Sunday, August 29, 2010

Starvation Math

Sunday, August 29, 2010
Starvation Math
by Me
Anybody good at math? Not sure I'm doing the numbers right, but it looks like 56 million would starve...in the United States.

More Mad Max scenario predictions. Last Great Depression=90% rural farmers; over 7 million starved in the U.S. This Great Depression=Less than 10% rural farmers; How many will starve now?

Oops, I gotta triple that because our population has tripled since the first great depression and I didn't figure that into the equation, so make that about 168 million that would starve...in the United States.

Wow, I hope I'm wrong, that's more than half the population starving to death...in the United States.

Theoretically, that means that half the people I know, (and/or me), will starve to death within the decade or sooner.


Monday, August 2, 2010

thewatchmen.biz

Monday, August 2, 2010
TheWatchmen.Biz
Sermonwriter
    A must-listen new radio show for breaking news and current events for freedom lovers world wide. Pull your head out of the ground and let the enemies of you and your family fall into the hole you leave behind.









Sunday, August 1, 2010

The International Money Changers Reward Euro for Forcing Austerity

    The Wall Street Journal reported Thursday that the Euro has reached an 11-week high against the dollar.

    NEW YORK –The euro rose above $1.31, hitting its highest point in 11 weeks as improving euro-zone economic data helped the common currency extend a strong rally that’s seen it rise more than 10% since early June.

    The euro has been perhaps the most visible beneficiary of easing concerns about the European sovereign debt crisis. After hitting a four-year low of $1.1876 on June 7, the currency has steadily gained ground amid confidence that policy makers have forestalled a European sovereign debt default.

This rise in strength comes just 3 months after the austerity measures were forced on the Greek people and the same steps being taken for the other PIGS (Portugal, Italy, Greece, and Spain). At the time, the global financial community debated whether the Euro would even survive because of fears that soveriegn debt of economically weak European Union member nations would destroy the Euro.  Now that the International bankers got the austerity measures that they wanted, the money manipulators have rewarded them.


The same game plan is playing out in the United States; ratchet up the rhetoric about debt and deficits with the veiled suggestions (threats) by the IMF for austerity, and then weaken the currency to a point where the body politic is forced to act on behalf of the banksters who manufactured the extreme over-leveraging.  The growing noise for “solutions” to America’s very real debt problems is becoming louder as the calls for confiscating Social Security and Pensions are now everyday news.