Interesting times for sure...
It doesn't take a genius to see how extreme, artificial leverage and "easy credit" + mal-investment = shit sandwich.
As I'm sure many are increasingly coming to the realize, the U.S. economy (and by extension the global economy) is little more than a shell game played within a house of cards. With that said, I don't think its game over yet.
There's too many people that love playing the game, and with the fairly recent removal of the up-tick rule, as much money can be made on the destruction of U.S. economy as was made on its artificially supported incline.
While I feel a severe correction is long overdue, I'm not cheering on the financial apocalypse. In my opinion the stock market represents one of the best examples of free market capitalism and opportunities for 'the little guy' to play on a comparatively level playing field which until recently was the sole domain of the wealthy.
In that context, I feel the current market manipulation, including 'the strong dollar policy' (i.e. artificial gold price suppression, 'propping up' fiat paper currencies as a result
www.gata.org) amounts to little more than taking the band-aid off as slowly as possible.
Perhaps paradoxically, the FOREX market, dominated by the interbank network represents arguably one of the absolute best examples of global free market capitalism... With $3+ trillion traded daily (dwarfing the world's stock markets) the 'peasant' retail trader with a $250 mini account is about as likely to influence this wholly decentralized market as a billion dollar order from a central bank. Compare this with Wall-Street which is thrives on a culture of manipulation, inside information and requires by some estimates, the influx of hundreds of billions from the illegal drug trade to remain solvent (listed companies are largely exempt from money laundering regulations. "Wall Street, CIA and the Global Drug Trade"
http://www.whale.to/b/ruppert1.html)
As for the immediate situation, 'Helicopter Ben' isn't the only Fed official with expertise in depression era economics, which in itself should be grounds for caution...
Personally, instead of being captive to the reality of the global finance shell game, I've tried to take advantage of it, and to be honest, my own recent passion in the subject has helped me appreciate why 'the game' has lasted so long and why I feel it still has a lot of life left still.
The 'finance shell game', which until recently has been the exclusive playground of the rich, has, along with many other aspects of society become democratized unlike any other time in history. This unique opportunity offers the potential to 'free' creative, intelligent individuals from the shackles of labor on a scale not seen since the agricultural revolution.
If the potential exists to 'earn' the same income in ten minutes as would normally take an entire day, with the only material requirement being the displacement of elections across a computer network I view this as a positive development. If more of 'us' started to view 'money' as the intellectual construct it is, rather than a limited commodity to sacrifice most of our productive lives accumulating, the world would be a better place in my opinion...
Even the staunchest conspiratorial "doom and gloomer", would be hard pressed to argue a substantial depreciation in US equity doesn't fit perfectly within the agenda of the forever non-descript group known as "them".
The way I see it, as the last vestiges of true 'free market' economics are eroded through government and central bank control, 'they' not only consolidate power but stifle the democratization of wealth in an economy which can no longer rely on the perpetual and exponential harvesting of the planets limited resources simply to avoid its own demise, but potentially at the expemse of the entire global ecology.
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