-
The borrower is the servant of the lender, and through the mechanism of government debt virtually the entire planet has become the servants of the global money changers. Politicians love to borrow money, but over time
-
The recklessness of the “too big to fail” banks almost doomed them the last time around, but apparently they still haven’t learned from their past mistakes. Today, the top 25 U.S. banks have 222 trillion dollars of
-
On Monday, President Donald Trump said the was looking into breaking up big banks in America, pushing forward Depression-era law that would separate consumer banking from investment banking. “I’m looking at that right now,”
-
Beware of what may be coming next. We already know the establishment has a plan to blame President Trump for the next financial crisis, and now there are moves being made that will support that narrative. After the 2008 fiasco, a
-
Whenever a central bank is formed the devil celebrates his black Pentecost. The priests of Mammon or what can more appropriately be identified as the House of Rothschild control the fiat financial empire of the devil’s
-
What is the anatomy of a breakdown? The past eight years have been extremely difficult for the real economy. Central bank intervention has propped up the stock market at the expense of the main street economy, at the expense of
-
With everything online, nothing is safe from criminals. Every ATM and every device is potentially hackable, and now a string of banks in Asia is learning the hard way that many people will go to great lengths in order to hit
-
Do you remember when our politicians promised to do something about the “too big to fail” banks? Well, they didn’t, and now the chickens are coming home to roost. On Thursday, it was announced that one of those “too
-
When former Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke was questioned by Ron Paul during a 2011 monetary policy report, he famously told the Congressman that gold is not money and the only reason central banks hold it is because of
-
Every share in gold is supposed to represent a certain amount of physical gold in storage, and be available on demand. But that’s not what happened when a customer asked for their gold at Deutsche Bank, the largest German bank