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By Jay Taylor |
May 10, 2012
The debt is too onerous to be repaid. So we will have to see massive defaults in terms of transfer payments to the masses and huge numbers of bankruptcies in the future. This will all be very deflationary and that means that the price of most everything could fall dramatically.
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By Karen Roche, JT Long |
May 8, 2012
A "paralyzed" Federal Reserve, in its "final days," held hostage by Wall Street "robots" trading in markets that are "artificially medicated" are just a few of the bleak observations shared by the former Republican US congressman and director of the Office of Management and Budget.
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By Richard (Rick) Mills |
May 1, 2012
What does taking care of its shareholders special interests first have to do with the Fed’s official dual mandate: stable prices and high employment? And
what do we replace, not just the Fed with, but the entire global fiat monetary system with?
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By Chris Vermeulen, J.W. Jones |
February 24, 2012
Ultimately, I am very bullish of gold and silver in the intermediate to longer-term, but in the immediate short-term frame gold could consolidate or pullback before breaking out to the upside.
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By Sally Lowder |
February 16, 2012
Not long after the New Year dawned, Gold Stock Trades Editor Jeb Handwerger noted certain rare earths emerging from their 2011 slumber to produce impressive gains. It's not yet March, but the good news keeps coming.
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By Richard (Rick) Mills |
January 4, 2012
Since the Federal Reserve's creation in 1913 the dollar has lost more than 96% of its value. The greatest achievement of the Fed has been to transform America from being the world's foremost creditor nation to the world's largest debtor nation.
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By Ben Traynor |
August 12, 2011
Maybe it's coincidence, or maybe The Connells were onto something, but the years 1974 and 1975 stand out as key dates in the economic history of the United States
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By Nick Barisheff |
May 12, 2011
While precious metals prices were soaring, the debt-saturated global economy continued to struggle. Record government spending pushed government deficits ever higher, and a massive bailout was needed.
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By Jeb Handwerger |
April 15, 2011
The serious weaknesses of our economic structure is exposing it as a paper tiger. Instead of seeking fiscal sanity, the inability of our leaders to agree on even the smallest of issues is reminiscent of the Roman Empire.
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By Mark O'Byrne |
March 28, 2011
Gold and silver have fallen in Asian and early European trading, despite global uncertainty leading to weakness in equity and bond markets. But support is likely from eurozone debt concerns, geopolitical risk and deepening nuclear crisis in Japan.