By Stephen Lendman
March 30, 2013
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On March 29, Cyprus Mail said banks opened Thursday.
They did so amid calm.
Long lines queued. People
waited patiently. A feared stampede didn't materialize. Whether it's the calm
before the storm remains to be seen.
Looting Cypriot bank accounts
reflects the new normal. It set a precedent. It did so for Europe. More
on that below.
Wall Street banks operate the
same way. So did MF Global.
Grand theft
reflects official policy.
Money is made
the old-fashioned way.
It's stolen.
Nothing's done
to stop it.
Corrupt
politicians and regulators permit it.
They do so for
benefits they derive.
Scamming investors is
commonplace. Goldman Sachs derisively calls them "muppets."
MF Global's CEO Jon Corzine
formerly headed Goldman Sachs. He looted customer accounts. He did so
brazenly.
He used client money to
speculate. More went for internal purposes. Much went to cover debt obligations
and losses. Top firm executives made millions. They did so at customers'
expense.
Financial
reform accomplished nothing.
Grand theft is
institutionalized.
Europe's no
different from America.
Anything goes
is policy.
Banks deposits were
considered safe. No longer. Eurocrats changed things.
Euro Group head Jeroen Dijsselbloem
explained.
Expect more wealth extracted
from depositors. Cyprus established a template. Bank accounts in other troubled
economies aren't safe.
"If there is a risk in a
bank, our first question should be 'Okay, what are you in the bank going to do
about that," he asked? "What can you do to recapitalize yourself?'
"
"If the bank can’t do
it, then we'll talk to the shareholders and the bondholders. We'll ask them to
contribute in recapitalizing the bank, and if necessary the uninsured deposit
holders."
"The consequences may be
that it’s the end of story, and that is an approach that I think, now that we
are out of the heat of the crisis, we should take."
In late February, ECB
Executive Board member Benoit Coeure suggested raiding
depositor accounts for bail-ins, saying:
"There needs to be an
appropriate burden-sharing….because we need to achieve debt
sustainability."
At the time, he suggested not
doing it across the board. Whether he meant it isn't clear.
He added that he doesn't
"pre-judge any instruments because the vocabulary matters, and there are
many ways to achieve burden-sharing."
It bears repeating.
Grand theft is official policy.
Even bank accounts aren't safe.
Market analyst Marc Faber believes "governments
one day (will) take away 20 ~ 30% of (his) wealth." There's no place to
hide.
German Finance Minister
Wolfgang Schaeuble proposed a 40% haircut on all deposits. So does IMF head
Christine Lagarde.
Cypriot Finance Minister
Michalis Sarris said large uninsured Laiki Bank depositors could lose up to 80%
of their money. Other European depositors race similar risks. So do people
elsewhere.
Some may lose everything.
It's the new normal.
Personal savings are up for grabs.
Bank bailouts will be borne on the backs of
ordinary people.
Think it can't happen here?
Think again. There's no place to hide. Ellen Brown explained. She said:
Banks legally own depositor funds,
"Our money
becomes the bank’s,
and we become
unsecured creditors
holding IOUs or
promises to pay."
Banks once repaid depositors
on demand. A joint December 10, 2012 FDIC-Bank of England (BOE) paper changed
things. Plans to loot customer accounts were made earlier.
The Bank for International
Settlements originated them. It's the privately owned central bank for central
bankers. Major ones have final say.
Looting
depositor accounts is policy.
Cyprus isn't a
one-off.
Guaranteed
insured deposits don't matter.
They're up for
grabs like all others.
It'll be done
clever ways or outright.
Brown said the FCIC-BOE plan
involves converting deposits (IOU promises to pay) into bank equity. They get
our money. We get bank stock.
Ready cash on demand is gone.
Whether it's ever returned, who knows? Take the money and run looks more than
ever like policy. Depositors anywhere may be hung out to dry.
Even gold and silver in
safety deposit boxes aren't safe. Not in America. Homeland Security told banks
in writing. It may inspect their contents on demand.
Ed Noor: Never forget what the good rabbi says; "serve" can take many diverse forms including creating small accounts to be robbed as the banker/Jews wish..
Under Patriot Act provisions, it may seize them with no warrant. It can do so anywhere. Banco de Mattress isn't safe.
Under Patriot Act provisions, it may seize them with no warrant. It can do so anywhere. Banco de Mattress isn't safe.
Investor Jim Rogers said "run for the hills
now. I'm doing it." Cyprus is no one-off.
"I want to make sure
that I don't get trapped," he said. "Think of all the poor souls that
just thought they had a simple bank account."
"Now they find out that
they are making a 'contribution' to the stability of Cyprus. The gall of these
politicians."
"If you're going to listen to government,
you're going to go bankrupt very quickly."
"I, for one, am making
sure I don't have too much money in any one specific bank account anywhere in
the world, because now there is a precedent,"
"The IMF has said 'sure,
loot the bank accounts. The EU has said 'loot the bank accounts, so you can be
sure that other countries when problems come are going to say, 'Well, it's
condoned by the EU. It's condoned by the IMF. So let's do it too.' "
The Daily Bell asked "What Is The REAL
Euro End Game? It is time to apply the free-market to bank depositors."
Strategy involves shifting
responsibility from taxpayers to depositors. Things ahead won't be the same.
Eurocrats' policy is wrongheaded. They're deepening crisis conditions, not
alleviating them.
They believe achieving
"full-on political union" depends on it. Their well-documented
comments reflect it.
"….Cyprus shock and
subsequent statements are not only deliberate, but have contributed to
spreading uncertainty throughout Europe."
"Now people no longer
trust their banks, contributing to their destabilization."
"If you have a bank
crisis, the last thing you want to do is further destabilize trust and
confidence in the system. But Brussels Eurocrats have done just that."
"Don't think it was a
mistake. If one accepts that line of thinking, the ramifications are serious
and deep from a sociopolitical, political and investment standpoint."
The Economic Collapse blog said global
elites plan to loot bank accounts. Don't be surprised when they steal yours.
"They are already very clearly telling you that they are going to do it." Your money is theirs. It's up for grabs on demand.
People put money in banks for
safety. Removing it "jeopardize(s) the entire system." Cyprus is a
tip of a giant iceberg. Major global banks are highly leveraged. Many are
insolvent.
When their bets pay off, they
win. When they don't, we pay. Wealth confiscation is now policy. Commerzbank
chief economist Joerg Kraemer urges a "tax rate of 15 percent on (Italian)
financial assets."
It's "probably enough to
push (government) debt below the critical level of 100 percent of gross
domestic product," he said.
New Zealand Finance Minister
Bill English proposed across the board depositor "haircut(s)" in case
of major bank failures.
Britain's Daily Mail headlined "One of the
nastiest and most immoral political acts in modern times," saying:
"People who rob old ladies in the street, or hold up security vans, are branded as thieves."
"Yet when Germany presides over a heist of billions of pounds from private savers' Cyprus bank accounts, to 'save the euro' for the hundredth time, this is claimed as high statesmanship.""It is nothing of the sort….It has struck fear into the hearts of hundreds of millions of European citizens, because it establishes a dire precedent.If Eurocrats can loot Cyprus, why not anywhere."This is the most brutal display since 2008 of how far the euro-committed nations are willing to go to save the tottering single currency.""It shows that the zone's crisis will run and run to the grievous disadvantage" of most everyone."Surely the euro cannot long survive by such anti-democratic means. It certainly does not deserve to."
Graham Summers says
"Europe is out of options and out of money."It's "totally and completely bust."Its banks are highly leveraged. They can't raise capital "because no one in their right mind wants to invest in them….""European nations are bankrupt because AGAIN no one in their right mind wants to buy their bonds UNLESS they believe they can dump their investments on the ECB at a later date. Who is the greater fool there?”Europe isn't fixed because enough capital isn't there to do it. "Europe and its alleged backstops are out of money. This includes Germany, the ECB, and the mega-bailout funds such as the ESM (European Stability Mechanism)."The ECB is "chock full of garbage debts." It's insolvent. It can print money, "but once the BIG collateral call hits, (it's) useless because (what's needed) would implode the system.""What could go wrong?" Virtually anything. "It's only a matter of time before (crisis conditions reach) hyperdrive, and we have an event even worse than 2008."
Zero Hedge says
Russia's "next in line to restrict cash transactions. (They're) taking a page from the Europeans' book."
"Russia to ban cash transactions over $10,000." It plans to "slash the amount of cash in domestic trade."It may do so by 2015. It's "expected to boost" bank reserves "and put a damper on (its) shadow economy. However, the middle class will most likely end up having to pay the price for the scheme."According to Zero Hedge, leaders realize that "limits of fiscal and monetary policy have been reached."
They're "now changing
rules, limiting freedom, and (instituting) outright confiscation (as) the only
way to maintain a status quo."
Doing so
reflects predatory capitalism's failure.
It's a house of
cards.
It's heading
perhaps for eventual collapse.
At risk is
whether it takes humanity with it when it does.
Stephen Lendman lives in
Chicago. He can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
I have warned many close friends (and the internet readers) about this situation for a few years. To me, it was obvious that it was in the works. They have slowly been milking us and I have said at some point they will turn on all the spigots and really get bucket fulls.
ReplyDeleteIts the last grab for as much of the loot they can get because they know its about to go down. They know that the masses are insouciant... lackadaisical... believers of the system and its Saviors (like Soetero or his alter ego republican).
But, the tribe (the real controllers) doesn't care about the money. They care about wealth and power.
Whatever is taken from you and I will be used to pay off their bogus debt from their insatiable gambling and bogus monetary schemes that we had absolutely nothing to do with.
Then from their position of wealth and power, they will take what is left of any tangible assets (homes, land, food, etc) and end up the landlords of serfs and slaves (us).
It is truly the fulfilling of the tribe's goal of having a subservient mass.
And my friends roll their eyes and yawn and consider me Chicken Little.