittsburgh, said his organization was brought in early by the city and Allegheny County to work out the summit logistics.

White House officials "were looking for room blocks, and we had to get the commitments from the hotel operators," he said. "It was a little different because we were not at liberty to tell them what the event was."

White House officials said they focused on Pittsburgh because of the city's economic recovery from the decline of the steel industry in the 1980s, and because of its leadership in environmentally friendly buildings.

Pittsburgh's convention center, which administration officials were familiar with from campaign visits, is the largest LEED-certified center in the world. LEED - the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design certification system - was developed by the U.S. Green Building Council.

"This is a tremendous opportunity for Pittsburgh," said city Chief of Staff Yarone Zober. "This is a chance for us to showcase our city, and our region, for the world."

Among the selling points: "Pittsburgh has really been a model for an economic turnaround," he said, noting the smokestacks-to-knowledge transformation of the regional economy, and the development of green job sectors.

Zober acknowledged that preparing the city to host the world's leaders would be a big job.

"We're going to make sure that this city shines," he said. "This is potentially one of the largest things to happen in Pittsburgh."

The city's public safety departments have begun coordinating security planning with the Secret Service, he said. The federal government is expected to cover most of the costs associated with hosting the summit.

Gov. Rendell, in a statement, said he was honored by the city's selection. "Any doubts that Pittsburgh is a world-class city with a bright future should be erased by this choice," he said.


http://www.philly.com/inquirer/world_us/20090529_Pittsburgh_to_host_fall_G-20_summit.html
 
Re: Who's A Conspiracy Theorist?: G20 Moves The World A Step Closer To A Global Curre

Possible Push For "World" Regulations At This Week's G-20!

http://www.marketwatch.com/story/obama-to-address-finance-reform-with-media-g20-le-2009-09-19

The president said he would use the G20 platform to speak to other world leaders about the need to improve regulations to provide more safety for the global financial system.

Foremost among Obama's goals is the creation of a proposed Consumer Financial Protection Agency that he said would help enforce rules on transparency in truth-telling at the time consumers sign mortgages or take on credit cards.

"Consumers shouldn't have to worry about loan contracts written to confuse, hidden fees attached to their mortgages, and financial penalties -- whether through a credit care or debit card -- that appear without a clear warning on their statements. And responsible lenders, including community banks, trying to do the right thing shouldn't have to worry about ruinous competition from unregulated and unscrupulous competitors."

The president said he would address steps to safeguard the world financial system at the G20 meeting and close what he called "gaps that permitted the kinds of reckless risk-taking and irresponsibility that led to the [financial] crisis."

Obama's address comes as he is about to embark on one of his most-intense periods of media appearances of his presidency. The president is scheduled to appear on five Sunday talk shows and will be a guest on "The Late Show with David Letterman" on CBS Monday night, as part of his efforts to push his financial-reform plans.

Republicans continued to focus on the president's efforts to reform the U.S. health-care system. Rep. Sue Myrick, R-N.C., gave the Republican response to Obama's radio address, citing and international study of state-run healthcare systems in Canada and the United Kingdom.

Myrick said this study found that it's three times more likely for Canadian and British citizens than Americans to have to wait more than month to see a specialty physician.

Myrick said that regardless of the Obama administration's talk about alternatives to a public option for health care coverage, the president's suggestions "are all gateways to government-run health care," and doubted the quality of such programs.

"When it comes to life-threatening diseases like cancer, delay could mean death," Myrick said. "Every family that confronts a serious illness should have access to the highest-quality care at the lowest possible cost, with no delays."
 
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