By Michael
June 23, 2013
Did
you know that you are involved in the most massive Ponzi scheme that has ever
existed? To illustrate my point, allow me to tell you a little
story.
Once
upon a time, there was a man named Sam. When he was younger, he had been
a very principled young man that had worked incredibly hard and that had built
a large number of tremendously successful businesses. He became
fabulously wealthy and he accumulated far more gold than anyone else on the
planet.
But
when Sam started to get a little older he forgot the values of his youth.
He started making really bad decisions and some of his relatives started to
take advantage of him. One particularly devious relative was a nephew
named Fred. One day Fred approached his Uncle Sam with a scheme that his
friends the bankers had come up with. What happened next would change the
course of Sam's life forever.
.
.
Even
though Sam was the wealthiest man in the world by far, Fred convinced Sam that
he could have an even higher standard of living by going into a little bit of
debt. In exchange for IOUs issued by his Uncle Sam, Fred would give him
paper notes that he printed off on his printing press. Since the paper
notes would be backed by the gold that Sam was holding, everyone would consider
them to be valuable. Sam could take those paper notes and spend them on
whatever his heart desired. Uncle Sam started to do this, and he started
to become addicted to all of the nice things that those paper notes would buy
him.
Fred
took the IOUs that he received from his uncle and he auctioned them off to the
bankers. But there was a problem. The IOUs issued by Uncle Sam had
to be paid back with interest. When the time came to pay back the IOUs,
Uncle Sam could not afford to pay back the debts, pay the interest on those
debts, and buy all of the nice things that he wanted.
So
Uncle Sam issued even more IOUs than before so that he could get enough notes
to pay off his debts. As time rolled on, this pattern just kept on
repeating. Uncle Sam repeatedly paid off his old debts by taking out even
larger new debts.
Meanwhile,
since the notes that Uncle Sam was using were backed by gold, everyone else in
the world decided to start using them to trade with one another. This was
greatly beneficial to Uncle Sam, because the rest of the world was glad to send
him oil, home electronics, plastic trinkets and anything else that Uncle Sam
wanted in exchange for his gold-backed notes.
.
.
Eventually,
however, the rest of the world started to suspect that the number of gold-backed
notes that Uncle Sam was issuing far exceeded the amount of gold that Uncle Sam
actually had. So the rest of the world started to trade in their notes
for gold.
And
by that time Uncle Sam definitely did not have enough gold to back up his
notes. Realizing that the scheme was starting to collapse, one day Uncle
Sam announced that his notes would no longer be backed by gold. But he
insisted that the rest of the world should continue using his notes because he
was the wealthiest man on the planet and everyone should just trust him.
.
.
And
the rest of the world did continue to trust him, although it wasn't the same as
before.
As
Uncle Sam got greedier and greedier, he started to issue IOUs and spend notes
at a rate that nobody ever dreamed possible. The great businesses that
Uncle Sam had built when he was younger were starting to decline, and Uncle Sam
started buying far more stuff from the rest of the world than they bought from
him. The rest of the world was still glad to take Uncle Sam's notes because
they used them to trade with one another, but they started accumulating far
more notes than they actually needed.
Not
sure exactly what to do with mountains of these notes, the rest of the world
started to loan them back to Uncle Sam. It eventually got to the point
where Uncle Sam owed the rest of the world trillions of these notes. Even
though the notes were losing value at a rate of close to 10 percent a year,
Uncle Sam somehow convinced the rest of the world to loan him notes at an
average rate of interest of less than 3 percent a year.
One
day Uncle Sam woke up and realized that the amount of debt that he owed was now
more than 5000 times larger than it was when Fred had first approached him with
this ill-fated scheme. ‘
Uncle
Sam now owed more than 16 trillion notes to his creditors, and Uncle Sam had
already made future financial commitments of 202
trillion notes that he would never be able to pay.
Meanwhile,
the notes that Fred had been printing up for Uncle Sam were now worth less than
5 percent of their original value. Uncle Sam was becoming concerned
because some of his other relatives were warning that this whole scheme was
about to collapse.
Sadly,
Uncle Sam did not listen to them. Uncle Sam knew that if he admitted how
fraudulent the financial scheme was, the rest of the world would quit sending
him all of the things that he needed in exchange for his notes and they would
quit lending his notes back to him at super low interest rates.
.
.
And
if the rest of the world lost confidence in his notes and quit using them,
Uncle Sam knew that his standard of living would go way, way down. That
was something that Uncle Sam could not bear to have happen.
When
a financial crisis almost caused the scheme to crash in 2008, a desperate Uncle
Sam went to Fred and asked for help. In response, Fred started printing
up far more notes than ever before and started directly buying up large amounts
of IOUs from Uncle Sam with the notes that he was creating out of thin
air. Fred hoped that the rest of the world would not notice what he was
doing.
It
seemed to work for a little while, but then an even worse financial crisis came
along. Once again, Uncle Sam started issuing massive amounts of new IOUs
and Fred started printing up giant mountains of new notes to try to fix things,
but their desperate attempts to keep the system going were to no avail.
The rest of the world started to realize that they had been sucked into a
massive Ponzi scheme, and they lost confidence in the notes that Uncle Sam was
using.
Suddenly
nobody wanted to lend notes to Uncle Sam at super low interest rates anymore,
and people started asking for far more notes in exchange for the things that
Uncle Sam wanted.
Uncle
Sam's standard of living dropped dramatically. Since he could no longer
flood the world with his notes, Uncle Sam could not continue to consume far, far
more wealth than he produced. Uncle Sam sunk into a deep depression as he
watched the scheme fall apart all around him.
Uncle
Sam had once been the wealthiest man on the entire planet, but now he was a
broke, tired old man that was absolutely drowning in debt. Unfortunately,
once he was down on his luck the rest of the world did not have any compassion
for him. In fact, much of the rest of the world celebrated the downfall
of Uncle Sam.
All
of this could have been avoided if Uncle Sam had never agreed to Fred's crazy
scheme. And once Uncle Sam made the decision to stop backing his notes
with gold, it was only a matter of time before the scheme was going to
collapse.
Does
this little story sound crazy to you? It shouldn't. The truth is
that you are involved in such a scheme right now. In case you haven't
figured it out, "Uncle Sam" is the United States, the
"notes" are U.S. dollars, and "Fred" is the Federal
Reserve.
,
,
Please share this story with as many people as you can. Our country is headed for complete and total financial disaster, and we need to get people educated about this while there is still time.
No comments:
Post a Comment
If your comment is not posted, it was deemed offensive.