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Exclusive Interview

Sunday, January 01, 2012

Catherine Austin Fitts on Wall Street's Corruption, the Austrian School and Who's 'Really' in Charge

With Anthony Wile
157

Catherine Austin Fitts

The Daily Bell is pleased to publish this exclusive interview with financial advisor Catherine Austin Fitts.

Introduction: Catherine is the president of Solari, Inc., publisher of The Solari Report, and managing member of Solari Investment Advisory Services, LLC and Sea Lane Advisory, LLC. Catherine served as managing director and member of the board of directors of the Wall Street investment bank Dillon, Read & Co. Inc., as Assistant Secretary of Housing and Federal Housing Commissioner at the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development in the first Bush Administration, and was the president of Hamilton Securities Group, Inc. She graduated from the University of Pennsylvania (BA), the Wharton School (MBA) and studied Mandarin Chinese at the Chinese University of Hong Kong.

Daily Bell: For those who don't know, give us a rundown of your current business and economic preoccupations.

Catherine Austin Fitts: I publish the Solari Report (solari.com), a private bridge call and blog focused on building personal and family wealth. I also provide investment advisory services through Solari Investment Advisory Services LLC (solariadvisors.com) and Sea Lane Advisory LLC (sealaneadvisory.com)

Daily Bell: Give us a sense of your background and childhood.

Catherine Austin Fitts: I grew up in Philadelphia in the United States. As a child, I witnessed the destruction of wealth by networks engaged in organized crime and financial fraud and the covert operations that supported them. It started a life-long fascination with understanding how money and the financial system work, including in places, and how healthy cultures could prevail.

My mother was an economist who retired from the Philadelphia Federal Reserve to have children. My father was a surgeon and trauma expert who loved caring for people. I watched them struggle with the growing corruption as it ultimately tore our family apart.

I traveled around the world during college, studying Mandarin in Hong Kong, and then graduated from the University of Pennsylvania and received an MBA at Wharton. After graduation, I went to work at Dillon, Read & Co. Inc., a small Wall Street investment bank that is now a part of UBS. I chose Dillon Read as the firm offered me a chance to work in many different areas. I kept moving from one area and type of work to another, trying to understand different parts of the economy and financial system.

Dillon had a tradition of public service. After I became a managing director and member of the board, we sold the firm and after our initial employment contracts ended, numerous members of the firm joined the Bush Administration. I did as well, becoming Assistant Secretary of Housing – Federal Housing Commissioner in 1989. After serving in the Bush Administration for 18 months, and deeply disturbed by the mortgage fraud, I left and started an investment bank, Hamilton Securities Group. My hope was to use software technology and the Internet to help decentralize the capital raising process in a manner that could, in combination with government reengineering, revive the US economy and improve pension fund returns as globalization was shifting significant employment and income abroad.

Decentralizing the economy in a manner that grows decentralized equity ownership was not the direction taken by Washington and Wall Street. Instead, the strong dollar policy was instituted and a debt bubble, led by a global housing debt bubble, financed enormous shifts of capital globally in a manner that aggressively centralized political and economic control. I have described this process as a "financial coup d'état." (See solari.com/blog/financial-coup-d'etat/).

To help facilitate the US housing bubble, the federal government targeted Hamilton. I spent eleven years engaged in litigation. This process forced me to research the US black budget, including related organized crime and financial fraud both domestically and globally.

I have described these events in detail in writings available online. (See the links at www.dunwalke.com/gideon/, including the link to my online book: Dillon, Read & Co. Inc. & the Aristocracy of Stock Profits).

During that time, I had a number of private families request my assistance in protecting their assets from the risks created by the changes underway. I found that I very much liked helping individuals and families directly. Consequently, after completing the litigation, I started Solari Investment Advisory Services.

I had a number of my clients in funds managed offshore. After Dodd Frank, the funds were returned to US investors and I started Sea Lane Advisory with my partner Chuck Gibson of Financial Perspectives in the San Francisco Bay area to provide an alternative.

Daily Bell: Are things getting better or worse from a corruption and freedom standpoint in the US?

Catherine Austin Fitts: Things are getting worse. On a positive note, there are some advantages to have the "beast" come out of the closet.

Daily Bell: Give us a summary of your perspective regarding Wall Street – and what happened to you in a little more detail.

Catherine Austin Fitts: I think Wall Street is the pit bull, not the master. The $64,000 question is, of course, who is really in charge and why are they behaving this way?

I have had the opportunity to operate at high levels in Washington and Wall Street and have never met a person who did not function as if they were a prisoner of the system. Often, that "system" did not permit them to function on a lawful basis. This implies highly centralized governance if this many people are functioning in an insecure, limited or unlawful way.

The people who manage our financial system are also operating with significant double binds. This is what I try to describe with my red button story:

"In the summer of 2000, I asked a group of 100 people at a conference of spiritually committed people who would push a red button if it would immediately stop all narcotics trafficking in their neighborhood, city, state and country. Out of 100 people, 99 said they would not push such red button. When surveyed, they said they did not want their mutual funds to go down if the U.S. financial system suddenly stopped attracting an estimated $500 billion - $1 trillion a year in global money laundering. They did not want their government checks jeopardized or their taxes raised because of resulting problems financing the federal government deficit."

So it is not appropriate to assume that the corruption is just at the top. Indeed, most citizens in the first world have been the economic beneficiary of what James Turk calls "the central banking-warfare model."

At the same time, we have all been limited by suppression or control of knowledge and technology that could significantly improve global living standards. The spiritual, environmental and cultural costs of this model are enormous.

What my experience helped me to understand is that we are governed by a group of people who have the power to kill, and otherwise break the law, with impunity. As the Secretary of HUD once said in my presence, "I don't have to obey the law, I report to a higher moral authority."

This power appears to come in part from the ability to use deeply invasive digital systems to gather intelligence, transact and monitor as well as from invisible weaponry, including satellites and weaponry controlled or delivered from space.

As Western countries move investment into the emerging markets, their satellites and military move to police this global investment. Investors do not invest where they cannot enforce. So in a sense, financial globalization is pressuring the United States to become a global military empire.

Daily Bell: Can Wall Street be cleaned up?

Catherine Austin Fitts: Of course it can. However, before it can, the question is: What is the investment and financial model that will replace the central banking-warfare model and how will it be implemented? Part of the economic warfare that is raging throughout the financial markets relates to the squabbles between the different countries and factions that want to come out on top. The greater the uncertainty about the model and the greater the change, the uglier the process will be.

Depending on the politics, market forces and new technology have the potential to significantly reduce Wall Street's market share in the global financial system.

Daily Bell: Is the SEC the regulator to do it?

Catherine Austin Fitts: Our society has integrated warfare with financial markets. So, for example, if we want to checkmate the Chinese, the oil price is driven up. Or when Treasury wanted to bubble the dollar, the gold price was suppressed. Yelling at the SEC or the CFTC to regulate more is not going to solve the problem. In a sense, to regulate in these markets you need the SEC to team up not only with the CFTC but also with DOD and ONI. And they need to coordinate with their counterparts around the world. And you need greater literacy in the investing public about how financial systems really work.

Our political class believes that dumbing people down and using controlled media, entrainment technology and subliminal programming to manipulate is the way forward. I am from the Winston Churchill school, "Tell the people." The greatest waste in our society is the broad-based intelligence that is not being unleashed because our markets are not truly free markets.

Clearly, the political class has been instructed to make sure they do not work.

Daily Bell: Does financial regulation work? Will more work better?

Catherine Austin Fitts: The Tao Te Ching says:

The more restrictions and prohibitions there are, the poorer the people become
The sharper the people's weapons are, the more national confusion increases?
The more skill artisans require, the more bizarre their products are?
The more precisely laws are articulated, the more thieves and outlaws increase

More laws or regulation will not address the underlying failure of enforcement and the need for a new investment model.

Daily Bell: Would markets be better off if they were MORE free and private watchdogs were allowed to take over from public ones?

Catherine Austin Fitts: Not necessarily. Again, we need to address the question, "Who is the breakaway civilization, what are their weaponry and surveillance systems and what systems will work successfully to shift their behavior in a positive manner?" This, of course, leads to additional questions, such as, "What do they know that we do not know and how would we behave if we had that knowledge?"

Setting private watchdogs to regulate these guys is a bit like landing on Normandy Beach with a water pistol.

This enforcement question is one of the reasons I focus on the power of transparency combined with individual intention and action to bring positive change.

A few regulators are an easy target. Millions of private citizens and investors shunning dirty players in the markets are not. Globally, they become a mighty force. However, that means that as a cultural matter the human race must become deeply committed to respecting everyone's individual rights, not just one's own.

Daily Bell: Are central banks responsible for much of the current chaos?

Catherine Austin Fitts: This takes us back to the central question – who is in charge and why are they behaving the way they are behaving? I don't think we know the answer to those questions.

Daily Bell: Would you like to see central banks shut down? Or do you think banks like the Fed ought to be nationalized, as Ms. Ellen Brown wants?

Catherine Austin Fitts: I agree that a Federal Reserve System under the ownership and control of the US government would better serve us in a system in which the information and clearance systems are owned, controlled and operated by government employees NOT by private defense contractors and where the rules regarding access to information are strictly observed and enforced.

Of course, that means we would have to return the Treasury and US agency information systems back to government employee management.

If you map out the information systems and databases at the US government, including at the Department of Justice, the SEC and the US Treasury, you will understand why I say that there has been a financial coup d'état. There has also been a financial data coup d'état.

During the hearings on Enron, I pointed out that the Department of Justice had not asserted control of Enron's documents. However, as the chairman's of Enron's finance committee was a key investor and board member in a company that was running information systems for the Department of Justice and the SEC, it would appear that Enron insiders had asserted control of the government's documents.

Can you imagine investigating someone who is a controlling investor in a company running the information systems for your enforcement division? How is that supposed to work?

Financial sovereignty requires information sovereignty.

Daily Bell: Let's switch gears. If the United States is an empire, will this century see another power rise to challenge it? China perhaps?

Catherine Austin Fitts: The greatest threat to US hegemony in Asia is Japan. Or at least it was Japan until Fukushima happened.

I don't underestimate the threat that Germany poses, particularly if we get a real split of the Anglo-American alliance from the continent as a result of the re-arrangements around the euro and Germany grows closer to Russia. Remember, one of the reasons that the European Union happened was that the rest of Europe, with bitter memories of WWI and WWII, wanted to integrate Germany into the whole of Europe.

China is formidable, but they are checkmated by the need to feed and employ such a large population.

Right now, the United States's lead in satellites, weaponry and control of the sea lanes makes it dominant. The question is how long that can continue if America itself devolves into a barbaric country. Force and technology alone do not result in greatness and the invasiveness of the model has become not just financially oppressive but deeply perverted.

As China is burdened with a large population, the United States has an aging population that is not prepared for the changes underway. How the US is going to manage their expectations and fund their retirement is an unanswered question.

Daily Bell: The invention of the Gutenberg Press was, in our opinion, the proximate cause, eventually, of the Thirty Years peasant war that raged across Europe – a war generated by an elite that had the most to lose from the Gutenberg Press's ability to bring literacy to the masses. Are we seeing a similar paradigm today?

Catherine Austin Fitts: Yes. Digital technology permits higher learning speeds generally. However, it also makes highly centralized management and manipulation possible, aka "the matrix."

Daily Bell: Is war necessary for those in charge of the US Empire to maintain control?

Catherine Austin Fitts: Yes. The US Empire is financially dependent on the violation of individual rights globally and access to cheap natural resources. This requires various forms of covert and economic warfare as well as overt military wars.

Daily Bell: Once the Empire topples, or as it does, will another take its place?

Catherine Austin Fitts: I do not assume that the Empire will topple. It has the ability to NOT topple. Whether it does or not is a political and military question – not an economic or financial question. The Empire's challenge is how to maintain liquidity without trust and how to maintain productivity without markets. It is trying to do too much with force and covert methods.

If it does topple, the competition to become the regional hegemons will accelerate and organized crime will move into the power vacuum.

As ugly as the Empire can be, there are uglier forces at work. Ask yourself: Does the Russian mafia have nuclear weapons? I assume so.

Daily Bell: What would be the result of more global centralization?

Catherine Austin Fitts: It would be more of the same – including increases in poverty, slavery and depopulation. Aaron Russo knew what he was talking about when he said warned us that these folks want spy chips in everyone and everything.

Daily Bell: Is a gold standard, or a gold and silver standard, the normal outcome of a peaceful, market-based society?

Catherine Austin Fitts: Not necessarily. Currency systems are part of governance systems. We should look at the currency question integrated into the question of who is going to govern and manage and in what process with what kinds of disclosure.

For example, there are many attractive features of a gold and silver standard. However, the ownership of precious metals is limited to a small group of the global population. If we suddenly adopt gold and silver as our currency standard, it will benefit a small group of people in a manner that could make things worse.

Nevertheless, I would far prefer that to a digital system working through the Internet and hand-held devices that allow all financial data to be centrally accessed and controlled.

Bottom line: Don't fall into the trap of proposing currency systems on a stand-alone basis. You want to know who is going to run things and with what processes and disclosure. Then you get into the aspects of the different financial tools that help us do that.

When I look at a company, the first thing I look at is the quality, experience and networks of the people who govern, manage and own it. It is the same with the global financial system. Without high quality people who are free to govern in the best interests of all concerned or as stated by law, charter and contract, there are no solutions. Put excellent people in charge throughout society and I assure you they can run things remarkably well, even if forced to struggle with lousy currency systems.

Along with better currency systems, we also need to shift out of dependency on debt and into an equity based financial system. Equity tends to build alignments and cooperation. Debt facilitates warfare with "buy now, pay later" economics that makes sure the financiers can win no matter the outcome.

Daily Bell: Does the Internet have a role in a new monetary system?

Catherine Austin Fitts: Yes. However, the Internet is the ultimate surveillance "op." Which means we have to have monetary systems that offer us robust transactions and value storage options in the material world that offer complete privacy without debasement. That means we need systems that function offline between private parties.

Daily Bell: Is the Austrian School making substantial inroads?

Catherine Austin Fitts: Yes, thank heavens. Let's hope they make more. However, as the centralizers want to use social media and online systems to help centralize transactions and move to digital control of currencies, anticipate lots of "woo-woo" proposals about "new money systems."

I was just at a wonderful conference in Switzerland and heard some of the most terrifying proposals for "a world without money." Having the Austrians by my side did me a world of good. I kept trying to explain to the most wonderful people that after you have turned over trillions of dollars of bailout money to one group who has now centralized tremendous ownership and power, to voluntarily swear off money means to decrease your power in a way that increases theirs. Is that a good idea?

We need to look at all these ideas through the prism of economic warfare. An eco-village can be a wonderful idea if the people who participate choose to create it and grow it well. However, that idea in the hands of the wrong people can be a design for labor camps.

So be careful with monetary ideas. The best monetary reforms are ones you will do in your life, today, now. Change starts with me and what works for me right now in my day-to-day transactions. For example, check out the calculator we made with Franklin Sanders of the Moneychanger to support people who want to use silver and gold to conduct transactions: http://silverandgoldaremoney.com. Otherwise interesting ideas can turn into weapons in the hands of those who do not have our best interests at heart.

Again, one man's eco-village is another man's labor camp. One man's gold standard is another man's plan to reduce a population to a feudal state to his advantage.

Daily Bell: What about the EU and the euro? Will either or both survive?

Catherine Austin Fitts: Force can make any system go, if you apply enough force and are willing to tolerate sufficient wealth destruction and depopulation. Witness the dollar. Numerous benefits come to the average American as a result of the dollar being the reserve currency. At the same time, the force used to make the system go and the debasement of both the currency and the culture that results is destroying America.

The same is happening in Europe. My expectation is that the euro will survive for some time with fewer countries subject to the Lisbon Treaty.

The euro as a currency system makes no sense. Europe has different people, with different languages, in different economies. There is no "we" here.

Different currencies would allow markets to work. So Europe would be wealthier with different currencies. But then the people centralizing the economy would not be able to pick up equity cheap in the PIGS with disaster capitalism tactics. Do they have the force to keep the system going? Yes, at least until enough people can see the game for what it is and are prepared to act in the face of force.

Daily Bell: Do you have an opinion on China? We believe it's headed for a crash landing.

Catherine Austin Fitts: China is struggling in the shift from exporter to the West to a country with more significant internal consumption. Their political challenges are formidable – including keeping one billion people employed and managing a new generation that is dominated by too many single male children.

However, China has an extremely productive culture and people. They think strategically, are very hard-working and love to learn and invest. The Roman Empire and the British Empire went broke trading with the Chinese, until the Brits turned to opium.

I think a growing China is here to stay. Yes, they may slow down as, like the rest of us, they choke on misallocations of capital that occur in bubbles. I don't think they will crash unless the currency wars lead to a global meltdown and war. Their long-term outlook is quite positive. Remember that our success is very much tied to their success.

Oversimplified, if the young people of this world are not successful what would happen to all of us? Elders need youngsters. In part, that is what the shift of capital to the emerging markets is all about.

Daily Bell: What are some of the most important issues pertaining to free markets, in your opinion?

Catherine Austin Fitts: The most important issue is transparency. The second is integrity of contracts and agreements.

Daily Bell: What are the fundamental obstacles to recovery?

Catherine Austin Fitts: We are experiencing an ongoing financial coup d'état that is centralizing power. Symptoms include an absence of transparency, deteriorating integrity of contracts and agreements, environmental deterioration, a "breakaway civilization" that appears "out of control." I would add to this the use of financial markets for warfare as opposed to facilitating the allocation of capital and trade.

The ultimate codification of things like transparency and integrity of transactions is not the law; it is the culture. A variety of forces are systematically breaking down our physical health and our culture. That cultural corruption is the greatest obstacle.

Daily Bell: What are the fundamental issues pertaining to a healthy recovery?

Catherine Austin Fitts: We have to get to the bottom of who has been centralizing and why, what is the technology they have and where it is they are planning to go with this.

Daily Bell: Is there a power elite that is trying to create one-world government? If so, is it succeeding?

Catherine Austin Fitts: Yes, there is a concerted effort to create a one-world government and evolve to a one-world currency. It has been succeeding. As the "financial coup d'état" becomes more obvious, centralization is entering a critical stage as more and more people globally react negatively to the effort and related tactics.

Indeed, our current currency wars reflect a natural pulling away from centralization that is healthy.

Daily Bell: What endeavors are you involved in that you want to point out to our audience? What's most important to you that you would like our audience to be aware of and support?

Catherine Austin Fitts: My focus is on the preservation and growth of family wealth. If you study the economy bottom up, it is built by people. Successful economies are built by family enterprises that ultimately contribute significant amounts of financial and civic capital and provide environmental stewardship, not to mention raising our future leaders.

Family wealth is threatened by centralized control. Specific issues that I tend to focus on include the centralization of the seed and food supply in combination with the patenting of life. Others include environmental pollution, financial fraud and insufficient transparency to support individual investors and erosion of property rights and individual liberties.

Daily Bell: What are the most important – seminal – works of yours that you would encourage everyone to read? Where can they be found?

Catherine Austin Fitts: I have spent quite a lot of time thinking about how we could shift the management of institutional capital to a new model. You can read more about the Solari Investment Model here: http://solari.com/blog/the-solari-investment-model/ .

Daily Bell: Finally, give us your best estimate of where is gold headed, pricewise, over the near- and long-term.

Catherine Austin Fitts: Gold is still in a long-term bull market. I anticipate the high for 2012 being somewhere between $2000-2200. Where the price ends up long-term is very much a function of monetary policy in the long-run. Gold is not increasing in value so much as fiat currencies are debasing.

I believe that inflation will continue to be the policy choice to manage global debt positions.

One of my greatest concerns is the push for a Constitutional Convention in the United States. If such a process were hijacked in a manner that fundamentally altered the Constitution, it would create the conditions to make it much easier to manage through deflation. That could have a significant impact on the relationship globally between financial paper and tangibles, including precious metals.

The amount of new technology that could be integrated over the next decade is quite significant. In a more positive scenario, a combination of the global rebalancing and new technology could cause the equity markets to shake off the debt burden and leave precious metals in the dust.

That still leaves the question of how people are going to access the necessities of life if technology provides what labor used to AND the centralizers continue to handicap or disallow small business and entrepreneurship and force hundreds of millions of farmers off their land and into the cities.

If hedge funds can borrow at 1% or less in a carry trade but I have to pay 30% to finance the local farm or meat market, the transition to devalue labor can offset the monetary inflation, but it can also make for a very ugly world.

Daily Bell: On behalf of all of our readers we thank you for sharing your views with us, and hope to hear from you again soon.  And we encourage all readers to visit Solari.com and consider learning more about your work. Thank you.

Catherine Austin Fitts: Thank you! I enjoy reading the Daily Bell and am honored to have this opportunity. Thank you for all you and your readers do in this world.

Daily Bell: Thank you.

Thanks to Catherine Austin Fitts for this generous interview. There is much in it that merits study, and we hope viewers take a close look at it.

For us, the most important statement she makes is when she says: "I think Wall Street is the pit bull, not the master. The $64,000 question is, of course, who is really in charge and why are they behaving this way?"

This simple statement puts Wall Street into context. And it is one that people ought to reflect on, in our view, as the hysteria over Wall Street corruption mounts. The same forces that organized Occupy Wall Street are still at it, agitating for a new "Pecora Hearing" of a sort. We've written about this before: The Real Reason Bloomburg Sued to Open Up Fed Records?

We figure the new Pecora Hearings shall begin sometime after Barack Obama is reelected (if he is). The apparently false-flag OWS protestors shall be turned loose once more to cry out for the heads of the one percent. It is reminiscent of a second French Revolution writ small.

Cutting off the heads of the Wall Street captaincy shall not reduce the system's abuses. Regulation shall only concetrate power and make them worse. It's been tried before. 

Honestly, the way to deal with Wall Street and its appendages is to withdraw patronage from them. Education is necessary as well because the reality is that Wall Street in its modern form would not exist without the larger money system that is now in place.

Call the larger system of monopoly-privileged central banks Money Power. And the families that control these banks the "power elite." When Ms. Fitts speaks of the "$64,000 question" she is making a point about the way the world REALLY works.

She has acted on this knowledge for her own clients. And in this interview we can surely see why she has amassed a sizeable business and continues to create success for her readers and subscribers.




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  Posted by Bischoff on 01/04/12 01:12 AM

The type of central bank that is the FED, the ECB, the BOJ and the BOC, to name the consequential once, are in fact independent government agencies which create irredeemable currency based on government debt. This debt is then sold, and the proceeds are distributed through a banking system to fund government projects in local economies and to create, through a multiplier effect, additional local jobs. However, this currency is always just debt which is passed around or circulated.

"Tying" such currency to gold makes no sense. Would anybody be willing to give you gold for giving him debt? (People will only give up gold in return for monetized debt, if they are certain that they will be able to change irredeeable currency back into gold) If there is doubt, sooner or later, gold will go into backwardation.

Redeemable currency is not created against debt. Redeemable currency, which existed in the U.S. from 1750 until 1933, was created against "Bills of Exchange" and gold only. Banks had to have a charter to create a redeemable currency. The charter set out certain rules with regard to "excess currency", which bankers often violated. The Federal Reserve Act of 1913 tried to corral rogue banking practices by individual banks. It franchised the creation of a national currency to twelve regional reserve bank associations which could create redeemable currency for their member banks, under supervision from the Congress, and only in relation to the value of "Real Bills" and gold each member bank held. (See Federal Reserve Act of 1913, paragraphs (a) and (c) of Section 14)

Redeemable currency has positive value. It can be exchanged for physical gold at a fixed rate. This gives redeemable currency the value standard of gold. (To properly understand all, this you have to understand Adam Smith's Real Bills Doctrine) The RBD hasn't been taught by the education establishment for at least 75 years. Today, hardly anyone has the foggiest idea about "Real Bills", at least of all, the "bankers". That is a problem.

Real Bills arise out of the consumer item producing, private business sector. They are ninety day clearing instruments which banks acquire at discount, and against which they create currency. As business expands, more Real Bills are drawn and which are acquired by banks to create currency. The currency volume expands and contracts with the amount of business in the private sector. As Real Bills mature, they have to be replaced with new ones, or the outstanding volume of currency has to be reduced accordingly.

With the RBD, there cannot be inflation. The unmatured Real Bills held by the banks always have value. Real Bills can be rediscounted for physical gold. Because of this fact, the currency created against Real Bill always has a positive value.

The point is, that redeemable currency embodies the value standard of gold. (Gold as the standard of value has to do with the amount of "work" required to mine and refine specfic amounts of gold.) An irredeemable, debt monetized currency does not. "Tying" it to gold by merely declaring it has no meaning, as I said.

It is not enough to apply an inflation factor to a debt monetized currency when using it for financial accounting. It is much more complicated than that. (Read Ludwig von Mises writings on valuation of capital.)

Simply said, if you understand the difference between a "Real Bill" and a Mortgage, you can understand the difference between an RBD created redeemable currency and a debt monetized, irredeemable currency.

  Posted by memehunter on 01/04/12 12:55 AM

Excellent point. I tried to get the DB to answer this (on the Anthony Migchels thread). Here is part of their answer (sorry for the shouting):

"What is it about the free market, and free-market advocacy, you don't understand? WE ARE NOT FOR A STATE METALS STANDARD.

Is that clear enough? We believe in an open market of competing currencies and are sympathetic to a PRIVATELY ORIGINATED bimetallic standard (gold and silver). There is NOTHING remotely controversial about this remedy. Bimetallic standards have been used formally or informally for thousands, maybe tens of thousands, of years. They are a free market solution to monetary manipulation by the elites."

As I wrote later, "I am still not sure who or what would make sure that the "backing" of the paper/digital notes is honest and stable in the free market situation that the DB favors". I agree with you, making sure that the currency issuers (whether private or public, in a free-market situation or not) will not "overprint" under a gold and/or silver standard seems problematic to me.

  Posted by Agent Weebley on 01/04/12 12:13 AM

Daily Bell: Are central banks responsible for much of the current chaos?

Catherine Austin Fitts: This takes us back to the central question - who is in charge and why are they behaving the way they are behaving? I don't think we know the answer to those questions.

Agent Weebley: Geez Catherine, of course you know, You said it earlier. Every single one of us has our middle finger hovering over that red button. We just cannot believe we can press it, then hold that same finger high, high in the air.

Then we press 16 little buttons to make it all better.

I'm taking out my pocket watch . . . now

Click to view link

  Posted by Agent Weebley on 01/04/12 12:13 AM

Daily Bell: Are central banks responsible for much of the current chaos?

Catherine Austin Fitts: This takes us back to the central question - who is in charge and why are they behaving the way they are behaving? I don't think we know the answer to those questions.

Agent Weebley: Geez Catherine, of course you know, You said it earlier. Every single one of us has our middle finger hovering over that red button. We just cannot believe we can press it, then hold that same finger high, high in the air.

Then we press 16 little buttons to make it all better.

I'm taking out my pocket watch . . . now

Click to view link

  Posted by WD on 01/03/12 11:26 PM

@ Bischoff on 01/03/12 08:58

But don't fiat currencies float against each other on the basis of the fluctuating amount of each currency? Do not fiat currencies 'float' against gold based on how much of a particular currency is out there compared to the supply of gold?

I am suggesting that the danger of fiat currency comes not from the lack of an artificial tie to a given amount of gold, but from the ability to create more of it without restraint. I am also suggesting that fiat currency does not matter if accounting and business long term planning are done if terms of gold (or some other convenient real commodity) rather than units of fiat currency. Legal tender laws not withstanding, I don't believe there are any laws against this. The advantage being that no person or business is obligated to play the government's and bankster's rigged game. They made contracts based on gold illegal but did they did make contracts based on the fluctuating fiat price of gold illegal?

It seems to me doing business in fiat currency but pegged to the actual value of gold (priced in fiat currency) would circumvent the disadvantages of fiat currency altogether. Prices and contract values would fluctuate with the amount of fiat currency compared to the fiat price of gold but, in the computer age, even the dullest accountant should be able to keep up. Eventually there would be no payoff in debauching the currency except for taxes required to be paid in fiat currency, in which case the payoff for debauching the currency would be negative.

  Posted by Agent Weebley on 01/03/12 11:20 PM

Note to self:

Use the link at the top.

Click to view link

  Posted by Agent Weebley on 01/03/12 11:17 PM

Now that I have your attention . . .

Your statement:

"Longterm business planning and accounting is impossible with a irredeemable currency"

. . . is not true.

Most normal people, like me, have been planning just fine, working in the pre 2008 5% inflation into their long term planning . . . .as if it is normal, when in fact it is not normal . . . it is theft, since the newly printed money is not given to the people like it should be. It is given to friends in low places.

For you to use superlatives like "impossible" is just plain wrong as it invites criticism.

I would rather talk about Catherine Austin Fitts, her transparency and her red buttons.

Why don't people want to press the red button, Ingo? Don't tell me it's because they would rather borrow your scrip at interest . . . pulease!

Is it because cash, homes, stocks and bonds are the only game in town, and they fear the loss of what they got for much/little/no effort?

And don't get me going about transparency! OK, you just did. I applied for the Digital Director job in the UK as a joke. My quite transparent letter got read by Dave and Nick, as I was on a short list. I even wrote a letter to the Queen's presonal secretary on the MI6 website, as she has no email address.

They all must think I am insane. I love it!

Anyway, gotta fly . . .

http://youtu.be/NVQCpI4GbKQ

  Posted by Danny B on 01/03/12 10:35 PM

Keep in mind that The Straights of Hormuz could be closed in 5 minutes. Same for the Vale of Tears. Lloyds of London would close them. 20,000 missiles [SAMs] went missing from Libya. They're heat-seeking and could easily be used for ships.
Click to view link
Should Iran fear for their survival, they would probably use the SAMs for everything they could find to shoot at. The U.S. made a very good [bad] example out of Libya. Iran also has an Exocet factory and can fire 11,000 missiles a minute.
If they believe that they are going to get bombed back to the Stone Age, they will take the West down with them. Their Russian missiles will easily take out our entire navy,,, as reported by the pentagon.
Remember how long the Suez canal was closed?

  Posted by Agent Weebley on 01/03/12 10:31 PM

Finally!

Hi Ingo. How was your day?

  Posted by Bischoff on 01/03/12 10:27 PM

Weebley,

I just have a hard time tolerating fools like you. So give me a break.

  Posted by Agent Weebley on 01/03/12 10:01 PM

"You can do business accounting and financial planning with a redeemable currency. Longterm business planning and accounting is impossible with a irredeemable currency."

OMFNG. Thiss boofune would sai wye doo you seem to lye* or at least obfuskate around the truth so mush Ingot? That cind of tork confusses peeple. If money/currency/assets wernt inflatted so mush, we could plane just fin . . . for the end of the USD as the reservist - no crash landing.

Click to view link

Oh, and how come you sound so shrill these days . . . almost like you are having some sort of panic attack, with all those ad hominem remarks.

Note to readers: My good buddy Ingo does not seem to MSDOS around with me right now, so there will be no \ over what I say to him . . . especially the metaphors . . . he just doesn't get them! That is why our website is the perfect base for an APT*.

*NaOH

Oh, and Ingo. We are going to Stockton CA tonight, near San Andreas. I got a strange call from there today. That's near you, right?

Relax, Ingo.

Click to view link

  Posted by Bischoff on 01/03/12 08:58 PM

@ WD

The difference lies in the fact that irredeemable currencies float against each other. Their value constantly changes. Its like ships in a taifoon trying to determine their position by fixing it against the position of the other bubbing ships.

A redeemable currency recognizes gold to be a firm standard. In other words, to go back to the example of the ships in a taifoon, gold is the lighthouse on the shore against which the bubbing ships can fix their position.

Gold priced in an irredeemable currency is merely the amount of currency required to abtain a fixed amount of gold. That's a "floating gold standard", which is an oxymoron.

A redeemable currency can be exchanged for a fixed amount of gold. That is the gold standard.

You can do business accounting and financial planning with a redeemable currency. Longterm business planning and accounting is impossible with a irredeemable currency.

  Posted by Bischoff on 01/03/12 08:42 PM

@ the pig

Yes, it is "marginal cost production" which allows the ability to fix the "world oil prices". The Saudis head up OPEC which coordinates the production quotas for its members.

There cannot be a "free market" in oil under present circumstances. Therefore, the world oil price is a "fix".

The Saudis in Riyhad, who are the marginal cost producers of crude, and the American Oil majors in Houston, who are the marginal cost producers of refined petroleum products agree on the fix. They make it work through commodity market transactions.

The "price fix" effects oil producers across the world. Nobody can underbid the Saudis. OPEC makes sure that the attempt is not even made.

  Posted by WD on 01/03/12 08:22 PM

I noticed CAF does not, as DB does, think the gold and/or silver standard is without vulnerability to manipulation by money power. This is particularly true when the City of London banksters can generate unlimited money for the purpose of manipulating markets like they do with the bonds of PIIGS. Under a gold standard they did and will again if a gold standard emerges. Why does DB insist this is not a problem?

  Posted by WD on 01/03/12 08:08 PM

I have a question. Everybody talks about irredeemable currency meaning the issuing government/central bank will not redeem it in gold or silver. As long as you can buy gold and silver on the market, what difference does it make? Isn't it a question of how much currency is chasing how much gold or silver in either case?

  Posted by Bischoff on 01/03/12 08:02 PM

Tell me about the FBI plot... ??? You seem to be an authority on U.S. intentions toward Iran. You seem to be a regular treasure trove. Will you let me in on some of these things you know... ???

Frankly, I think you are just blowing smoke.

  Posted by Bischoff on 01/03/12 07:57 PM

"I'm quite positive that there are many countries that are preparing themselves for a world in which the USD is no longer the reserve currency."

Preparing for another reserve currency, and wanting to replace the USD now, are two quite different things. If you read what I wrote, you would see that I made a point to say "at this time".

I propose that every currency be a functional reserve currency. How is that possible... ??? As long as a currency is redeemable into a fixed amount of gold, it is a reserve currency.

What does it mean for the ECB to mark its gold reserves to market... ???
It means that in its quarterly financial assessments the ECB recognizes the inflationary aspects of the EURO. This has implication for businesses in the EURO zone which relates to financial statements and to taxes. It has nothing to do with the "gold standard".

You mentioned "bilateral" trade. "Bilateral trade" is essentially "barter trade". That is supposed to be an improvement over a redeemable reserve currency system... ??? I am sure you can't mean that.

  Posted by flying_pig on 01/03/12 07:34 PM

Address the criticism, Mr. Ingo. Are oil prices determined by marginal utility theory applied to production? Yes or No, Mr. Ingo?

  Posted by Bischoff on 01/03/12 07:30 PM

Wikipedea declares the Straits of Hormuz to be Iranian waters... ??? What nut case wrote this... ???

You seem to know all about the U.S. intentions toward Iran. Why don't you tell me tell me about those intentions... ???

Do you really know them, or are you just blowing smoke... ???

  Posted by Bischoff on 01/03/12 07:15 PM

"Yeah, Mr Ingo knows-it-all doesn't mention the role of the OPEC cartel in determining the price of oil, and tells other people to study marginal utility theory."

No, Mr. Ingo doesn't know it all, but Mr. Ingo has strong opinions and he can back them up.

I have mentioned many time over how the Saudis is lead OPEC to make the their setting of the "world oil price" stick. If you din't read it, it's not my fault. If you know anything about the oil business or how the world price of oil is set, you should have been able to understand my points clearly without having to make your comment.

Since according to you, I don't understand oil prices, could you enlighten me... ??? I am always anxious to learn.

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