Filed under: agriculture, amazon, amazon rainforest, Argentina, aristocrats, Australia, biofuels, Canada, ethanol, Eugenics, famine, food crisis, food market, food prices, food shortage, Genocide, George Bush, george soros, global elite, health and environment, Henry Kissinger, internationalist, malthusian, malthusian catastrophe, NWO, Petrol, rainforest, ruling class, Russia, UN, united nations, US Crops, World Bank | Tags: corn, grain, wetlands, World Food programme
One quarter of US grain crops fed to cars – not people
A grain elevator in Illinois, US. In 2009, 107m tonnes of grain was grown by US farmers to be blended with petrol. Photograph: AP
London Guardian
January 22, 2010
One-quarter of all the maize and other grain crops grown in the US now ends up as biofuel in cars rather than being used to feed people, according to new analysis which suggests that the biofuel revolution launched by former President George Bush in 2007 is impacting on world food supplies.
The 2009 figures from the US Department of Agriculture shows ethanol production rising to record levels driven by farm subsidies and laws which require vehicles to use increasing amounts of biofuels.
“The grain grown to produce fuel in the US [in 2009] was enough to feed 330 million people for one year at average world consumption levels,” said Lester Brown, the director of the Earth Policy Institute, a Washington thinktank ithat conducted the analysis.
Last year 107m tonnes of grain, mostly corn, was grown by US farmers to be blended with petrol. This was nearly twice as much as in 2007, when Bush challenged farmers to increase production by 500% by 2017 to save cut oil imports and reduce carbon emissions.
More than 80 new ethanol plants have been built since then, with more expected by 2015, by which time the US will need to produce a further 5bn gallons of ethanol if it is to meet its renewable fuel standard.
According to Brown, the growing demand for US ethanol derived from grains helped to push world grain prices to record highs between late 2006 and 2008. In 2008, the Guardian revealed a secret World Bank report that concluded that the drive for biofuels by American and European governments had pushed up food prices by 75%, in stark contrast to US claims that prices had risen only 2-3% as a result.
Since then, the number of hungry people in the world has increased to over 1 billion people, according to the UN’s World Food programme.
“Continuing to divert more food to fuel, as is now mandated by the US federal government in its renewable fuel standard, will likely only reinforce the disturbing rise in world hunger. By subsidising the production of ethanol to the tune of some $6bn each year, US taxpayers are in effect subsidising rising food bills at home and around the world,” said Brown.
“The worst economic crisis since the great depression has recently brought food prices down from their peak, but they still remain well above their long-term average levels.”
The US is by far the world’s leading grain exporter, exporting more than Argentina, Australia, Canada, and Russia combined. In 2008, the UN called for a comprehensive review of biofuel production from food crops.
“There is a direct link between biofuels and food prices. The needs of the hungry must come before the needs of cars,” said Meredith Alexander, biofuels campaigner at ActionAid in London. As well as the effect on food, campaigners also argue that many scientists question whether biofuels made from food crops actually save any greenhouse gas emissions.
But ethanol producers deny that their record production means less food. “Continued innovation in ethanol production and agricultural technology means that we don’t have to make a false choice between food and fuel. We can more than meet the demand for food and livestock feed while reducing our dependence on foreign oil through the production of homegrown renewable ethanol,” said Tom Buis, the chief executive of industry group Growth Energy.
Filed under: agriculture, AGW, amazon, carbon dioxide, climate change, climate science, climategate, Co2, EPA, famine, food crisis, food market, food prices, food shortage, Global Warming, global warming hoax, greenhouse, health and environment, Hoax, malthusian, malthusian catastrophe, man made global warming, netherlands, o2, oxygen, photosynthesis, rainforest, scandal, third world | Tags: ammonia, Anthropogenic Global Warming, aspen forest, aspen tree, bigger yields, co2 farming, dr. sherwood idso, forest trees, greenhouse gases, Jan van Duijn
Forest Trees Growing Like Crazy From CO2 Level Increase
Mike Adams
Natural News
December 21, 2009
Scientists from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and the University of Minnesota at Morris have found that increased levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide have led to the rapid growth of certain tree species. The quaking aspen, a popular North America deciduous tree, has seen a 50 percent acceleration in growth over the past 50 years due to increased CO2 levels.
Trees are necessary climate regulators since they process carbon dioxide and give off oxygen. Humans process oxygen and give off carbon dioxide, working harmoniously with natural plant life to maintain proper atmospheric composition. Since natural forests represent about 30 percent of the earth’s surface, they are highly effective at segregating greenhouse gases.
The quaking aspen is a vibrant, dominant tree found in both Canada and the United States. It is considered to be a “foundation species”, meaning that it helps dictate the dynamics of the plant and animal communities that surround it. Roughly 42 million acres in Canada and 6.5 million acres in Wisconsin and Minnesota are composed of aspen trees.
Elevated levels of CO2 will naturally lead to increased plant growth since CO2 is a precursor to plant food. Tree-ring analyses verified that aspen trees have been growing at an increasingly accelerated pace over the years because of this phenomenon.
Because accelerated growth was not seen in other tree species like oak and pine, scientists admit they will have to further investigate the issue. Similarly, drier regions where the trees were found did not experience the same rapid growth rates as those found in the wetter regions.
Comments by Mike Adams, the Health Ranger
An interesting side effect of increased carbon emissions by human activity is that plants will grow more quickly. CO2 is to plants as oxygen is to humans, so the more CO2 is in the atmosphere, the more quickly many plants can grow.
Of course, plants produce oxygen as the “waste” product of their respiration, and that’s a poison to other plants, so there’s a natural balancing effect that keeps oxygen and CO2 levels in balance over the long haul.
This is why greenhouse gases are called “greenhouse gases”, by the way — because they turn the planet into a really effective greenhouse where plants grow like crazy. Of course, the clear-cutting of rainforest in the Amazon (and elsewhere) kills any chance of those regions taking part in that accelerated plant growth. Even in a high-CO2 environment, human beings can destroy plant life with bulldozers.
It’s interesting that plants and humans breathe the same air but extract very different chemical elements from it: Humans need oxygen while plants need carbon dioxide. For both species to survive, the air needs to contain both chemicals in balance. Currently, the oxygen content of the air is roughly around 20% (and falling).
Carbon Dioxide: The Breath of Life
Dutch aubergine grower yields big after piping CO2 into greenhouses
Telegraph
December 14, 2009
Jan van Duijn, however, walks proudly through his greenhouse, a vast glass and metal structure spread out over five hectares (12.3 acres) where millions of aubergines are doing very nicely thank you.
He’s happy because thanks to a deal with a supplier, he’s getting hot water piped in from the factory, which produces ammonia, to maintain the temperature at a constant 68 degrees F (20C).
The chemical site, five kilometres (three miles away), also supplies carbon dioxide which helps his aubergines grow more abundantly.
“We’re pioneers in a way,” van Duijn said, while admitting that what drove him to try this business model was cost.
The water from the Yara factory, where it is used as a coolant, flows along underground pipes and into his greenhouse at a temperature of 90 degrees C.
There it is circulated in pipes between the rows of aubergines, sharing its heat among the beds of rockwool they grow in, before being pumped back to the factory as coolant again.
Similarly, CO2 released during the manufacture of ammonia is injected into the greenhouse to stimulate growth.
“It’s the basic principle of photosynthesis,” van Duijn said. Combined with water and light, the plants convert the carbon dioxide into organic compounds, releasing oxygen as a side product.
The level of CO2 inside is three times higher than outside, giving a crop yield that according to van Duijn is two to three times greater.
He reckons the project will produce 2.5 million kilogrammes (5.5 million pounds) of aubergines a year, adding to the millions he already cultivates under glass on his land in the southern Netherlands.
Filed under: Africa, agriculture, Alex Jones, carbon dioxide, Carbon Tax, climate change, climate science, climategate, Co2, copenhagen, Copenhagen treaty, corruption, darwinists, devaluation, Dictatorship, ecoscience, egypt, Empire, ethanol, Eugenics, famine, Fascism, fearmingering, food crisis, food market, food prices, food shortage, Genocide, global economy, global elite, Global Warming, global warming hoax, government, haiti, Hoax, Holocaust, imf, internationalist, internationalists, italy, john holdren, Lord Monckton, malthusian, malthusian catastrophe, manipulation, mud pie, Nazi, New World Order, NWO, obama, oligarchy, poor, scandal, starvation, sterilization, third world, UN, united nations, World Bank, Zoellick
Genocidal Climate Change Policy is Killing Third World Nations
Millions dying from starvation as a direct consequence of global warming fraud
Paul Joseph Watson
Prison Planet.com
December 10, 2009
The implementation of policies arising out of fraudulent fearmongering and biased studies on global warming is already devastating the third world, with a doubling in food prices causing mass starvation and death – a primary reason why the climategate crooks and their allies should be criminally investigated and hit with the strongest charges possible.
As Lord Monckton outlined in his recent Alex Jones Show appearance, climate change alarmism and implementation of global warming policies is a crime of the highest nature, because it is already having a genocidal impact in countries like Haiti, where the doubling of food prices is resulting in a substantial increase in starvation, poverty and death.
Poor people around the world, “Are being killed in large numbers by starvation as a result of (climate change) policy,” said Monckton, due to huge areas of agricultural land being turned over to the growth of biofuels.
“Take Haiti where they live on mud pie with real mud costing 3 cents each….that’s what they’re living or rather what they’re dying on,” said Monckton, relating how when he gave a speech on this subject, a lady in the front row burst into tears and told him, “I’ve just come back from Haiti – now because of the doubling in world food prices, they can’t even afford the price of a mud pie and they’re dying of starvation all over the place.”
As a National Geographic Report confirmed, “With food prices rising, Haiti’s poorest can’t afford even a daily plate of rice, and some must take desperate measures to fill their bellies,” by “eating mud,” partly as a consequence of “increasing global demand for biofuels.”
In April last year, World Bank President Robert Zoellick admitted that biofuels were a “significant contributor” to soaring food prices that have led to riots in countries such as Haiti, Egypt, the Philippines, and even Italy.
“We estimate that a doubling of food prices over the last three years could potentially push 100 million people in low-income countries deeper into poverty,” he stated.
“That’s how serious this is, these people, by their scientific fraud and financial fraud, they’re profiting enormously….while people die of starvation in a dozen regions of the world….it is a scandal of the worst proportion – our own fellow creatures are being killed by starvation because these people have lied and made up the science and hidden it so nobody else could check,” said Monckton.
If the measures currently being debated at the Copenhagen summit in the name of fighting global warming are passed, we can only expect a further assault on the already horrifying plight of the population of the third world.
In the leaked Copenhagen text that emerged earlier this week, leaders of third world countries were horrified to discover that developed nations would take on less of a burden than anticipated and that more would be demanded of poorer countries despite the fact that any further cuts in CO2 emissions would further cripple their flimsy economies and poverty-stricken people.
In addition, the leaked paper revealed that funds from climate financing, originally allocated to go to the UN and then be doled out piecemeal to third world nations, would instead be paid directly into the coffers of the World Bank and IMF, organizations that have made a habit out of looting poorer countries with crippling loans that cannot be paid back, forcing such countries to hand over their entire infrastructure to globalist loan sharks.
The fact that policies arising out of the contrived science of global warming are already killing people in vast numbers in the third world further illustrates the fact that the entire climate change movement is a Malthusian offshoot of the profusely stated goal on behalf of the global elite to eliminate a huge chunk of the global population via modern-day eugenics.
This agenda was vehemently argued for by President Obama’s top science advisor and one of the pre-eminent climate change ringleaders, John P. Holdren, in his 1977 book Ecoscience, in which he called for installing a “planetary regime” to enforce draconian population control measures such as forced abortion and mandatory sterilization through the water supply.
Watch the segment from the interview below where Monckton discusses how the climate crooks are deliberately devastating the third world with their lies about global warming.
Filed under: Al Gore, alarmism, alarmist, cap-and-trade, carbon credit system, carbon credits, carbon dioxide, Carbon Tax, climate change, Co2, Congress, Dictatorship, Empire, energy, environmental taxation, food market, food prices, food tax, gas prices, gas tax, global tax, Global Warming, global warming deception, gore, gore deception, Hoax, House, HR 2454, hype, hysteria, MIT, Neolibs, paul broun, scam, Senate, tax, Taxpayers, unemployment
Broun: Man Made Climate Change Is A Hoax
Filed under: Credit Crisis, DEBT, Dollar, Economic Collapse, economic depression, Economy, food crisis, food market, food prices, food shortage, global economy, Great Depression, Greenback, hyperinflation, Inflation, putin, Russia, Stock Market, US Economy, Wall Street
Russian Grocery Shelves Increasingly Empty
London Telegraph
October 17, 2008
For a generation of Russians who queued daily in the snow for the most basic of staples, the symbolism of a bare supermarket shelf is so powerful that it could potentially destroy the reputation of Vladimir Putin, the prime minister, as saviour of the world’s largest country.
The shortages are not yet widespread. Even so, goods have begun to vanish from dozens of Moscow supermarkets over the past fortnight.
At a branch of the supermarket chain Samokhval in southwestern Moscow, a handful of shoppers pushed their trolleys through empty rows of shelves that once groaned under the weight of imported wares.
The deep freezes hummed, although there was nothing to freeze. Only a row of baked beans, a few jars of olives and sealed cupboards filled with vodka and cheap wine interrupted the void.
Filed under: Big Banks, comex, Credit Crisis, DEBT, Dollar, Economic Collapse, economic depression, Economy, food crisis, food market, food prices, food shortage, gas prices, global economy, gold, gold shortage, Great Depression, Greenback, hyperinflation, Inflation, manipulated economy, manipulated prices, market manipulation, nationalization, Oil, Petrol, price fixing, silver, silver shortage, Stock Market, US Economy, Wall Street | Tags: kitco, paper investment, run in banks
Why Gold Is Down When It Should Be Up
Alex_Wallenwein
The Market Oracle
October 13, 2008
Why is gold dropping right now when anyone in their sane mind would expect it to rise? The simple answer to this question is, “because Comex-gold isn’t gold” – and because it deceptively pretends to be ‘the’ price-setter for real gold.
Gold is gold, paper is paper, and “Comex gold” is nothing but paper masquerading as gold while simultaneously pretending to be the price-setting medium for actual gold in the world. Now, finally, Comex-gold is in the process of being unmasked.
The real supply and demand determinants for Comex gold are not actual gold investors but fund managers . Fund managers are inextricably intertwined with the world of contract-based credit instruments. They use bet on Comex gold contracts to hedge their other (currently horrendously losing) bets with something they all, in their in-bred belief in paper markets, believe will ‘go up’ in value while everything else is going down.
However, these very same fund managers and their paper-bound investment psychology are the exclusive reason why Comex gold is dropping in these times when everyone (including fund managers) expects gold to rise. As already stated, though, and as they now finally realize to their own dismay, Comex-gold just isn’t gold – and that causes even further selling.
Two Losing Bets, Compounded
Fund managers’ other bets are losing money fast, now, so they need to raise cash to keep up the overall value of their respective funds, so they can earn their management bonuses and avoid getting booted for lack of relative performance. Guess what they cash in on? The very same Comex paper-gold they mistakenly bought as a ‘hedge’, of course.
Meanwhile, real investors in real gold are enjoying their shopping spree – except that the spree turned into a treasure hunt as the shelves and display cases of gold dealers look more and more like the supermarket shelves in the old Soviet Union – bare.
This is the only ‘bare-market’ in real gold the world will see for a long, long time to come.
With this split, this disconnect, between Comex illusion and gold reality, one thing or the other will have to give, and it won’t be physical gold that gives.
The system built up around the reputation of Comex-gold as being a price-setting mechanism for real gold plays right into the hands of the financial establishment. The establishment depends for its (now increasingly meager) existence on the illusion that gold “isn’t living up to its promise” as a real inflation and disaster hedge. The implication, of course, is that investors might as well stay in the computer blip and paper world.
As the Comex gold price illusion drops, many retail investors are still persuaded to keep their money circulating in the paper world, and that ultimately feeds the system. Of course, by now that ‘feeding’ mechanism looks more like life-support, but try and unhook someone who is on life-support. The results are dramatic, inevitable, immediate – and final.
Yet, even on life-support, the system is deteriorating at a catastrophic pace. It would be hilarious to watch if it wasn’t for the fact that we are all depending on this phony system for our real-life support. Without credit freely circulating through the commercial paper universe, for example, grocery stores won’t have food on their shelves, there won’t be gas a the gas station, and your bank will be shut. Cash doesn’t transfer very well without the bank settlement process.
That’s the problem.
COMEX Gold Drops $681 on October 24, 2008
Filed under: Alan Greenspan, Argentina, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Australia, Big Banks, brazil, California, carlyle group, Chicago, Cintra, consolidation, Credit Crisis, Credit Suisse, DEBT, ecnomic collapse, economic depression, Economy, florida, food prices, foreign buyout, foreign investors, global economy, gold, Goldman Sachs, Great Depression, Greenback, hyperinflation, Inflation, infrastructure, JPMorgan, Lehman Brothers, liquidation, morgan stanley, privatization, South America, spain, Stock Market, tax, Taxpayers, Toll Roads, US Economy | Tags: highways, indiana toll road, infrastructure transactions, investing, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts, Krugerrands, Macquarie, Midway Airport, Pennsylvania Turnpike, roads, run on banks, skyway
Cities Debate Privatizing Public Infrastructure
NY Times
August 29, 2008
Cleaning up road kill and maintaining runways may not sound like cutting-edge investments. But banks and funds with big money seem to think so.
Reeling from more exotic investments that imploded during the credit crisis, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts, the Carlyle Group, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and Credit Suisse are among the investors who have amassed an estimated $250 billion war chest — much of it raised in the last two years — to finance a tidal wave of infrastructure projects in the United States and overseas.
Their strategy is gaining steam in the United States as federal, state and local governments previously wary of private funds struggle under mounting deficits that have curbed their ability to improve crumbling roads, bridges and even airports with taxpayer money.
With politicians like Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger of California warning of a national infrastructure crisis, public resistance to private financing may start to ease.
“Budget gaps are starting to increase the viability of public-private partnerships,” said Norman Y. Mineta, a former secretary of transportation who was recently hired by Credit Suisse as a senior adviser to such deals.
This fall, Midway Airport of Chicago could become the first to pass into the hands of private investors. Just outside the nation’s capital, a $1.9 billion public-private partnership will finance new high-occupancy toll lanes around Washington. This week, Florida gave the green light to six groups that included JPMorgan, Lehman Brothers and the Carlyle Group to bid for a 50- to 75 -year lease on Alligator Alley, a toll road known for sightings of sleeping alligators that stretches 78 miles down I-75 in South Florida.
Until recently, the use of private funds to build and manage large-scale American infrastructure assets was slow to take root. States and towns could raise taxes and user fees or turn to the municipal bond market.
Americans have also been wary of foreign investors, who were among the first to this market, taking over their prized roads and bridges. When Macquarie of Australia and Cintra of Spain, two foreign funds with large portfolios of international investments, snapped up leases to the Chicago Skyway and the Indiana Toll Road, “people said ‘hold it, we don’t want our infrastructure owned by foreigners,’ ” Mr. Mineta said.
And then there is the odd romance between Americans and their roads: they do not want anyone other than the government owning them. The specter of investors reaping huge fees by financing assets like the Pennsylvania Turnpike also touches a raw nerve among taxpayers, who already feel they are paying top dollar for the government to maintain roads and bridges.
And with good reason: Private investors recoup their money by maximizing revenue — either making the infrastructure better to allow for more cars, for example, or by raising tolls. (Concession agreements dictate everything from toll increases to the amount of time dead animals can remain on the road before being cleared.)
Politicians have often supported the civic outcry: in the spring of 2007, James L. Oberstar of Minnesota, chairman of the House Committees on Transportation and Infrastructure, warned that his panel would “work to undo” any public-private partnership deals that failed to protect the public interest.
And labor unions have been quick to point out that investment funds stand to reap handsome fees from the crisis in infrastructure. “Our concern is that some sources of financing see this as a quick opportunity to make money,” Stephen Abrecht, director of the Capital Stewardship Program at the Service Employees International Union, said.
But in a world in which governments view infrastructure as a way to manage growth and raise productivity through the efficient movement of goods and people, an eroding economy has forced politicians to take another look.
“There’s a huge opportunity that the U.S. public sector is in danger of losing,” says Markus J. Pressdee, head of infrastructure investment banking at Credit Suisse. “It thinks there is a boatload of capital and when it is politically convenient it will be able to take advantage of it. But the capital is going into infrastructure assets available today around the world, and not waiting for projects the U.S., the public sector, may sponsor in the future.”
Traditionally, the federal government played a major role in developing the nation’s transportation backbone: Thomas Jefferson built canals and roads in the 1800s, Theodore Roosevelt expanded power generation in the early 1900s. In the 1950s Dwight Eisenhower oversaw the building of the interstate highway system.
But since the early 1990s, the United States has had no comprehensive transportation development, and responsibilities were pushed off to states, municipalities and metropolitan planning organizations. “Look at the physical neglect — crumbling bridges, the issue of energy security, environmental concerns,” said Robert Puentes of the Brookings Institution. “It’s more relevant than ever and we have no vision.”
The American Society of Civil Engineers estimates that the United States needs to invest at least $1.6 trillion over the next five years to maintain and expand its infrastructure. Last year, the Federal Highway Administration deemed 72,000 bridges, or more than 12 percent of the country’s total, “structurally deficient.” But the funds to fix them are shrinking: by the end of this year, the Highway Trust Fund will have a several billion dollar deficit.
“We are facing an infrastructure crisis in this country that threatens our status as an economic superpower, and threatens the health and safety of the people we serve,” New York Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg told Congress this year. In January he joined forces with Mr. Schwarzenegger and Gov. Edward G. Rendell of Pennsylvania to start a nonprofit group to raise awareness about the problem.
Some American pension funds see an investment opportunity. “Our infrastructure is crumbling, from bridges in Minnesota to our airports and freeways,” said Christopher Ailman, the head of the California State Teachers’ Retirement System. His board recently authorized up to about $800 million to invest in infrastructure projects. Nearby, the California Public Employees’ Retirement System, with coffers totaling $234 billion, has earmarked $7 billion for infrastructure investments through 2010. The Washington State Investment Board has allocated 5 percent of its fund to such investments.
Some foreign pension funds that jumped into the game early have already reaped rewards: The $52 billion Ontario Municipal Employee Retirement System saw a 12.4 percent return last year on a $5 billion infrastructure investment pool, above the benchmark 9.9 percent though down from 14 percent in 2006.
“People are creating a new asset class,” said Anne Valentine Andrews, head of portfolio strategy at Morgan Stanley Infrastructure. “You can see and understand the businesses involved — for example, ships come into the port, unload containers, reload containers and leave,” she said. “There’s no black box.”
The prospect of steady returns has drawn high-flying investors like Kohlberg Kravis and Morgan Stanley to the table. “Ten to 20 years from now infrastructure could be larger than real estate,” said Mark Weisdorf, head of infrastructure investments at JPMorgan. In 2006 and 2007, more than $500 billion worth of commercial real estate deals were done.
The pace of recent work is encouraging, says Robert Poole, director of transportation studies at the Reason Foundation, pointing to projects like the high-occupancy toll, or HOT, lanes outside Washington. “The fact that the private sector raised $1.4 billion for the Beltway project shows that even projects like HOT lanes that are considered high risk can be developed and financed privately and that has huge implications for other large metro areas,” he said .
Yet if the flow of money is fast, the return on these investments can be a waiting game. Washington’s HOT lanes project took six years to build after Fluor Enterprises, one of the two private companies financing part of the project, made an unsolicited bid in 2002. The privatization of Chicago’s Midway Airport was part of a pilot program adopted by the Federal Aviation Administration in 1996 to allow five domestic airports to be privatized. Twelve years later only one airport has met that goal — Stewart International Airport in Newburgh, N.Y. — and it was sold back to the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey.
For many politicians, privatization also remains a painful process. Mitch Daniels, the governor of Indiana, faced a severe backlash when he collected $3.8 billion for a 75- year lease of the Indiana Toll Road. A popular bumper sticker in Indiana reads “Keep the toll road, lease Mitch.”
Joe Dear, executive director of the Washington State Investment Board, still wonders how quickly governments will move. “Will all public agencies think it’s worth the extra return private capital will demand?” he asked. “That’s unclear.”
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Filed under: Alan Greenspan, bailout, central bank, CNBC, Congress, Credit Crisis, DEBT, Dollar, Economic Collapse, economic depression, Economy, fannie mae, Federal Reserve, food crisis, food market, food prices, freddie mac, gas prices, global economy, gold, Great Depression, Greenback, henry paulson, house senate, housing market, hyperinflation, Inflation, Jim Cramer, liquidation, Mad Money, Media, medicare, morgan stanley, mortgage, mortgage companies, mortgage lenders, nationalization, NYSE, Oil, Paulson, Petrol, real estate, SEC, Stock Market, subprime, subprime lending, US Economy, US Treasury, USDA, Wall Street, Warren Buffett | Tags: securities and exchange commission
Buffett Says Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac ’Game Is Over’
Bloomberg
August 22, 2008
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the two largest mortgage finance companies, “don’t have any net worth,’’ billionaire investor Warren Buffett said.
“The game is over’’ as independent companies said Buffett, the 77-year-old chairman of Berkshire Hathaway Inc., in an interview on CNBC today. “They were able to borrow without any of the normal restraints. They had a blank check from the federal government.’’
Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae touched 20-year lows yesterday on the New York Stock Exchange on speculation a government bailout will leave the stocks worthless. U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson won approval from Congress last month to pump emergency capital into the companies, which account for more than half of the $12 trillion U.S. mortgage market.
Fannie and Freddie mispriced their products and “kept existing because they had the federal government behind them,’’ Buffett said. Omaha, Nebraska-based Berkshire had been among the largest holders of Freddie until about 2001, when it became apparent the company wasn’t being run well, he said.
Jim Cramer Talks About Market Manipulation
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Filed under: Amero, Australia, bailout, Bank of America, Big Banks, BIS, Britain, Canada, China, Congress, corporations, corporatism, Costa Rica, David Rockefeller, Ecuador, energy, Eugenics, Euro, Europe, european union, exxon mobil, fannie mae, FDIC, Federal Reserve, food market, food prices, food shortage, freddie mac, gas prices, general motors, George Bush, Germany, global economy, global elite, global government, Globalism, gold, housing market, hyperinflation, India, indymac, International Bankers, internationalist, Iran, Japan, job market, liquidation, malthusian catastrophe, Martial Law, Mexico, middle class, mortgage companies, mortgage lenders, mugabe, nationalization, neocons, New World Order, North American Union, Oil, Patriot Act, Petrol, Police State, Population Control, Posse Comitatus, private banks, real estate, rockefeller, rothschild, shell, silver, South America, spain, Stephen Harper, subprime, subprime lending, Taxpayers, United Kingdom, Venezuela, wells fargo, Zimbabwe | Tags: Deutsche Bank, george green, k-mart, run on banks, sears, silver shortage, spanish bank, wells fargo
Stressed banks borrow record amount from Fed
Reuters
July 31, 2008
Banks borrowed a record amount of funds from the Federal Reserve in the latest week as the year old credit crisis took a persistent toll, while the commercial paper market continued to contract, signaling tough conditions for short term borrowers.
Banks’ primary credit borrowings averaged $17.45 billion per day in the latest week, the second straight week this had hit a record and up from $16.38 billion the previous week, Fed data showed on Thursday.
Zimbabwe Devalues Currency
AP
July 30, 2008
Zimbabwe will drop 10 zeros from its hyper-inflated currency — turning 10 billion dollars into one — the country’s reserve bank said Wednesday. President Robert Mugabe threatened a state of emergency if businesses profiteer from the country’s economic and political unraveling.
Shop shelves are empty and there are chronic shortages of everything including medication, food, fuel, power and water. Eighty percent of the work force is unemployed and many who do have jobs don’t earn enough to pay for bus fare.
Inverview with George Green – (7/16/2008)
http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0708/12166.html
Soaring energy bills set to push inflation to 16-year high
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar..set-push-inflation-16-year-high.html
GM Has $15.5 Billion Loss on U.S. Sales Drop, Leases
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=agMEuJ_r_yxA&refer=worldwide
Venezuela to Nationalize Spanish Bank
http://english.cri.cn/2947/2008/08/01/1821s388058.htm
IndyMAC Files For Bankruptcy Protection
http://www.nytimes.com/2008..2&ref=business&oref=slogin&oref=slogin
Jobless Claims Up Highest In Five Years
http://www.wnbc.com/news/17049831/detail.html
Inflation Could Hit 6% By Fall?
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com..Economist/articleshow/3307499.cms
Deutsche Bank Writedowns Exceed $11 Billion
http://moneynews.com/financenews/bank_writedowns/2008/07/31/117802.html
Shell reports 33% rise in profit
http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/07/31/business/31shellNEW.php
Exxon posts record $11.68 billion profit
http://money.cnn.com/2008/07/31/news/.._profits/?postversion=2008073109
Britons Skipping Meals Due To Money Worries
http://www.money.co.uk/article/100..-meals-due-to-money-worries.htm
IMF Calls For N. African Economic Integration
Greenspan: Housing No Where Near Bottom
Economic Rebound Not As Energetic As Hoped
Biggest dive for commodities in 28 years
Filed under: Bank of America, Bear Stearns, bernanke, Big Banks, Britain, central bank, copper, Credit Crisis, DEBT, Dollar, Dow, Economic Collapse, economic depression, Economy, energy, Euro, Europe, european union, fannie mae, Federal Reserve, food market, food prices, freddie mac, gas prices, George Bush, global economy, gold, Great Depression, Greenback, housing market, Illegal Immigration, imf, Immigration, Inflation, Israel, Mexico, mortgage companies, nymex, Oil, Petrol, real estate, silver, stimulus, Stimulus Package, Stock Market, tax, tax rebates, UAE, United Kingdom, US Economy, US Treasury, World Bank | Tags: soybeans, wheat, with corn
Oil Hit Record $147, Gold $969, Euro $1.59
On Friday Oil hit record of $147.27, Gold $969, Euro $1.5972 against the greenback, Today July 14, 2008 11:31 AM EDT Crude price sinks to $145, Gold $969, Euro 1.5859.
AP
July 12, 2008
Gold prices rose Friday, making their largest advance since first hitting $1,000 earlier this year, after another record crude rally and a tumbling stock market led jittery investors to the safety of hard assets.
Other commodities traded mostly higher, with corn, soybeans, wheat and other agriculture futures rising.
Gold’s rally suggests investors are increasingly concerned about rising inflation as Americans struggle with $4 gasoline and the U.S. dollar continues to lose ground against its main rivals.
After a week of volatile trading in the commodities complex, a myriad of dour economic developments pushed gold prices skyward: Oil soared above $147 for the first time, stocks dove on concerns that mortgage companies Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae might collapse and the dollar tumbled further against the euro.
“All of these things are a pretty good recipe for safe-haven buying into bullion,” said James Steel, analyst with HSBC in New York. “You’re really spoiled for choice on a day like this.”
Gold for August delivery added $18.60 to settle at $960.60 an ounce on the New York Mercantile Exchange, after earlier rising as high as $969.10. That was gold’s highest trading level since first cracking the $1,000 threshold on March 13 after the collapse of Bear Stearns & Co.
Nervousness about the U.S. economy, record energy prices and the falling dollar have helped propel gold 34 percent higher in the past year, but it’s not clear if the current climate is gloomy enough to push gold back into record territory.
“The $1,000 mark accompanied a bank failure the last time so it’s questionable whether the situation now is as severe, but that doesn’t mean it won’t go back to that level,” Steel said.
Other precious metals also traded higher. September silver prices added 50 cents to settle at $18.82 an ounce on the Nymex, while September copper gained 2.15 cents to settle at $3.74 a pound.
Euro falls one cent vs dollar from day’s highs
Reuters
July 14, 2008
The euro fell over one cent from the day’s highs against the dollar on Monday, after the U.S. Treasury and Federal Reserve launched emergency steps to restore investor confidence in U.S. mortgage lenders Fannie Mae (FNM.N: Quote, Profile, Research) and Freddie Mac.
The euro fell to as low as $1.5866 on trading platform EBS, down from an intraday high of $1.5972.
Jim Rogers: Dollar Doomed, Fed Will Fail
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Bush acknowledges ’tough times’
http://rawstory.com/news/afp/Bush_..mes__07112008.html
Dow Drops Below 11,000
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/2008..TBWOFUn8JIG0V8Jn7V5dv24cA
Stimulus Checks for the Dead
http://taxprof.typepad.com/taxprof_blog/2008/07/stimulating-the.html
Budget Deficit Twice as Big as Last Year’s
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp..7.html?hpid=sec-nation
World Bank’s Zoellick: Food Prices High Until 2012
http://www.washingtonpost.com/..AR2008071101987_pf.html
Mexican Illegal Aliens Leaving U.S.
http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedc..nmetimmigrants.24395628.html
Experts Worry Euro Might Replace US Dollar as Primary Reserve Currency
http://rawstory.com/news/2008/The_buck_doesnt_stop_here_it_0706.html
IMF says world economy between recession and inflation
http://uk.news.yahoo.com/rtrs/20..economy-imf-bd5ae06.html
Oil’s Rise Stirs Talk Of $200 A Barrel This Year
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB12..od=hpp_us_whats_news
Bank of Israel to buy more US dollars
http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satel..me=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull
Bank of America CEO: Recession “feel” may last year
http://www.reuters.com/article/ousiv/idUSWNAB018220080709
Similarities between 1929 and 2008 terrifying
Emirates calls on GCC countries to depeg currencies from US dollar to curb inflation
Pension plans suffer huge losses
Filed under: asia, Big Banks, Britain, California, central bank, China, citigroup, Condoleezza Rice, Credit Crisis, DEBT, Dollar, Economic Collapse, economic depression, Economy, Euro, Europe, european union, Federal Reserve, florida, food crisis, food prices, forclosure, gas prices, general motors, george soros, global economy, Great Depression, Greenback, housing market, Inflation, LA, london, Los Angeles, Miami, New York, Oil, Petrol, real estate, Stock Market, United Kingdom, US Economy | Tags: Wen Jiabao, Zhou Xiaochuan
Citigroup: Euro May Approach $1.69 by September
Bloomberg
July 2, 2008
The euro may be nearing an “explosive breakout,’’ reaching record levels against the U.S. dollar, according to a Citigroup Global Markets Inc. research note.
The trading pattern, including a so-called double-bottom that tested lows, resembles the one before Feb. 26 that preceded the surge to $1.6019 per euro, analysts Tom Fitpatrick in New York and Shyam Devani in London wrote in the note today.
“ We cannot help but feel that things might be about to get very bad again,’’ the analysts said, referring to the possible combination of falling bond yields and rising oil prices.
The exchange rate may approach $1.69 per euro by September if previous patterns are duplicated, the report said.
The dollar fell to a two-month low, trading at $1.5864 at 12:35 p.m. in New York, down 0.5 percent from $1.5793 yesterday. It earlier touched $1.5887, the weakest since April 24. The dollar reached an all-time low of $1.6019 per euro on April 22.
China’s premier urges US to stabilise dollar
AFP
July 1, 2008
Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao has again called on the United States to stabilise the dollar, warning the greenback’s decline was posing threats to the global economy.
“China is taking measures to safeguard its stable economic development,” Wen said during a meeting with visiting US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice on Monday, according to a statement posted on the foreign ministry’s website.
“(We) hope the US will overcome its subprime crisis soon and stabilise the exchange rate of the US dollar, which is significant to the whole world,” he said, according to the transcript posted late on Monday.
The Chinese currency, the yuan, has appreciated about 20 percent against the dollar over the past three years, which has placed enormous pressure on China’s exporters and forced some out of business.
China’s foreign exchange reserves, by far the largest in the world, hit 1.80 trillion dollars at the end of May, meaning even a small decline in the value of the dollar could cause a big loss to the Chinese treasury’s coffers.
It was the second time this year that Wen had spoken out against the weak dollar and problems in the US economy, and the impacts for China.
“The impact of the US subprime mortgage crisis is expanding, (and) the value of the dollar is continuing to fall,” Wen told China’s annual meeting of parliament in March.
“China is now in a critical period in its reform and development, and we must be fully prepared for changes in the international environment and become better able to defuse risks.”
Central bank governor Zhou Xiaochuan last month spoke out at the falling US dollar, saying it was driving up oil and other commodity prices, stoking inflation and causing pain for developing nations.
Factories hit worldwide as commodity prices soar
Reuters
July 1, 2008
Soaring commodity costs are denting manufacturing activity in Asia and Europe and the outlook looks bleak as new orders drop off in the face of rising prices, surveys showed on Tuesday.
Manufacturing activity in the euro zone contracted in June for the first time in three years while business confidence in Asia’s largest export markets is buckling and output has likely contracted further in the United States.
Purchasing managers indices showed manufacturing activity in the euro zone fell to 49.2 in June, China saw its index fall to a near three-year low of 52.0 while in Britain it contracted at its sharpest rate since December 2001.
Recent News:
http://www.stern.de/wirtschaft/unte..orge-Soros-We/625954.html
Shares tumble as global bear market takes grip
http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/economics/article4272493.ece
Fed Official Admits Inflation Figures Are Cooked
http://www.reuters.com/article/bondsNews/idUSN0332437420080703
U.S. auto sales hit 15-year low
http://www.reuters.com/article/busi..nessNews&rpc=23&sp=true
China should be alert to stagflation risks in fighting inflation
http://english.people.com.cn/90001/90776/90884/6442614.html
Gas Prices Threaten To Shut Down Rural Towns
http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2008-07-01-small-town-gas_N.htm
Forclosures will rise no matter who is elected president
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20..OhaMLLr1MN3fQC6hph24cA
L.A., Miami Home Foreclosure Rates More Than Double
http://www.bloomberg.co..=aYchgMdpnpC8&refer=worldwide
U.S. food prices up 8.5 percent from last year
http://www.reuters.com/article/domesticNews/idUSN0236099120080702
US banks lose ’fifth’ of their value
http://www.bloomberg.com/app..BH2KL5bScow&refer=europe
American Airlines to cut 8% of staff
U.S. Economy Loses Jobs For 6th Straight Month
Angry Consumers Flooding Fed With Complaints
Filed under: bernanke, Big Banks, BIS, Britain, central bank, Credit Crisis, DEBT, Dollar, Dow, ECB, Economic Collapse, economic depression, Economy, Euro, Europe, european central bank, european union, Federal Reserve, food prices, Fox News, gas prices, GDP, general motors, global economy, gold, Great Depression, Greenback, imf, Inflation, interest rate cuts, Iran, job market, neil cavuto, Oil, Paulson, peter schiff, Petrol, rate cut, Ron Paul, Saudi Arabia, Stock Market, United Kingdom, US Economy, US Treasury, utah, World Bank | Tags: indymac, inland empire, starbucks
Fed Auctions $75 Billion to Big Banks
AP
July 1, 2008
The Federal Reserve has auctioned another $75 billion in loans to squeezed banks to help them overcome credit problems and announced it will provide a fresh batch of the loans this month.
The central bank on Tuesday released the results of its most recent auction — the 15th since the program began in December. It’s part of an ongoing effort to ease financial turmoil and credit stresses.
In the latest auction, commercial banks paid an interest rate of 2.340 percent for the 28-day loans. There were 77 bidders. The Fed received bids for $90.88 billion worth of the loans. The auction was conducted on Monday with the results made public on Tuesday.
The Fed also said it will conduct two auctions in July. Banks will have an opportunity to bid on a slice of $75 billion in short-term loans in each auction.
In mid-December the Fed announced it was creating an auction program that would give banks a new way to get short-term loans from the central bank and to help them over the credit hump. A global credit crunch has made banks reluctant to lend to each other, which has crimped lending to individuals and businesses.
Europe May Push The Fed To Raise Rates
CNN
July 1, 2008
The fireworks may come a day early for the financial markets if the European Central Bank, as expected, raises interest rates on Thursday.
If the ECB, Europe’s counterpart to the Federal Reserve, hikes rates, that could put even further pressure on the anemic dollar and send commodity prices even higher.
The ECB will announce its decision on interest rates early the morning of July 3 and will hold a press conference shortly thereafter to discuss the decision.
Global economy faces deep slowdown and deflation threat, BIS warns
Telegraph
July 1, 2008
The global economy may be heading for a far deeper crisis than is expected and a bout of deflation in the world’s biggest economies is now a possibility, according to one of the world’s most highly regarded economic institutions.
The Bank for International Settlements has warned that many in the City and elsewhere may have underestimated the scale of the coming economic downturn in one of its most sombre portraits yet of the international financial system.
The Swiss institution – known as the central bankers’ bank – issued the alert in its annual report, released today.
Peter Schiff Demonized On Fox Business
Recent News:
http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2008-07/03/content_8478565.htm
Ron Paul Calls For Hearings On Falling Dollar
http://www.fortbendno..t=push&instance=home_news_bullets&open=&
Thieves Stealing Manhole Covers
http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/news/20080630/a_manhole30.art.htm
Bank Giving Debit Cards To 11 Year Olds
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/mone..?xml=/money/2008/06/30/cnvisa130.xml
U.S. Stocks Tumble
http://www.bloomberg.com/a..d=aF4fDOUXmP2k&refer=worldwide
LA Times To Cut 250 Jobs
http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/080702/la_times_cuts.html?.v=1&printer=1
Forecast for U.S. workers: Gloom
http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/07/02/business/02jobs.php
U.S. Treasury’s Paulson: Downturn has ’further to go’
http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/us-trea..7D&dist=msr_6
Starbucks to cut as many as 12,000 positions
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080701/bs_nm/starbucks_dc_1
Analyst sees ‘ghost town’ in Inland Empire
http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/laland/2008/07/analyst-sees-gh.html
Oil Prices Rise To Record Highs Above $144
http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=D91LTE8O0&show_article=1
Utah company puts operations on hold due to food and fuel prices
http://www.ksl.com/?nid=148&sid=3637972
CBS Story On $7 Gas
http://rawstory.com/rawreplay/?p=1365
Dow Has Worst 1st Half Since 1970
http://www.reuters.com/article/newsOne/idUSL1764662020080630?sp=true
Saudi king urges consumers to get used to high oil prices
http://www.breitbart.co..24505.gb3mxog6&show_article=1
Merrill says General Motors bankruptcy possible
Ron Paul On Financial Crisis: Something Big is Going On
Paulson: Banking Regulations Need Overhaul
IndyMac denies that it’s close to collapse
Dow Jones breaks Great Depression record for poor performance
Oil Rises to Record on Concern Iran Supplies May Be Disrupted
Euro Inflation Highest In 16 Years
IMF To Investigate The Federal Reserve
Filed under: bernanke, BIS, Britain, central bank, China, Credit Crisis, DEBT, ECB, Economic Collapse, economic depression, Economy, Europe, european central bank, european union, Federal Reserve, food crisis, food market, food prices, food shortage, gold, Great Depression, Greenback, housing market, imf, Inflation, Japan, morgan stanley, real estate, Stock Market, United Kingdom, US Economy | Tags: corn, OTC, royal bank of scotland
RBS issues global stock and credit crash alert
London Telegraph
June 18, 2008
The Royal Bank of Scotland has advised clients to brace for a full-fledged crash in global stock and credit markets over the next three months as inflation paralyses the major central banks.
“A very nasty period is soon to be upon us – be prepared,” said Bob Janjuah, the bank’s credit strategist.
A report by the bank’s research team warns that the S&P 500 index of Wall Street equities is likely to fall by more than 300 points to around 1050 by September as “all the chickens come home to roost” from the excesses of the global boom, with contagion spreading across Europe and emerging markets.
BIS Warns Of Great Depression
Banking Times
June 11, 2008
The Bank for International Settlements (BIS), the organisation that fosters cooperation between central banks, has warned that the credit crisis could lead world economies into a crash on a scale not seen since the 1930s.
In its latest quarterly report, the body points out that the Great Depression of the 1930s was not foreseen and that commentators on the financial turmoil, instigated by the US sub-prime mortgage crisis, may not have grasped the level of exposure that lies at its heart.
According to the BIS, complex credit instruments, a strong appetite for risk, rising levels of household debt and long-term imbalances in the world currency system, all form part of the loose monetarist policy that could result in another Great Depression.
The report points out that between March and May of this year, interbank lending continued to show signs of extreme stress and that this could be set to continue well into the future.
It also raises concerns about the Chinese economy and questions whether China may be repeating mistakes made by Japan, with its so called bubble economy of the late 1980s.
Notional Value Of Derivatives Hits One Quadrillion
Jim Sinclair
JS Mineset
June 11, 2008
The notional value of all outstanding derivatives now totals approximately $1.144 QUADRILLION.
This appears to be Bank of International Settlement Spin to announce the largest gain in derivatives outstanding since they started to report. As of the last report it appeared that both listed and OTC derivatives was under $600 trillion. Now listed credit derivatives alone stood at $548 Trillion. The OTC derivatives are shown as $596 trillion notional value, as of December 2007. One can only imagine what number they are at now.
Well we hit a QUADRILLION. We have more than $1000 trillion dollars in all derivatives outstanding. That is simply NUTS because notional value becomes real value when either counterparty to the OTC derivative goes bankrupt. $548 trillion plus $596 trillion means $1.144 quadrillion.
It would be an interesting piece of research to see what the breakdown is of listed derivatives according to exchange to see if it adds up to the reported number. Spin is now everywhere.
This means that no OTC derivative house can be allowed to go broke. This means that whatever funds are required to rescue failing international investment banks, banks and financial entities will be provided.
Keep this economic law in mind. Monetary inflation proceeds price inflation and is its primary cause in economic history from Rome to present.
Nothing can stop the juggernaut of price inflation heading towards every nation like a runaway freight train down a mountain.
Gold is going to at least $1650. I am probably way too low with that estimate.
The US dollar will trade down to at least .5200 as measured by the USDX.
Policy-makers around the globe declared soaring inflation a top threat on Monday, with pressure rising for central banks to raise interest rates amid protests against higher costs of living.
Gold is the easiest market to trade for the aggressive investor. Sell 1/3 when the market looks like a Rhino Horn which you will see with your French Curves at the point of the rollover.
Buy 1/3 back when the price of gold looks like a fishing line hanging off a fishing rod. Your maximum power down trend line will give you this.
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Morgan Stanley warns of ’catastrophic event’ as ECB fights Federal Reserve
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/main.jhtml?xml=/money/2008/06/16/bcnecb116.xml
Washington Post says Bernanke will not raise rates
http://www.reuters.com/article/ousiv/idUSN1647075820080616
Bank Robberies Up Around USA
http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation..ankrobberies_N.htm?csp=1
IMF Economist Calls For World Currency
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Global_Economy/JF06Dj04.html
Corn Jumps To Record
http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/080612/commodities_review.html?.v=3&printer=1
Inflation jumps by biggest amount in 6 months
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/2..CNtc5x1gy4CWdv24cA
US trade deficit jumps to 60.9 billion dollars
http://rawstory.com/news/afp/US_trad.._06102008.html
Zimbabwe faces worst harvest on record
Global food supply is a growing problem
NY Fed Chief Urges Global Bank Framework
Food Scarcity ’Creating New World Order’
AFGHANISTAN: Over 3.5 million at” high risk” of food insecurity – ministry
Water Crisis To Be World’s Big Risk
U.S. Banks Hiding $5 Trillion
Filed under: Ahmadinejad, airstrikes, Big Banks, Britain, Congress, Coup, Credit Crisis, DEBT, Dick Cheney, dollar peg, Economic Collapse, economic depression, Economy, Europe, european union, False Flag, food crisis, food prices, France, gas prices, George Bush, gold, gordon brown, Great Depression, Greenback, Hugo Chavez, Inflation, Iran, Israel, military strike, north korea, Nuke, Oil, OPEC, Petrol, Preemptive Strike, preemptive war, Propaganda, Russia, Sanctions, Saudi Arabia, Shock and Awe, Tehran, UN, United Kingdom, US Economy, Venezuela, War On Terror, wheat, WMD, WW3, ww4 | Tags: Mohsen Talaie, OFID
Britain To Freeze Iranian Bank Assets
AP
June 16, 2008
Britain will freeze assets of Iran’s largest bank in a further move to discourage the country from developing nuclear weapons, Prime Minister Gordon Brown said Monday.
Brown, speaking at a news conference with President Bush, said Britain will work to persuade Europe to follow suit.
The British leader said that assets of Iran’s Bank Melli would be frozen. Last year, the United States accused the bank of providing services to Iran’s nuclear and ballistic missile programs.
“Action will start today in new phase of sanctions on oil and gas,” Brown said. “We will take any necessary action so that Iran is aware of the choice it needs to make.”
The U.S. and some of its allies accuse Iran of trying to develop nuclear weapons. Iran denies that, saying its atomic program is aimed at using nuclear reactors to generate electricity.
The U.N. Security Council has imposed three sets of limited sanctions against Iran for refusing to halt uranium enrichment, a technology that can both produce nuclear fuel and turn out the material needed for nuclear warheads.
The third round of U.N. sanctions passed in March introduced financial monitoring of Bank Melli and another bank with purported links to suspect Iranian nuclear activities, Bank Saderat.
Brown said his government wanted to do all it could to maintain a dialogue with Tehran.
“But we are also clear that if Iran continues to ignore (United Nations) resolutions, to ignore our offers of partnership, we have no choice but to intensify sanctions,” the prime minister said.
“I will repeat that we will take any necessary action so that Iran is aware of the choice it has to make — to start to play its part as a full and respected member of the international community, or face further isolation.”
Bush urged Tehran to accept a new package of incentives and said it should accept a Russian proposal to enrich uranium on Iran’s behalf.
“When the Iranians say we have a sovereign right to have one, the answer is ’You bet you have a sovereign right, absolutely’,” Bush said, referring to a civilian nuclear program.
“But you don’t have the trust of those of us who have watched you carefully when it comes to enriching uranium, because you have declared that you want to destroy democracies in the neighborhood.”
Brown said he will press European colleagues at a summit in Brussels, Belgium later this week to agree a tougher package of European Union sanctions against Iran, including the freezing of Bank Melli’s assets.
The EU imposes its own set of measures against Iran, in addition to U.N.- backed sanctions, which include a total arms embargo and travel bans against a number of named individuals and organizations.
French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner has previously called for the EU to target more companies — particularly in the banking sector — and other individuals who do not now face visa bans under current EU penalties.
Iran Withdraws $75B From Europe
Reuters
June 16, 2008
Iran has withdrawn around $75 billion from Europe to prevent the assets from being blocked under threatened new sanctions over Tehran’s disputed nuclear ambitions, an Iranian weekly said.
Western powers are warning the Islamic Republic of more punitive measures if it rejects an incentives offer and presses on with sensitive nuclear work, but the world’s fourth-largest oil exporter is showing no sign of backing down.
“Part of Iran’s assets in European banks have been converted to gold and shares and another part has been transferred to Asian banks,” Mohsen Talaie, deputy foreign minister in charge of economic affairs, was quoted as saying.
Iranian officials were not immediately available to comment on the report in Shahrvand-e Emrouz, a moderate weekly, which did not specify the time period for the withdrawals which it said were ordered by President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
“About $75 billion of Iran’s foreign assets which were under threat of being blocked were wired back to Iran based on Ahmadinejad’s order,” the weekly said.
Iran’s Etemad-e Melli newspaper, also quoting Talai, last week also reported the country was withdrawing assets from European banks but did not give any figures.
Iran Urges OPEC To Dump Dollar
Press TV
June 17, 2008
Iran urges the OPEC member states again to convert their cash reserves into a basket of currencies rather than the tumbling US dollar.
Speaking at a ceremony to open the 29th ministerial meeting of the OPEC Fund for International Development (OFID), Iran’s President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad repeated his proposal made about six months ago in a rare summit of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries’s heads of states.
“The fall in the value of US dollar is one of the pressing problems of the world today,” warned the Iranian president at the conference in Isfahan on Tuesday.
He further expressed concern over the adverse effect of the dollar depreciation on the international community, especially energy exporting countries through increasing the price of commodities like wheat, rice and oilseeds.
Ahmadinejad said he warned six months ago in the summit conference in Riyadh that there were many indications pointing to continued fall in the value of the greenback.
“And we see that this continues to happen and the resources and wealth of OPEC member countries have been hugely damaged.
“I again repeat my previous proposal; we should have a basket of different international hard currencies as the basis or the member countries should come up and produce a new hard currency for petroleum contracts,” he stressed.
“They get our oil and give us a worthless piece of paper,” Ahmadinejad said earlier after the close of the summit in the Saudi capital of Riyadh.
The comments by the Iranian president gained backing from Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez as he said at the same event, “The empire of the dollar has to end.”
On the soaring oil prices, the Iranian president said, “At a time when the growth of consumption is lower than the growth of production and the market is full of oil, prices are rising and this trend is completely fake and imposed.”
“As you know the decrease in the dollar’s value and the increase in energy prices are two sides of the same coin which are being introduced as factors behind the recent instability,” Ahmadinejad added.
http://www.niacouncil.org/index.ph..&task=view&id=1141&Itemid=2
Israeli Ministers Mull Plans for Military Strike against Iran
http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/0,1518,559925,00.html
Iran: No decision for new sanctions
http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=60394§ionid=351020101
EU To Issue Stronger Iran Sanctions
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20..yoz_9cR3Dd4WvnVDpQUewgF
Bush threatens Iran with military action, again
http://www.independent.co.uk/news..an-with-military-action-848488.html
Alert?! Cheney Winning the Inside Battles Again
http://www.thewashingtonnote.com/archives/2008/06/alert_cheney_wi/
Iran and North Korea may have bought nuclear missile blueprints
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/new.._and_americas/article4144317.ece
Iran Nuke Laptop Data Came from Terror Group
http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=41416
Coup on Iran & False Flag News Archive
Filed under: Big Banks, Britain, central bank, Credit Crisis, DEBT, Economic Collapse, economic depression, Economy, Europe, Federal Reserve, food crisis, food market, food prices, food shortage, gas prices, george soros, Germany, Great Depression, Greenback, housing market, Inflation, interest rate cuts, london, michigan, Oil, paris, Petrol, Protest, rate cut, ration, real estate, riot, Stock Market, UN, United Kingdom, US Economy
Fed Auctions Another $75 Billion to Big Banks
AP
June 3, 2008
Battling to relieve stressed credit markets, the Federal Reserve said Tuesday it has provided a total of $435 billion in short-term loans to squeezed banks since December to help them overcome credit problems.
The central bank announced the results of its most recent auction — $75 billion in short-term loans — the 11th such auction since the program started in December.
It’s part of an ongoing effort by the Fed to help ease the credit crunch, which erupted last August, intensified in December and January and took another turn for the worst in March.
The housing, credit and financial crises have weakened the economy and threaten to push it into recession.
Fuel Protests In Paris and London
CNN
June 3, 2008
Truckers and taxi drivers slowed traffic around Paris’ business district to a crawl Tuesday in a protest over rising fuel prices, and hundreds of fishermen demonstrated in London to demand government help.
Dozens of trucks and taxis in Paris drove slowly toward and around the headquarters of oil giant Total in La Defense, site of the main financial district, to protest a new tax on heavily polluting vehicles.
Authorities said the operation snarled traffic on several highways.
Farmers elsewhere in France blocked ports and oil terminals as part of protests started by fishermen last month demanding government aid to help compensate for high fuel costs.
Fishermen from around the United Kingdom demonstrated in central London on Tuesday to demand their government’s help in coping with soaring fuel prices.
Hundreds of fishermen gathered outside the London headquarters of the department responsible for food, seeking financial support for an industry they say is especially vulnerable to rising fuel costs.
Barrie Deas, chief executive of the National Federation of Fishermen’s Organizations, said the cost of fuel for fishing boats was making it impossible for many in the industry to keep going.
“Boats are going out to sea and fish for five days in terrible conditions and we’re not getting enough to even pay our crews,” he said.
Recent News:
http://depression2.tv/d2/node/118
Rationing at UK supermarkets as world prices soar 70 per cent
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/ne..world-prices-soar-70-cent.html
$75 Credit Card Limit At Pumps Causes Anger
http://www.usatoday.com/money/i..dollar-limit_N.htm?loc=interstitialskip
UN To Meet On Food Price Crisis
http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20080..O9baHV0rJPOROrgF
George Soros: ’We face the most serious recession of our lifetime’
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/ma..=/money/2008/05/26/ccsoros126.xml
German shops running out of milk
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/7435613.stm
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/..S-agents-try-to-beat-property-slump.html
U.S. Bank Failures Loom
http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default..05..8story_28-5-2008_pg5_26
U.S. Has $99.2 Trillion In Unfunded Liabilities
http://www.roguegovernment.com/news.php?id=9581
U.S. Record $4 Gasoline Remains a Bargain in Europe
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?..ive&sid=aB9b2rPXKVBY
US attacked at food summit over biofuels
Oil will fall to $60 a barrel, says BDT manager
US home prices drop at sharpest rate in 20 years in 1st quarter
Greenspan says recession still likely in U.S.: report
Big Banks Use Astrology To Play Markets
Weimar Inflation In America
Blair Used Taxes To Build Real Estate Empire
Filed under: alaska, BP, brazil, central bank, CFR, chevron, Credit Crisis, DEBT, Economic Collapse, economic depression, Economy, Euro, exxon mobil, famine, food market, food prices, food shortage, gas prices, GDP, george soros, global elite, global government, Global Warming, gold, Great Depression, Greenback, Hoax, Inflation, Iraq, Kurdish, lindsay williams, Lindsey Williams, Mexico, middle east, MSNBC, nation building, New World Order, occupation, Oil, OPEC, peak oil, Petrol, Stock Market, US Economy, War On Terror, Warren Buffett | Tags: robert hirsch
Experts Push “Peak Oil” Scam to Predict $15 a Gallon Gas Prices
Infowars
May 26, 2008
Editor’s Note: The following video is a prime example of hysterical “Peak Oil” scaremongering. In fact, there is no shortage of oil — the reserves are increasing, not decreasing. Consider the following examples: In 2006, Chevron announced a huge oil discovery in the the Lower Tertiary zone of the Gulf of Mexico, described as “one of the nation’s biggest oil discoveries in decades,” and Brazil discovered giant new offshore oil fields in 2005 (expected to produce 773 million barrels of oil by 2025). Add to this BP’s discovery of new oil fields near the Shetland Islands, recent discoveries in the Timor Sea, Yemen, Tunisia, Libya, offshore Trinidad, in Pakistan, Angola, in the Ordovician Red River Strata of southeastern Saskatchewan, and elsewhere. Earlier this month, the Kurds of northern Iraq announced a major oil find, estimated at about 2 billion barrels. In the last 20 years, known reserves have doubled. Currently there are somewhere in the neighborhood of 680 billion barrels of Middle East reserve oil alone.
Add to this an “intriguing theory now permeating oil company research staffs suggests that crude oil may actually be a natural inorganic product, not a stepchild of unfathomable time and organic degradation. The theory suggests there may be huge, yet-to-be-discovered reserves of oil at depths that dwarf current world estimates,” writes Chris Bennett (see Lindsey Williams interview below). “Deeply entrenched in our culture is the belief that at some point in the relatively near future we will see the last working pump on the last functioning oil well screech and rattle, and that will be that. The end of the Age of Oil. And unless we find another source of cheap energy, the world will rapidly become a much darker and dangerous place.” It is a meticulously nurtured myth.
Peak Oil takes a page from publicly available CFR and Club of Rome strategy manuals that say global government needs to control the world population through neo-feudalism by creating artificial scarcity that will result in massive social unrest, widespread famine, and endless war. $15 a gallon gas will most certainly help this agenda along.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U7IJEEIBwrE
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=80XMKbnHuEs
From David Edwards and Raw Story, May 24:
Robert Hirsch, senior advisor for Science Applications International Corporation, sat down with MSNBC’s Alex Witt to discuss the possibility of an upcoming oil crisis. Hirsch says that gas could reach $15/gallon within a few years because it is “essentially certain” the world has reached the maximum levels of oil production.
“The problem is that there’s not that much oil left in the ground,” Hirsch says. “What we’ve done is been very fortunate to have oil production increase as our economies have developed over the past decades. And now we’re reaching a point where we’re about to get, or we may be, at the maximum world oil production. After that, oil production will then decline and prices, of course, will continue to do what they’ve been doing recently. So what we’ve got today may be the ‘good old days.’”
Hirsch addressed the timeframe in which the US could see $15/gallon gas: “It could happen within a matter of months. It could happen within a matter of a few years. But it’s essentially certain that we are at the maximum of world oil production. And after that, we’ll go into decline, and when there’s much less oil available, then, of course, the price of oil is going to increase dramatically.”
Fuels, heating oil, and consumer products that rely on petroleum will all be impacted by the decline in world oil production. Hirsch estimates the world GDP declining at the same rate as oil production.
Oil Expert: By Summer, Oil To Hit $200 Per Barrel
This is reality, energy is in the hands of profiteers and has lost touch with the real expenses. There is no logic here, says Davor Stern.
Javno
May 23, 2008
Oil prices have once again crashed through the ceiling with a record price of 135 dollars per barrel because of the concerning fall in American reserves of crude oil with 5.32 million barrels. The fact is that this is only a continuation of the crisis; food is getting more and more expensive, petrol and diesel are rising in price every other week in Croatia (as well as in many countries around the world), and there is no end in sight to the price hikes.
This is reality, energy is in the hands of profiteers and has lost touch with the real expenses. There is no logic here – Davor Stern told us in a telephone conversation. Davor is the former director of Croatia’s largest oil company INA, as well as an oil expert.
Record earnings by oil companies
He added that oil companies earn a lot. Igor Dekanic from the faculty of mining, geology and oil, said that European oil companies are breaking the borders of profitability.
– The largest companies like IBP, Shell, Exxon, the French Total and the Italian Enia have the largest profits in history. That is a general trend with privatized companies in the world – says professor Dekanic.
Stern stresses that the market itself has some sort of logic, however, the current situation is in a state of psychosis.
– By summer we can expect oil prices of 200 dollars per barrel, and that is not the opinion of the trade, but my own prediction. It is impossible to give any projections of the prices, but one thing is certain, the sky is the limit – says Stern.
Recent News:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/busi..y/23/oil.commodities1
Gold Hits Over $930, Oil $135, Euro $1.57
http://www.reuters.com/article..er=2&virtualBrandChannel=10005
OPEC: Oil market is going ’crazy’
http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=56937§ionid=3510213
Buffett blames banks for credit crisis
http://www.reuters.com/article/ousiv/idUSL2561340920080525
It’s Not An Oil Crisis It’s A Dollar Crisis
http://www.321gold.com/editorials/schiff/schiff052308.html
Alaska Drilling Would Only Save 75 Cents Per Barrel
http://www.mcclatchydc.com/251/story/38223.html
Buffett Sees Deep U.S. Recession
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/200805..oENIM35QA3Eqb.HQA
Food prices high for foreseeable future, says UN
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/may/23/unitednations.food
George Soros: rocketing oil price is a bubble
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/ma..2008/05/26/cnsoros126.xml
Global Warming Bill Could Spike Gas $1.50 to $5 a Gallon
http://www.businessandmedia…/20080515172437.aspx
Economist Challenges Government Data
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/05/25/BU6K10JTEF.DTL
Gas Prices Could Top $5 A Gallon In Bad Economy
http://cbs2chicago.com/consumer/gas.prices.oil.2.719683.html
Gas Could Go To $10
http://www2.nysun.com/article/75363
Euro, Franc, Krona to Benefit From Oil Price, Barclays Says
Economy Slows To A Crawl
Government Green Lights Gulf Dollar Abandonment
Federal Reserve May Want Inflation
Fed Cuts Key Interest Rate By A Quarter Point
U.S. Economic Collapse News Archive
Filed under: 9/11 Truth, Air Force, Al Gore, bill gates, biofuels, carbon dioxide, Carbon Tax, China, David Rockefeller, energy, environmental taxation, ethanol, Eugenics, famine, food crisis, food market, food prices, food shortage, Genocide, global elite, global tax, global warming co2, Globalism, Henry Kissinger, malthusian catastrophe, Nancy Pelosi, Newt Gingrich, Oil, one child policy, planned parenthood, Population Control, riot, riots, rockefeller, sterilization, ted turner, UN, Uncategorized, Warren Buffett, WTO
Ted Turner: World Needs a ’Voluntary’ One-Child Policy for the Next Hundred Years
Philly 9/11 Truth Confronts Eugenicist on Calls for 95% Population Reduction
Aaron Dykes
Jones Report
April 29, 2008
http://youtube.com/watch?v=1G72Sd6AqjE
Okay, so Ted Turner’s not a people person. But, he has a plan to bring the world’s population down to 2 billion– a figure substantially less than current numbers– that he says would allow for a better standard of living… for everyone.
Though it might be trying for the world to adopt the brutal one-child policy of China, it would, ideally, help humanity to avoid the nightmare cannibalism scenario Turner claims we otherwise face in the wake of global warming.
Ted Turner used his Southern charm to calm worries that he longed for 95% decline from current population levels during a question and answer session– as the billionaire eugenicist was quoted in Audubon magazine more than a decade ago.
“That’s not really true,” Turner told members of Philly 9/11 Truth. He instead cited 2 billion as the target– a mere 2/3 reduction of the human population — which he claims would allow ’everyone’ to have a decent standard of living, including a “refrigerator and air conditioner.”
The 9/11 Truth activists probed the billionaire on how he would achieve these population goals– citing policymakers like Henry Kissinger who advocate using ’food as weapon.’
Turner commented, “The way I think we should get there is have a voluntary one child per family for the next hundred years… like they do in China now.”
Despite the fact that Turner himself has 5 children, he has put forward this view a number of times before. “We’re too many people; that’s why we have global warming,” he told PBS’s Charlie Rose in April. “Too many people are using too much stuff.”
“On a voluntary basis, everybody in the world’s got to pledge to themselves that one or two children is it,” Turner added during the April 2008 interview.
China’s policies have been heavily criticized not only for the gross human rights violations against its dehumanized population, but also for its peer-pressure affect on the rest of the world to adopt similar polices. China, too, started with a so-called ’voluntary’ policy which then led to fines and only later to more extreme punishments for having more than one child.
In the name of global warming and environmentalism, children have now been blamed as ’part of the problem’ and calls to limit children have now saturated the Western World.
In the third world, Turner has contributed literally billions to population reduction, namely through United Nations programs , leading the way for the likes of Bill & Melinda Gates and Warren Buffett (Gates father, for one, has long been a leading board member of Planned Parenthood and a top eugenicist).
These same figures have also donated vast sums of money for vaccination programs that many have identified as part of the problem.
Members of Philly 9/11 Truth also asked Turner about being the largest land owner in North America. Turner suggested that his vast acreage– estimated at more than 2 million acres— was being put to good use, deflecting claims of hypocrisy.
Turner has also been criticized recently for advocating the production of corn-based ethanol, which has now been blamed by the U.N. and others for causing food shortages and increased poverty, particularly in the 3rd World.
Philly 9/11 Truth also confronted the unrepentant Turner after the event to further criticize his involvement with globalist agendas that continue to pursue drastic population reduction at the cost of dignity and respect for the masses of humanity.
In 1996, Turner stated in an interview with Audubon Magazine that a 95% population reduction would be ideal. Below is his quote.
“A total population of 250-300 million people, a 95% decline from present levels, would be ideal.”
Ted Turner Repeats Call For Population Curb
Says diminishing farmland will lead to food riots, despite being behind corn-based ethanol push
Paul Joseph Watson
Prison Planet
April 28, 2008
Billionaire Globalist Ted Turner, who earlier this month predicted that global warming would eventually lead to cannibalism, has repeated his call to curb population growth, claiming that disappearing farmland will cause food riots, despite the fact that Turner himself is behind the push to grow corn-based ethanol, an industry the UN has blamed for food shortages and increased poverty.
http://youtube.com/watch?v=3jgKodUUeTU
“There are a lot of different problems being caused by an ever-increasing number of people in a finite-sized world,” Turner told CNBC’s Bob Pisani. “The resources of the planet just can’t keep up with the demand and I’m afraid this going to be more commonplace. I’m afraid we’re just seeing the tip of the iceberg. It’s very complicated I do want to say.”
“We’ve had warnings for a number of years,” Turner said. “Grain stocks have been dropping every year for the last 10 years or pretty close to that – the reserves. And, the environment in so many different areas is being – the pressure being put on it by the ever-increasing number of people and the number of people using more stuff and more energy – that’s what ‘s leading to global climate change and the over-fishing of the oceans,” he added.
Turner cited increased vehicle usage as a reason for disappearing farmland.
“Agriculture is complicated anyway. For instance – China adds more cars, they need more roads and the only place to put more roads in China is over farmland. So you lose farmland as you increase development. We’re doing it even here in the United States.”
However, Turner failed to acknowledge the fact that one of the main reasons behind food shortages is global demand for biofuels, an industry that Turner has vigorously promoted and publicly supported in a 2006 WTO speech.
As the UN warned last year, “The global rush to switch from oil to energy derived from plants will drive deforestation, push small farmers off the land and lead to serious food shortages and increased poverty unless carefully managed”.
Earlier this month, Turner caused shockwaves when he stated that inaction on global warming “will be catastrophic” and those who don’t die “will be cannibals.”
“We’re too many people; that’s why we have global warming,” he said. “Too many people are using too much stuff,” adding that “on a voluntary basis, everybody in the world’s got to pledge to themselves that one or two children is it.”
Turner himself failed to live up to such a pledge, having fathered five children, but continues to lecture the rest of us on how we should limit our procreation.
Some would find Turner’s zeal to “thin” the human population hard to reconcile with his leadership of a UN initiative to combat malaria.
When one considers Turner’s past comments about the supposed need to drastically cut world population levels by up to 95%, his involvement in any kind of program run under the guise of “improving health” in third world countries should be examined with severe caution.
“A total population of 250-300 million people, a 95% decline from present levels, would be ideal,” Turner stated in 1996.
As the Baltimore Sun reported, “Most of [Ted Turner’s first donation to the United Nations Foundation of] $22 million went to programs that seek to stall population growth.”
Recent News:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qi6n_-wB154
US air force calls for mission to combat climate change
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environm..change?gusrc=rss&feed=science
Global Warming – Left’s latest excuse for war on the family
http://grasstopsusa.com/df042808.html
Rockefeller’s Urge Action On Climate Change
http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/.._resources/article3835693.ece
Veteran Professor Targeted For Global Warming Skepticism
http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/front/5736103.html
Record complaints over ’greenwashing’
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/m..008/04/25/eagreen125.xml
Gore Investment Body Closes $683M Fund
Carbon emissions may be immaterial to global warming in future
The link between solar cycle length and decadal global temperature
Radiohead Limits Travel To Fight Climate Change
Filed under: Africa, asia, biofuels, brent scowcroft, bush senior, central bank, CIA, colombia, Credit Crisis, DEBT, Economic Collapse, economic depression, Economy, ethiopia, Eugenics, famine, food prices, GAO, gas prices, Genocide, global elite, Globalism, Great Depression, Greenback, Henry Kissinger, imf, Inflation, Iraq, malthusian catastrophe, Mexico, neocons, Nigeria, Peru, Petrol, philippines, Population Control, riot, riots, Stock Market, tuckey, UN, US Economy, wheat, World Bank | Tags: corn, grains, rice, Robert Zoellick, yemen
World Bank: rocketing food prices have put fight against poverty back 7 years
London Guardian
April 10, 2008
Rocketing global food prices are causing acute problems of hunger in poor countries and have put back the fight against poverty by seven years, the World Bank said today.
Robert Zoellick, the Bank’s president, said that while consumers in rich countries were worried about the cost of filling the fuel tanks in their cars, people in poor countries were “struggling to fill their stomachs. And it’s getting more and more difficult every day.”
Zoellick said the price of wheat has risen by 120% in the past year, more than doubling the cost of a loaf of bread. Rice prices were up by 75%.
“In Bangladesh a two kilogram bag of rice now consumes almost half of the daily income of a poor family. With little margin for survival, rising prices too often means fewer meals.”
Poor people in Yemen, he said, were now spending more than a quarter of their income on bread.
“This is not just about meals foregone today, or about increasing social unrest, it is about lost learning potential for children and adults in the future, stunted intellectual and physical growth. Even more, we estimate that the effect of this food crisis on poverty reduction worldwide is in the order of seven lost years.”
The Bank’s analysis chimes with research from the International Monetary Fund showing that Africa will be the hardest hit continent from rising food prices. More than 20 African countries will see their trade balance worsen by more than 1% of GDP as a result of having to pay more for food.
World Bank expects more high food prices
AP News
April 8, 2008
Rising food prices, which have caused social unrest in several countries, are not a temporary phenomenon, but are likely to persist for several years, World Bank President Robert Zoellick says.
Strong demand, change in diet and the use of biofuels as an alternative source of energy have reduced world food stocks to a level bordering on an emergency, he says.
Speaking to reporters Monday before the bank’s spring meeting this coming weekend, Zoellick said the 185-member World Bank would work with other organizations to deal with the crisis by seeking ways to help farmers, especially in Africa, to increase productivity and improve access to food through schools or workplaces.
“This is not a this-year phenomenon,” he said, referring to the price spike. “I think it is going to continue for some time.”
Zoellick said bank forecasters looking at food prices have concluded that a serious risk exists of a significant increase in poverty, which for some countries will reverse gains made over the past five to 10 years.
http://mparent7777-1.blogspot.com/2008/04/food-as-weapon-rape-of-iraq.html
UN Chief: Food riots are already being reported across the globe
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2008/apr/09/food.unitednations
Grains Gone Wild
http://www.nytimes.com/2008.._r=1&oref=slogin&pagewanted=print
Food Haitians storm palace in food price riots
http://www.boston.com/news/world/la..rm_palace_in_food_price_riots/
Rice Jumps to Record, Corn Near High as Demand Outpaces Supply
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/new..&sid=aBPFBEmOgnh8&refer=home
Food riots fear after rice price hits a high
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environ..r/06/food.foodanddrink
Food prices to rise for years, biofuel firms say
http://www.reuters.com/article/reutersEdge/idUSL0324014220080403
Rush to restrict trade in basic foods
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/7a4c2b98..77b07658.html?nclick_check=1
Filed under: amazon, biofuels, BP, brazil, carlyle group, ethanol, famine, food crisis, food market, food prices, gas prices, GE, George Bush, george soros, health and environment, malthusian catastrophe, Mexico, Oil, Pakistan, Petrol, shell, UN, washington, wheat | Tags: corn, grain, grasslands, malaysia, rain forest, rainforest, soybean, wetlands
Destroying the Amazon Rainforest to Fight Global Warming
Biofuel industry to destroy valuble wetlands, grasslands and forests to cash-in on the global warming trend
Time
March 30, 2008
From his Cessna a mile above the southern Amazon, John Carter looks down on the destruction of the world’s greatest ecological jewel. He watches men converting rain forest into cattle pastures and soybean fields with bulldozers and chains. He sees fires wiping out such gigantic swaths of jungle that scientists now debate the “savannization” of the Amazon. Brazil just announced that deforestation is on track to double this year; Carter, a Texas cowboy with all the subtlety of a chainsaw, says it’s going to get worse fast. “It gives me goose bumps,” says Carter, who founded a nonprofit to promote sustainable ranching on the Amazon frontier. “It’s like witnessing a rape.”
The Amazon was the chic eco-cause of the 1990s, revered as an incomparable storehouse of biodiversity. It’s been overshadowed lately by global warming, but the Amazon rain forest happens also to be an incomparable storehouse of carbon, the very carbon that heats up the planet when it’s released into the atmosphere. Brazil now ranks fourth in the world in carbon emissions, and most of its emissions come from deforestation. Carter is not a man who gets easily spooked–he led a reconnaissance unit in Desert Storm, and I watched him grab a small anaconda with his bare hands in Brazil–but he can sound downright panicky about the future of the forest. “You can’t protect it. There’s too much money to be made tearing it down,” he says. “Out here on the frontier, you really see the market at work.”
This land rush is being accelerated by an unlikely source: biofuels. An explosion in demand for farm-grown fuels has raised global crop prices to record highs, which is spurring a dramatic expansion of Brazilian agriculture, which is invading the Amazon at an increasingly alarming rate.
Propelled by mounting anxieties over soaring oil costs and climate change, biofuels have become the vanguard of the green-tech revolution, the trendy way for politicians and corporations to show they’re serious about finding alternative sources of energy and in the process slowing global warming. The U.S. quintupled its production of ethanol–ethyl alcohol, a fuel distilled from plant matter–in the past decade, and Washington has just mandated another fivefold increase in renewable fuels over the next decade. Europe has similarly aggressive biofuel mandates and subsidies, and Brazil’s filling stations no longer even offer plain gasoline. Worldwide investment in biofuels rose from $5 billion in 1995 to $38 billion in 2005 and is expected to top $100 billion by 2010, thanks to investors like Richard Branson and George Soros, GE and BP, Ford and Shell, Cargill and the Carlyle Group. Renewable fuels has become one of those motherhood-and-apple-pie catchphrases, as unobjectionable as the troops or the middle class.
But several new studies show the biofuel boom is doing exactly the opposite of what its proponents intended: it’s dramatically accelerating global warming, imperiling the planet in the name of saving it. Corn ethanol, always environmentally suspect, turns out to be environmentally disastrous. Even cellulosic ethanol made from switchgrass, which has been promoted by eco-activists and eco-investors as well as by President Bush as the fuel of the future, looks less green than oil-derived gasoline.
Meanwhile, by diverting grain and oilseed crops from dinner plates to fuel tanks, biofuels are jacking up world food prices and endangering the hungry. The grain it takes to fill an SUV tank with ethanol could feed a person for a year. Harvests are being plucked to fuel our cars instead of ourselves. The U.N.’s World Food Program says it needs $500 million in additional funding and supplies, calling the rising costs for food nothing less than a global emergency. Soaring corn prices have sparked tortilla riots in Mexico City, and skyrocketing flour prices have destabilized Pakistan, which wasn’t exactly tranquil when flour was affordable.
Biofuels do slightly reduce dependence on imported oil, and the ethanol boom has created rural jobs while enriching some farmers and agribusinesses. But the basic problem with most biofuels is amazingly simple, given that researchers have ignored it until now: using land to grow fuel leads to the destruction of forests, wetlands and grasslands that store enormous amounts of carbon.
Backed by billions in investment capital, this alarming phenomenon is replicating itself around the world. Indonesia has bulldozed and burned so much wilderness to grow palm oil trees for biodiesel that its ranking among the world’s top carbon emitters has surged from 21st to third according to a report by Wetlands International. Malaysia is converting forests into palm oil farms so rapidly that it’s running out of uncultivated land. But most of the damage created by biofuels will be less direct and less obvious. In Brazil, for instance, only a tiny portion of the Amazon is being torn down to grow the sugarcane that fuels most Brazilian cars. More deforestation results from a chain reaction so vast it’s subtle: U.S. farmers are selling one-fifth of their corn to ethanol production, so U.S. soybean farmers are switching to corn, so Brazilian soybean farmers are expanding into cattle pastures, so Brazilian cattlemen are displaced to the Amazon. It’s the remorseless economics of commodities markets. “The price of soybeans goes up,” laments Sandro Menezes, a biologist with Conservation International in Brazil, “and the forest comes down.”
Deforestation accounts for 20% of all current carbon emissions. So unless the world can eliminate emissions from all other sources–cars, power plants, factories, even flatulent cows–it needs to reduce deforestation or risk an environmental catastrophe. That means limiting the expansion of agriculture, a daunting task as the world’s population keeps expanding. And saving forests is probably an impossibility so long as vast expanses of cropland are used to grow modest amounts of fuel. The biofuels boom, in short, is one that could haunt the planet for generations–and it’s only getting started.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2008/apr/01/biofuels.energy
Analyst Predicts Corn Rationing In 2008
http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ap/fn/5662307.html
Filed under: Africa, asia, brent scowcroft, bush senior, central bank, CIA, colombia, Credit Crisis, DEBT, Economic Collapse, economic depression, Economy, ethiopia, Eugenics, famine, food prices, GAO, Genocide, global elite, Great Depression, Greenback, Henry Kissinger, Inflation, malthusian catastrophe, Mexico, neocons, Nigeria, Peru, philippines, Population Control, riot, riots, Stock Market, tuckey, UN, US Economy, wheat | Tags: grain, Guinea, King George VI, Mauritania, Morocco, rice, rice shortage, soybean shortage, thailand, yemen
Rice Prices Soar Globally Leading To Food Riots
CSM
March 26, 2008
Bangkok, Thailand – – Rice farmers here are staying awake in shifts at night to guard their fields from thieves. In Peru, shortages of wheat flour are prompting the military to make bread with potato flour, a native crop. In Egypt, Cameroon, and Burkina Faso food riots have broken out in the past week.
Around the world, governments and aid groups are grappling with the escalating cost of basic grains. In December, 37 countries faced a food crisis, reports the UN Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO), and 20 nations had imposed some form of food-price controls.
In Asia, where rice is on every plate, prices are shooting up almost daily. Premium Thai fragrant rice now costs $900 per ton, a nearly 30 percent rise from a month ago.
Exporters say the price could eclipse $1,000 per ton by June. Similarly, prices of white rice have climbed about 50 percent since January to $600 per ton and are projected to jump another 40 percent to $800 per ton in April.
The skyrocketing prices have prompted millers to default on rice supply contracts and bandits to steal rice as they aim to hoard the crop, and sell it later, as prices continue to rise.
“The farmers are afraid as their fields have been robbed in the nighttime,” says Sarayouth Phumithon, an official at the Thai government’s Bureau of Rice Strategy and Supply. “This is just the beginning. The problem will get worse if the price keeps increasing.”
High Rice Cost Creating Fears of Asia Unrest
NY Times
March 29, 2008
Rising prices and a growing fear of scarcity have prompted some of the world’s largest rice producers to announce drastic limits on the amount of rice they export.
The price of rice, a staple in the diets of nearly half the world’s population, has almost doubled on international markets in the last three months. That has pinched the budgets of millions of poor Asians and raised fears of civil unrest.
Shortages and high prices for all kinds of food have caused tensions and even violence around the world in recent months. Since January, thousands of troops have been deployed in Pakistan to guard trucks carrying wheat and flour. Protests have erupted in Indonesia over soybean shortages, and China has put price controls on cooking oil, grain, meat, milk and eggs.
Food riots have erupted in recent months in Guinea, Mauritania, Mexico, Morocco, Senegal, Uzbekistan and Yemen. But the moves by rice-exporting nations over the last two days — meant to ensure scarce supplies will meet domestic needs — drove prices on the world market even higher this week.
This has fed the insecurity of rice-importing nations, already increasingly desperate to secure supplies. On Tuesday, President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo of the Philippines, afraid of increasing rice scarcity, ordered government investigators to track down hoarders.
The increase in rice prices internationally promised to put more pressure on prices in the United States, which imports more than 30 percent of the rice Americans consume, according to the United States Rice Producers Association. The price that consumers pay for rice has already increased more than 8 percent over the last year.
But the United States is fortunate in also exporting rice; poor countries ranging from Sengal in West Africa to the Solomon Islands in the South Pacific are heavily dependent on imports and now face higher bills.
Kissinger’s Plan For Food Control Genocide
Tehran Times
March 18, 2008
On Dec. 10, 1974, the U.S. National Security Council under Henry Kissinger completed a classified 200-page study, “National Security Study Memorandum 200: Implications of Worldwide Population Growth for U.S. Security and Overseas Interests.” The study falsely claimed that population growth in the so-called Lesser Developed Countries (LDCs) was a grave threat to U.S. national security. Adopted as official policy in November 1975 by President Gerald Ford, NSSM 200 outlined a covert plan to reduce population growth in those countries through birth control, and also, implicitly, war and famine. Brent Scowcroft, who had by then replaced Kissinger as national security adviser (the same post Scowcroft was to hold in the Bush administration), was put in charge of implementing the plan. CIA Director George Bush was ordered to assist Scowcroft, as were the secretaries of state, treasury, defense, and agriculture.
The bogus arguments that Kissinger advanced were not original. One of his major sources was the Royal Commission on Population, which King George VI had created in 1944 “to consider what measures should be taken in the national interest to influence the future trend of population.” The commission found that Britain was gravely threatened by population growth in its colonies, since “a populous country has decided advantages over a sparsely-populated one for industrial production.” The combined effects of increasing population and industrialization in its colonies, it warned, “might be decisive in its effects on the prestige and influence of the West,” especially effecting “military strength and security.”
NSSM 200 similarly concluded that the United States was threatened by population growth in the former colonial sector. It paid special attention to 13 “key countries” in which the United States had a “special political and strategic interest”: India, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Indonesia, Thailand, the Philippines, Turkey, Nigeria, Egypt, Ethiopia, Mexico, Brazil, and Colombia. It claimed that population growth in those states was especially worrisome, since it would quickly increase their relative political, economic, and military strength.
http://www.nationalpost.com/news/story.html?id=412984
Imagine you were already slowly starving and food prices suddenly double
http://electronicintifada.net/v2/article9421.shtml
Bread, milk, egg prices spike, draining locals’ wallets
http://www.pressofatlanticcity.com/186/story/119284.html
Food prices rising across the world
http://www.printthis.clickability.com..d.ap%2Findex.html&partnerID=21210
Filed under: Bank of England, Bear Stearns, Big Banks, BOE, California, central bank, Credit Crisis, DEBT, Dow, Economic Collapse, economic depression, Economy, Euro, food prices, gas prices, George Bush, global economy, gold, Great Depression, Greenback, henry paulson, Inflation, interest rate cut, interest rate cuts, Iraq, nymex, Oil, Paulson, Petrol, rate cut, silver, Stock Market, US Economy, Wall Street, wheat
Update: Gold Regains $954, Oil $108, Euro $1.58
AP
March 27, 2008
Gold prices edged slightly lower Thursday after the dollar gained against the euro, leading investors to sell the precious metal traditionally viewed as a haven against inflation.Other commodities traded mixed, with crude oil briefly rising above $108 a barrel and wheat and soybean futures retreating.
The dollar strengthened against the euro after the U.S. Commerce Department reported that the economy grew slightly in the fourth quarter. The euro bought $1.5766 in Thursday trading, down from $1.5815 in New York late Wednesday.
A stronger greenback often encourages investors to sell hard assets like gold and silver, which are seen as hedge investments during times of economic uncertainty and rising inflation. A stronger dollar also makes dollar-denominated commodities seem more expensive to overseas buyers.
Gold for April delivery inched 40 cents lower to settle $944.20 an ounce on the New York Mercantile Exchange, after earlier trading as low as $940.
“Gold seems to be following the euro,” said Scott Meyers, analyst with Pioneer Futures in New York. “I think it’s a brief pause in the upward trend but we have to keep an eye on the dollar.”
Other precious metals traded higher. Silver for May delivery rose 16.7 cents to settle at $18.55 an ounce on the Nymex, while May copper added 14.80 cents to settle at $3.873 a pound.
Gold had moved higher in the previous two sessions, breaking out of last week’s commodities slump that saw big drops in everything from corn to copper. Gold has gained 12 percent this year, driven up by U.S. interest rate cuts, record-high crude prices and nervousness about the economy. The metal reached a record 1,033.90 this month, and analysts say it could go even higher.
“We’re going to see sustained acceleration in the (gold) market,” Meyers said. “There’s enough nervousness about the dollar and I don’t know if there’s enough bullets in (Federal Reserve Chairman Ben) Bernanke’s gun to keep lowering rates.”
In energy markets, oil futures briefly rose above $108 a barrel after the bombing of a major oil pipeline in Iraq. Dow Jones Newswires reported that the attack cut off exports from the southern city of Basra, although oil officials said exports weren’t affected.
Light, sweet crude for May delivery added $1.68 to settle at $107.58 a barrel on the Nymex after earlier rising as high as $108.22.
Other energy futures traded mixed. April gasoline futures fell 2.66 cents to settle at $2.7163 a gallon, while April heating oil futures rose by 10.45 cents to settle at $3.1483 a gallon.
In agriculture markets, wheat prices fell after the dollar rebounded.
Wheat for May delivery dropped 19 cents to settle at $10.14 a bushel on the Chicago Board of Trade, after earlier falling as low as $10 a bushel.
Other agriculture futures traded mixed. Corn for May delivery added 3.25 cents to settle at $5.55 a bushel on the CBOT, while May soybean futures declined 24.75 cents to settle at $13.2725.
BlackRock says gold record high may be challenged
Reuters
March 26, 2008
http://youtube.com/watch?v=OvCVEsahhZo
Investment manager BlackRock expects tight gold supply and a gradual rising trend in the price which could lift the metal to new highs above the record $1,030 per ounce hit last week.
“We expect a gradually rising trend in the gold price and if that happens we will get to a new high. We are expecting that positive trend to continue, with volatility over the short term,” said fund manager Evy Hambro, who runs BlackRock’s $17 billion (8.5 billion pound) World Mining Fund and co-manages the $8.9-billion World Gold Fund.
Gold traded at $931.60 an ounce on Tuesday, well off a high of $1,030.80 hit on March 17.
“We think the replacement cost of gold today is much higher than where the market is right now,” Hambro said, adding that even if the price reached the desired level it would have to be sustained for gold companies to invest.
“Just because it reaches that number doesn’t mean it’s going to change anything. We’re not going to see all gold mining CEOs building new projects. The price needs to average that over a decent period of time for them to start investing shareholder capital into new production assets,” he said.
The Gold fund’s top three holdings as at the end of last month were Australia’s Newcrest Mining (NCM.AX: Quote, Profile, Research), Canada’s Barrick Gold (ABX.TO: Quote, Profile, Research) and Kinross Gold (K.TO: Quote, Profile, Research), which together accounted for over 22 percent of the fund.
“In the gold space we are very much in a situation where production will continue to likely decline. There are not enough new gold discoveries to replace the gold being mined,” Hambro said.
Recent News:
http://business.timesonline.co..economics/article3624591.ece
Wall Street To Shed 20,000 Jobs
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/..money/2008/03/26/bcnjobs126.xml
Paulson Says New Financial Rules Needed
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080326..4FpI27qGt34XERusSs0NUE
Next Stop $2000 Gold
http://seekingalpha.com/article/69710-next-stop-2-000-gold
Bush Actually Thinks Economy Will Get Stronger
http://www.reuters.com/article/politicsN..=RSS&feedName=politicsNews&rpc=22&sp=true
$5.40 Gasoline Spotted In California
http://www.nbc11.com/news/15701062/detail.html
Paulson: Social Security Unsustainable
http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=080325191211.f5erep3w&show_article=1
Banks Want You to Bail Them Out
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/a233faa2..0-000077b07658.html?nclick_check=1
Questions abound on Bear Stearns buyout
http://www.reuters.com/article/ousiv/idUSN1438930520080320
Goldman Sees $1.2 Trillion Global Credit Loss
Financial Destruction Of The Average Man
Food Stamp Use Hits All-Time High
Sterling falls as BoE highlights downside risk to pound
New Home Sales Fall To 13-Year Low
Hoarding by banks stokes fears on credit crisis
Gas Prices Skyrocket To All-Time High
Barrick Gold to invest up to $35m in Allied Gold
Chinese banks allowed to trade gold futures
Existing-Home Sales Rise, Prices Fall
Fed May Buy Mortgages Next
The four ‘new sheriffs’ of Wall Street
Filed under: 2008 Election, Alan Greenspan, bernanke, central bank, CNBC, Credit Crisis, DEBT, Economic Collapse, economic depression, Economy, Federal Reserve, food prices, glenn beck, gold, GOP, Great Depression, Greenback, housing market, idaho, Inflation, interest rate cut, interest rate cuts, missouri, montana, peter schiff, rate cut, real estate, republican caucus, republican primaries, Ron Paul, ron paul delegates, silver, Stock Market, subprime, subprime lending, US Economy
Abolish the Fed – Ron Paul on CNBC
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mBympCQcyzY
Financial Advisor to Glenn Beck: Ron Paul Gets It
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Es2SZ1Z2lW8
http://www.house.gov/paul/tst/tst2008/tst031608.htm
Ron Paul Satisfies Ballot Requirements Nationwide
http://news.google.com/news/url..f2pmR2-qMAHsD2kDwRRN_9fJAdGQ
Ron Paul: Shock and Awe in Missouri
http://stcharlesjournal.stltoday.c..s/doc47e01f744db32094092795.txt
Ron Paul Turns in Signatures to Appear on Montana
http://www.ronpaul2008.com/press..ppear-on-montana-republican-primary-ballotRon Paul is On The Idaho Ballot
Ron Paul Backers Take Over GOP Caucuses
Ron Paul wins here where it counts
Ron Paul backers tangle with state GOP over caucus reports
Ron Paul: Beware the Threat from Within