Tuesday, April 1, 2014

$1 Billion Loan Guarantee From A Nation In Financial Freefall

By Anne Trimble


Probably, at an earlier time in our nation's past, it may have made sense for Secretary of State John Kerry to formulate a $1 billion loan guarantee for Ukraine. Yet, besides collaborating with the International Monetary Fund and many international groups to organize the loan, the Obama administration is also considering adding direct support to Ukraine.

The plain fact is that the United States itself might quickly end up resembling two countries that are in the depths of an economic doldrum, Spain and Greece. We are no longer an abundant country, overflowing with wealth and unlimited resources, but instead have become a country on the edge of a monetary wreck. With a $16 trillion dollar financial obligation, we need to obtain money from China and other countries just to keep the lights on.

If the national debt balloons to $21 trillion, US credit rating will experience a downgrade. Despite this looming disaster, Kerry wants to save the Ukraine. Is it too difficult to think of spending the cash placing folks back to work here in the United States? Our rising unemployment is possibly two times the 8.2 percent put out by official statisticians.

Leading economic experts like Wiedemer, as far back as 2006, were discussing the looming collapse of the United States housing market, a decrease in the equity markets, and a fall in customer spending due to increasing personal debt. Today, a lot of what he forecasted is showing up in trends like high joblessness, a diving stock market, and a spiking yearly cost of living.

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke as well as former Chairman Alan Greenspan, entrusted with damage control, have done just the opposite. And while the crisis they engineered by reckless printing money continues unabated, Kerry has toured the Ukraine, promised aid, and warned Putin to de-escalate his military.

Now, if that's not crazy enough for you, here's one more twist to this tale of official lunacy. While the Obama administration is planning to collaborate with Congress to give a $1 billion financing guarantee to shield that nation from reduced energy subsidies, Russia will most likely counter that initiative by elevating gas prices. Yet because Russians are the bulk holders of Ukrainian debt, the money from the U.S. will wind up in Russian financial institutions.

It resembles the Titanic's captain and crew deciding to play poker while the ship is heading straight for an iceberg. For some time now, we have been talking about obtaining God's money--Gold and Silver--due to the fact that it will certainly not be long now before the paper in your billfold will be useless.




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