Crisis or Coup?

As some of the disclosures required by the financial reform bill are made, everyday Americans are starting to figure out what many zealous economy and market watchers have known since 2008: The Fed’s rescue programs weren’t just aimed at domestic banks with Manhattan headquarters. The aid stretched far into the reaches of everyday America, with the recipients of approximately $885 billion in loans still not disclosed.

For those who had not already arrived at this conclusion, it should now be crystal clear: the collapse of 2008 was a mini financial coup d’ etat. The very institutions and individuals charged with the oversight of our financial system were the same people who were helping to blow up asset bubbles and perpetuating cheap, easy credit. I think that it is very important to understand that these folks have been systematically doing the exact same thing to our willing government in the form of debt monetization. In the 1990′s and forward, they sucked in a willing consumer with massive expansion of available credit and sleazy marketing campaigns aimed at convincing people that it was really ok to owe $15,000 on a credit card at 19.9% interest.

The American people and their government both readily embraced the concept of deficit spending and debt accumulation as a viable path to prosperity. The Federal Reserve and its member (owner) banks have been the primary facilitators in this great transition from prosperity to poverty. Its actions in 2008 and 2009 were nothing more than an attempt to snare even more control of the financial system and the economy, while kicking the can down the road just a little further. Banks have gone from their traditional role as financial intermediaries to micromanagers of the economy. And this has all taken place in a little over a generation.

The startling part of what has transpired is that more and more of our economic destiny than ever now falls under the direct control of a panel of unelected and virtually unaccountable banking aristocrats. These bankers made decisions in 2008 not only to shower electronic dollars created from nothing on Wall Street banks, but on international banks, and companies like Harley Davidson, Caterpillar, GE, and Verizon. GE is an easy one since it has a huge exposure to default risk through its banking operations. But what of the rest? These supposedly healthy companies couldn’t make it through a few months of tight credit without running to the Fed for assistance?

Here’s a breakdown of the assistance: The Fed purchased commercial paper (CP) from Harley Davidson 33 times in 2008 and early 2009 for a grand total of $2.3 Billion. It purchased commercial paper from Verizon twice for a total of $1.5 Billion. GE was the big winner at the time, selling to the Fed 12 times for a grand total of $16 Billion. However, the biggest winner of all is Uncle Sam who is has already sold and will continue to sell to the Fed for at least another $600 Billion.

The mere existence of this activity should in and of itself reveal the very phony nature of a fiat paper money system. However, in all the mainstream news articles (many of which are owned by GE incidentally), nobody has bothered to ask where the Fed got the $3.3 Trillion it used to conduct the bailouts.

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