By Anna Von Reitz
Sounds counter-intuitive, doesn't it?
The
Bretton Woods conference and all the solutions coming out of it
depended on an "ever expanding economy" and unfortunately, also depended
on fiat currency and central banks and.... ever expanding debt.
If
you think about it, it's obvious. If the economy is good, people
invest, which means they go into debt and the new debt creates what?
New debt notes. This inflates the currency and devalues it, but, if the
economy continues to expand, it doesn't matter.
What do you need for a "continuously expanding economy"?
You
need a continuously expanding population demanding goods and services,
which is what you would expect overall absent a great plague or nuclear
war, etc., especially in the post-war Baby Boom Era.
Plus,
you need a continuously spending and investing population creating more
debt for itself. You have to have a good consumer base of people eager
to go into debt to buy things like jet skis and yoghurt makers.
Those
two things-- expanding population and expanding debt-- are what are
needed to fuel the kind of ever-expanding economy that Bretton Woods
depended upon ---and in the post-war 1940's, those were both sure
bets.
Where are we now?
The
Baby Boomers have topped off; most of them have quit borrowing and are
instead paying off loans, finishing mortgages, and going into
reduced-spending retirement mode.
The potent economic driver provided by the Baby Boom is winding down.
At
the same time, thanks to nut cases in DC, Rome, London, and elsewhere,
we are in a deepening population collapse -- which will not only kill
our economy, but the entire world economy using the debt-note currency
model.
As we pay off debts with debt notes, which causes inflation, the vicious cycle deepens.
Getting
people to invest at all requires artificially plunking up places to
spend investment money, such as doing what the Fed just did by
self-investing billions back into the stock market.
This
self-induced bull market generates hyperinflation like its own little
storm bottle, and prompts people to invest in stocks in hopes of quick
painless profits, but anyone investing in this particular bull market
needs to realize that at a certain moment agreed upon by insiders, it's
going to crash like a deflated balloon and the same thing is going to
happen to the currency supply-- it's going to dry up, and has been
quietly drying up since 2017.
This
is when Grandma's Investment Strategy comes in handy. You take what
you can afford to lose and invest it in the phony baloney stock market.
As soon as you start making money, you start reaping it back until you
have recouped your original investment amount. You keep doing this so
that all you ever risk is that initial amount, and keep the profit
safely invested in cash assets.
Then,
when the market goes Ka bluey, all you ever have at risk is that
initial amount you could afford to lose, and that has been replaced
five, ten or however many times over by the run up of the stock market.
If
you are disciplined and keep investing this way, you can make
substantial gains on a phony bull market and never risk losing your
shirt--- but most people get greedy and start investing back their
profits instead of rat-holing those in cash investments.
And
that is where people become "over-exposed" and lose the whole shooting
match, or worse, get tempted into leveraging and betting on the market
and end up deep in debt for all their efforts.
The
big banks in charge of the printing presses are going to run up the
stock market, hyperinflate the economy doing so, and then the whole
thing is going to go bust --- if they have anything to say about it.
The
Federal Reserve Note will be greatly deflated, which is the opposite of
inflated; you will be able to buy more with each FRN but any new money
supply will be virtually non-existent, and as the population collapses,
both demand for dollars and the size of the world economy will shrink.
Central
banks are all in the business of rigging commodities, but the most
important commodity they manipulate is the money supply -- or, what
passes for money -- the fiat currency.
Debt
notes which depend on ever-expanding debt and increasing population
willing to invest, are not viable in the current economic environment.
To put it in Goon-ease, "the currency model does not fit current economic and market conditions".
Our population is getting drastically smaller, not larger.
We are paying off debts and not ordering up new loans.
The
fiat currency is devaluing rapidly due to inflation caused by the guys
with the printing presses self-investing billions in companies and
commodities they already own and causing a phony bull market.
Cash
supplies are not being replenished and we are in the most draconian cut
back on cash supplies in living memory, so, there is far less cash in
the marketplace and it is still rapidly losing ground to inflation.
This
grotesque cut back in the cash supply will continue during and after
the stock market collapse, resulting in a situation where every deflated
Federal Reserve Note will be able to buy far more than at present.
Without
an ever-expanding population and ever-expanding investment market
causing ever-expanding debt, the economy based on the debt-note model
collapses.
The
Federal Reserve is doing this -- again -- just as they did in the
1920's because in a sense, they don't know what else to do. The
politicians are demanding "good news" to prop up their candidates
through the campaign season, so the Fed is providing at least the
appearance of a booming stock and investment market.
This is the last bonfire before the smoke and ashes.
This
is because there is no actual investment expansion, therefore no debt
expansion, and no expanding population to drive any of the drivers that
the fiat currency model depends upon.
The Fed is busily extracting the last vapors out of the Federal Reserve Note.
And
the fiat currency model is all the Fed has to work with, because only
the actual States of the Union can issue gold and silver asset-backed
money.
If
only we had gold and silver asset-backed currency back again, we could
trade it against the Federal Reserve Notes and inject value back into
the fiat currency as well as pay off debt and kill inflation....
But
wait, didn't I say that the actual States of the Union have been in
Session for three years? With all their people properly declared,
recorded, and published? Provenance and standing established?
And the Federation of States is still here, still able to issue gold and silver currency?
Oh, wait, didn't the States just take a roll call vote and issue a new gold-backed currency, the American Federation Dollar?
So
there is no need for any crash after all, no "inevitable" boom and
bust, because we now have a different currency model in play, one that
uses actual money and pays actual debts and has actual substance.
Lions and tigers and bears!
Oh, my!
Instead
of relying on the expansion of debt, we can rely on pre-paid credit,
instead. And instead of being limited to commercial debt swapping, we
can use real money at our discretion to actually pay debts.
How? Why?
Because
we, the living people, and our lawful States of the Union, are the
actual owners of both the assets and the credit generated from the
assets.
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