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Name: Chad MacINNES
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Housing sales are up... so look out below!

The talking heads are all aflutter with the latest bout of economic news. For a couple of months now several prominent personalities have repeatedly proclaimed the “recession” to be over and that America is well on its way back to prosperity. How they could make such claims while looking at the same data the rest of us see defies both logic and common sense. The problem with the talking heads is that they have now committed themselves to their predictions of recovery while, in fact, we are very far away from seeing any such thing realistically materialize. They are focusing on individual bits of data that seem encouraging and positive, while ignoring warning signs and negative information. They are simply not looking at the bigger economic picture.

While they praise the perceived beneficial effects of the $787 billion stimulus package (less than 20% of which has been spent thus far) for bringing the economy back from the brink of total collapse, they conveniently ignore the fact that this so-called stimulus is only a massive “credit injection” that has been created literally out of thin air, is based on and backed by nothing, and can therefore ultimately produce nothing. It is entirely fictitious.  And, while certain trends may indicate an improvement in economic conditions in the near term, what is certain is that any long term prospects for a real healing of this economic hemorrhaging are equally fictitious for as long as the "recovery" is dependent upon credit created out of thin air, based on nothing, and with no value.

Indeed, essentially every step taken by Congress, the administration (current and previous), the traditional media, and, sadly, many respected economists, to identify, assess and combat this growing financial crisis has also been based in fiction. The very fact that these same people who created the conditions that encouraged and enabled the behaviors that resulted in this crisis is alarming enough. Their elation over the latest housing numbers merely demonstrates the latest stage of denial and their almost universal ignorance of logic and good economic sense.

While celebrating the latest housing sales numbers, up 9.4%, and proclaiming this as the latest indicator that the “recession” is all but over, the talking heads seem to have forgotten about the commercial real estate market that is about to implode and drag many more financial institutions with it, as well as the flash-in-the-pan that was “cash for clunkers.”  (continued...)
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The dollar devalution - a new Weimar?

The writing has been on the wall for some time now, and over the last several months there have been many none-too-subtle hints from China, France and a host of other nations about what they think of the dollar. The recent G-20 meeting in Pittsburgh was very much a consensus on abandoning the U.S. dollar as the world’s reserve currency and creating a new global reserve currency. Many scoffed at the viability of such an undertaking, declaring it to be unattainable, but anyone who has been paying attention to what our own Federal Reserve has been doing, who has grasped an even cursory understanding of the history and theory of money, and who has been observing what the other members of the G-20 have been quietly up to were not surprised by today’s announcement that the Arab gulf states, China, Russia, France, Japan and others are planning to divest themselves of their U.S. dollars and end all dollar transactions for oil.

This is a monumental and historic change in global monetary policy, and could soon prove devastating to the dollar. Indeed, it begs the question: will the dollar collapse? Unfortunately, the possibility is becoming increasingly likely despite the pictures of rainbows, sunshine and lollipops emanating from top policymakers, central bankers and analysts in and around Washington and New York. This is most unfortunate because very many people in this country stand to be completely blindsided by these unfolding events and just about the only source for information is foreign press. Too many Americans are right now under the illusion that the “recession” is all but over, that we are in the process of a “jobless recovery” and that our continuing to spend trillions of dollars that we don’t have is of no consequence because the Federal Reserve knows exactly when to begin reducing the money supply to stave off any harmful inflation. There are several serious problems with this entire situation that warrant attention.  (continued...)

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