Comment

Back to Work

Why We Need Smart Government for a Strong Economy
Mar 03, 2014StarGladiator rated this title 0.5 out of 5 stars
OK - - let's do the breakdown: The Blackstone Group, then the wealthiest private equity firm [private bank] on the planet, provides presidential candidate Bill with an office to solicit campaign donations. [In the present, his wife's top advisor sits on the BoD of BlackRock, an offshoot of the Blackstone Group, and one of the Big Four investment firms.] In 1993, the SEC, under Clinton, would drop the requirement for investment firmst to report the identities of their major shareholder - - to obscure ownership, one doesn't know the owners, one doesn't know who owns everything! Clinton signed NAFTA, which includes a clause allowing for foreign ownership of Mexican banks, and within one year 90% of them will be foreign-owned, mainly by American banks. Clinton signed the Riegle-Neal Interstate Banking and Branching Efficiency Act, allowing for full interstate banking - - a major step in the formation of a global banking cartel. Clinton signed the Investment Company Act of 1996, allowing for a limitless number of investors in hedge funds, et cetera. [When coupled with his later legislation, combined with limitless commodity futures purchases and limitless credit default swap purchases, this ensures incredible potential for speculation and lays the groundwork for the global economic meltdown and historic transfer of wealth from the 90% to the .01% [the REIT Modernization Act, the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act - - the Glass-Steagall killer, the Commodity Futures Modernization Act]. From 1997 to 2007, $23 trillion in securitized debt will be sold - - between 2007 to 2009, US households will lose $17 trillion in value and assets, whil $6 trillion from those credit derivatives is lost in Europe. [$23 trillion in securitized debt sold - - $23 trillion in losses.] And in 2013, the Blackstone Group would buy 41,000 fraudclosed homes, making them the number one landlord in America, then they would issue rent-backed securities [credit derivatives].