Interesting Article by Ellen Brown
Wag the Dog: How to Conceal Massive Economic Collapse
Ellen Brown
Global Research
August 14, 2008
"I’m in show business, why come to me?"
"War is show business, that’s why we’re here."
– "Wag the Dog" (1997 film)
Last week, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac had just announced record losses, and so had most reporting corporations. Unemployment was mounting, the foreclosure crisis was deepening, state budgets were in shambles, and massive bailouts were everywhere. Investors had every reason to expect the dollar and the stock market to plummet, and gold and oil to shoot up. Strangely, the Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 300 points, the dollar strengthened, and gold and oil were crushed. What happened?
It hardly took psychic powers to see that the Plunge Protection Team had come to the rescue. Formally known as the President’s Working Group on Financial Markets, the PPT was once concealed and its very existence denied as if it were a matter of strict national security. But the PPT has now come out of the closet. What was once a legally questionable "manipulator" of markets has become a sanctioned stabilizer and protector of markets. The new tone was set in January 2008, when global markets took their worst tumble since September 11, 2001. Senator Hillary Clinton said in a statement reported by the State News Service:
"I think it’s imperative that the following step be taken. The President should have already and should do so very quickly, convene the President’s Working Group on Financial Markets. That’s something that he can ask the Secretary of the Treasury to do. . . . This has to be coordinated across markets with the regulators here and obviously with regulators and central banks around the world."1
The mystery over what was going on with the dollar the first week in August was solved by James Turk, founder of GoldMoney, who wrote on August 7:
"[T]he banking problems in the United States continue to mount, while the federal government’s deficit continues to soar out of control. . . . So what happened to cause the dollar to rally over the past three weeks? In a word, intervention. Central banks have propped up the dollar, and here’s the proof.
"When central banks intervene in the currency markets, they exchange their currency for dollars. Central banks then use the dollars they acquire to buy US government debt instruments so that they can earn interest on their money. The debt instruments central banks acquire are held in custody for them at the Federal Reserve, which reports this amount weekly.
"On July 16, 2008 . . . , the Federal Reserve reported holding $2,349 billion of US government paper in custody for central banks. In its report released today, this amount had grown over the past three weeks to $2,401 billion, a 38.4% annual rate of growth. . . . So central banks were accumulating dollars over the past three weeks at a rate far above what one would expect as a result of the US trade deficit. The logical conclusion is that they were intervening in currency markets. They were buying dollars for the purpose of propping it up, to keep the dollar from falling off the edge of the cliff and doing so ignited a short covering rally, which is not too difficult to do given the leverage employed in the markets these days by hedge funds and others.
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Now, how do we get about 100 million people to read it and understand what it means? This is nothing more than delaying financial armageddon, coming soon after the elections.
I also read an article regarding China's central bank. They have been raising their reserve ratio requirements for the past couple of years. They are now over 15%. While this would seem like a move in the right direction (toward a 100% reserve requirement - ha!), there is a catch. They are requiring their banks to keep the excess reserves in U.S. dollars - another intervention to try to protect their export business to the U.S. Sooner or later, everyone will realize that the short term pain of abandoning the U.S. dollar is MUCH better for their long term economic health, and then we will be in deep, deep doo doo.
Tom Mullen
www.tommullen.net
www.myspace.com/skepticsongs
"Question with boldness even the existence of a God" - Thomas Jefferson
Tom, once you understand that the market is played (perhaps this is a better term than manipulated) it seems like you can try to align yourselves with some of the major banks (by offering up much of your life in humble servitude!) or try to remain an independent. Being independent would be so much easier if others understood the situation, i.e. could read this article, would read it, and would do the mental arithmetic required to understand it. But when it seems like so many just are too lazy or frightened to look into the matter on their own --- the frustration sets in.
When it takes a backpack full of dollars to buy groceries, people will start to better understand the concept of inflation.
However none of this will happen because every one in the world will be drawn to this site for the IT updates! and then they'll stumble across this article and then voila!
lol --- Tom you're suppossed to be the voice of balance and reason -- when you start saying the crash is coming I'm really frightened!
Prop and keep it up till they can safely pull their own money . Seeing the collapse ahead of the peasants enabled them to prop it up , manipulate and soften the blow to themselves until they were in a position to dump !
Have you guys watched The Money Masters DVD? We just watched it last week. My husband borrowed it from a friend at work, but I'm ordering a copy to share with friends and relatives. Everyone should watch this 3.5 hour documentary to learn the truth about the hidden manipulation of gold and money markets.
Here's the link to their site:
http://www.themoneymasters.com/synopsis.htm
We saw the Money as Debt video a while ago. We found it to be a good explanation of the debt money system, but we didn't agree with the solution it presented.
that something very "unnatural" is occuring in the world markets and Ms. Brown's analysis is probably spot-on. Along with the information she provides stands the inexplicably sudden deflation of gold and silver futures. More manipulation? Probably.
Whenever something goes up inexplicably, other than by manipulation, it usually means that the big investors are getting out. The rally allows them to begin selling off their U.S. dollar-denominated assets and buying into gold and commodities while they are depressed. Once they are out of their positions in the dollar and into their positions on gold, the central banks will allow the dollar to plummet again and gold will go through the roof. Coincidentally, none of this will happen until after the U.S. elections.
The ensuing financial meltdown early in a new president's term will allow him to seize even more power. We will have a huge stock market crash and economic policy will be described as being in a "post-March 11 world," (or whatever the date of the crash), just as we now live in a "post-9/11 world." Say goodbye to the last vestiges of economic freedom, which is 95% of all freedom.
Tom Mullen
www.tommullen.net
www.myspace.com/skepticsongs
"Question with boldness even the existence of a God" - Thomas Jefferson
You speak with such certainty about the next stock market collapse! I assume you are shorting the market so you can capitalize on this? There are cycles, and there have been bad times in the past (from which we have recovered). I am no fan of this monetary system but I think it is premature to be predicting financial armageddon.
No comments?
Looking at one day of trading in the stock market and extrapolating as you do makes no sense at all.
are you addressing Ellen Brown directly
or confusing me with the author of the article?
the writer of the article and the one that advocates it.