The Gold Rush: why are we not being told the truth?
By Richard CottrellContributing writer for End the Lie
We
are now approaching one of the most important tipping points in world
history and yet we stagger on, besotted by iPhones and other electronic
brain frying clutter in the expectation that things being as they are
will remain the same in the future.
One
can assume that the people of Hiroshima and Dresden thought that too,
before they were toasted to a crisp by the latest advances in
peace-keeping technology.
The
entire new world order that kicked off with Bretton Woods in 1944 and
then spread like a global rash – the World Bank, the IMF, the European
Union – is now playing one of the most pointless mind games since our
ancient ancestors taught themselves how to work markets with systems of
exchange. Forms of money made barter largely redundant. In came precious
metals, and especially gold.
The
bright shiny stuff was not, of course, easily portable in large
quantities. So it was stocked up in treasury houses and money minted
according to the value of those reserves judged against the general
credit stakes of any given country.
When
we read that this, that, or the other country – the US included – is
‘off’ the gold standard, this is nonsense. Nixon took the US ‘off’ the
gold standard in 1971 after a caretaker checked one bright morning and
found there was nothing left to actually get off.
From
that moment on the dollar was consigned to its inevitable fate as a
paper fiat currency, supported by other countries with large gold hoards
stored at home, or as invariably became the case, in the vaults of the
US Federal Reserve.
Editor’s note: The
Federal Reserve has formally admitted that they do not, in fact,
“officially” own any gold and have not owned gold in some time. See the
testimony below:
Lately something very peculiar is happening to gold.
Largely
uncommented on by the lackey corporate media, there is a silent war for
gold. The war is led by the ‘Northern Empire’, the United States,
which is effectively reversing the Nixon edict by holding large
quantities of bullion that belong to other countries.
Whenever
the subject does come up we hear the usual ‘safe as houses’ explanation
trotted out. Yet, a few canny observers are catching something on the
wind that may be so shocking that it seems unreasonable, in practical
terms, to contemplate.
Is the ‘Northern Empire’ planning to nationalize gold hordes held in the US on behalf of foreign depositors?
Let’s
see. As of right now, 60% of Germany’s gold is locked up in the vaults
of the New York Fed. Not exactly cashable in an emergency, so to speak.
Why has Germany dispatched all that heavy metal across the Atlantic?
What’s wrong with the solid basements of the Bundesbank, if the ECB
smells so cheesy?
In
practical terms, the Germans are in the same bind as all the other
holders of US treasury notes, exchanged as shareholdings in the US
economy. The US demands gold pledges in order to prevent the dollar
imploding. Gold is now the ‘ghost Bretton Woods.’ In may also be
spectral in other ways, as we will shortly discover.
The
unspoken truth is that the dollar system is so thoroughly rotten it
makes the euro look like a lively stripling youngster. If it were not
for the fact that it owes some sixteen trillion bucks to the world – and
counting – the US government might be tempted to return to the official
gold standard to support the dollar.
Unfortunately,
this is a misunderstanding of the problem. The American problem is the
paper that the US holds – treasury commitments due to foreign central
banks – not in the immediate instance, the usefulness or value of solid
gold.
But
the Fed is not the only central bank with a liquidity problem. The
European Central Bank is close to (if not actually) insolvent – and
where do you read about that in the corporate coffee house sheets? Try
this on for size. The ECB is out in the breeze for some 3.02 trillion
euros at the latest audit, which put another way is about a third larger
than the entire Germany economy, reckoned as that is as the power
station of Europe.
This
is entirely due to a second draw down of loans (bailouts) to tottering
duffer states which, at the same time the ECB, in league with the EU and
the IMF, is trying to bankrupt. These are the economics of the
madhouse.
The
ECB does not have the solid assets to back those loans. And do remember
dear readers that the various beggar states of the EU are lining up
begging bowls empty for another big dollop of porridge.
The
real central bank in Germany – namely the Bundesbank – has worked out
that should the euro go belly up, then the federal balance sheet will
suffer to the extent of half a trillion euros, which is almost twice the
size of the annual German state budget. Now this is not just some
nightmare which blows away when the sun comes up, because there is no
sign of the sun coming up.
Aux la contraire.
The euro is heading steadily south in true pear-shaped fashion to
Greece, Spain, Portugal, and Italy, where its unkind fate will be
decided.
Meanwhile,
the Fed stocks up on other people’s gold, if it can get it, that is.
Hugh Chavez, the Other Castro, is not backing the western order of
things. Venezuela is the world’s 15th ranking gold holder, she has,
practically speaking, more than either Saudi Arabia or the UK (no
surprises there, after Gordon Brown emptied the vaults to pay the
housekeeping bills, just as gold sunk to rock bottom – proof of the old
adage that a fool and his money are soon parted).
Mexico’s
central bank, on the other hand, has been compelled to admit that
almost 95% of its modest gold holdings are held hostage in New York.
Mexico is not a client of the United States. It is a prostrate vassal.
It’s an interesting role reversal if we go back to the Conquistadores
who raped El Dorado to prop up a dying, decadent empire with Aztec gold.
No prizes in a reader competition to name the latest dying, decadent empire.
The
Mexicans will not get their gold back, ever. Its effectively US
property now and will remain so, short of the Mexican army crossing the
Rio Grande.
Chavez
would not have piled his hoard into New York City in any event. But the
fact that he is willing to repose his faith in the Russians or the
Chinese speaks volumes. Chavez watched the fate of the Libyan state,
smashed and battered back to the Stone Age for the sake of the Northern
Empire getting its sticky hands on Gaddafi’s gold.
Moreover,
the Russian treasury is quietly stocking up on gold, so it is not
likely to snaffle the gold of others. Putin has also amassed, as we learned recently,
a huge hoard of diamonds, the world’s largest in fact. That the Kremlin
should be considered a model of probity represents the fiscal
equivalent of a magnetic reversal of the poles.
The
Fed’s filching of other people’s wealth should not come as any surprise
to anyone who follows the wholesale looting practiced by Wall Street.
The boundary is seamless, of course. If the US is quietly contemplating
massive monetary world disorder, in which the only antidote would be
gold to support the Northern Empire’s chief currencies, the dollar and
the euro, then we begin to understand the beginnings of a bunker policy.
Yet
I think this is a serious under estimate of the gravity of the
approaching crisis. I opened this piece by saying that people tend to
think what they see around them will still be there tomorrow. One only
has to think back to the victims of Boxing Day tsunami in 2005 to see
how erroneous this can be. In softer terms, the victims of the housing
foreclosure tsunami in the United States, and those who are losing the
real value of their pensions and wages in the artificially imposed austerity crisis right across Europe at this moment.
Perception
is deceptive because the mainstream organs of information distort the
prism of perception with falsehoods and half-truths and blind the
popular audience with soap operas and organized distractions like
football, the Olympic games and the recent ‘royal’ jubilee in the UK.
So
we ignore the famous law promulgated by Sir Thomas Gresham (an early
British entrepreneur) – actually re-formulated, because the basic tenets
can be traced back to early thinkers in Arabia – concerning ‘good money
driving out bad.’
Gresham
and his predecessors were really sending a very important message far
into the future concerning over-valued currencies displacing
under-valued ones. Of course in his day there wasn’t a single currency
system embracing the whole of Europe – and no USA either. So today we
are better off reading his message as predicting a likely return to
alternative payments systems in the wake of a dollar and euro collapse.
Here we find a partial explanation, at least, for the epidemic of ‘local currencies’ sprouting everywhere in
Europe, right across North America, and now even in Africa. In many
cases, town, city or regional monies can be operated alongside barter or
exchange systems, and which taken together, present viable alternatives
to many formerly straight cash operations. If the lights went out, life
would go on, like oxbow rivers constantly seeking new channels.
It
is possible now in the UK to pay some utility bills in this fashion,
so, are we approaching the legalization of alternative tenders? Why are
governments nodding this through, given their struggles to support
stricken mainstream currencies? The answer of course is to continue
even in some primitive form some kind of taxation system. That is only
conceivable so long as the future sees it as essential to maintain the
notion of the traditional nation state, rather than a localized
patchwork quilt of loyalties.
Tax is one of the main supporting buttresses of what we are still pleased to call the ‘nation-state.’
Governments
are invariably wrong in everything that they do, and that is why the
battle is on to save an unsaveable currency system like the euro. That
is why the printing presses are working around the clock turning out
fiat and dollars and euros. The show must go on. But the people pulling
levers behind the streams are as about in charge of the situation as the
Wizard of Oz with his fantastical smoke and mirrors.
The
Mexican people were denied the right by every bureaucratic obstacle to
know exactly where the nation’s gold was actually held, until the dams
of conspiracy collapsed. We do not know exactly how much gold the Bank
of England really holds. It may not be very much. We do know there are
pastiche, doctored gold bars around, which means effectively, in
circulation (the mineral equivalent of printing money). We also know
that 60% of Germany’s gold is sleeping quietly close to the Hudson
River.
We
also know that the price of gold (and to some extent, silver) is
ruthlessly manipulated, not so much by speculators (the usual cry) as
professional riggers owing loyalties to those hubs of the Northern
Empire, Wall Street, the Federal Reserve, the Old Lady of Threadneedle
Street and the ECB. I would not be at all surprised if a full
independent audit revealed that the Empire ‘s real gold stocks are lower
than proclaimed, not to mention those stocks which might not pass
assay.
What
then if there were a run on gold? Commentators other than myself regard
that as a very interesting question indeed. Another is whether the gold
(and silver) brokers are fibbing concerning how much of what is bought
and sold could actually be taken away in physical form if the armored
truck called.
There
are no independent inventories of gold vaults. We have the feeble word
of those who do not, in any event, deal in the truth as a significant
medium of exchange.
The
usual rent-a-quote soothsayers are only too happy to pass us off with
glib assurances that springtime is just around the corner, the
‘recovery’ is under way, the ‘green shoots of prosperity’ are sprouting
once again. This is so much stuff and nonsense.
The
world financial order and the global economy are absolutely busted and
will not be repaired by any of the quick fixes proposed by the likes of
Mario Draghi, head waiter at the ECB, the preposterous little Mervyn
King at the Bank of England (who wouldn’t have much better luck running a
whelk stall) and ‘eyes wide closed’ Ben Bernanke, chief printer at the
Fed.
The
future will be peopled with robots turning out goods for diminishing
consumers with nothing that could be called real work. That’s not in the
far distant future, it is right now.
In
such a picture, you may well ask, “what’s gold anyway?” The answer is
that gold is the lubricant of an expiring system and the authorities set
over our heads either do not or will not understand this. In the
circumstances it is perfectly logical to both inflate the value of gold
along with how much of it really is on call for same day delivery and
how much, in brute terms, is counterfeit. How much so called held stocks
would not pass even a paper assay?
That
said, we can now see perfectly behind that curtain where the wizards
are at work. They are performing a confidence trick by snatching up as
much spare gold they can lay hands on. But, if we can’t believe in the
illusion of precious metals, how then can be expected to repose our
trust and faith in worthless fiat currencies?
Richard Cottrell is a writer, journalist and former European MP (Conservative). His new book Gladio: NATO’s Dagger At The Heart Of Europe is now available from Progressive Press. You may order it using the link below (or by clicking here – Gladio, NATO’s Dagger at the Heart of Europe: The Pentagon-Nazi-Mafia Terror Axis):
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Edited by Madison Ruppert
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