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'Super Stagflation' End Game?

Monday, January 24, 2011 – by Staff Report

Britain in battle over stagflation ... New figures set to confirm that growth has slowed, while unemployment and oil prices rise – a severe problem that blighted the 1970s. Fears are growing that the UK is running the risk of a period of painful "stagflation", as official figures should this week show that growth continued to slow down in the final three months of 2010. Analysts think the economy is already showing symptoms of stagflation – the toxic cocktail of stagnating growth and rising prices that leaves policymakers unable to tackle one problem without making the other worse. Households suffer, as the weak labour market means wages do not keep pace with wider price rises in the economy. The UK experienced a severe bout of stagflation in the 1970s, when the oil price shock contributed to larger contractions in output and a surge in inflation. Similar forces are at work in the UK economy now, analysts say, pointing to the persistently above target inflation despite the slowing pace of growth. – UK Telegraph

Dominant Social Theme: Where did that come from?

Free-Market Analysis: Another facile media explanation. (See excerpt above.) The Telegraph gets it half right. Stagflation is not caused by "higher oil prices" but by monetary policy. The West is about to embark on an episode of what we will call – for lack of a better term – "Super Stagflation." The 1970s saw stagflation, but this likely will be so much worse. In this article we will examine why.

In the 1970s, central banks printed too much money, especially in the United States, to try to stimulate the economy. This Keynesian nostrum didn't work then and it won't work now. The "oil shock" of the time had little or nothing to do with the larger reality of stagflation. Combine faulty monetary policy with a distorted, manipulated, sluggish economy and that is what occurs. And it's happening again. Only the 2000s are the 1970s on steroids. The financial ruin is far more complete.

The 1970s began with a recession and then a stock slump. The economy recovered somewhat and stocks went up; then inflation began to bite. House prices soared and so did the price of commodities and food. It wasn't until "Tall" Paul Volcker strode to the rescue as Federal Reserve Chairman late in the 1970s, that the economy began to respond to the guidance of the central bank.

But it took a stiff dose. Volcker had to raise short-term rates to nearly 20 percent and in the process he paralyzed the banking industry and almost caused a depression. By 1982, the economy had finally started to recover. BusinessWeek asked famously if the stock market was dead – and on cue the market roared to life. The great bull market surge of the 1980s was off and running; run it would until the 1987 Crash.

The 2000s are a good deal like the 1970s as we have often observed; but it has long been our opinion that the decade-long reaction against the excesses of central-bank money distortion would run far longer in the 2000s than in the 1970s. We don't expect the bull market in commodities to run out of steam for another four or five years. And in the meantime, it seems likely that the dollar-reserve system itself may not survive.

Everything has been elongated in the 2000s. It took until 2008 for the economy to entirely unravel and the unraveling was a good deal more emphatic than in the 1970s. Predictably, the West's central banks stepped into the breach and printed literally trillions of paper dollars-from-nothing. And even though Ben Bernanke and other top central bankers maintained that they could "sterilize" these vast amounts of currency, reality will prove different. Just wait.

For more than two years, currency has been trapped in banks' coffers, but now apparently it is beginning to circulate. The velocity of money is picking up – and price-inflation along with it. This is perfectly predictable and tracks a similar trend in the 1970s. Monetary policy repeats itself as does the cycle of business inefficiency and slumping consumer demand. Here's another article excerpt from the Telegraph on the difficulties of the British economy:

Retailers suffer worst December on record British retail sales suffered their worst December on record as retailers battled with Arctic weather conditions and shoppers shunned higher prices ... The biggest drop within overall retail sales volumes came from food, which declined 0.9pc month-on-month, the ONS said. Retail sales volumes declined 0.8pc month-on-month – the lowest reading since records began in 1988, the Office for National Statistics. Food stores saw a 3.4pc drop in year-on-year sales volumes – another record plunge – as prices soared 5pc. Today's official figures offer a definitive view on the impact the adverse weather and economic climate had on Christmas sales, as varied trading reports from retailers such as Marks & Spencer.

The reason for declining sales in our view is not the weather but the totally predictable unemployment rate in Britain.

According to a BBC report on January 19th, UK unemployment rose by 49,000 to almost 2.5 million in the three months to the end of November. The "Beeb" summed it up this way: "One in five 16 to 24-year-olds are now out of work, after a rise of 32,000 to 951,000 without jobs, the highest figure since records began in 1992. The UK unemployment rate is 7.9%, but for 16 to 24-year-olds it is 20.3%. Prime Minister David Cameron said any rise in unemployment was a ‘huge concern'."

Government figures always lie. The US unemployment figures are regularly put at 10 percent, but non-government watchdogs put the figure closer to 20 percent. (We believe it to be even higher.) And we think the same numbers apply to Britain. Unemployment is high because Western economies are still distorted. Instead of allowing bankrupt corporations and banks to collapse, Western central banks printed trillions in money-from-nothing and provided these funds as needed – not just in the United States but throughout the West and elsewhere besides.

The money-from-nothing effectively salvaged bankrupt multinationals and financial firms, but the result was a prolonged period where lending was confused. No one knew what companies were solvent and promising and what entities were essentially insolvent. Thus it was that people did not do business and the velocity of money slowed considerably. Now, thanks to enormous and persistent monetary stimulation, stock markets have risen and money is moving faster.

And that leads to price inflation. As the trillions that have been printed start to circulate, prices will begin to rise. Money is cheap and thus it takes more currency to purchase an individual good or service. Price inflation is a direct result of the misguided policies being followed by central bankers determined to prop up the West's economic system.

Central bankers will raise rates, of course, but the sums involved are insurmountable – somewhere between US$20 and 50 TRILLION. These funds will circulate no matter what; rates might have to go to 50 percent or 75 percent to slow the velocity and drain enough currency from the system. Western societies cannot survive 50 percent short-term interest rates. They will freeze, wither and die. The banks, too.

Central bankers are not stupid. The Anglo-American power elite – a handful of impossibly wealthy families and other interests – that has set up the worldwide central banking system is not stupid either. The cycle of the 2000s is the same as the 1970s, and thus the Anglosphere must be expecting the onslaught of price inflation, which has already caused food riots in Africa.

Stagflation this time around is not going to be an inconvenience but probably an economic killer. The choice may be between something near hyperinflation or impossibly high interest rates and a concomitant depression that will make the current economic dysfunction look preferable. The elite no doubt expects this; the dollar-reserve currency died in 2008 and current Western efforts at keeping the current system afloat are likely death spasms.

Earlier this month, US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner sent a letter to Congress explaining that if Treasury did not have Congressional approval to raise its borrowing authority, Treasury and the US would default. America's financial system – and the world's – is continually perched on a precipice.

The powers-that-be apparently hope they will be able to maneuver this fragility into the creation of an IMF-led bancor or something similar. They are counting on the chaos of stagflation – call it Super Stagflation – to generate the demand necessary to make the change. The idea is that when people are desperate for food and work, they will support any plan of action that promises them a more viable lifestyle.

Our point has always been these plans were made, however generally, before the Internet era. Too many people now know and understand the monetary manipulations of the elite. While Super Stagflation will no doubt afflict the West's and the world's economies, whether the elite can transform crisis into "opportunity" and then into a global currency is questionable indeed.

Suggestions from elite spokespeople are already being circulated by the mainstream media. The IMF floats the idea of a bancor; Alan Greenspan speaks of a gold standard. But the truth-telling of the Internet may already have rendered such suggestions moot. It is perfectly possible that people will be resistant to elite suggestions this time around. It is possible that a second Bretton Woods is simply not going to be acceptable to a mass of people radicalized by austerity and educated about money by the Internet.

Conclusion: In such a situation, it could be – as we have suggested – that the system itself simply breaks down and gold and silver begin to be used spontaneously. The world, or at least the West, begins to function with private money and free-banking. The precedents are there. As we have reported previously, only in the past 100 years has the elite managed to supplant the elegant private money system of the West with a mercantilist (quasi-public) one. But the mercantilism of the past century may now be overwhelmed by the market itself. Super Stagflation may mark the beginning of the end.




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  Posted by John GM on 01/27/11 11:48 AM

@ Ingo Bischoff

"rube goldberg constraption of derivatives" ha! True.

"the mathematical law of exponential growth cannot be defied. Once the exponential curve of interest growth crosses the line of linear debt growth, the game is over."

Exactly. The immutable laws of arithmatic will not be sympathetic to our plight. I estimate that we (the US)are just about 2 years from this intersection?

  Posted by Ingo Bischoff on 01/25/11 05:30 PM

@ John GM

"And, believe this " many, many people in the U.S. will suffer a fallout scenareo that is horrible far beyond your wildest imagination. Our sophisticated systems of food, liquid fuels, communications and banking are fragile and will likely fail."

You are correct, the mathematical law of exponential growth cannot be defied. Once the exponential curve of interest growth crosses the line of linear debt growth, the game is over. All you can do then is structure a rube goldberg constraption of derivatives to hold it together built on the naivite of the investors. The questions only is, how much longer can you fool them.

If people only understood that there is a whole body of rules that already exists based on the principles of individualism and local control, they'd easily opt for short term hardship now so they can get on with their lives.

It is the elites that have everything to lose. That is why they will hang on regardless of what happens to us. Therefore, the sooner these elites get shown the door, the better off we all will be. Then lets get back to tried and true principles.....a gold standard, redeemable currency, Anglo-Saxon taxation and a U.S. Constitution sans the 17th Amendment.

It'll be heaven on earth.

  Posted by John GM on 01/25/11 01:34 PM

@ EDD on 1/24/2011 6:10:11 PM

You've hit the nail on the head. These fiscal and monetary problems of the fed and state governments are beyond correction. It does not matter what government does or does not do in practical terms at this point, because it is simply too late. The debts are too great. The fallout subsequent to collapse will be horrible. While it is difficult for any sane person to squarely face these sobering realities, to do so is the only way anyone will likely survive or to be of much help to others.

And, believe this " many, many people in the U.S. will suffer a fallout scenareo that is horrible far beyond your wildest imagination. Our sophisticated systems of food, liquid fuels, communications and banking are fragile and will likely fail.

  Posted by John GM on 01/25/11 12:59 PM

@Ingo Bischoff on 1/24/2011 4:45:48 PM

Very good. Thank you!

  Posted by AmanfromMars on 01/25/11 05:47 AM

I aint no Ronald Reagan, but I might warrant being called a novel sort of cowboy .....": one having qualities (as recklessness, aggressiveness, or independence) popularly associated with cowboys: as a : a reckless driver b : a business or businessperson operating in an uncontrolled or unregulated manner" ....... Click to view link .... although to be perfectly honest with you, as is my wont, I would never ever agree to being in any way associated with the negative undertones as are usually applied to that use of the noun.

"He most certainly did. He did so in full knowledge of what central banking was all about. Since he could not fight it, he decided to hasten its demise. How better to use the central banking system before its inevitable collapse as a Ponzi scheme, than to fund a military to defeat the Soviet Communists without a shooting war. In his mission to defeat the Communist "evil empire", central banking was actually a "gift from god" to Ronald Reagan." .... Posted by Ingo Bischoff on 1/24/2011 8:17:17 PM

Crikey, Ingo Bischoff, do you want the alien version of that .....
[blockquote] Scratching the Surface of the Meaning of Life and the God Myth with ITs Evil Empires to Boot

Posted Tuesday 25th January 2011 10:16 GMT

Hi, Gavin Clarke in San Francisco,

Of course, there is fiction and there is fact, but whether or not there is any difference between the two of them, other than that which is afforded to them by their Product Placement in an alternate time zone/geophysical location/metadata rich environment for a Present Reality [factual use] or a Future Fantasy [fictional use], is a moot point.

There would be a probably somewhat alien view which would posit that there is no earthly difference between the two of them, and they are always one and the same at all times, and quite different at specific times.

Your report has an interesting parallel, which is not a fiction, in a submission made elsewhere on a matter which is really loded and loaded.

[blockquote]Posted by: amanfromMars | 01/24/11 | 4:13 am |

Has not the penny dropped yet*? Virtual Warefare, aka Cyber ZerodDay Trading, has taken over from Explosive Munitions and Kinetic Weapons as the Leading Defence Force for Attacking Systems of Command and Control.

Nowadays one doesn't assault sovereign territory for assets one covets, one seduces hearts and minds with SMARTer Information which reveals Intelligence Needs and Feeds and Seeds ........ for Sustainable Supply of Future Source ..... and in Stealthy Fields of Transparent Communication, are they invariably always in Steganographic CodeXSSXXXX.

Click to view link [/blockquote]

And for all you Heavy Binary Thinkers and Ternary Quantum Tinkerers, does not cloud cover provided perfect remote controlled hosting of advanced operating systems for browser activity and stealthy networking and viral screening of future command and control protocols and algorithms for Live Operational Virtual Environments.

42Entertainment type stuff, Gavin, from C42 Quantum Control Systems ..... AI@ITsWork, and not for the faint hearted or the sexually prudish and unaware.

Click to view link [/blockquote]

"Yes, I agree. I try not to judge. It is hard enough for me to deal with my own shortcomings than try to pass judgement on others." ...... A battle royal which shared evidence here on the Daily Bell suggests, is being right royally won. IB.

  Posted by Ingo Bischoff on 01/25/11 05:13 AM

@ AmanfromMars

"I see very well, thank you, and quite a lot further than many/most, and I hesitate to add, all, for that would be just too ignorant and arrogant, I'm sure you'll agree. :-)"

Yes, I agree. I try not to judge. It is hard enough for me to deal with my own shortcomings than try to pass judgement on others.

  Posted by Ingo Bischoff on 01/25/11 02:58 AM

@ John Danforth

Reagan appointed the "Gold Commission". However, his advisors on the monetary system all were Friedmanites. Nothing was ever done to FED monetary policy for the reasons I stated.

  Posted by AmanfromMars on 01/25/11 02:03 AM

"I don't know how you see things from Mars, but here on Earth you will never be able to understand why I praise the founding fathers and the U.S. Constitution until you understand the philosophical principles that guided these men to write this document." .... Posted by Ingo Bischoff on 1/24/2011 7:28:07 PM

And whenever I would tell you that I can understand perfectly said philosophical principles, but they were, and are, nowhere near enough to deliver life and liberty to all without being easily perverted and subverted to the pleasureably sinful and/or decadently vice-filled, darker side of life and liberty, ...... where power and control is regularly beautifully used and cynically abused for selfish personal gratification, with its fleeting and artificial temporal enrichment, rather than immaculately delivered so that partners luxuriate in the much more agreeable and infinitely more powerful, shared mutual XSSXXXXual satisfaction ..... would you understand the addictive attraction of being really good in really bad environments ....... for it offers a sublime protection and immunity from contamination and infection to propagation of self-destructive carnal desires in Live Operational Virtual Environments.

The nature of the Reality you experience, the depth and expanse of its territories, is directly proportional to one's acceptance and knowledge of oneself, the true nature of one's own being. And the most powerful beings on this puny planet/in any universe, are those who can freely share who they are without fear or favours. Those who are "good" survive and prosper and multiply, whilst those who are "bad" wither and fight and die.

Do you know what Reality really is? Is it a Virtual Concept and Figments of Imagination, Networking with IT and Media Programs? ...... Click to view link ...... and an IT Program itself, that GODs Program for Virtuous Polyamoral Machines with Global Operating Devices into Binary Tools and Full Disclosure Transparent Steganography? Or is it just that to a certain few in the IT Programming and Media Production Fields?

To imagine that nothing has improved/a man's wisdom in greater knowledge has not improved beyond all recognition in 223* years, is surely a failing of human intelligence in support of an artificial premise ...... that beings were smarter in earlier times, and the passage of time does not add to the store of one's wisdom.

* United States Constitution ....created September17, 1787, ratified June 21, 1788.

"It's principle behind the thing, Man....don't you see it?" ..... I see very well, thank you, and quite a lot further than many/most, and I hesitate to add, all, for that would be just too ignorant and arrogant, I'm sure you'll agree. :-)

This has been a very enlightening thread, DB. Congratulations to all who have found words they thought worthy of sharing and peer review.

  Posted by Ingo Bischoff on 01/25/11 02:00 AM

@ John Danforth

"I understand most of what you point out about Real Bills. If people don't understand why paper money is a bad thing even after they've lost their jobs and their homes, can't be bothered to learn about it even when someone tells them point-blank what stole their lives .... how are they ever going to adopt, let alone demand real bills? Most of them will conclude that if they don't understand it, it's probably another device to rip them off."

People have absolutely nothing to do with Real Bills, unless they want to acquire them at discount. Otherwise, people could care less. They would never have to know what they are or how they work. They didn't know when we had a "commercial banking" system, and they don't know now that we don't have one.

People only want to know that their earnings, paid in a "redeemable" currency, can purchase things and can be turned into gold, if they want to save. For savings, a digital gold account is ideal. Many people will keep amounts of gold in that account only temporarily as they seek a suitable gold bond or other type of investment.

The digital age has made Real Bills and redeemable currency infinitely more efficient. Not only in helping circulation, but also in State supervision.

Then, there is digital gold and there are gold derivatives. Digital gold represents ownership of physical gold stored in a vault. Those are the KB Edelmetall, E-gold, GoldMoney type of accounts. Everybody should have such type of account for their savings. Gold derivatives do not represent ownership of gold, but are evidence of a hedge in one form or another.

Redeemable paper currency or redeemable digital currency is not a bad thing at all, an it does not lose jobs.

Irredeemable paper currency and irredeemable digital currency is bad, and it does lose jobs. That is a distinction that you must grasp.

Redeemable currency circulates in lieu of Real Bills. Irredeemable currency is evidence that you owe money to the U.S. Government.

I State can never issue an irredeemable currency. Only the federal government can issue irredeemable currency.

When people scream for State's rights, they are screaming for the return of Real Bills and a redeemable currency. Do they know that? No.... Is it important that they know? No... just as long as they get State's rights back, and that is done by repealing the 17th Amendment. Once that is done, "commercial banking" will return and the people would have never heard of Real Bills and never needed to....

  Posted by Got No on 01/25/11 12:20 AM

I got no problem with starving. It will help the ecology!

  Posted by Jacob on 01/24/11 10:45 PM

Almost none of the professionals with whom I speak understands much about economics and finance, in particular the issues discussed at this and similar sites. Consequently, it appears inescapable that people will continue to abide by any government imposed financial and currency arrangement because it will be the only legally permitted game in town. Not a very sanguine thought. Well run exceedingly private barter clubs will offer some relief.

The future I most expect is continued government spending well in excess of revenue. That means destruction of this and future currencies. Sure, there will be modulation, but not much. Noam Chomsky got it right: America has morphed into a mafia state.

  Posted by Capn Mike on 01/24/11 08:52 PM

Where's Clayton???

  Posted by John Danforth on 01/24/11 08:33 PM

@Ingo;

I don't remember Reagan speaking about the Fed. Got a cite?

  Posted by John Danforth on 01/24/11 08:24 PM

@Ingo;

"Digital gold only makes saving easier and real. People can save for their "Old Age" again. However, since gold does not earn interest, there will never be much gold sitting in digital gold account."

I think you missed the point of the ruse. You are talking about real gold. I was talking about the Next Currency. Imaginary gold, unlike the barbaric relic, can earn interest. Everything can be priced in gold, making inflation easier to hide. Why wouldn't people fall for it? Look at the present system--when is the last time anyone here went into their bank and asked them how much they have in reserve?

I understand most of what you point out about Real Bills. If people don't understand why paper money is a bad thing even after they've lost their jobs and their homes, can't be bothered to learn about it even when someone tells them point-blank what stole their lives .... how are they ever going to adopt, let alone demand real bills? Most of them will conclude that if they don't understand it, it's probably another device to rip them off.

  Posted by Ingo Bischoff on 01/24/11 08:17 PM

@ Heuristic

"Didn't Reagan run up the national debt to a record level?"

He most certainly did. He did so in full knowledge of what central banking was all about. Since he could not fight it, he decided to hasten its demise. How better to use the central banking system before its inevitable collapse as a Ponzi scheme, than to fund a military to defeat the Soviet Communists without a shooting war. In his mission to defeat the Communist "evil empire", central banking was actually a "gift from god" to Ronald Reagan.

Ronald Reagan knew that FED central banking would eventually fall apart. He expected it to occur much sooner. It was Robert Rubin under Clinton who prolonged it, and George W. Bush who naively tried to turn it around, but was saved by 9/11. He escaped getting the blame for the FED central bank collapse when he signed the TARP Bill.

Now Barack Obama has the ball, and he has no idea what to do with it. The people who funded his election, the central bankers, are tearing their hair out, because he can't get the Chinese to revalue the RMB/Yuan.

"As did FDR before them. Even Ayn Rand voted for him in 1932 because of his "get government off people's backs" rhetoric. So the record shows that finding enunciators of fine philosophical principle who will run for office and get elected is not so hard."

What constitutional principles did FDR ever annunciate in his speeches? "All we have to fear is fear"....??? What constitutional principle is that...??? The New Deal was as far removed from the U.S. Constitution as you can get. FDR fooled people because he projected a "father image" to the people and he exercised a "paternal" kind of leadership. His motto seemed to be "damn the Constitution".

Ronald Reagan never acted to fool the people. He had an uncanny ability to start his speeches out by explaining the constitutional principles, and then ask people to give him the power to follow the course he wanted to chart.

People as a whole are smart enough to distinguish between a FDR and a Ronald Reagan. Though, I grant you some individuals would never be able to do so.

"What will be different next time? Apart from a new generation of people to be gulled, I mean."


All I can say to that is that the beauty of being human is that each baby born starts off with a brand new slate. So, there is hope.....lots of hope.

  Posted by EDD on 01/24/11 07:42 PM

@Ingo Bischoff:

"The "experts" and academics you meet have plenty of knowledge. What they don't have is wisdom. Wisdom is embodied in philosophical principles. In today's world, scientific research has replaced philosophy."

Definition of experts: ([pronounced ex-spurts], ex---'a has been', spurts---'a brief flow, a pause, another brief flow'). No wonder the PE's memes are losing credibility.

Sorry, just had to find a moment of levity even if it is inane. :-)

On the serious side, not only is wisdom to be desired, but as you mentioned, it has its existence in philosophical principles and therefor, the word wisdom may be viewed as WISe DOMinion. Thank you for that post.

  Posted by Ingo Bischoff on 01/24/11 07:28 PM

@ AmanfromMars

"Strewth, you cannot be serious, Ingo Bischoff. You think the Great Game didn't start until the founding fathers and the United States of America were invented/arrived on the scene? Ye gods, what sort of arrogance and ignorance in equal fabulous measure is that?"

I don't know how you see things from Mars, but here on Earth you will never be able to understand why I praise the founding fathers and the U.S. Constitution until you understand the philosophical principles that guided these men to write this document.

If on Mars you make no distinction between principles involved in what is known as "People's Law" and those principles which are involved in what is known as "Ruler's Law", then I understand that you doubt me when I say that I am dead serious in my remarks about the founding fathers and the U.S. Constitution be extraordinary.

It's principle behind the thing, Man....don't you see it?

  Posted by Ingo Bischoff on 01/24/11 07:08 PM

Zenbillionaire on 1/24/2011 10:04:19 AM

You write: "I enjoy Ingo Bischoff's (and the Bell's) unfaltering optimism, however I do not hold with the idea that the common person is well enough educated on the subject of economics and financial systems to spontaneously adopt a commodity based medium of exchange. I use myself as an example; I am a fairly well educated and intelligent human and up until three or four years ago I was an absolute idiot on the subject of economics. After studying it with some vigor since then I believe I have graduated from idiot to moron. I fear we are doomed to re-experience the 1970's on steroids. Now comes the winter of our discontent."

You are way too pessimistic. To demonstrate what can be done by forward looking people, even under circumstances of government control and central banking, I will post on Kickstarter a project which is likely to be of interest to every reader of The Daily Bell. The project will be open for a one week period only.

Click to view link is a website which employs principles of Real Bills which are effective even in a central bank dominated economic environment.

  Posted by Heuristic on 01/24/11 06:53 PM

Jsmith asks "is there any truth that the Rothchild's are worth 100 to 300 trillion dollars, mostly in gold?" and DB answers "So we have heard. Who knows?"

So we have heard? That's not evidence of anything. Surely there would be some hard evidence of such a thing?

All I could find out from 10 minutes of superficial research is that they own some vineyards, and horse ranches and were chased out of France by Mitterand.

Surely, if the banking elite are so small, it should not be hard to totally document them and their assets? What are you theorizing about if the crux of your argument is based on hearsay? And they marry their cousins, which seems like a recipe for eventual extinction.

Reply from The Daily Bell

OK, Heuristic. You are correct. A familial, intergenerational, banking elite does not exist. Neither does the Queen of England; neither does the square-mile City of London. Thanks for the insights!

  Posted by EDD on 01/24/11 06:10 PM

This just in from a 'Grassroots Action' email to me today:

"If you thought the budget disasters striking states around the country were bad, consider this: A new report from the University of Illinois says the 66% income tax hike recently approved by Gov. Pat Quinn and the General Assembly is nowhere near enough to solve the state's $15 billion deficit.

"While the tax increase is expected to raise $4 billion, the deficit for 2011 is now nearly three times larger, standing at $11 billion. As in most other deeply indebted states, painful cuts must be made in everything from police and
prisons ... fire and emergency services ... government worker salaries and pensions ... and much more in order for the state
to avoid default.

"Another case in point: Camden, New Jersey, where, in a solemn display, laid-off firefighters and police officers lined up this week to turn in their helmets and badges.

"Nearly half the Camden police force, including civilians, and about one-third of its firefighters have now lost their jobs as city leaders desperately try to balance the city's budget.

"THIS is what I've been telling you about. THIS is why I say this crisis is now UNAVOIDABLE. No
conceivable amount of tax increases OR budget cuts will ever be enough to end this crisis in the short term."

---

Well DB and Feedbackers; If the PE media would even be close about the unemployment figures,this would just blow the lid on the simmering kettle. How in the world would the PE be able to contain irate Americans, not if, but when these events begin to accelerate?

BTW, Grassfire Nation is one of the organizations which have come into existence recently due to the current political scene.

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