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	<title>The Underground Investor &#187; Financial Crisis, Dollar Crisis, &amp; Recession Proof</title>
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	<description>The definitive investment blog for investment news not discussed in the mainstream media</description>
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		<title>Fraud &amp; Technicals Converge to Make US Stock Markets Ripe for a Sell-Off</title>
		<link>http://www.theundergroundinvestor.com/2012/02/sp-500-ripe-for-a-sell-off/</link>
		<comments>http://www.theundergroundinvestor.com/2012/02/sp-500-ripe-for-a-sell-off/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 10 Feb 2012 05:09:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Financial Crisis, Dollar Crisis, & Recession Proof]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[gold]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[hyperinflation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[S&P 500]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[silver]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[stock market sell-off]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[USD collapse]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Zimbabwe]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.theundergroundinvestor.com/?p=2371</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[A brief but very important post today. The S&#38;P 500 appears as if it’s ripe for a significant pull back right now. However, anyone that’s been following us for years now knows that we don’t believe technical charting patterns alone are good predictors of future stock market or asset behavior due to its &#8220;completely-rigged-by-the-PPT&#8221; nature. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A brief but very important post today. The S&amp;P 500 appears as if it’s ripe for a significant pull back right now. However, anyone that’s been following us for years now knows that we don’t believe technical charting patterns alone are good predictors of future stock market or asset behavior due to its &#8220;completely-rigged-by-the-PPT&#8221; nature.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><span id="more-2371"></span></p>
<p><a href="http://www.theundergroundinvestor.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/snpfeb121.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-2373" title="snpfeb12" src="http://www.smartknowledgeu.com/images/snpfeb121.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="360" /></a></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><a title="visual proof HFT machines are rigging US markets" href="http://www.zerohedge.com/news/presenting-rise-hft-machine-visual-confirmation-how-skynet-broke-stock-market-us-downgrade-day">Follow this link</a> and you’ll find incontrovertible visual proof that the big Wall Street banks have been using their HFT algorithms to artificially pump US markets higher. Combined with the bearish rising wedge formation above and the very low daily trading volume that’s easy for the HFT machines to rig, one thing about fraud never changes. Fraud can often last much longer than one would be believe to be possible, but growth based upon fraud is unsustainable and will always eventually break down. Due to these rigging games, it&#8217;s become incredibly difficult to predict the timing of these inevitable sell-offs, but right now, the dam looks ready to break. Of course, if its imminent break is countered by the Feds funneling trillions of new dollars into the market, either covertly or openly, any possible continued rise in the market can only happen on the back of rapidly devaluing dollars, which in the end, means one will just have a greater amounts of worthless USDs.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Consequently in real terms, if a continued rise in US markets is accomplished through these means, ironically one will grow poorer as the nominal dollar amount of one’s US portfolio rises, as possession of greater amounts of USD will translate into a lower standard of living as one will be able to purchase less goods and services with greater amounts of devalued dollars. Just ask citizens of Zimbabwe if they were ecstatic during the years the Zimbabwe stock market was the best performing stock market index in the world courtesy of hyperinflation of the Zimbabwe dollar.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>That’s why, despite sentiment still being ironically low in gold and silver, <a href="http://www.smartknowledgeu.com">gold and silver will still serve as your best protection to preserve and accumulate true wealth.</a> Stay invested in broad global stock market indexes and you have lost as the S&#038;P 500, the FTSE 100 and the ASX 200 have respectively lost -14.32%, -15.72% and -30.50% over the last 4-1/2 years, not including the devaluation of the Euro and USD during this time. Stay invested in broad global stock market indexes, and rise or bust over the next few years, and you will continue to lose, likely at an even greater pace than during the last 4-1/2 years. Greater amounts of worthless fiat currency will not preserve your wealth as politicians and bankers continue down their path to destroy the USD and Euro.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em><strong><br />
About the author:</strong> JS Kim is the Chief Investment Strategist of <a href="http://www.smartknowledgeu.com">SmartKnowledgeU</a>, a fiercely independent consulting &amp; research firm with a relentless drive to uncover the truth about global capital markets. Last month, in January 2012, the SmartKnowledgeU <a href="http://www.smartknowledgeu.com/pdf/cio-newsletter.pdf">Crisis Investment Opportunities newsletter</a> posted a one-month +28.51% rise.</em></p>
<p><strong>Republishing Rights:</strong> The above article may be re-printed on other sites as long as all text and links, including an acknowledgment of the author, remains in their original form. All sites that fail to abide by this will be asked to remove this article from their website.</p>
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		<title>Business School Curricula Today Lacks Real Critical Knowledge to Survive the Global Economic Crisis</title>
		<link>http://www.theundergroundinvestor.com/2012/01/business-school-curricula-today-lacks-real-critical-knowledge-to-survive-the-global-economic-crisis/</link>
		<comments>http://www.theundergroundinvestor.com/2012/01/business-school-curricula-today-lacks-real-critical-knowledge-to-survive-the-global-economic-crisis/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 16 Jan 2012 08:35:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Financial Crisis, Dollar Crisis, & Recession Proof]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Peak Investment Crisis & Stock Market Crash]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[US Federal Reserve]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Wealth Literacy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Carnegie]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[deliberate dumbing down of America]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[education propaganda]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Iserbyt]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[JS Kim]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Reagan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rockefeller]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[SmartKnowledgeU]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.theundergroundinvestor.com/?p=2328</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[“College isn’t the place to go for ideas” – Helen Keller “It is possible to store the mind with a million facts and still be entirely uneducated.” – Alec Bourne. “I have never let my schooling interfere with my education.” – Mark Twain In Part 3 of my critical thinking and education series, I am [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>“College isn’t the place to go for ideas”</em> – Helen Keller<br />
<em>“It is possible to store the mind with a million facts and still be entirely uneducated.”</em> – Alec Bourne.<br />
<em>“I have never let my schooling interfere with my education.”</em> – Mark Twain</p>
<p>In Part 3 of my critical thinking and education series, I am posting a video from Charlotte Iserbyt, the Senior Policy Advisor in the Office of Educational Research and Improvement (OERI), U.S. Department of Education, during the tenure of Ronald Reagan, and author of <a title="the deliberate dumbing down of america" href="http://www.deliberatedumbingdown.com/MomsPDFs/DDDoA.sml.pdf" target="_blank">“The Deliberate Dumbing Down of America”</a>, as the substantive portion of this commentary.  Ms. Iserbyt’s father and grandfather were members of the Skull &amp; Bones secret society and as Senior Policy Advisor of the OERI, Ms. Iserbty had access to an abundance of secretive minutes from past educational policy meetings that revealed the true intention of the Rockefeller and Carnegie funded global education system. <span id="more-2328"></span>Whether or not you believe everything Ms. Iserbyt has to say, her pedigree makes the interview a definite worthwhile listen despite its length and is sure to make you reconsider your views about institutional academics.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><iframe src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/WULTN9IS8FQ" frameborder="0" width="560" height="315"></iframe></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>We, at SmartKnowledgeU, have long stated that business school curricula promotes and instills zero knowledge critical to understanding how capital markets truly operate and how to create wealth.  For this reason, we have often stated that <a title="Delaying a College Education in this Economy is the Right Choice" href="http://www.theundergroundinvestor.com/2010/05/delaying-a-college-education-in-this-economy-is-the-right-choice/" target="_blank">“Delaying a College Education in this Economy is the Right Choice.” </a> If we were responsible for building a nation’s business educational curricula, here are some of the topics we would consider mandatory, none of which are taught in business schools today, and all of which are part of the SmartKnowledgeU <a href="http://www.smartknowledgeu.com/pdf/WealthSecrets.pdf" title="SmartKnowledgeU Wealth Secrets online education course" target="_blank">Wealth Secrets</a> educational online course:</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>A History Of Central Banks and Their Motives<br />
How Money is Created, How the Monetary System Operates, &amp; The True Definition of Money<br />
The Real Definition of Inflation<br />
How to Properly Interpret “Official” Government Key Economic Indicators<br />
How to Interpret Publicly Released Corporate Earnings Statements<br />
How Bankers Have Shaped World Thought Through Academia &amp; Media<br />
Understanding Fractional Reserve Banking<br />
Understanding Austrian v Keynesian Economics<br />
The Real Story Behind the Efficient Market Hypothesis &amp; Diversification Strategies<br />
The Monetary History &amp; Investment Value of Silver<br />
The Monetary History &amp; Investment Value of Gold</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>You may find Part I &amp; Part II of this SmartKnowledgeU series on Education &amp; Critical Thinking below:</p>
<p>Part I: <a href="http://www.theundergroundinvestor.com/2012/01/think-and-thinking-shall-set-you-free/" target="_blank">Lack of Critical Thinking is Key to the Corrupt Status Quo Maintaining Their Power</a></p>
<p>Part II: <a href=" http://www.theundergroundinvestor.com/2012/01/the-hidden-dark-agenda-of-public-education/" target="_blank">The Hidden Dark Agenda of Public Education</a></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em><strong>About the author: </strong>JS Kim is the Founder and Chief Investment Strategist for <a href="http://www.smartknowledgeu.com/">SmartKnowledgeU</a>, a fiercely independent investment research and consulting firm with a mission of helping to stomp out Wall Street fraud and to reinstitute sound monetary principles and sound money worldwide. We sincerely appreciate all of you that continue to “like” our <a href="http://www.facebook.com/smartknowledge">Facebook fan page</a> and <a href="http://www.twitter.com/smartknowledgeu">“follow us” on Twitter</a>. Through these mediums, we will keep all of you aware of some major campaigns we will be launching in early 2012 to raise global awareness of monetary truth and our proposed solutions to institute sound money that CAN serve as a viable and implementable solution to the financial ills heaped upon us by the global banking cartel.</em></p>
<p><em><strong>Republishing Rights: </strong>The above may be reprinted on other sites as long as all text and links remain intact, INCLUDING the “about the author” text. Sites that republish our articles and do not abide by these rules will be asked to remove the article for copyright infringement violation.</em></p>
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		<title>Before the Giant Vampire Squid, There Was the Giant Predatory Octopus</title>
		<link>http://www.theundergroundinvestor.com/2012/01/before-the-giant-vampire-squid-there-was-the-giant-predatory-octopus/</link>
		<comments>http://www.theundergroundinvestor.com/2012/01/before-the-giant-vampire-squid-there-was-the-giant-predatory-octopus/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 16 Jan 2012 03:02:43 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Financial Crisis, Dollar Crisis, & Recession Proof]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[US Federal Reserve]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.theundergroundinvestor.com/?p=2323</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[In the early 1900s, when dispensing truth was not a revolutionary act for either politicians or the media, the vast majority of the public, unlike today, was aware of the evils and thieving intentions of Central Banks and the commercial banking system. Before the Goldman Sachs giant vampire squid, there was the giant predatory octopus. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In the early 1900s, when dispensing truth was not a revolutionary act for either politicians or the media, the vast majority of the public, unlike today, was aware of the evils and thieving intentions of Central Banks and the commercial banking system. Before the Goldman Sachs giant vampire squid, there was the giant predatory octopus. Below, is a political cartoon from the early 1900s that depicts exactly what the public believed about the coming money trust that has become the US Federal Reserve today. Everything about the US Federal Reserve depicted in this cartoon remains true today. <span id="more-2323"></span>One must give great consideration as to why nearly 100% of the public understood the grave threat the US Federal Reserve posed to liberty and freedom just 100 years ago but hardly anyone understood this until the Federal Reserve ushered in the grave economic conditions that resulted in stock market crashes around the world in 2008.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.theundergroundinvestor.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/fedreserve_vampiresquid.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-2324" title="US Federal Reserve Giant Vampire Squid &amp; Giant Predatory Octopus" src="http://www.theundergroundinvestor.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/01/fedreserve_vampiresquid.jpg" alt="" width="468" height="700" /></a></p>
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		<title>The Real Reasons Behind Hollywood&#8217;s Anti-Piracy SOPA</title>
		<link>http://www.theundergroundinvestor.com/2012/01/the-real-reasons-behind-hollywoods-anti-piracy-sopa/</link>
		<comments>http://www.theundergroundinvestor.com/2012/01/the-real-reasons-behind-hollywoods-anti-piracy-sopa/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 11 Jan 2012 09:35:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Financial Crisis, Dollar Crisis, & Recession Proof]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[I found this discussion between Max Keiser and Stacy Herbert regarding the real reasons behind Hollywood&#8217;s Anti-Piracy SOPA (Stop Online Piracy Act) fascinating and very much worth watching, complete with Max&#8217;s unique brand of humor and interesting use of a stuffed kitty to prove his point. Max and Stacy break down Hollywood&#8217;s Enron-like accounting methods [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I found this discussion between Max Keiser and Stacy Herbert regarding the real reasons behind Hollywood&#8217;s Anti-Piracy SOPA (Stop Online Piracy Act) fascinating and very much worth watching, complete with Max&#8217;s unique brand of humor and interesting use of a stuffed kitty to prove his point. Max and Stacy break down Hollywood&#8217;s Enron-like accounting methods to reveal their obscenely exaggerated statements regarding the harmful effects of online piracy on their bottom line and discuss how SOPA, if passed, will infringe upon internet speech and freedom and perhaps destroy the fundamental infrastructure of the internet that allows a free exchange of knowledge and ideas. For the reasons discussed in this video, I moved my <a href="http://www.theundergroundinvestor.com">investment blog</a> from a US-based server to one based in Asia a couple of years ago to prevent the US gov&#8217;t from shutting down my blog in response to one of my articles about how the fraudulent global banking and monetary system truly operates. Doing this still may not be enough to protect my blog, however, as governments worldwide seek to pass their own &#8220;SOPA&#8221; legislation and follow suit. I&#8217;ve posted the video below for your enjoyment. A must watch for anyone working in the entertainment industry in Los Angeles and anyone that cares about internet freedom of speech.</p>
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		<title>Ron Paul: Why a Euro and/or USD Crash Will Cause Social Chaos</title>
		<link>http://www.theundergroundinvestor.com/2011/12/ron-paul-why-a-euro-andor-usd-crash-will-cause-social-chaos/</link>
		<comments>http://www.theundergroundinvestor.com/2011/12/ron-paul-why-a-euro-andor-usd-crash-will-cause-social-chaos/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 28 Dec 2011 01:23:10 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>Prepare for Massive Social Unrest Around the World: The Survival Guide for Citizens in a Revolution</title>
		<link>http://www.theundergroundinvestor.com/2011/12/prepare-for-massive-social-unrest-around-the-world-the-survival-guide-for-citizens-in-a-revolution/</link>
		<comments>http://www.theundergroundinvestor.com/2011/12/prepare-for-massive-social-unrest-around-the-world-the-survival-guide-for-citizens-in-a-revolution/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 28 Dec 2011 01:19:03 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[We wholeheartedly endorse peaceful revolution, but unfortunately, history tells us that when tyrannies force the majority of the middle class into poverty in any country, violent revolution will result. The banking cartel that controls the US military has been war gaming conditions of massive social unrest for years now with Unified Quest 2011. Whether you [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>We wholeheartedly endorse peaceful revolution, but unfortunately, history tells us that when tyrannies force the majority of the middle class into poverty in any country, violent revolution will result. The banking cartel that controls the US military has been war gaming conditions of massive social unrest for years now with Unified Quest 2011. Whether you believe violent revolution will occur in your country or not, unfortunately this is an important read for everyone because often the signs for violent revolution simmer beneath the surface and are not visible out in the open, leaving millions in countries supremely unprepared to survive should systemic chaos break out. Violent revolution never happens “overnight” but the appearance that it happens overnight is due to the long periods of time it takes for negative conditions to percolate that produce an abundance of pent up frustration and anger in the populace that can explode and build momentum quickly. Look to Yugoslavia as a historic example. Though to the outside world, the Croat and Serb conflict appeared to explode out of nowhere in the early 1990s, political leaders in Croatia had fostered ethnic hatred between Croats and Serbs for at least the prior decade by using centuries-old prejudices to scapegoat each other for the building economic disaster in Yugoslavia. Pent-up ethnic hatred and economic frustration gave the appearance that this civil war seemed to explode “overnight” to the outside world though certainly Croatians and Serbians had seen signs of the impending disaster for years prior. Tensions between Croats and Serbs lead to the extermination of at least 100,000 to 200,000 people, lack of access to gas, water, food and electricity, and 2,500,000 refugees.<span id="more-2271"></span></p>
<p>Currently, today, there are many present signs in relatively peaceful nations of impending violent outbreaks. Here is a guide to help you identify these signs and how to prepare for even the possibility of massive social chaos. Because the global banking cartel is routing and pillaging wealth across the world today, one must prepare for this possibility even if it seems remote right now. So we present to you, at this link, <a href="http://www.scribd.com/mobile/documents/56546855" title="Survival Guide for Citizens in a Revolution" target="_blank">The Survival Guide for Citizens in a Revolution</a>. We wish this could be The Survival Guide for Citizens in a Peaceful Revolution, but unfortunately the global banking cartel seems hell bent right now on instigating a violent one. The intelligent course of action today is to hope for peaceful revolution and to foster peace, but to prepare for violent revolution should one break out.</p>
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		<title>The Death of Capitalism, Redux</title>
		<link>http://www.theundergroundinvestor.com/2011/05/the-death-of-capitalism-redux/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 12 May 2011 07:57:12 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[I first posted the below article on my blog in January 2010. Today, when I was searching for this article to send the link to a friend, I noticed that this article had mysteriously disappeared from my blog&#8217;s database. I don&#8217;t know who removed it but luckily, I kept a copy of it so I [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I first posted the below article on my blog in January 2010.  Today, when I was searching for this article to send the link to a friend, I noticed that this article had mysteriously disappeared from my blog&#8217;s database.  I don&#8217;t know who removed it but luckily, I kept a copy of it so I am re-posting it again. So here it is again, the original article that I posted in January of 2010.</p>
<p><strong><br />
The Death of Capitalism, Redux</strong></p>
<p><strong><br />
</strong></p>
<p>Bankers are destroying Capitalism. Unfortunately, most Westerners won’t realize this until five years from now, when the middle class has been forcibly relegated to the ranks of the poor. And this isn’t just a situation that will afflict America but it will likely afflict Japan and many countries in the EU such as the UK, Spain, and Greece just to name a few.  But for the purposes of this essay, let’s examine how bankers have destroyed capitalism in the USA. <span id="more-2043"></span></p>
<p>In 2009, when almost every major US bank manufactured profits out of thin air and declared themselves financially healthy by (1) changing their regular reporting periods to exclude months in which huge losses occurred; (2) changing their definitions of bad debt, and (3) by revaluing their assets courtesy of FASB, particularly their commercial real estate portfolios, at fantasy land valuations that they will never receive in the open market, these events all marked the continuation of the Enronization of America that is ushering in the death of capitalism. The systemic injection of fraud and deceit into nearly every aspect of American life, has been unfolding for decades, even prior to the Enron scandal itself.  In 2009, Bank of America CEO Ken Lewis testified that former US Treasury Secretary and ex-Goldman Sachs CEO Hank Paulson instructed him to disobey securities law and conceal material losses in the Merrill Lynch merger from investors. Lewis additionally testified that Paulson threatened to fire him and his entire board if he tried to back out of the Merrill deal. These kinds of activities, devoid of all morals and ethics, have been occurring regularly within the financial industry for decades. It only seems as if such transgressions are more numerous today because of the recent attention given them in the media, but in reality, they have neither proliferated in frequency nor in expanded in their level of egregiousness.</p>
<p>Anyone that has ever worked for a Wall Street firm is well aware of the danger an analyst brings upon himself if he refuses to tow the official corporate party line regarding stock ratings for a company that is simultaneously closing a financially significant deal with another division of his firm.  Even though this atmosphere of “unspoken coercion” of inflated stock ratings existed for decades, when the bull was strong on Wall Street, very few journalists found this story newsworthy. Even though regulatory laws were passed many years ago to separate investment banking interests from securities interests within the same firm, the percent of US stocks covered by Wall Street firms rated as a “buy or hold” actually increased from 89% (2003) to 93% (2007) after the passage of new laws that were supposed to discourage firms from granting inflated stock ratings. Who in their right mind would ever believe that 93% of all stocks covered by Wall Street should be rated a “buy or hold” and that only 7% should be rated a “sell”? Of course, in Wall Street parlance, insiders know that “hold” really means “sell” but still, this is a level of deceit nonetheless.</p>
<p>When regulations are enforced through self-monitoring and self-policing as is too often the situation, and when all financial regulatory agencies are themselves lacking in integrity and transparency, new regulations can be enacted every day without effect. Self-regulations and regulations imposed by morally bankrupt people within a broken and corrupt system have never been effective. That’s why I have zero expectations about the efficacy of any new regulations being proposed today beyond their efficacy as a highly efficient smokescreen for politicians to hide behind. How quickly we forget that in 2002, UBS Paine Webber financial consultant Chang Wu was fired by branch manager Patrick Mendenhall no more than several hours after Enron executive Aaron Brown complained to Mr. Mendenhall about an email Mr. Wu had sent to his clients. In the email that Mr. Brown found “extremely disturbing”, Mr. Wu had advised all of his clients to sell Enron stock due to massive liquidity problems he had uncovered, even though UBS Paine Webber had rated it a strong buy. (Source:  CNN, “Financial Adviser Fired Over Enron Advice”, 26 March 2002).  After Mendenhall fired Wu, UBS sent an email to their clients retracting Mr. Wu’s statement, informing them that Enron stock was “likely heading higher than lower from here on out.” (Source: New York Post, 4 October 2006).  Of course, we all know that just several months later, Enron went bankrupt.</p>
<p>We should be cognizant that in light of the Enron scandal, this level of fraud has not been a recent development. In 2001-2002, a partial list of companies that had to re-declare earnings due to erroneous information contained in previous publicly released earnings announcements included the following companies: Adelphia, AOL Time Warner, Arthur Anderson, Bristol-Meyers, Squibb, Freddie Mac, ImClone, Citigroup, General Electric, JP Morgan, Tyco, Worldcom, Dynergy, Enron, General Motors, AIG and Hyundai.  Many of the company names on this list are the same companies that have been exposed as withholding material information from their investors about their financial health either in this year or in recent years. And let us not forget that in the early 2000’s, JP Morgan, Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, Credit Suisse First Boston, Lehman Brothers, UBS Warburg,  and US Bankcorp Piper Jaffray all paid fines between $32,5000,000 and $400,000,000 for engaging in deceptive and unethical behavior (Source: PBS Frontline, “The Global Settlement, an Overview”, 28 April 2003).</p>
<p>In regard to such systemic fraud, unfortunately, little has changed today.  With the blessings of FASB and our current administration, almost every major bank in the US is cooking their books today (i.e. consider that, of $4.2 billion of Bank of America’s declared earnings during one quarter last year, $1.9 billion was attributable to a non-recurring event, the sale of China Construction Bank shares, and $2.2 billion was attributable to a fantasy-land valuation of Merrill Lynch structured notes).  As I previously stated, though the Enronization of America did not start with the Enron scandal, the consequences of systemic duplicity have finally caught up to its perpetrators and have now reached its tipping point today. If we take a moment to dwell on what aspects of our financial system have been infiltrated by fraud, it would include our financial ratings system led by Standard &amp; Poors and Moodys, our mortgage system, our banking system, our equities analysts and financial analysts, our accounting system, our regulatory agencies including FASB, the SEC and the CFTC, our media, our politicians, our corporate executives, and lastly and most significantly, our monetary system. In fact, though the current media focus seems to be on morally bankrupt financial executives and institutions, the fact is that this scenario could not have proliferated over the past several decades if the problem did not run much deeper than just our financial infrastructure.  If other integral aspects of our society were uncompromised, they would have flushed out the dishonesty so prevalent in our financial industry many years ago. So the real question that needs to be examined is  the following &#8211; How exactly did fraud in America become so systemic?</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong>The Fraud of our Legal System</strong></p>
<p><strong><br />
</strong></p>
<p>The first phase of the Enronization of America occurred through our legal system. Most of us make the grave mistake of equating our legal system with morality, but law and morality are creatures that often reside at opposite ends of the spectrum under our current legal system.  Since those that make our laws are also the same immoral people that control our financial system, often our laws have very little concern with governing morality and much more focus on ensuring that the very elements that hold power maintain or expand their power.  Most Americans automatically equate a behavior as right or wrong depending on whether a law defines such behavior as legal or illegal without any critical thought, and this is a mistake. The fact is that today, many laws have nothing to do with morality.  In fact, our legal system is laden with such hypocrisy at times that it allows for the very same behavior to be defined as legal if a financial elite is engaging in the behavior but illegal if a  “regular Joe” is engaging in it.</p>
<p>Consider that Richard Strong, CEO of the former Strong Mutual Funds, admitted to skimming $1.8 million from his clients’ accounts that essentially was the equivalent of stealing, yet under the auspices of our current legal system, Mr. Strong was not sentenced to spend a single day in jail (Source: Washington Post, 23 June 2004). Yet there is little question that if a hungry, unemployed man steals food equivalent to a fraction of the money Richard Strong stole, he will go to jail if caught. How is this possible? It is possible because very little honor is left in our legal system. Stealing $1.8 million may be legal under our current legal system, but it certainly is not moral. In 2005 and 2006, CEOs from the 11 largest firms in America paid themselves $865,000,000 in salary even though their “leadership” caused a loss of $64,000,000,000 of market capitalization in their firms during the same equivalent time period (Source: BBC News, 22 June 2006).  Yet, if an employee of this firm performed as miserably as did their CEOs, their reward would almost certainly be a pink slip, not millions upon millions in bonuses, salaries and perks. Paying oneself hundreds of millions in salaries and hundreds of millions more in bonuses despite contributing to unemployment and the substantial loss of shareholder wealth is certainly unethical, yet it will always remain 100% legal. All you have to do is review the financial payouts from last year to know that not a single iota of decency has been injected into our financial system. When firms like Merrill Lynch went bankrupt and then took money from US taxpayers to pay their executives more than $4 billion of bonuses, this only added insult to the injury their bankruptcy inflicted upon many American families.</p>
<p>Were our legal system truly to regulate morality, the executive suites of America’s largest financial corporations would transform into ghost towns as a great percentage of these executives would be jailed. There are numerous actions that are considered “legal” today that would be illegal if moral and righteous men were making our laws, and even a handful of “illegal” behaviors that would be re-categorized as legal. Suffice it to say, if our legal system has been Enronized, our regulatory agencies by default, have also been Enronized. The Enronization of our Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) was never more apparent in their failure to shut down Bernard Madoff and protect American families even though hedge fund manager Harry Markopoulos informed the SEC both in writing and by phone of the fraudulent nature of Madoff’s fund for nine years. During Congressional testimony regarding this matter, Mr. Markopoulos testified that when the SEC repeatedly ignored his warnings about the fraudulent nature of Madoff’s practices, that he feared for his, as well as his family’s safety, a damning indictment of not only the SEC’s abject failure to regulate, but also of their propensity to protect powerful men in the financial industry whether they are breaking the law or not. The continuing failure of other regulatory agencies such as the CFTC to act in the interests of American people is also apparent in their recent approval of financial products such as the E-mini Gold and Silver futures contracts introduced on April 19th, 2009 that settle strictly in cash. Futures contracts that specifically prohibit the delivery of the underlying commodity explicitly allow its participants to naked short a commodity with zero intention of every purchasing or holding the underlying physical asset in their possession and thus establishing a fraudulent market for a commodity that can never resemble the free market dynamics of its physical market.  The lesson here is this – if you are a small player, the regulatory agencies will still prosecute criminal activity, but if your rank is among the financial elites, they will do nothing.</p>
<p><strong><br />
The Fraud of our Media</strong></p>
<p><strong><br />
</strong></p>
<p>The second phase of America’s Enronization has occurred through the mass media.  Ben Bagdikian, the author of the seminal work on media mergers and consolidation titled The Media Monopoly, has noted that almost all major media in the US is now under the control of five major conglomerates &#8211; Time Warner, Disney, Murdoch&#8217;s News Corporation, Bertelsmann of Germany, and Viacom.  To be fair and objective in this matter, there are a handful of major news organizations not controlled by the “big five”, including The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Chicago Tribune and Los Angeles Times. However, Badgikian’s basic premise that the problem with our media is &#8220;not one of universal evil among the corporations or their leaders&#8221; nor one of &#8220;a general practice of constant suppression and close monitoring of the content of their media companies&#8221;,  but one of a contradiction between the values of free enterprise and the interests of giant conglomerates, is still valid. Today, many important news stories are reported on the internet by bloggers well before they attract the necessary viral proliferation to draw the attention of major media outlets.  Today, a strong case can be made for the argument that one will find a greater level of truth and integrity in internet reporting than through major information distribution channels such as CNBC.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong>The Destruction of Our Critical Thinking Skills</strong></p>
<p><strong><br />
</strong></p>
<p>The fraud of our media has evolved into the fraud of our educational system. Though this is a topic that commands the devotion of an entirely separate article, the financial elites have heavily influenced the curriculum taught at leading American educational institutions for decades now. For example, over the last century, the Rockefeller family has donated millions upon millions of dollars to leading economic schools such as the University of Chicago and Harvard Business School. Perhaps it is the monetary influence of financial elites such as the Rockefellers that is largely responsible for erroneous economic beliefs about inflation and our monetary system that persist today. To squelch much of the skepticism that may arise around the suggestion that the financial elites would utilize their money to alter the educational curriculum of leading educational institutions in America, recall that in 2002, David Rockefeller stated in his own autobiographical memoirs the following:</p>
<p><em>“For more than a century ideological extremists at either end of the political spectrum have seized upon well-publicized incidents such as my encounter with Castro to attack the Rockefeller family for the inordinate influence they claim we wield over American political and economic institutions. Some even believe we are part of a secret cabal working against the best interests of the United States, characterizing my family and me as &#8220;internationalists&#8221; and of conspiring with others around the world to build a more integrated global political and economic structure &#8211; one world, if you will. If that&#8217;s the charge, I stand guilty, and I am proud of it.&#8221; </em></p>
<p>The only difference today is that the cabal working against the best interests of the US and all American families is no longer secret, but well documented and well known.  Since the above statement is sure to stir up cries of conspiracy regardless of the fact that it is directly attributable to a member of the financial oligarchy, let us take a minute to consider the disappearance of our critical thinking skills. Why do those with a keen interest in suppressing the truth about the origins and nature of our current global financial crisis have great success in doing so merely by simply using the word “conspiracy” to marginalize the well-constructed arguments of others? Why do the people that attempt to discredit these truthful revelations never offer more than flimsy verbal accusations devoid of any evidence to validate their accusations?  And why do we rarely, if ever, challenge the fact that the vast preponderance of people that provide the strongest opposition to the dissemination of truth are those whose personal wealth depend upon delusional beliefs about the health of our stock markets and the soundness of our financial institutions and monetary system? Today, the fraud of our institutional education system has dulled our aptitude of critical thinking to such a degree that we now look to others to do our thinking for us. Instead of challenging the propaganda that makes zero sense, we are all too willing to be duped into believing erroneous concepts just because they are written in a textbook or a newspaper.</p>
<p>As a prime example of this, consider over the past decade, the propensity of Central Banks and the IMF to pre-announce massive gold sales that they rarely execute. From a purely logical standpoint, can anyone well versed in logic truly argue one beneficial reason for doing so?  In 1999, when now UK Prime Minister pre-announced the sale of 400 tonnes, or more than half of the Bank of England’s gold reserves, his announcement promptly caused gold to plummet to $250 an ounce, the lowest price in the last decade. For an institution interested in making profits, it is a foregone conclusion that pre-announced large sales of gold reserves will significantly depress prices; thus what is the reason behind such an announcement other than to purposefully depress prices? Yet, when skeptics are presented with such evidence and can offer no valid counter-argument, instead of intelligently considering the validity of another’s viewpoint, too often they shut off their brains and repeat beliefs that have been repeatedly rammed down their throats.</p>
<p>In the seminal book about warfare, The Book of Five Rings, legendary samurai Miyamoto Musashi wrote, <em>“true enlightenment can be seen by what a person has done, not by what he says. Those who have missed the mark may chatter all day long about this and that, but they have never done anything. Anyone can make a good argument, but few can show good results.” </em> If we as Americans wish to prevent the death of capitalism and to reinstitute our rights of self-determination and our Constitutional rights to a sound monetary system that are paramount to a free society, we must judge people not by what they say but by what they do. We must listen not to those that present hollow arguments and that can demonstrate no positive track record of results, but rather focus on the thoughtful arguments of the few that have been able to illustrate the intelligence and validity of their views because their predictions have been vetted over time.</p>
<p>As a nation, we have become Enronized because we too often focus on the false arguments of those that are well versed in the art of persuasion yet persistently demonstrate a poor track record when it comes to results.  As a prime example, consider this Congressional testimony where former US Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson disingenuously claims that he advocates greater transparency in US markets when in fact, Goldman Sachs, under his direct leadership, aggressively lobbied to repeal laws that granted financial markets transparency. We are much too apt to accept the words of people rather than to take the more intelligent approach of analyzing their actions to judge the validity of their words.</p>
<p><strong><br />
The Fraud of Our Leaders</strong></p>
<p><strong><br />
</strong></p>
<p>The final phase of the Enronization of America has occurred through our power structure and politics. The financial oligarchs that wish to suppress the truth about their role in this crisis have been very opportunistic in forming close relationships with the highest echelons of government and then using this inordinate power to polarize the masses and further consolidate their power.  The revolving door among Central Banks (i.e the Bank of Italy, the Bank of England, the US Federal Reserve), Goldman Sachs, the US Treasury, JP Morgan, and Citigroup has been well documented so I won’t  repeat the prolific work of others here. However, using politics or nationalism as a divisive maneuver is often a favored tactic of the financial elites, so we must remain vigilant against immoral attempts to deflect our attention away from the true causes of this crisis, such as the scapegoating of immigrants or other shameless tactics. In a recent outlook for 2010 that I sent to my paying subscribers, I stated:</p>
<p><em>&#8220;Though bankers and politicians tried to sell 2009 as a year of recovery, this is nothing more than massive deception of the worst kind and hot air. What they delivered to you was not recovery but a big deception.&#8221;<br />
</em><br />
I further stated:<br />
<em><br />
If the S&amp;P 500 breaks the support level [of 1126-1128] and remains below it for several days or heavily breaks below it on a single day [on higher volume], then look for a downtrend reversal pattern to follow.&#8221;</em></p>
<p>The above indeed happened and triggered a two-day, 4%+ slide in the S&amp;P 500 last week. I&#8217;ve informed my subscribers of the other indicators they must follow to know if this is just a correction or the beginning of a long-term slide.  However, with such rampant fraud in all major stock markets last year perpetrated by politicians and bankers, a big crash is inevitable in the world&#8217;s major stock markets and is a matter of &#8220;when&#8221; and not &#8220;if&#8221;.  It&#8217;s a little early to determine if what happened at the end of last week is the beginning of a long-term slide though initial appearances seem to project that right now. A long-term slide will manifest in time, whether now or later. When obfuscation of fact and misinformation systemically replace transparency and integrity as they have in our modern society, we have little chance of producing a favorable outcome to this current crisis. More than 140 US banks failed in 2009, and every single bank failure announcement occurred on a Friday afternoon after market close so that the revelations of these bank failures could not adversely affect markets while they were still open. Additionally, such announcements were timed to grant investors two weekend days to forget about these failures. America has been Enronized over the past several decades not because of Democrats and not because of Republicans, but because of the financial oligarchs that have ruled and continue to rule our country. The Enronization of America has happened under President Clinton’s watch, under President Bush’s watch and it is now progressing under President Obama’s watch.  If you think there has been a marked difference in monetary and fiscal policy in America during the last 20 years, then you do not truly understand our monetary and fiscal policy.</p>
<p>It amazes me that people still foolishly follow the words of this administration and not its actions. It amazes me that I still hear people praising Obama’s proposed plan (proposed being the key word here) to impose limits on the size and trading activities of the nation&#8217;s largest banks without awaiting the resultant actions from such talk. I read one financial journalist that stated high praise for this proposal as he inferred that banks have become too big and that a freeze on mergers and acquisitions in the US banking industry would be welcomed. Did this journalist even consider that the biggest consolidation of power on Wall Street in the last couple of decades just happened within the past two years when Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan virtually eliminated all of their competition and the US Federal Reserve utilized the very crisis they created to seize even more power? Did this journalist even pause to consider that this administration’s cabinet and advisory boards consist of more Wall Street executives than any administration in the last several decades? Did this journalist consider that the greatest theft of American taxpayer money occurred under this adminstration’s watch with the $850 billion bailout plan that is now morphing into trillions of dollars? Did this journalist bother to note that the Senate Finance Committee is now seeking to increase the debt ceiling by a radical $1.9 trillion after just approving a $290 billion increase at the end of last year that was necessary to avoid an unprecedented default on US Treasury bonds? And did this journalist miss the CFTC hearings regarding the imposition of position limits on energy commodities and somehow miss that the true nature of discourse during these hearings was not to ban speculators from creating and bursting bubbles in the commodity markets but only to ensure, in a round-about-manner, that Wall Street can continue this speculation?</p>
<p>And after all this, if this journalist still believes Obama’s comical statement that <em>“the financial system is far stronger today than it was one year ago”</em>, this is exactly what is wrong with our media today.  Because the deceit, lies and the shady accounting practices that cover up the true health of all banks in the Western hemisphere are far stronger today than they were a year ago, the people’s confidence in the US financial industry may be much stronger today than it was a year ago. But confidence and reality are two different animals, especially in today’s chaotic world. If true Glass-Steagall like reforms are indeed implemented, then I will be the first to commend this administration for acting differently than any administration in recent history when it comes to reining in financial greed and fraud. Furthermore, I am much too familiar with the political game of very public tough talk that often is granted the greatest media publicity that eventually morphs into a greatly watered down, very different-looking piece of legislation that somehow escapes the critical lens of the media. So forgive me if I always reserve my judgment regarding such tough talk until I see the final iteration of the legislation that passes into law. My skepticism of this process originates from the fact that administrations have spoken the same tough game in public for decades while continuing to sleep with the enemy behind closed doors.</p>
<p>Until we wake up and correct many of the flaws in our thinking and in our justice system, capitalism has zero chance of survival and any discussion of reviving free markets is moot. Arthur Shopenhauer, a noted German philosopher, once stated,</p>
<p><em>“All truth passes through three stages.  First, it is ridiculed. Second, it is violently opposed. Third, it is accepted as being self-evident.” </em></p>
<p>We have already passed through the first stage where truth has been ridiculed. For several decades, those that attempted to reveal the price suppression schemes executed by governments and Central Bankers against gold and silver were ridiculed as conspiracy loonies. Today, the evidence of this manipulation is so overwhelming that men that dwell firmly inside the confines of the mainstream, men that previously would never have dared to publicly state such sentiments just 10 years ago, are now stepping forward and publicly acknowledging the existence of price suppression schemes that interfere with free markets (i.e., Donald Coxe, chairman of Harris Investment Management in Chicago).</p>
<p>Today we have progressed to the second stage of truth, when truth is violently opposed. Former US Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson testified multiple times in Congress that it is not reality that is important to stock markets, but only what people think they know, even if what they think is wrong. Paulson regularly emphasized the vital importance of consumer confidence to the performance of capital markets.  In the end, confidence levels measure consensus belief and often have very little correlation to the reality of underlying economic fundamentals. In a bear market, such as the one in which we are currently engaged, it is safe to say that rising stock markets serve as a barometer of deceit. The greater the deceit by our leaders, the more likely stock markets will act irrationally and rise when there is no foundation to support the rise, including the most recent rally that we have witnessed in US markets throughout the latter half of 2009 into the very beginning of 2010. But when reality overcomes deceit, watch out below, because we will not see a correction, but a crash.</p>
<p>As long as markets react positively to lies that prevent the masses from understanding the grave situations of our faltering economy and monetary system, our government and financial leaders will continue to prevent people from knowing or understanding the truth. One merely has to acknowledge that last year, FASB conveniently altered mark to market regulations immediately prior to first quarter 2009 earnings season and immediately prior to stress tests that were to be conducted on financial institutions to realize that our current administration is not any more interested in disclosing the truth or increasing transparency than previous administrations. Again, we would be wise to remember Miyamoto’s sage advice to judge someone not by his or her words, but by his or her actions.</p>
<p>The fragility of America’s emotional state regarding the dire economic situations that existed during the last US Presidential campaign left America vulnerable to blindly accepting anybody that promised change, but again we must consider the actions, not the words, of this current administration.  We must look at the men appointed to “solve” this crisis and understand that almost all of these men were handpicked from the same institutions (Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, and JP Morgan) that were largely responsible for creating this crisis. The most efficient way to solve a crisis caused by lack of ethics and morals is not to put the most morally bankrupt people in the nation in charge. It should disturb us all that our current President appointed a man like Paul Volcker to lead a Presidential advisory board when Volcker once stated in reference to rising gold prices in the 1980’s the following:<br />
<em><br />
“That day, the U.S. announced that the dollar would be devalued by 10%. By switching the yen to a floating exchange rate, the Japanese currency appreciated, and a sufficient realignment in exchange rates was realized. Joint intervention in gold sales to prevent a steep rise in the price of gold, however, was not undertaken. That was a mistake.”</em>(Source: Volcker’s memoirs printed in the Nikkei Weekly, November 15, 2004).</p>
<p>Men that clearly state their opposition to free market mechanisms and the reliance on collusion as preferable to transparency and integrity should never be appointed to any position of leadership in our country.  Despite the lack of leadership from the financial elites during this crisis, they have made it clear that their agenda of concealing the truth from us will not prevent them from shamelessly pinning us with the blame for their errors by increasing our taxes and devaluing the purchasing power of our dollars. And remember, devaluing major currencies, which no sane person can deny is happening all around the world, is the quickest way to destroy capitalism. It is for this reason that bankers are currently digging capitalism a shallow grave right now.</p>
<p>Though our governments have aided and abetted our global financial crisis which will soon enter its second phase, they have not been the root cause or the prime perpetrators. This honor belongs to the financial oligarchs and the fraudulent monetary system they have instituted. Today, governments have devolved into nothing more than an instrument of execution for the financial oligarchs. The late great John F. Kennedy was the last US President to understand and recognize the massive flaws and immorality of our modern day monetary system. Were the honorable President Kennedy still alive today, but a regular citizen, voicing the exact same displeasures against our current monetary system as he did half-a-century ago, I have little doubt that those in power would have already marginalized his arguments and labeled him as a “conspiracy buff” with a lack of sensibilities.</p>
<p><strong><br />
Can We Save Capitalism?</strong></p>
<p><strong><br />
</strong></p>
<p>The lack of transparency and the veil of secrecy that has existed in our financial world for a very long time now have enabled the imminent death of capitalism. Just think about some of the parlance that now is commonplace in our global marketplaces like “dark pools”, where discovery of market prices has become opaque and difficult, yet grotesquely accepted as normal. Furthermore, the misinformation campaigns that the financial elite have engaged upon for decades have further supported and maintained the ignorance of the masses. If one merely focuses on gold and silver markets, one can uncover a mountain of deceit.  Consider that when Central Banks lease gold, they still claim it as an asset on their balance sheets, an obviously fraudulent practice.</p>
<p>In the end, let us not look to the words of our financial and government leaders for truth, but to their actions. If there has ever been another institution in the history of America with a persistently worse track record of accomplishing their stated mission than the US Federal Reserve (that of maintaining price stability), I cannot think of one. Thus, we should permanently shutter institutions that have a track record of utter failure and that have consistently failed to act in the interests of their citizens although they may repeatedly insist that they always act in the nation’s best interest.  We should all want results and supporting actions, not unfulfilled pledges and promises year after year, and decade after decade. Enough is enough. We should also permanently shutter those financial institutions led by corrupt executives that have cumulatively made billions from the purposeful deception and bankrupting of American families.  Finally, if you are a shareholder with voting rights, it is incumbent upon you to exercise your rights at general meetings to oust all corrupt directors and executives at corrupt firms. Because it is near impossible to regulate morality, the only sustainable solution to prevent the death of capitalism is to remove the very institutions and people responsible for this process. As current administrations of major governments all around the world have demonstrated an unwillingness to do so, it is patently clear that this movement must originate from the people.</p>
<p>If we all desire the freedom of self-determination that is impossible with a corrupt monetary system, this change will have to come from the people. If there is one thing about the monetary system that I believe with all my heart, it is this. The monetary system today, as it has been structured by Central Bankers, is immoral. The current monetary system stifles, not encourages free markets. If a free market system facilitated capitalism in the world’s major markets today, the middle class would be healthy and robust, the poor would be transitioning into the middle class, and the rich, while still a healthy component of society, would not increase their proportion of wealth relative to everyone else every year. Instead, in the absence of free markets and capitalism, the rich seize more and more resources every year, the middle class shrinks every year, and the poor become poorer. If every person in this world truly understood how the monetary system operates, whether a Muslim, a Christian, a Hindu, Buddhist, a Catholic, or of any other faith, I am 100% sure that that person would be opposed to our current monetary system based upon his sense of morality provided by the most important tenets of his or her religion. In The Economic Consequences of the Peace, John Maynard Keynes stated the following:<br />
<em><br />
“Lenin is said to have declared that the best way to destroy the Capitalist System was to debauch the currency. By a continuing process of inflation, governments can confiscate, secretly and unobserved, an important part of the wealth of their citizens. There is no subtler, no surer means of overturning the existing basis of society than to debauch the currency. The process engages all the hidden forces of economic law on the side of destruction, and does it in a manner which not one man in a million is able to diagnose.”</em></p>
<p>If you don’t understand the above statement, then I urge you to research Central Banks and how they operate until you do. And when you do, you will understand why I claim that no man or woman that calls himself a good Christian, a good Muslim, a good Catholic, or a good Hindu could support our monetary system or work for a bank today in good conscience. If you are skeptical of this comment, as you should be, then I urge you to investigate and understand how the monetary system truly operates before you declare your opposition to this statement. Try to explain in words, to another friend, the complete process of how money comes into existence from the first step of being printed by Central Banks until it ends up in your wallet, along with every party that is charged interest or taxed  along the way during this process (through multiple mechanisms) including the government and the government’s transfer of this “interest tax” to the people.  Until you can verbalize every step of this entire process, one should not claim that he or she understands our monetary system.  But when you can verbalize this entire process, it will become very clear to you why Lenin stated that the best way to destroy Capitalism is to destroy the purchasing power of money. You will understand the extreme hypocrisy of Goldman Sach’s CEO Lloyd Blankfein’s statement that bankers were doing <em>“God’s work”</em> when you realize that our modern monetary system breaks the 8th commandment of<em> “Thou shall not steal.” </em>Furthermore, you will understand that while Goldman Sachs undoubtedly deserved the bulk of criticism levied against it last year,  private banking families that established Central Banks, not Goldman Sachs, have created our fraudulent monetary system. As is the case with other large commercial banks, Goldman Sachs is just an enabler, participant and beneficiary of the corrupt system.</p>
<p>If we all desire free gold and silver markets that are not persistently rigged by the US Treasury, the US Federal Reserve, the Bank of England and the likely usual suspects Goldman Sachs, HSBC, and JP Morgan, then this change will have to come from the people. If we desire free markets of any kind, in any form, this change will have to come from the people. Too many times in the past decade, politicians have promised change only in word but no real change has ever resulted from their actions. This clearly demonstrates that the financial oligarchs are the real power backing all major governments today.  The alternative consequence of our inaction will be the manifestation of Shopenhauer’s third stage of “truth as self-evident” at a not-so-distant time in the future. Unfortunately, however, if truth becomes self-evident, this will undoubtedly mean that the bankers will have succeeded in transforming the middle class of many Western nations into the poor. In reality, if we enter the third stage of monetary truth when truth becomes self-evident, it will be too late for most to take any action that will have any consequence in assisting their families.  The time for action clearly is now – when we are still in Shopenhauer’s second stage of truth  – the stage when all truth is violently opposed. Two movements that provide actionable ideas to implement right now that will help reinstate capitalism and revive capitalism from its deathbed can be found at <a href="http://moveyourmoneyproject.org/">Move Your Money</a> and <a href="http://www.endfinancialfraud.org">Sound Money Now! </a>Instead of just complaining that our lives are being ruined by bankers, all of us would do well to take countermeasures today in an attempt to save capitalism.</p>
<p><strong><br />
<em>About the author:</em></strong> JS Kim is the Managing Director and Chief Investment Strategist for <a href="http://www.smartknowledgeu.com">SmartKnowledgeU</a>, a fiercely independent investment education, research, and consulting firm that provides visionary guidance and profitable strategies to deal with the ongoing systemic fraud of our monetary system and capital markets.</p>
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		<title>Technical and Fundamental Analysis Fall Woefully Short When Assessing Manipulated Markets</title>
		<link>http://www.theundergroundinvestor.com/2011/02/technical-analysis-falls-woefully-short-in-assessing-manipulated-markets/</link>
		<comments>http://www.theundergroundinvestor.com/2011/02/technical-analysis-falls-woefully-short-in-assessing-manipulated-markets/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 07 Feb 2011 09:52:17 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.theundergroundinvestor.com/?p=1916</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I have stated this for many years now and I’ll continue to stand by this statement: Technical and fundamental analysis are of limited utility in predicting short-term trends in manipulated markets when analyzed in a vacuum absent of the context of government and bank manipulation. This not only applies to US stock markets but also [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I have stated this for many years now and I’ll continue to stand by this statement: Technical and fundamental analysis are of limited utility in predicting short-term trends in manipulated markets when analyzed in a vacuum absent of the context of government and bank manipulation. This not only applies to US stock markets but also to two of the most manipulated markets of all, the gold and silver futures markets. Often, with technical analysis, two analysts with multi-years of experience may offer widely diverging analyses when interpreting the exact same chart. However, if an analyst refuses or fails to take into account the massive amount of fraud and manipulation when interpreting charts of the S&#038;P 500 or the Gold &#038; Silver Continuous Contracts, then I would fathom that analyst would be off the mark at a much higher clip than he or she would be on the mark. For the past decade, it has been foolish to deny that massive fraud and manipulation existed in these aforementioned markets. Refusing to account for the “x factor” of fraud and manipulation, as it is frequently the single most important factor that moves these markets in the short-term, is what ultimately turns some gold/silver analysts into nothing more than weather forecasters.<span id="more-1916"></span></p>
<p>During sharp corrections and/or consolidation periods in gold and silver, I inevitably stumble upon comments posted by gold/silver investors online that become greatly worried by some article posted by some analyst online that states that the silver and gold bull run has ended and that silver and gold prices are now going to crash. When this happens, gold/silver investors need to keep their focus on the big picture to avoid being led astray by the white noise that will constantly surround them during every single gold and silver pull back. As for the subset of gold and silver investors who, by  nature, are worrisome creatures, they will always find analysts in the mainstream media that will gladly fuel their anxiety during every gold and silver correction or consolidation period. For ten years in a row now, gold and silver analysts come out of the woodwork to state that gold and silver are going to crash every single time these particular assets suffer a decent, rapid short-term correction or consolidation period. </p>
<p>To begin, it is quite easy to dismiss many of the analysts that call for a crash in gold and silver simply by conducting an internet search of their past predictions. Doing so will reveal that some of theses analysts have called for a crash of gold and silver every single year since the gold and silver bull run began.  Other searches will reveal that many of these analysts are just flat-out terrible and that they have made many other severe warnings about commodity crashes just about at the exact time they bottomed and then proceeded to soar higher.  Why waste energy worrying about an analyst’s calls when that analyst has proven himself or herself to be massively wrong multiple times year in and year out? </p>
<p>But what about analysts whose calls have been fairly accurate in the past and whose current calls create a level of concern for you? Then use this second process of separating the wheat from the chaff. Search the internet, find this analyst’s blog, and read about this analyst’s calls in the same asset class over a multiple numbers of years. If you can’t find any public record of past calls for this analyst regarding the specific asset class he or she is speaking of, then dismiss this analyst.  Sure, a lot of analysts will want to reserve their most detailed and best analysis for their paying clients only and perhaps this is why they lack any kind of past track record. I reserve my best and most detailed calls and strategies for my paying clients only as this makes good business sense. If an analyst posted his best calls online all the time, why would anyone every pay the analyst for information they can receive for free? </p>
<p>However, if any analyst ever wants to develop his or her business, he or she needs to establish a track record in the public arena as well to prove he or she indeed is worthy of a following. After establishing a track record for at least two or three years, then such an analyst can begin to pull back his public predictions and reserve them more exclusively for the privacy of his or her clients only. Thus, I believe that any analyst worth his or her salt will have a decent public track record.</p>
<p>Given the rise of gold/silver in the public consciousness for the past several years, there are now a plethora of self-proclaimed gold and silver analysts online now that have no discernible track record of accurate past predictions regarding past movements in the gold and silver markets nor had made a single comment about gold or silver markets until two or three years ago. First of all, if such a person was truly an expert in gold and silver, realizing that we are in the midst of one of the largest gold and silver bulls of our lifetime only after gold had risen from $250 an ounce to $1000 an ounce and silver from $4 to $16 an ounce should automatically disqualify that person from ever being able to proclaim they are an “expert”. Furthermore, if an analyst has discussed gold and silver markets before but never once discussed fraud and manipulation in gold and silver futures markets until the past couple of years when it became “chic” and mainstream to do so, then his or her credibility should be highly questionable. The job of an analyst is to dig deeper than the level of public understanding and to not be afraid of taking a stance that he or she knows to be true even if the rest of the world disagrees with him or her at the time. How could a gold/silver analyst refuse to acknowledge the single most important factor &#8211;  fraud and manipulation – that frequently moves these markets in the short-term, for years and call him or herself a gold/silver analyst? The equivalent scenario would be a US stock market analyst that refuses to acknowledge the massive effect of US Federal Reserve POMO schemes on the current short-term market behavior of the S&#038;P 500, the DJIA and NASDAQ. </p>
<p>On January 25th, in this article I posted an article titled <a href="http://www.theundergroundinvestor.com/2011/01/will-junior-mining-stocks-be-the-investment-of-2011/">“Will Junior Mining Stocks be THE Investment of 2011?</a>” on my online investment blog, <a href="http://www.theundergroundinvestor.com">the Underground Investor</a>. </p>
<p>I iterated that my outlook for gold’s ongoing correction would be for a short-term bottom to form<em> “somewhere around the $1,300 an ounce mark…and not with a further $250 an ounce correction and the $1,090 an ounce mark called for by Seabreeze Partners Management’s GP Doug Kass.”</em> I further stated, <em>“I’m going to directly contradict Kass and predict a pop higher of at least $40 to $50 an ounce in gold sometime during the 10 trading days between January 28th and February 11th.”</em> </p>
<p>To my subscribing <a href="http://www.smartknowledgeu.com/pdf/Platinum.pdf">Platinum Members</a>, to whom I provide much more detailed analysis than anything I publish in the public arena, I granted them even tighter timeframes for the turnaround on January 25th &#8211; </p>
<p><em>“I believe that this correction<strong> will end by Friday of this week [January 28th]</strong> if not sooner and that we are very close to a strong reversal now. Look for a bottom to form, and a rebound from <strong>gold at about $1,300 and the HUI at about 495</strong>.”</em>. </p>
<p>In regard to these predictions, I provided subsequent actionable strategies regarding gold/silver mining stocks as well. For the time being, gold bottomed at about $1,308 an ounce on January 28th in Asia, and the HUI bottomed in New York at 492.04 later on the same day (I issued my bulletin to my members before market open in New York that day). Between January 28th in Asia and February 4th in New York, gold popped higher by $51.70 an ounce, meeting my call for a $40 to $50 bounce between January 28th and February 11th. </p>
<p>I based these short-term predictions and dates of short-term reversals not by blindly picking numbers out of a hat, but by studying the behavior of the bullion bank manipulators that continuously manipulate gold (and silver) markets and by combining this information with technical chart analysis. Of course, we’re not completely out of the woods yet with gold and silver, and I’ll have to track and interpret both technical charts and the movements of bullion bank manipulators on a daily basis to understand whether this reversal in gold/silver markets will now stand its ground or not. Below, I’ll provide further examples of how I’ve been incorporating fraud and manipulation analysis into my technical analysis to accurately foresee both the short-term and long-term direction of gold and silver markets for years.</p>
<p>With gold and silver futures markets, one must understand the mechanisms of the likely <a href="http://www.theundergroundinvestor.com/2009/07/the-gld-and-slv-legitimate-investment-vehicles-or-not/">fraudulent paper gold and silver ETFs, the GLD and SLV</a>, and the fraudulent paper gold and silver futures markets and how both of these paper markets influence gold/silver prices independent of free market supply and demand mechanisms. Of course, this is just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to understanding the difference between the mechanisms of how markets truly operate and the false mechanisms that business schools worldwide teach to the future analysts of the world. An analyst must always keep in mind fraud and manipulation whenever using technical charts to predict future behavior in manipulated markets or that analyst’s technical analysis will ALWAYS be distorted and inaccurate. Whether it’s by design, sheer arrogance or plain ignorance, this is why a five-year-old child’s predictions about future US market behavior during the last five years would have stacked up very well against the predictions made by supposedly very learned men like US Fed Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke.  </p>
<p>On September 16, 2006, in my article  <a href="http://www.theundergroundinvestor.com/2006/09/a-no-no-no/">“Has the Commodities Bubble Burst? No, No, No!”</a>, I stated:</p>
<p><em>“Everywhere in the media, you have pundits saying that the commodities Bull Run is over &#8211; including even chief global economists of major investment firms like Steven Roach of Morgan Stanley. <strong>THEY’RE ALL WRONG</strong>…I’ve dug deep enough down into the rabbit hole to know that gold will rise much much higher in the future.. Yes, oil has slipped to below $60 a barrel but again, this doesn’t mean that oil is done either.”<br />
</em><br />
At the time I made the above prediction, gold had tumbled nearly 14% in the previous two months to $573 an ounce, oil had tumbled 25% from $80 a barrel to $60 a barrel and many global commodity analysts had called for people to sell out of all commodity based stocks across the board. In particular, a few precious metals analysts used this steep correction to foment fear among gold investors and called for gold to retrace all the way back down to its initial starting point in this gold bull run at $250 an ounce. So what happened? Gold, by the end of 2007, soared from its September 2006 correction that was supposed to usher in a collapse, by more than 45%, to $833 an ounce!</p>
<p>And for those of you that believe I am always positive on gold and silver because many of my public postings happen to be posted near interim bottoms when gold and silver are set to rebound, this is hardly the case. In my last 2010<a href="http://www.smartknowledgeu.com/pdf/investmentnewsletter.pdf"> Crisis Investment Opportunities newsletter</a> issue, I warned of an impending gold/silver correction to begin 2011: </p>
<p><em>“The likely time frame for the likelihood of a Central Bank engineered attack against gold and silver prices has now been pushed out until January or February 2011.” </em></p>
<p>Interpretation of fraud and manipulation can help one identify warnings about short-term pullbacks in the price of certain assets as well as identify short-term bottoms.</p>
<p>On December 6, 2007, subscribers to my free online investment newsletter received this warning:<br />
<em><br />
“Over the past six months, soaring oil prices are much more directly connected to a devaluing dollar than decreasing oil supply or peak oil. Had the Gulf Nations declared this week that they were going to unpeg their currencies from the U.S. dollar, I guarantee you that oil would have shot up beyond $100 to $120 a barrel within a matter of weeks [oil was trading at $88 a barrel at this time]. And that would have had nothing to do with supply and demand and everything to do with feared U.S. dollar weakness.&#8221;</em></p>
<p>Again, my statement above had nothing to do with fundamentals or technical charts but everything to do with the fraudulent nature of the US dollar and my understanding of the fraudulent nature of currency and oil markets. Sure enough, several Gulf Nations unofficially and quietly temporarily unpegged their currencies from the US dollar over the next few months, following Saudi Arabia’s lead of temporarily unpegging the Riyal from the US dollar at the end of 2007. During the next six months that followed my above statement, oil rose from just $88.40 a barrel to more than $120 a barrel. In mid-2008, oil peaked out at more than $140 a barrel, though a certain Wall Street firm’s opportunistic positioning in the oil futures markets based upon their knowledge of a single U.S. hedge fund that was short 260 million barrels of oil was largely responsible for the final spike in prices (again, just another example of how short-term price behavior was driven by manipulation of the banks and not supply-demand based). </p>
<p>Today, I’ve read in newspapers from the Americas to Europe to Asia, the attempt of many country’s finance ministers once again to deflect blame away from their Central Banks’ fiat currency devaluation policies as the root cause of rising commodity and oil prices. Today finance ministers worldwide have colluded to keep the people in the dark about reality by stating unilaterally that rising commodity prices are responsible for inflation versus stating the reality that currency manipulation is the main culprit of massive inflation.</p>
<p>This same type of “fraud and manipulation” analysis can be extended to another massively manipulated market, the US stock market. When predicting the future behavior of US stock markets, an analyst must always incorporate the fraud of Federal Reserve POMO schemes and the artificial propping up of a handful of core index stocks that keep entire indexes afloat into one’s technical analysis.</p>
<p>On March 21, 2007, on my investment blog, I pricked quite a few investors’ nerves when I wrote the article <a href=" http://www.theundergroundinvestor.com/2007/03/a-the-short-term-may-be-rosy-but-beware-the-financial-crisis-that-is-building-steam/">“The Short-Term May be Rosy, But Beware the Financial Crisis that is Building Steam”.</a> In fact, back then, the rise of US stock markets on the back of massive fraud and manipulation was remarkably comparable to today’s current state of US stock markets four years later. In that article, I stated:</p>
<p><em>“Everywhere global stock markets have rebounded whether in China, Australia, Europe, or the US , short positions have decreased dramatically, and the bulls are back in full force. However, there are still two scenarios that every investor should be wary of, one that is very likely, and one that is near inevitable&#8230;I know that a lot of people will think that any talk of a future global economic crisis is ludicrous but that is why so few people actually build wealth through investing. Only the handful of people that take the time to really understand the economics that brew well below the surface of the Bloomberg reports and CNBC and the Wall Street Journal will readily prepare their investment portfolios for this crisis.”</p>
<p>“And this crisis that seems inevitable to me will be much bigger than the U.S. Great Depression of the 1930’s and much larger than the Asian Financial Crisis of 1997 because the conditions that are creating this crisis will have a much wider and more significant global impact than either of these two previous crises. Before those two crises hit, the overwhelming majority of investors believed that those people that believed a crisis was imminent were crazy. And during those times, salesmen and women in the financial industry were able to leverage the naivete of the thundering sheep herd to get them to do things that led to certain financial ruin.”<br />
</em><br />
The <em>“economics that brew well below the surface of the Bloomberg reports and CNBC and the Wall Street Journal” </em>that I referenced in my above prediction was, of course, the real levels of key economic indicators versus the fraudulent, “official” government-reported economic statists that governments disseminate to the public via mainstream media distribution channels. Because I have always focused my analysis on government and banker levied fraud and manipulation of capital markets, even in March of 2007, at a time when many commercial investment advisors were taking advantage of the steady 9-month advance in US stock markets to tout their usual <em>“get on board [the US market bull] or get left behind”</em> propaganda, the precarious nature of the situation at that time was crystal clear to me. </p>
<p>So what happened after I made this prediction? US markets continued to be rosy in the short-term as the title of my article indicated before eventually topping out in October of that year and falling by more than 20% by March of the next year. As far as the remainder of 2008, we all know the disastrous year that 2008 ended up being worldwide. How did we do in 2008? Our Crisis Investment Opportunities investment newsletter portfolio still ended up positive for the year (barely positive, but still positive). Due to my prediction that a crisis would unfold, we avoided the 40% haircuts that almost all commercial investment firm clients suffered that year.  Furthermore, just a few weeks ago, Reuters reported that “<em>home prices fell for the 53rd consecutive month in November, taking the decline past that of the Great Depression for the first time in the prolonged housing slump”</em> and that <em>“home values have fallen 26 percent since their peak in June 2006, worse than the 25.9-percent decline seen during the Depression years between 1928 and 1933”</em>. But what about my prediction that this unfolding crisis would be “much bigger than the US Great Depression”? I still believe that the prediction I made on March 21 of 2007 will come to fruition over the course of the next several years and this global crisis will become much bigger than the US Great Depression as at some point this year, we will move from the eye of the economic hurricane back into the turmoil of the hurricane. In fact, we may already be witnessing the first signs of my prediction above that this current crisis would <em>“have a much wider and more significant global impact than either [the Great Depression or the 1997 Asian Financial Crisis]”</em> in the food and unemployment riots that have already started this year in Egypt, Tunisia, Algieria and India.</p>
<p>By April 23, 2008 as the signs of an imminent US stock market crash were becoming clearer, I posted another warning shot on my investment blog titled <a href=" http://www.theundergroundinvestor.com/2008/04/will-us-markets-crash-now-or-crash-later/">“Will US Markets Crash Now or Later?”</a></p>
<p>In that article, I stated: <em>“Should an extended rally of the Dow above 13,000 occur, it will serve no purpose other than to create the illusion of wealth, as opposed to the creation of real tangible wealth. The higher U.S. markets rise in today’s environment, the more likely it is that they will fall even harder in the future. Here’s why. Currently, the U.S. Federal Reserve is playing the same shell game that it has for decades, one in which they alternately inflate stock markets and real estate markets. If stock markets are crashing, then they inflate real estate markets, and vice versa. It’s a vicious circle that eventually will collapse under the weight of its own foolishness. In the late 1920s, in very simple terms, the U.S. Federal Reserve’s solution to forestall a mild U.S. economic contraction and to stop England’s gold losses was to print more money.”<br />
</em><br />
 What happened? The U.S. Market started a steep decline just one month later, shedding almost 5,000 points between May and October of 2008!</p>
<p>In conclusion, I’m not stating that by studying fraud and manipulation, one’s predictions will be spot on year in and year out. There is no analyst, including myself, that has not made, or will not make a prediction or two at some point, that will appear silly in hindsight. No one is infallible, though some may infer as much. But I can guarantee you this. If an analyst incorporates an understanding of how bullion banks and governments operate fraud and manipulation schemes into his or her technical analysis of capital markets, his or her chances of making uncannily accurate calls in the behavior of capital markets year in and year out become exponentially better than if he or she were to attempt to predict future market behavior based on technical analysis alone. </p>
<p>At a time when everyone but the most naïve of the naïve understand how grossly distorted capital prices are both to the upside (in global stock markets) and to the downside (in gold and silver markets) due to massive manipulation schemes executed through collusive bullion-bank and government efforts, it makes zero sense to continue to put faith in technical analysis alone. Though fundamentals may drive behavior in the long-term, fundamentals have had, at times, zero effect on the price discovery of assets in the short-term. Furthermore, with certain sectors such as the banking sector where insolvent bankrupt banks have been magically transformed into solvent profitable banks by corrupt regulatory agencies that have allowed banks to cook their books, the fundamentals of many sectors are not fundamentally sound! Fraud and manipulation analysis today is more than ever, more critical than either fundamental or technical analysis.</p>
<p><em><br />
<strong>About the Author:</strong> JS Kim is the Founder and Managing Director of <a href="http://www.smartknowledgeu.com">SmartKnowledgeU</a>, a fiercely independent investment research, education, and consulting firm with a mission of protecting the interests of Main Street from the fraud of Wall Street.</em><br />
<em><br />
Republishing rights: The above article may be reprinted on other sites as long as all links and text, including the author acknowledgment, remain unchanged.</em></p>
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