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Fed Looks to Hyperinflate

Monday, June 28, 2010 – by Staff Report

Ben Bernanke

RBS tells clients to prepare for "monster" money printing by the Federal Reserve ... As recovery starts to stall in the US and Europe with echoes of mid-1931, bond experts are once again dusting off a speech by Ben Bernanke (Left) given eight years ago as a freshman governor at the Federal Reserve. Entitled "Deflation: Making Sure It Doesn't Happen Here", it is a warfare manual for defeating economic slumps by use of extreme monetary stimulus once interest rates have dropped to zero, and implicitly once governments have spent themselves to near bankruptcy. The speech is best known for its irreverent one-liner: "The US government has a technology, called a printing press, that allows it to produce as many US dollars as it wishes at essentially no cost." Bernanke began putting the script into action after the credit system seized up in 2008, purchasing $1.75 trillion of Treasuries, mortgage securities, and agency bonds to shore up the US credit system. He stopped far short of the $5 trillion balance sheet quietly pencilled in by the Fed Board as the upper limit for quantitative easing (QE). Investors basking in Wall Street's V-shaped rally had assumed that this bizarre episode was over. So did the Fed, which has been shutting liquidity spigots one by one. But the latest batch of data is disturbing. – UK Telegraph

Dominant Social Theme: We'll dump as much money into the market as necessary – until it surrenders and does our bidding.

Free-Market Analysis: This potential move gives the deflation versus inflation debate a new perspective. We have written in the past that we had questions about the Great Depression based on conflicting opinions of Murray Rothbard, Milton Friedman et. al. Living through the "Great Recession" has begun to clear them up. It is a little like being a lab rat; it is painful, but the experience gives you an insider's look at the scientific method. Or in this case a fiat-money economy.

In previous articles we have examined the inflation versus deflation debate at some length. Now it could be that you, dear reader, are tired of reading about arcane monetary policy matters, but in fact, this is just what the power elite wishes will happen. The monetary economy has been made so complex through the ruse of central banking and a ridiculous vocabulary that unless one confronts the situation with the requisite ruthless cynicism, one is apt to be overwhelmed.

This is a dominant social theme of course, one that goes something like this: "We are the great collective OZ. You may petition us, though surely you will not comprehend our toolkit, understand our terminology or appreciate our strategies. We will explain the progress being made in due course – and you better believe it!" Admittedly this is a cynical reading of the promotion underway but nonetheless we think it is accurate.

Yes, complexity is important in that it obscures failure. There have been numerous grinding recessions since the central banking era began in the early 1900s. Now in the early 2000s, we look back on what has occurred and we ask ourselves, what has improved? The United States is nearly bankrupt and so are the European economies. Wherever mercantilist central banking has been tried, ruination has followed. Every cycle has produced less job growth and further centralized what industry remains, truly creating a managerial state.

Those in charge of the system have invented an entire nomenclature to impress the general public with the complexity of their strategies. Let us then examine the massive, additional "quantitative easing" that Bernanke is contemplating. (Ed Note: you can skip this part if you want and direct your attention to our considerably more succinct version below) ...

Quantitative Easing: Central banks normally set the price of money using official interest rates to regulate the economy. These interest rates radiate out to the rest of the economy. They affect the cost of loans paid by companies, the cost of mortgages for households and the return on saving money. Higher interest rates make borrowing less attractive because taking out a loan becomes more expensive. They also make saving more attractive, demand and spending reduces. Lower interest rates have the reverse effect. But interest rates cannot be cut below zero and when official rates get close to zero the effect they have on regulating the economy becomes muted. Banks still need to make a profit and in troubled times the gap between the official interest rate and the rates faced by companies and households can rise, because lenders want a greater return for the additional risk of granting a loan when times are tough.

When interest rates are close to zero there is another way of affecting the price of money: Quantitative Easing (QE). The aim is still to bring down interest rates faced by companies and households and the most important step in QE is that the central bank creates new money for use in an economy. Only a central bank can do this because its money is accepted as payment by everybody. Sometimes dubbed incorrectly "printing money" a central bank simply creates new money at the stroke of a computer key, in effect increasing the credit in its own bank account.

It can then use this new money to buy whatever assets it likes: government bonds, equities, houses, corporate bonds or other assets from banks. With the central bank weighing in, the price of the assets it buys should rise and the yield, or interest rate, on that asset will fall. Companies for example with a willing central bank seeking to buy its bond, will be able to pay a lower interest rate when new bonds are issued or existing bonds come to the end of their life and need to be replaced.

With cheaper borrowing the hope is that the central bank will again encourage greater spending, putting additional demand into the economy and pulling it out of recession. As the money ends up in bank deposits, banks should also find their funding position improved and make them more willing to lend. A side effect will be that this new money is expected to raise consumer prices giving people another incentive to buy now rather than later. – Financial Times

See how many words it takes? Our definition is a little simpler. It would run something like this: "Quantitative easing is when central banks create new electronic money out of thin air and spend it buying up mostly financial assets in the hopes that such spending will kick-start consumer purchases and end the recession." We would change the name of the procedure, too. We would call it "Making Money From Nothing and Buying Things With It." There is probably a reason why central banks don't go along with this kind of nomenclature, as it more fully reveals the ludicrousness of what's going on and does so with a minimal amount of syllables.

Of course the question really comes down to what central banks are doing with the additional money that they are creating from nothing. (It should also be noted that central banks are ALWAYS creating money out of thin air and the difference is simply that when banks are involved with "quantitative easing," they are injecting money directly into the economy, not running it through commercial banks or designated bond dealers.) In this case, central banks are going out into the market place and buying whatever they want to, stocks, bonds, IPOs, mortgages, anything that the bankers believe will inject money into the "real" economy to get the money circulating again.

This brings us back to the articles we have written previously. We pointed out only a few days ago as a matter of fact that the reason previous stimuli had worked so poorly was because the Federal Reserve was determined to go through the banking system itself or various fiduciaries rather than put the money into the hands of people who would really spend it. The reason to go through the banking system was to preserve the fiction that banks were the necessary final adjudicators of who gets what money. The idea is that you wouldn't just hand out drugs to people – you'd prescribe them through a doctor. Thus, too, money is not to be handed out either but must travel through appropriate, professional channels.

It is all, actually, simply a matter of control. And in fact the money that the Federal Reserve and other central banks will provide via this next bout of quantitative easing, if it comes to that, will not end up in the hands of people either. Here's betting it will STILL go to financial entities, though maybe not directly to banks anymore. And for this reason, among others, it STILL may not have the desired effect, certainly not right away. As we have written before, central banks will do almost anything rather than send money to individuals, entrepreneurs and small companies because to do so invalidates the fiction that the painstakingly created and cultivated banking network is necessary – it is not.

We have spent so much time of late on deflation and inflation because we are getting to the point in the business cycle when such musings become important from a real-life standpoint. Unlike central bankers, we don't fight our intuition when it comes to the business cycle. (Intuition being part of the Austrian economic approach.) We were, for instance, well aware at the beginning of the decade that gold was going to travel to US$1,000 or more based on what we understood of the upcoming money-metals bull market. Just as we were aware that the fiat-money bear market is going to run at least 15 years, which means there are about five years to go.

We base this on our understanding of current marketplace distortion. In the 1970s it took about 10-12 years to unwind the economy and cleanse it to a point where much of the distortion had subsided. But this time, THIS Western economy is a heckuva lot more screwed up. So it will take longer. And that's why we knew that all the recent talk by so many respected mainstream Western economists and politicos about a recovery was likely so much hooey. We figured there were several more shoes to drop. And they've begun to drop – or Bernanke wouldn't be looking at another US$5 trillion in "stimulus." Recovery indeed.

What's going on? Because the Western economy is still in such sad shape, still distorted – more than ever as a matter of fact because so many ruined entities have been designated as too-big-to-fail – money is still refusing to circulate and economies themselves are still spiraling downhill, refusing to create new jobs, etc. We have shown in previous articles how the power elite is using this price-deflation to set up "austerity" in Europe and America and to privatize and purchase assets at a cut-rate price.

We have also indicated, via an article on George Soros, that the elite is panic-stricken that deflation may go too far, too fast and cause widespread unrest and rioting. In fact, we think this is exactly what is going to happen. But for those who believed we were incorrect about the elite's panic in the face of a deflationary overshoot, we seem to have a definitive answer – US$5 trillion in ADDITIONAL quantitative easing. That number has flop-sweat written all over it.

We will not by the way in this article get into another discussion about whether inflation or deflation is "good." We are on record numerous times as stating that mild deflation (real deflation – a contraction of the money supply and credit) is indeed good during a downturn in a real-money (gold and silver) economy. But in a fiat money system such as the one we have now, everything is turned upside down.

It is like a Mad Hatter's tea-party and even the words themselves have lost meaning. In a fiat money environment, for instance, one can likely have a collapse of credit and subsequent price deflation without necessarily a real contraction of the money stock. Central bankers love such complexity. Being of modest intellect (versus the Masters of the Universe), we don't, however, and likely neither do you. We try to simplify relentlessly, that being the best defense against professional complicators. And in a number of articles on inflation and deflation we have applied this technique as tenaciously as possible.

Thus we are on fairly comfortable ground predicting again, as we have before, that given the slowing velocity of money, price-deflation, especially, will continue. It will continue and continue until such time as the larger Western economy is sufficiently unwound so as to begin to utilize the oceans of cash that are sloshing around within the walls of its most august institutions and under mattresses in the houses of long-suffering citizens. At this point, price inflation will arrive with a ferocity that may eventually lead to hyperinflation.

We hope we have not bored you, dear reader. Above is yet another effort at keeping up with what the banking class has in mind for us. It IS important, because the kinds of money movements that we are analyzing constitute massively powerful trends. If and when price inflation kicks in (we think it will, as it always does in these business cycles) the results will likely have a life of their own and be no more controllable than price deflation is currently.

Yes, this is important to realize. It is why we think the system may ultimately collapse. (In fact it has collapsed but remains functioning because of central banking life support.) It is why we think gold and silver will continue to travel up and are probably not in a "bubble" but represent the true valuation of current Western fiat currencies which are currently spiraling down toward zero.

Conclusion: It is, in fact, not all that complicated, even though central bankers try to make it seem so. The ultimate effects of US$5 trillion of additional money on the economy are also predictable. We must draw two conclusions if such a sizeable injection occurs. First, the elite is in fact panicked about societal unrest as a result of this gargantuan bust – the "Great Recession." Second, they are willing to risk hyperinflation later to steady Western economies now. Keep analyzing those memes.




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  Posted by Mike Hodgkiss on 07/04/10 08:02 AM

I think Mr. LaRouche is correct. Reinstate Glass Steagall, and fix the exchange rates. Those institutions which have assumed the position of too big to fail, can go to heil, and their CEO's to jail.

Ed: "is there a consensus as to the time-frame in the fall of the Greenback and the Euro?"

As I think you well know Ed, there is no consensus on anything anymore, so, you best listen to LaRouche who knows more about this process than any human alive or dead. There were a couple articles on it yesterday at LaRouchepac breaking news.

  Posted by Pat Fields on 06/30/10 08:10 AM

Citing William: "So the bankster/government cabal has made the use of real money illegal by withdrawing the use of government courts to enforce contracts in real money."

Curious to learn more details of the scheme (maintaining a two decade research project); at Jaci's suggestion in the LaRouche comments here on the 20th, I downloaded the free section of 'Dulocracy in America' from the book's website.

The book explains how ALL American business and parties have been bullied into exclusive federal jurisdiction by what the author concludes to be under 'Commerce Clause' license (but what I rather explain more comprehensively as nexus with Art. IV, Sec. 3, cl. 2).

So, those who re-organize their affairs in the ordinary, original jurisdictions of their States, are perfectly free to resume trade in copper, silver and gold and establish Common Law courts wholly beyond federal reach (AND that of States in violation of their own Constitutions).

The goal is to re-inhabit original jurisdiction. Once an overwhelming majority of individuals accomplishe THAT task, (federalized) State governments themselves can re-occupy their original jurisdictions, resuming operations with the full complement of their reserved sovereign powers.

The problem with using silver and gold right away, is that their values are insanely disjoint in the spectrum of values elsewhere on the scale. The best substance for resumption of the hard-money regimen is to start with copper (also 'under'-valued, but FAR more plentifully available (note that copper, in Troy, STILL holds reasonably within a 100:1 ratio to silver).

  Posted by AmanfromMars on 06/29/10 12:30 PM

"why dont they print this "free money" and extend unemployment benefits?

maybe they should print it and just give it out free i mean since it cost them nothing to make. wtf" .... Posted by Dj on 6/29/2010 12:03:24 PM

Ah yes, Dj, why not indeed free Man from the slavery of men who have never made anything but who would have everyone build them their dreams, with their manipulation and distribution of currency?

If the presumption was that everyone was born rich with all that they will ever need, rather than born dirt poor with absolutely nothing, would the love of money and the root of all evil be totally defeated and business and industry would flourish like never before.

For everyone would realise that being smart and productive, even should it be only to provide the most basic of services or goods so that other services and goods can be exchanged, is that which keeps them alive and thriving and progressing forward into a brave new world.

Otherwise they perish or are considered pariah, for with the worry of not being able to purchase whatever you need, removed, can one spend as much time as is available to do what one discovers one is best at, and that will be a journey with many destinations.

  Posted by Dj on 06/29/10 12:03 PM

why dont they print this "free money" and extend unemployment benefits? maybe they should print it and just give it out free i mean since it cost them nothing to make. wtf

Reply from The Daily Bell

You are not supposed to realize this.

  Posted by Rob Gerhardt on 06/29/10 05:42 AM

Some points about central bank myths:

1. Central banks do not control interest rates " otherwise spreads with other money and bond market instruments across the globe would not continually widen and once more become narrower.

2. There is no connection between changing central bank interest rates and subsequent inflation rates. Excess money creation " which is the fault of the central bank " leads to an imbalance with the overall price structure which has then to reset itself. In any case the official inflation rates are a fiction, as anyone with half a memory can prove by thinking back to what they paid for a trolley load of groceries 10 years ago " it has more than doubled " inflation rate around 10%.

3. There is no such thing as a velocity of money. It is a residual created from dividing the total spending in the economy by the money stock. If the money stock is being grown too fast we are told not to worry because velocity is falling " how wierd is this explanation? As if we could spend our incomes any faster or slower than they accrued. Besides, the size of the economy is a fiction because it includes government spending which never creates anything. The total physical volume of industrial production is a much more reliable indicator of national wealth.

My opinions are distorted (and made cynical?) by a lifetime in interest rate related businesses. From late 1960s " financial journalism. From mid 1970s " stockbroking specialising in the financial sector and debt markets. From mid 1980s " institutional fund management of interest rate assets. A watcher (and sniggerer) for most of the past decade.

  Posted by Chris F on 06/29/10 03:43 AM

"We have state similar concerns and believe that the MSM are not reporting current unrest and are downplaying organized protests, etc."

China for the last three years has 90,000 incidents of civil unrest per year according to Professor Yu as the director of social issues research at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences Institute of Rural Affairs.

We all know that MSM is under-reporting our dissent.

  Posted by Bruce on 06/29/10 12:41 AM

US Government claims to have a huge debt, while it owns through the back door more than 75 percent of all industry domestically and has operations in 75 percent of nations world wide. The banks are the laundering mechanism, as government organizations fund their own debt through the back door.

Why would congress vote to save the banks? Could it be to keep the government's accounts in the black?

US, State, and local government investments world wide produce enough income to run all government services and fund all government obligations. Yet, they scream short fall so that they can forever expand their power and wealth while impoverishing the tax paying class.

This link provides a good article on the matter. I wonder if the Ellen Brown it refers to is the Brownian Brown?

Click to view link

Reply from The Daily Bell

Very interesting! So Burien has some misgivings about Ellen's fixation on the state as well ... Some letter.

Anyway, we have stayed away from Burien because we don't know what to think ... Ultimately, if the states do hold all this money and can use it, we think it would become significant source of price inflation.

  Posted by Weeble on 06/28/10 10:05 PM

In the mediocre Monty Python movie, The Meaning Of Life, there was a scene in a semi-private hospital ward, where John Cleese is an administrator explaining to members of a hospital tour, the amazing machine that goes "bing!" The hospital used to own it, but sold it to a 3rd party company that leased it back to the hospital, so it would free up capital and increase cash flow. Meanwhile, a person is dying connected to the said machine.

  Posted by Jefferson Still Lives on 06/28/10 07:16 PM

Re: Kwame M Acheampong

All of we the people may fashion money out of whatever has been created already. As a market, we the people, have spiraled towards silver and gold, a long time ago already.

To make additional quantities of (honest, commodity based) money available will (slightly) distort our improved productivity by introducing (slight) inflation (or lowered deflation). Such as unearthing additional gold or silver from the ground. But it takes great effort, and it's inflationary effects are limited. An increased money supply does not infer social benefit. (Rothbard)

So I would hold, that no National or International government should encourage us to trust their interpretation of the 'correct' amount of money in any society. Our multitude of human actions (including mining of monetary metals) will direct prices to the optimal informational level.

  Posted by Leonardo Pisano on 06/28/10 04:57 PM

[...] "As we have written before, central banks will do almost anything rather than send money to individuals, entrepreneurs and small companies because to do so invalidates the fiction that the painstakingly created and cultivated banking network is necessary ' it is not." [...] [DB]

Banks somewhat obscurely distribute the newly created money. They are money buffers by default, and the money they receive from the central banks is hidden in their stores. If central banks were bypassing the commercial banks the myth would be broken: people would simply lose trust in the system and that's what FIAT money is all about.

But there is more to it. As the DB says, it's all about control. A bank run is not only financial instability; it's losing control for the elite as the money is in hands of numerous individuals that are difficult to track.

With electronic transfers money flows can be followed. So, extra money from the central banks gives an extra buffer in bad times for the banks for the sake of stability (the DB also mentions this).

Of course, the dominant social theme is that it is to protect the savings of the people. As people WANT to believe this, it's very quickly accepted, indeed even welcomed. But the real reason for rescuing the banks is that the banking network is essential for money control: bank accounts and credit card payments can be monitored, unlike monies in "matrasses at home" and cash payments.

And governments also seek same as they use this control for taxing purposes. Obviously, a gold/silver standard would undermine this control mechanism of electronic quantitative easing " that's why the central banks combat a gold standard with everything they have.

The QE is not trickling into the economy, so it seems. My guess is the banks use it to invest in the stock markets " the upbeat of stocks suggests "recovery". But as soon the extra money is taken back by the central banks (to avoid inflation) this money is to be withdrawn from the stock markets with obviously crashing effects.

Reply from The Daily Bell

Interesting thoughts, thanks.

  Posted by William on 06/28/10 04:50 PM

So the bankster/government cabal has made the use of real money illegal by withdrawing the use of government courts to enforce contracts in real money.

Why not just form private business law courts and/or arbitration entities to which businesses could subscribe? This would allow commerce in real money outside the bankster/government rigged confiscatory system. I would wager that the cost of maintaining such a private court/real money system would, in the long run, be far cheaper than the tax and confiscate system the bankster/government cabal has rigged for us.

Who needs another Andrew Jackson? Who knows? This could spark another outbreak of prosperity, the greatest fear of the financial elite. Just a thought. ...

  Posted by Angus Wright on 06/28/10 04:29 PM

I think the DB would do us all a great service if some means could be found of isolating the cost to taxpayers of servicing the debt created by governments to support the banking industry, from the cost of social spending which government constantly tells us is the excess from which we must recover.

In the UK, for example: no one denies that the number of state employees is excessive; that state pensions are unaffordable and that huge amounts of waste are generated by too much government activity. But is there some way in which that latter proportion of the debt can be isolated from the bank debt on in such a way that we can all see the purpose of the sacrifice we are being required to make ? Or am I being totally naive?

Reply from The Daily Bell

These figures are available, we believe, if we understand the questions correctly. But we are not exactly sure where, off hand. We will look into it. Others are encouraged to jump in, if they know ...

  Posted by Akak on 06/28/10 04:08 PM

Regarding the whole inflation vs. deflation debate, let me post one question:

Which is more logical to assume, that the IOUs of an already bankrupt debtor with exponentially increasing debt will become MORE valuable in the future, or less?

Reply from The Daily Bell

Less valuable over time. ie: worth less. You argue for inflation.

  Posted by Weeble on 06/28/10 03:26 PM

Speaking of hyperinflation, did you read this "anti-blogger" article by Richmond Fed's Kartik Athreya:

Click to view link

I am beginning to come on board with your opinion that the Elite is on the run. When I see this article, I am speechless (or "I am not worthy to speak m'lord").

His ego seems hyperinflated.

Reply from The Daily Bell

Thanks, what an argument. ...

Economics is hard. I have a Ph.D. and I still find it hard. Why should anyone believe economic bloggers who have not studied as hard as I have? I still find economics hard and I find publishing in economic journals hard and am often rejected. People should pay attention to experts, not economic bloggers. Etc. For three pages!

How does he explain that the alternative hard-money blogging community got it "right" while his crowd, including Bernanke and Greenspan, got it wrong. He doesn't.

Of course they're running scared. People are "getting" it. There are no experts by the way. Not even Kartik Athreya.

And it's not that hard.

  Posted by Tom Wojo on 06/28/10 01:28 PM

Don't know if this is true but it sure sounds good as these are supposedly the three rules of work that Albert Einstein used:

1. Out of clutter find simplicity
2. From discord find harmony
3. In the middle of difficulty lies opportunity

I find this approach very helpful in looking at the situation(s)in the world today and applying this to my thinking. Not that is applies to me, but true genius is not in making things complex but rather in making the complex simple and understandable.

  Posted by Lance E. Schultz on 06/28/10 12:57 PM

SIR JOSIAH STAMP, (President of the Bank of England in the 1920's, the second richest man in Britain)
"Banking was conceived in iniquity, and was born in sin. The Bankers own the Earth. Take it away from them, but leave them the power to create deposits, and with the flick of the pen, they will create enough deposits, to buy it back again. However, take it away from them, and all the great fortunes like mine will disappear, and they ought to disappear, for this would be a happier and better world to live in. But if you wish to remain the slaves of Bankers, and pay the cost of your own slavery, let them continue to create deposits."

Because make NO MISTAKE fiat currency is designed for one purpose and one purpose only to permanently and irrevocably enslave the nations which drink its blood and to bind the value of their output forever to the yoke of debt and usury until they choke and drown upon their own blood. Such is the nature and history of every fiat dollar ever spent in war. They were not fighting your enemies. They were fighting you. There was never conceived a greater ingenuity or more effective means to confiscate and plunder the American people. There is not one instance in history when a fiat [valueless] currency has survived until the U.S. dollar which I guarantee you will suffer the same fate as the Roman Denarius, the Chinese "Flying Money," the French Livres, Assignats and Francs and the German Mark in the days of the Weimar Republic and recently in such nations as the Mexican Peso, Argentina , Iceland, the Russian Ruble and Zimbabwe and yes even here in the United States of America our own currency has already "crashed" during the Revolutionary War with the "Continental"

The best alternative to the Fed is freedom. Unmitigated laissez-faire economic, political and financial freedom.

  Posted by Laura K on 06/28/10 12:55 PM

Brilliantly and extraordinarily well done. My husband has forwarded me a couple of your articles and I have to congratulate you for doing such a outstanding job.

Very self-explanatory, clear, didactic and accurate from the get go. Deflation vs Inflation, business cycles, fiat-money, Quantitative easing and the so called "economic experts" are very well defined in this article.

Additionally, I have to admit, It took me sometime to read and understand the entire article. End result, I am madder at the fact that governments and the "experts" are not for the prosperity of their countries, but for the control of the means and impoverishment of those who rely on them.

Reply from The Daily Bell

Thanks for the kind words. It's not so complicated.

  Posted by Scooter on 06/28/10 11:55 AM

I have a real smart friend who years ago let me into the Keynesians little phycological trick Click to view linking big complicated words to confuse and deflate ones confidence in what is taking place in the financial world.

I feel the first round of QE was mostly deposited to stabilize the banks......otherwise there would be rioting in the streets...funny, people dont like to have there hard earned money taken away.

Until the banks write down there bad debts, the situation will worsen. like Dr Fekete mentioned, gold estinguishes debt.....may those days of rational thought come back to the world when all this is over....for the sake of humanity and fairness.

  Posted by Richard Lamb on 06/28/10 11:27 AM

It all boils down to the question: How long will it take for "BOUBUS AMERICANUS" TO KNOW THEY HAVE BEEN HAD?

  Posted by Darryl on 06/28/10 11:23 AM

Wonderful article. Under this administration, the United States is moving toward complete finanacial disaster so as to become a Socialist country to "spread the wealth." What a joke. Riots? Wait until the those on the dole won't get their checks in the mail, or if they do, the money won't buy squat. Then, the riots will start, and the rioters will march toward those preceived as the "haves" and take whatever they can get their hands on through whatever means.Americans, let's build moats around our property!

Seniors on Social Security have already taken it on the chin by not receiving a cost of living increase for two years. That's just the beginning of not being able to pay the bills, not to mention not being able to pay those with their grubby hands out.

Reply from The Daily Bell

Soon enough food insecurity?

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