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the petro dollar

Posted: Wed Jan 17, 2018 3:07 am
by bentech
I'm curious

so much is said about it

just what would the effect on the dollar be if the opec countries stopped the trade of their resource in the American denomination?

the petro dollar

Posted: Wed Jan 17, 2018 6:10 am
by Roots
Hyperinflation.

the petro dollar

Posted: Wed Jan 17, 2018 11:35 am
by Butcher Bob
There is a strong incentive not to switch to another denomination.
Both Saddam Hussein and Muammar Gaddafi announced their countries would begin selling oil for other currencies.
Where are they now? :whistle:

the petro dollar

Posted: Wed Jan 17, 2018 4:01 pm
by bentech
isn't Russia about to along side china stating they will only buy in the yen?

the petro dollar

Posted: Thu Jan 18, 2018 12:29 pm
by Butcher Bob
I would have to say no....I don't think either country would benefit from using Japanese currency, let alone if it would even be practically feasible.

the petro dollar

Posted: Thu Jan 18, 2018 7:26 pm
by Jesús Malverde
Trump's Iran sanctions bellicosity will drive the large Iranian export towards yuan-denominated trading. It's already begun. If the PRC wants to become a global reserve currency however, they would have to abandon their export-driven economy and build internal demand for their productive output--any attempt to couple a global reserve currency with a large trade surplus will render the trade in that denominated currency illiquid as there won't be enough in international circulation to do the clearing of trades. One downside of being the global reserve currency-issuing country is that, as a practical matter, you must run a significant trade deficit to keep necessary liquidity of trading. The Germans, who run an export driven economy, are enabled by exporting both debt and manufactured output to countries within the Euro Zone. The Euro Zone is the closest, but there is no country besides the US that ticks all the boxes.

the petro dollar

Posted: Mon Feb 26, 2018 1:22 pm
by bentech
BEIJING — Wall Street is bracing for a potential shake-up as China is set to launch its first-ever crude oil futures contract late March at the Shanghai Futures Exchange.

The move, which had been laid out in 2012 but faced delays over possible market turbulence, could represent a bold step forward in China’s rise as an economic superpower and global hegemon. The contracts will be priced in China’s currency, the renminbi or yuan, marking the birth of what many are calling the “petroyuan.”

Despite pessimism over China’s currency shift in U.S. business publications, the introduction of a petroyuan marks one of the most significant bids to date by countries seeking to dump the U.S. “petrodollar.” The move will also strengthen the ability of China — the world’s top oil importer in the biggest oil-consuming region on the globe — to determine the price of crude oil sold to its neighbors. As a result, China may soon become the strongest player in global crude markets.


https://www.mintpressnews.com/will-petr ... ch/237633/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

the petro dollar

Posted: Tue Feb 27, 2018 11:33 pm
by Lrus007
ya we are in deep. could crash us, if they really tried.
Lrus007

the petro dollar

Posted: Mon Apr 16, 2018 9:29 pm
by bentech
China finally launched last month its yuan-denominated crude oil futures that have been in the works for years, after several delays.

The start of the new contract trading was successful, attracting interest from institutional and retail investors, and major commodity trading houses Glencore and Trafigura.

Yet, it’s too soon to call the less-than-a-month-old contract a total success, because it still faces a long road toward building reputation and history, analysts say. They have also identified the single biggest risk factor for western investors—the extent to which China could meddle with government regulation in the yuan crude futures, as Beijing is known for little tolerance toward wild price swings in its markets and has a history of intervening.




The fact that OPEC dedicated a special article on the Chinese yuan crude futures in its closely watched report shows that the cartel is taking seriously the possibility that at some point in the future, its Middle Eastern members may have to price the oil they sell to China versus a Chinese crude benchmark.


https://www.rt.com/business/424233-petr ... lar-death/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

the petro dollar

Posted: Tue Apr 17, 2018 11:21 am
by Butcher Bob
Any significant foothold into petro-currency by another country could prove to be disastrous to the US. Even the slightest uptick in interest on national debt would put the US in an economic stranglehold that would be very difficult to escape at this point. As soon as the ultra-wealthy decide it's time to hedge their bets, the collapse will likely begin.

the petro dollar

Posted: Tue Apr 24, 2018 8:40 pm
by bentech
Electric buses were seen as a joke at an industry conference in Belgium seven years ago when the Chinese manufacturer BYD showed an early model. Suddenly, buses with battery-powered motors are a serious matter with the potential to revolutionize city transport -- and add to the forces reshaping the energy industry. With China leading the way, making the traditional smog-belching diesel behemoth run on electricity is starting to eat away at fossil fuel demand. The numbers are staggering. China had about 99 percent of the 385,000 electric buses on the roads worldwide in 2017, accounting for 17 percent of the country's entire fleet. Every five weeks, Chinese cities add 9,500 of the zero-emissions transporters -- the equivalent of London's entire working fleet, according Bloomberg New Energy Finance. All this is starting to make an observable reduction in fuel demand. And because they consume 30 times more fuel than average sized cars, their impact on energy use so far has become much greater than the than the passenger sedans produced companies from Tesla to Toyota. For every 1,000 battery-powered buses on the road, about 500 barrels a day of diesel fuel will be displaced from the market, according to BNEF calculations. This year, the volume of fuel buses take off the market may rise 37 percent to 279,000 barrels a day, about as much oil as Greece consumes, according to BNEF.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles ... l-industry" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

the petro dollar

Posted: Tue Apr 24, 2018 11:34 pm
by Butcher Bob
bentech wrote:With China leading the way, making the traditional smog-belching diesel behemoth run on electricity is starting to eat away at fossil fuel demand.
That is a bit deceptive. It doesn't necessarily reduce fossil fuel demand, it simply changes it from oil, which China does not have much of, to coal, which China has lots of.

the petro dollar

Posted: Wed Apr 25, 2018 5:38 am
by smokebreaks
Butcher Bob wrote:
bentech wrote:With China leading the way, making the traditional smog-belching diesel behemoth run on electricity is starting to eat away at fossil fuel demand.
That is a bit deceptive. It doesn't necessarily reduce fossil fuel demand, it simply changes it from oil, which China does not have much of, to coal, which China has lots of.

Years ago now, I had met this guy one morning while I was out for breakfast, interesting fellow who’s family was one of the largest shale exporter from the US.

He was telling me tales about how the US had a large trade imbalance with the Chinese mostly as a result of our shale burning away in their boilers, way hotter than the Chinese steel could withstand.

Seemed that he knew we were on a collision course with regard to trade wars at least 10 years ago.

Though anyone paying attention to global affairs or Ben’s rantings, ought to have been well aware that this day would be coming.

the petro dollar

Posted: Wed Apr 25, 2018 9:34 am
by roller24
Nixon bargained away the remaining gold standard, as a trade off for the petro dollar,which ended the Oil Embargo aganist the US. this move helped enrich the arab nations with not only wealth and power, but also was used to broker the influence of modern western culture (central banking) into the mid eastern countries with the CIA installing secular leaders , all at the bequest of Israel to ensure the success of it's occupation of Palestine. This in turn gave president to the UN and the legitimization of Global Government. I'm kinda stoned, so I'm sure I could have stated this more clearly. I have another whack at it later. Here's a good link though http://anonhq.com/fascinating-story-pet ... -40-years/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

the petro dollar

Posted: Wed Apr 25, 2018 9:43 am
by bentech
i dont get how this works,

The latest US sanctions, which sent the Russian currency to its steepest drop in the past three years, surprisingly helped to boost the country’s budget with an extra 232 billion rubles ($3.8 billion).

The decline in the value of the ruble, as well as recent purchases of hard currency by the Central Bank of Russia, brought an additional inflow of money for the Russian government.

The re-assessment of foreign-exchange reserves shows that, at the peak of the ruble crash, when the national currency fell to over 65 rubles to one dollar, Russia's sovereign wealth fund reaped a profit of some 470 billion rubles ($7.6 billion). However, the subsequent strengthening of the Russian currency wiped out nearly half of the gains

https://www.rt.com/business/425078-russ ... eak-ruble/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

the petro dollar

Posted: Mon Apr 30, 2018 9:44 am
by bentech
Iran recently announced it is dropping the US dollar in foreign trade. Just as Iraq did shortly before it was invaded by the US, or Libya planned to before it was bombed by NATO-led allies. Lee Camp is starting to see a pattern.

The US is gearing up to abandon the Iran nuclear deal, which has all but killed Tehran's nuclear program in exchange for sanctions relief, because it's not restrictive enough. With Iran already saying it won't accept more demands or more sanctions, it's anyone's guess what kind of chain reaction might ensue.

READ MORE: Iran dumps dollar for euro in foreign trade transactions
Comedian Lee Camp's guess is pretty grim. He notices how Iran recently ditched the dollar in favor of the euro – something Iraq also did 18 years ago, a couple years before the US invaded it under the phony pretext of weapons of mass destruction. Libya wanted to do the same, although its leader Muammar Gaddafi wanted to establish its own currency, the gold dinar – but in 2011, NATO warplanes bombed his country to support an uprising against him. Almost immediately, the rebels formed their own central bank and were given leave by the US and the UN to legally sell oil from the land they controlled.

On his show Redacted Tonight, Lee deconstructs these parallels and more, because "It's all about the banking!"

https://youtu.be/VobUNfYwlss" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

the petro dollar

Posted: Mon Apr 30, 2018 9:08 pm
by Butcher Bob
As I understand it, he's missing Syria as well.

the petro dollar

Posted: Tue May 01, 2018 10:20 am
by bentech
Clear at this point, with Washington and London abandoning any pretense of rules of international law to justify their acts of war, Iran is facing a potentially devastating new round of economic warfare to follow months of softening up through the de facto currency warfare. Things could get really ugly in the Middle East after May 12. That will target Iran, a key link to the Eurasian Belt Road Initiative, the new Economic Silk Road of China and the economic cooperation with Russia. If that succeeds, we can be sure that further targeting of Russia as well as of China is next in line. If those key strategic Eurasian powers fail to strengthen their mutual cooperation on economic, political and military levels, it could be like shooting fish in a barrel for Washington to knock out the rivals to its undisputed sole superpower hegemony. That would not be at all good for world peace prospects.

https://journal-neo.org/2018/04/21/wash ... lize-iran/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

the petro dollar

Posted: Thu May 03, 2018 8:57 pm
by Jesús Malverde
The Chinese may break the stranglehold on the petrodollar in trading but the USD as global reserve currency has no imminent competitors. The only likely ones, the Yuan and the Euro cannot run the trade deficits necessary and maintain their export driven economies. And as long as the USD remains the global reserve currency, deficits don't really matter which in turn limits the potential damage of attempts to undermine the USD can do. I am oversimplifying for brevity, but that's the gist of it.

the petro dollar

Posted: Thu May 03, 2018 9:35 pm
by Butcher Bob
China is a tricky one, considering the amount of US debt they hold. Sort of a damned if you do and damned if you don't situation. But one thing is certain, they could fuk US economically...it's just a matter if that would be beneficial for them. :dunno:

the petro dollar

Posted: Sat May 19, 2018 3:59 pm
by bentech
19 May, 2018 07:23

Which countries are dumping the dollar and why?

The European Union is considering switching payments from the US dollar to the euro after Washington threatened to target European firms working in Iran, according to reports.
The measure may help the EU to retain one of the world's largest markets, which was opened for trade after the historic nuclear deal signed by Tehran and the P5+1 powers (China, France, Russia, UK, US, plus Germany) in June 2015.
Read more
Europe to ditch US dollar in payments for Iranian oil – source
The idea to eliminate the role of the greenback in international settlements is not new. Aside from the EU, a number of nations have been mulling the idea. RT discussed with analysts how realistic the prospect of countries ditching the dollar is.
In light of the recent developments Iran is the most pressured nation to drop the dollar with Tehran having partially adjusted trade without the US currency, Alexandre Kateb, president of Competence Finance SAS, told RT.
"When Iran was previously under sanctions from 2012 to 2015, it established new mechanisms to bypass US-related financial institutions, such as barter exchange and to replace the dollar with other currencies, such as the renminbi in its bilateral trade with China or the euro in its trade with European countries," the economist said.
At the same time, China's recent move to trade oil in yuan is seen as an initial step to challenging the dollar dominance, Stephen Innes, Head of FX Trading for OANDA in Asia Pacific told RT, stressing that the number of bilateral trade agreements, signed amongst Asia Pacific nations, will settle in yuan.
"Mainland it is laying the ground for the Belt and Road Initiative, and China is even sweetening the pot by offering swap facilities to local countries to promote the use of the yuan," he added.
Experts are unanimous on the point that bi- and multi-lateral pacts between various nations could become the major drivers on the way toward decreasing the dependence on US currency in international trade.
Read more
China urges ditching dollar & euro trade with Russia in favor of national currencies
"This would depend on the leverage the EU, the UK, Russia and China deploy. The likely scenario is diversification – bilateral arrangements between trading partners, or regional arrangements, substituting for multilateral arrangements that supported dollar dominance," Ramaa Vasudevan an Associate Professor at the Department of Economics, Colorado State University told RT.
At the same time, analysts admit that getting rid of the greenback is not an easy task. It took the US dollar nearly a century to unsettle the British pound that had been enjoying its preeminence through the 19th century and the first half of the 20th as the global reserve currency.
"Old habits are hard to break as most of the global hedging is still done on US exchanges like Nymex or ICE," Innes said. "The issues are working out the deliverable to hedge ratio factors which could put many off from breaking long-held settlement in US dollar."
"The US dollar is still, for many reasons, the international trade and reserve currency of choice," according to Kateb. "The whole international financial system is currently structured around the United States and around the central role of the dollar."
However, the expert noted that the international system will change dramatically. Rapid development of blockchain technology along with rooting of virtual currencies is reportedly set to bring about the changing process.
Read more
China can succeed with petro-yuan where Gaddafi failed – killing the US dollar in oil trade
"Eventually, the evolution of global finance will be very much related to the evolution of the global balance of power," the economist told RT. "This will not happen overnight. It will take time and many more crises and balance shifts. None really knows what the new system will look like."
The experts agreed that expelling the greenback from its dominant position in the international monetary system will take much more effort than just replacing it with the euro or other domestic currencies.
"Dollar dominance does not depend simply on its use to denominate trade, but on the dollar's role as the pivot of the international financial system – the fact that about 88 percent of the average daily turnover of foreign exchange instruments is against the dollar, in contrast to the share of the euro which is only about 31 percent," said Vasudevan.
The researcher highlighted that the recent impulse for dislodging the US currency is a symptom of a wider discontent with the rules of the dollar system, but is not a cure for the dollar problem.



https://www.rt.com/business/427177-who- ... us-dollar/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

the petro dollar

Posted: Sat May 19, 2018 5:34 pm
by bentech
The share of yuan-backed crude oil contracts has soared to 12 percent of global trading since the US withdrawal from the Iran nuclear deal, compared to eight percent in March, when they were launched.


https://www.rt.com/business/427193-petr ... ollar-oil/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

the petro dollar

Posted: Sat May 19, 2018 6:36 pm
by Butcher Bob
Wow....we could get fukked. I'm curious to see where we stand after a years time.

Wait a minute.....when was Tillerson fired?

the petro dollar

Posted: Sun May 27, 2018 1:51 pm
by bentech
seen this?

“Basically every country creates their own narrative story,” Stengel said. “My old job at the State Department was what people used to joke [call] the chief propagandist job. I’m not against propaganda, every country does it and they have to do it to their own population and I don’t necessarily think it’s that awful.”

viewtopic.php?f=48&t=11873" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

the petro dollar

Posted: Wed Jun 06, 2018 1:28 pm
by bentech
Vice President Dick Cheney cynically quipped, “debt doesn’t matter; Reagan proved that.” Up to a point that appeared so. Now we are getting dangerously near to that “point” where debt does matter.

Since 2009, US corporate debt has increased by 49%, hitting a record total of $8.8 trillion. Much of that debt has been used to fund stock repurchases by the companies to boost their stock price, the main reason for the unprecedented Wall Street stock market bubble.

we are overdue for our next recession and given the interest rate is only 1 point something the fed doesn't have any room to stimulate effectively...

https://journal-neo.org/2018/06/01/usa- ... th-spiral/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

the petro dollar

Posted: Sat Jun 16, 2018 9:51 pm
by bentech
Russia dumps half of its US Treasury bonds
16 Jun, 2018

Russia has held a major selloff of US Treasury bonds, dumping some $47bn-worth of papers and momentarily dropping six places on a list of major foreign holders of US securities, recently released statistics for April have shown.

In just one month, Russia proceeded to sell $47.4 billion out of the $96.1 billion the country had in US treasury bonds in March. The latest statistics released by the US Treasury Department on Friday showed that, in April, Russia had only $48.7bn in American assets, occupying 22nd place on the list of “major foreign holders of Treasury securities.”

China, which holds the most US Treasury bonds, also sold off some seven billion-worth of its American assets, from March to April, and now has $1.18 trillion invested in securities. Japan, which is positioned second on the list, in the same timeframe sold off some $12 billion, leaving just over a trillion dollars in US coffers. Ireland, which had $300.4 billion in April also managed to ditch over $17 billion in US assets.

https://www.rt.com/business/429931-russ ... reasuries/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

the petro dollar

Posted: Mon Jun 18, 2018 12:39 am
by Butcher Bob
Less than .4% of total debt...trivial, insignificant.
Japan and Ireland shouldn't be included...down to aboot a quarter of a percent now.
Average daily trading...over half a Trillion.

the petro dollar

Posted: Mon Jun 18, 2018 8:47 am
by bentech
i though the change in their position was worth note
its easy to forget that Russias
s economy is about the size of italy's

a couple years ago I heard an economist say that Russia had so much gold reserve the economic recession the west was forcing on it made its total debt so cheap that it might repurchase it outright...

the petro dollar

Posted: Tue Jun 19, 2018 10:45 am
by bentech
Russia & India ditching US dollar in defense deals

Moscow and Delhi are seeking to bypass US sanctions by using the rupee and the ruble in facilitating military deals, according to Indian daily, the Economic Times.
The paper reports that US sanctions are hampering $2 billion in defense deals between Russia and India, as payments are getting stuck. The countries are seeking to avoid this by switching to settlements in domestic currencies and ditching the greenback.


https://www.rt.com/business/430185-russ ... ls-dollar/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

the petro dollar

Posted: Mon Jun 25, 2018 10:45 am
by bentech
The idea that a trade war between US and China is good for the dollar is complete nonsense, according to investor Peter Schiff. He believes that greenback will only depreciate.

"The thinking is – at least when it comes to trade - is that the dollar is going to benefit from a trade war, which I think is wrong. I think it's just as wrongheaded as the concept that the dollar is going to benefit from larger budget deficits," Schiff said.

According to Schiff, while one may think that a trade war or US budget deficits can create a dollar deficit that will prop up the greenback, in reality the world will be flooded with American currency. "The thinking is this is going to absorb all the dollars out there and there is going to be a dollar shortage, which is complete nonsense."

He explains that the excessive amount of dollars will be provided by the mint of US treasury bonds. "You've got a treasury, you've got a dollar. I mean, what's the difference between a 30-day treasury bill and a dollar? You know, they're pretty much the same thing. The only difference is people don't readily spend their treasuries, right? They don't go into a store and purchase something with a treasury. But they can. They can cash it in and buy something. But they're effectively dollars. So, even though the Federal Reserve, in theory, will be shrinking its balance sheet, the US government will be expanding its balance sheet."

Schiff says as the supply of dollars is going to grow and grow, the demand for the American currency can fall, while the US Fed will be unable to stop the dollar glut. “Eventually, what's going to happen is it's going to be the demand for those dollars is going to collapse, not the supply. And when the demand for dollars collapses, then the price of the dollar collapses. You get massive inflation. That is what is coming."


https://www.rt.com/business/430781-us-dollar-trade-war/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

the petro dollar

Posted: Tue Jun 26, 2018 1:19 pm
by Butcher Bob
bentech wrote:“Eventually, what's going to happen is it's going to be the demand for those dollars is going to collapse, not the supply. And when the demand for dollars collapses, then the price of the dollar collapses. You get massive inflation. That is what is coming."
That is one of the reasons the Fed has a goal of a 2% artificially induced inflation rate...it is supposed to help counter that. They tout that as being good for the economy, as it increases the $ value of GDP, but what they fail to factor in is the fact that doing so effectively steals money out of the pockets of every USD holder, which is bad for the economy. Theoretically it's a wash overall, but in reality it's a transfer of wealth...you get the $ (soon to be worth less), they get the resources (soon to be worth more).

the petro dollar

Posted: Tue Jun 26, 2018 2:42 pm
by bentech
I thought the mild inflations was purposeful in order to discourage hording?

the petro dollar

Posted: Wed Jun 27, 2018 8:40 am
by Butcher Bob
Think aboot who's hording that stifles.;)

the petro dollar

Posted: Fri Jul 27, 2018 9:10 am
by bentech
Washington's use of payment systems for political purposes undermines the US dollar as a global currency, said Russian President Vladimir Putin at the BRICS Summit in South Africa.
According to Putin, Russia has no intention of getting rid of the US dollar, as the currency is widely used in international trade and business.
"We will continue to use the US dollar unless the United States prevents us from doing so," said Putin in his address to BRICS leaders on Friday.
Putin explained Russia's liquidation of US Treasury holding and increasing of national gold reserves as a strategy to minimize risks.
The Russian president emphasized the need for other currencies in global trade, and the emergence of new reserve currencies like the ruble.


https://www.rt.com/business/434433-puti ... th-africa/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

the petro dollar

Posted: Mon Sep 03, 2018 11:43 am
by bentech
Turkey’s Erdogan calls on global trading partners to smash US dollar’s ‘monopoly’

Turkey will pursue non-dollar transactions in trade and investment with other countries, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said in response to US sanctions. He compared the US’ behavior towards his country to “wild wolves.”
“We need to gradually end the monopoly of the dollar once and for all by using local and national currency among us,” Erdogan said at a business forum in Kyrgyzstan.
According to the Turkish president, a dollar-linked system which was designed to simplify global trade has turned into a major problem. The purpose of manipulating currency rates is to cast doubt on the strong and healthy Turkish economy, Erdogan said.

“America behaves like wild wolves. Don’t believe them,” Erdogan said. “Using the dollar only damages us. We will not give up. We will be victorious.”

https://www.rt.com/business/437481-erdo ... us-dollar/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

the petro dollar

Posted: Tue Sep 04, 2018 8:36 pm
by bentech
https://www.rt.com/business/437595-post ... lar-world/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

china might have 20,000 tons of gold

the petro dollar

Posted: Tue Sep 04, 2018 10:56 pm
by Butcher Bob
...and US has none.

If oil trade divests from USD, USD will falter and interest rates on treasuries will have to increase to reflect that. If those rates increase just .25%, US annual interest payments will jump over $54 billion. And that's just the first domino...there are lots of treasury based investments.

1971:
OPEC oil embargo.
Nixon ended gold standard.
National debt...$.4 trillion

2018:
National debt...$21.5 trillion

Coincidence?...hmm :notamused:

Whoops, treasuries rates have increased %1.75 since Trump was elected.
Guess we didn't need that extra $378 billion a year in interest. :dunno:
Good thing the news is all over that shit. :whistle:

SMOKE :dunno2: MIRRORS

the petro dollar

Posted: Wed Sep 05, 2018 9:59 am
by roller24
The whole of the global banking monetary system is smoke and mirrors. The Debt is merely the amount of currency in circulation. Since currency is a note of debt, and is actually a liability, then all currency is pure debt. The paradox is in the fraudulent nature of having a debt instrument used as the legal tender for the payment of this debt. In theory, everything purchased with the us dollar becomes collateral for the debt represented by the note. You can't pay a debt with a debt, you can only satisfy a debt with something of value. Knowing this, every thing you think you own, is actually the banks in legal title, and you have equitable title. This guarantees that the banks get it all in the end.

the petro dollar

Posted: Wed Sep 05, 2018 11:18 am
by Jesús Malverde
Public debt = private savings. Think about what that means.

the petro dollar

Posted: Thu Sep 06, 2018 9:03 am
by bentech
the repeal the fed guys I know make a point of that debts can no longer be paid
only transferred

nobody can capsulize this subject to my satisfaction.
all I see is innumerable avenues from which to ferret out a bag guy in some layer of this process and live with the righteous animosity that goes with seeing something this way

unfortunately all these various animosities never act together or add up to stopping the process which is so developed now soas to choose individuals and roles in their own organization to BE the targets of 'next years news' about what we should be mad about...

the petro dollar

Posted: Thu Sep 06, 2018 9:50 am
by Oldjoints
You never change things by fighting the existing reality. To change something, build a new model that makes the existing model obsolete.
-R. Buckminster Fuller

the petro dollar

Posted: Thu Sep 06, 2018 12:09 pm
by Butcher Bob
roller24 wrote:The Debt is merely the amount of currency in circulation.

In theory, everything purchased with the us dollar becomes collateral for the debt represented by the note.

...every thing you think you own, is actually the banks in legal title, and you have equitable title.
Not sure where yer getting this info Roller, but it is wrong. :p

US debt = $21.46 trillion......US currency in circulation = $1.67 trillion

The collateral for US debt instruments is the ability to collect future taxes. Currency are Federal Reserve notes, not US debt. The holder of the note, just like the holder of a mortgage, is due value from the note issuer, which in the case of currency is the Federal Reserve.

No bank has any claim to my house, my vehicles, or anything else that I own...I hold legal title to all of it. The only thing I have ownership of that is not truly mine, is the land that all my stuff sits on, which in actuality is owned by the government as evidenced by their ability to levy property taxes. Your statement only holds true for items that have outstanding debt on them.

the petro dollar

Posted: Thu Sep 06, 2018 3:10 pm
by Oldjoints
Actually most of the US debt is being covered by the Social Security Fund. Who knows what nightmare will be created once that fund starts to deplete......

the petro dollar

Posted: Thu Sep 06, 2018 8:05 pm
by roller24
BB, I pulled that info out of my tin foil hat.
I sell you a car, you give me an IOU for 500$, then you give me a govt IOU for 500$. All I have still is an IOU, but I can't collect the value, I have to find some other chump who will accept it for something else. That is our monetary system. yay.

the petro dollar

Posted: Thu Sep 06, 2018 11:01 pm
by Butcher Bob
Oldjoints wrote:Actually most of the US debt is being covered by the Social Security Fund. Who knows what nightmare will be created once that fund starts to deplete......
"Most" is a stretch...
Who Owns the U.S. National Debt?
...but your point is still valid.
roller24 wrote:I sell you a car...you give me a govt IOU for 500$. All I have still is an IOU, but I can't collect the value, I have to find some other chump who will accept it for something else.
True enough...but that is by definition a monetary system. It all started with the goldsmith holding all the gold and distributing notes pledging that held gold. The key difference now is that you can no longer turn in those notes for the gold they represent. We moved from a physical monetary system to an imaginary monetary system. That is why the 'kill the Fed' and gold folks want to return to a physical based system...because imaginary money doesn't have any actual value.

the petro dollar

Posted: Thu Sep 06, 2018 11:11 pm
by Butcher Bob
Butcher Bob wrote:...because imaginary money doesn't have any actual value.
This is why having oil denominated in USD is so important. Only being able to buy oil with USD gives the USD value. As other currencies are used, the value of the USD will start to erode.

the petro dollar

Posted: Fri Sep 07, 2018 12:47 am
by bentech
"That is why the 'kill the Fed' and gold folks want to return to a physical based system...because imaginary money doesn't have any actual value."

aside from creating more 'general welfare' than the agrarian world had seen in 10,000 year?


they could care less!

to a man all they want to do is destroy society
just when their isn't enough natural world to go around
that is feed everyone

they want what that will unleash
its the only fair world as far as their values are concerned...

the petro dollar

Posted: Sat Oct 13, 2018 12:42 pm
by bentech
China has sold $3 billion of sovereign dollar bonds. This is only the third such move by Beijing in the last 14 years, and the first involving bonds with a 30-year maturity.

China sold $1.5 billion of five-year bonds at 3.25 percent, $1 billion of 10-year bonds at 3.5 percent, and $500 million of 30-year bonds at four percent, the Finance Ministry said on Friday, as quoted by Reuters.

China has made the sale at a time when yuan has depreciated 10 percent against the dollar amid an escalating trade war with the US. “For any other normal corporate borrower the decision might have been to stand on the sidelines and wait for the market to stabilize a bit, but China is a little bit of a different animal,” a banker who worked on the deal told Reuters.

Printing machine: US Treasury issuing more bonds to feed soaring debt but there are no takers
Beijing is the largest holder of US debt. As of July, China had $1.17 trillion invested in debt minted by the US Treasury.


https://www.rt.com/business/441146-us-t ... hina-sale/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

the petro dollar

Posted: Sat Oct 13, 2018 11:10 pm
by Dick Fein
Looks like the end of the road.

the petro dollar

Posted: Sun Oct 14, 2018 11:35 am
by Jesús Malverde
China traded interest bearing bonds denominated in USD for USD that bear no interest, thus depriving themselves of the interest income. :facepalm:

the petro dollar

Posted: Sun Oct 14, 2018 2:31 pm
by bentech
it was an investment...

the petro dollar

Posted: Thu Oct 18, 2018 8:08 pm
by bentech
The Central Bank of Russia has continued getting rid of US Treasury bonds in August. The share of Russian investments in American debt is getting close to zero.

Russian investments in US securities as of August have fallen to just $14 billion. Back in 2011, Russia was one of the largest holders of US debt with a $180 billion investment.

The reason is not only about politics and US sanctions against Russia, a broker at Otkritie bank Timur Nigmatullin told RIA Novosti. The US Federal Reserve is hiking interest rates, which makes American bonds cheaper, he said. “Russia has almost dropped out of the list of holders of US government debt, being the 54th largest holder.”

“A further sale of US Treasury bonds by Russia will most likely be compensated by buying gold and opening short-term deposits at banks,” he said. The share of precious metals in the country's foreign reserves has reached a record 18 percent, closely approaching the share of dollar investments.

The largest investors in US debt, China and Japan, have also cut their holdings. Chinese holdings of US sovereign debt dropped to $1.165 trillion in August, from $1.171 trillion in July, marking the third consecutive month of declines. Japan has slashed its holdings of US securities to $1.029 trillion in August, the lowest since October 2011.

The reason for holding money in US bonds is global trade, which is still dominated by the dollar, director of macroeconomic analysis at Expert RA Anton Tabah told Izvestia daily. So, countries are forced to have a lot of dollars in cash, and US bonds are the best option for that.

India and Turkey have followed Russia's lead. Turkey has dropped out of the top-30 list of holders of American debt, while India has been liquidating its investment for five consecutive months to $140 billion in August.


https://www.rt.com/business/441615-russ ... s-us-debt/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;




Sanctions are forcing Russia to find alternative settlement currencies to the US dollar to ensure the security of the country's economy, according to President Vladimir Putin.

“We are moving to the de-dollarization of the economy. We are doing so not because we want to undermine the dollar, but because we want to ensure our security. We are constantly facing sanctions, they do not give us the opportunity to work in dollars,” Putin said on Thursday at the Valdai Discussion Club meeting in Sochi.

The alternative to the greenback could become a basket of national currencies, an instrument being developed by BRICS countries. “If such tools are invented, it will be possible to get away from the dollar. As soon as this happens, the dollar will have hard times,” Putin said.
The Russian president said that the US is forcing a number of countries to abandon the dollar in international payments. “This is a typical mistake of an empire. Our American friends are undermining confidence in the dollar as a single currency,” Putin said.
“European countries want to trade w

ith Iran. They do not believe that Tehran violated any conditions of the nuclear deal. Therefore something like an alternative to SWIFT international payment system is being invented,” the president said.

https://www.rt.com/business/441677-russ ... of-dollar/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

the petro dollar

Posted: Fri Nov 09, 2018 11:24 am
by bentech
The Bank of England (BoE) is refusing to release around $550 million in gold owned by Venezuela back to the country over the UK regulator's claim of growing uncertainty about Caracas’s intentions for the 14 tons of gold bars.

the petro dollar

Posted: Sun Nov 25, 2018 11:27 am
by roller24
good video

the petro dollar

Posted: Wed Dec 05, 2018 4:03 pm
by Butcher Bob
What the fuk is going on with the oil market?
We have gas as low as $1.75/gallon in my state....most places are around $2.
That's a far cry from the $4+ we've seen before.
Good side is, fracking grinds to a halt when oil gets this low.
Bad side is.....something's going on. :notamused:

the petro dollar

Posted: Wed Dec 05, 2018 11:57 pm
by Irwin the Troll
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-glob ... SKBN1O4036" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false; I saw this link on infowars.

the petro dollar

Posted: Thu Dec 06, 2018 1:32 pm
by Butcher Bob
Hmm, wonder how that's going to work out....seeing as we use OPEC as a weapon against some of those countries.:p

Another thing I did not realize...
While Bush Jr saw a reduction of domestic production over his terms, production doubled over Obama's terms.

the petro dollar

Posted: Wed Dec 12, 2018 9:33 am
by bentech
id forgotten that 30 years ago we were just 'waiting for china to fail' and were still waiting...

Video: Behind the US Attack on Chinese Smartphones

https://www.globalresearch.ca/video-beh ... es/5661957" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

the petro dollar

Posted: Fri Dec 14, 2018 11:28 am
by Jesús Malverde
The US is set to become a net oil exporter for the fist time since WWII next year. It is also set to become the largest oil producing nation in the world for the first time since the 1980s when OPEC were slashing production to support world prices.

the petro dollar

Posted: Tue Dec 25, 2018 9:31 pm
by bentech
The US legal system has become a “cheap farce” where rulings are politically charged and impossible to challenge legally, jailed Russian businessman Viktor Bout says. He warned that “great changes” are looming in America.
Bout has been in custody for many years after being arrested in 2008 in Thailand during a US sting operation. He was eventually convicted in 2012 over conspiring to kill American citizens by allegedly selling weapons to the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), receiving a quarter-century jail term.




https://www.rt.com/russia/447380-us-rev ... ming-bout/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

the petro dollar

Posted: Wed Jan 02, 2019 9:50 am
by bentech
Top 5 countries opting to ditch US dollar & the reasons behind their move

Published time: 2 Jan, 2019 05:18

The past year was full of events that inevitably split the global geopolitical space into two camps: those who still support using US currency as a universal financial tool, and those who are turning their back on the greenback.
Global tensions caused by economic sanctions and trade conflicts triggered by Washington have forced targeted countries to take a fresh look at alternative payment systems currently dominated by the US dollar.
RT has taken a deeper look into the recent phenomena of de-dollarization, summing up which countries have taken steps towards eliminating their reliance on the greenback, and the reasons behind their decision.
China
The ongoing trade conflict between the United States and China, as well as sanctions against Beijing's biggest trading partners have forced China to take steps towards relieving the dollar dependence of the world's second-largest economy.


The past year was full of events that inevitably split the global geopolitical space into two camps: those who still support using US currency as a universal financial tool, and those who are turning their back on the greenback.
Global tensions caused by economic sanctions and trade conflicts triggered by Washington have forced targeted countries to take a fresh look at alternative payment systems currently dominated by the US dollar.
RT has taken a deeper look into the recent phenomena of de-dollarization, summing up which countries have taken steps towards eliminating their reliance on the greenback, and the reasons behind their decision.

China

The ongoing trade conflict between the United States and China, as well as sanctions against Beijing's biggest trading partners have forced China to take steps towards relieving the dollar dependence of the world's second-largest economy.

Also on rt.com
Engine of growth: Trade turnover across China’s ‘One Belt, One Road’ exceeds $5 trillion since 2013

In Beijing's signature soft-power style, the government hasn't made any loud announcements on the issue. However, the People's Bank of China has been regularly reducing the country's share of US Treasuries. Still the number-one foreign holder of the US sovereign debt, China has cut its share to the lowest level since May 2017.
Moreover, instead of promptly dumping the greenback, China is trying to internationalize its own currency, the yuan, which was included in the IMF basket alongside the US dollar, the Japanese yen, the euro, and the British pound. Beijing has recently made several steps towards strengthening the yuan, including accumulating gold reserves, launching yuan-priced crude futures, and using the currency in trade with international partners.

As part of its ambitious Belt and Road Initiative, China is planning to introduce swap facilities in participating countries to promote the use of the yuan. Moreover, the country is actively pushing for a free-trade agreement called the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), which will include the countries of Southeast Asia. The trade pact could easily replace the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), the proposed multi-national trade deal which was torn up by US President Donald Trump shortly after he took office. RCEP includes 16 country signatories and the potential pact is expected to form a union of nearly 3.4 billion people based on a combined $49.5 trillion economy, which accounts for nearly 40 percent of the world's GDP.
India
Ranked the world's sixth-largest economy, India is one of the biggest merchandise importers. It's not surprising that the country is directly affected by most global geopolitical conflicts and is significantly impacted by sanctions applied to its trading partners.

Earlier this year, Delhi switched to ruble payments on supplies of Russian S-400 air-defense systems as a result of US economic penalties introduced against Moscow. The country also had to switch to the rupee in purchases of Iranian crude after Washington reinstituted sanctions against Tehran. In December, India and the United Arab Emirates sealed a currency-swap agreement to boost trade and investment without the involvement of a third currency.
Taking into account that India is the third-largest country by purchasing power parity, steps of this kind could considerably diminish the role of the greenback in global trading.
Turkey
Earlier this year, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan announced plans to end the US dollar monopoly via a new policy that is aimed at non-dollar trading with the country's international partners. Later, Turkey's leader announced that Ankara is preparing to conduct trade through national currencies with China, Russia and Ukraine. Turkey also discussed a possible replacement of the US dollar with national currencies in trade transactions with Iran.

The move was prompted by political and economic reasons. Relations between Ankara and Washington have been deteriorating since the failed military coup in the country to oust President Erdogan in 2016. It's been reported that Erdogan suspects US involvement in the uprising and accuses Washington of harboring exiled cleric Fethullah Gulen, whom Ankara blames for masterminding the coup.
The Turkish economy sank after Washington introduced economic sanctions over the arrest of US evangelical pastor Andrew Brunson on terrorism charges in relation to the uprising.
Erdogan has repeatedly slammed Washington for unleashing a global trade war, sanctioning Turkey and trying to isolate Iran. The NATO member's decision to buy Russian S-400 missile systems added fuel to the fire.

Moreover, Turkey is trying to ditch the dollar in an attempt to support its national currency. The lira has lost nearly half of its value against the greenback over the past year. The currency plunge was exacerbated by soaring inflation and increasing prices for goods and services.
Iran
A triumphant return of Iran to the global trading arena did not last long. Shortly after winning the US presidential election, Donald Trump opted to withdraw from the 2015 nuclear deal signed between Tehran and a group of nations, including the UK, US, France, Germany, Russia, China, and the EU.
The oil-rich nation has once again become a target for severe sanctions resumed by Washington, which has also threatened to introduce penalties against any countries that would violate the embargo. The punitive measures banned business deals with the Islamic Republic and cracked down on the country's oil industry.

Sanctions have forced Tehran to look for alternatives to the US dollar as payment for its oil exports. Iran clinched a deal for oil settlements with India using the Indian rupee. It also negotiated a barter deal with neighboring Iraq. The partners are also planning to use the Iraqi dinar for mutual transactions to reduce reliance on the US dollar amid banking problems connected to US sanctions.
Russia
President Vladimir Putin said the US is "making a colossal strategic mistake" by "undermining confidence in the dollar." Putin has never called for restricting dollar transactions or banning the use of US currency. However, Russian Finance Minister Anton Siluanov said earlier this year that the country had to dump its holdings of US Treasuries in favor of more secure assets, such as the ruble, the euro, and precious metals.
The country has already taken several steps towards de-dollarizing the economy due to the constantly growing burden of sanctions that have been introduced since 2014 over a number of issues. Russia has developed a national payment system as an alternative to SWIFT, Visa and Mastercard after the US threatened tougher new sanctions that would target Russia's financial system.

So far, Moscow has managed to partially phase out the greenback from its exports, signing currency-swap agreements with a number of countries including China, India and Iran. Russia has recently proposed using the euro instead of the US dollar in trade with the European Union.
Once a top-10 holder of US sovereign debt, Russia has all but eliminated its holdings of US Treasuries. Moscow has used the money to boost the nation's foreign reserves and to build up its gold stockpile to stabilize the ruble.


https://www.rt.com/business/447915-top- ... ng-dollar/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

the petro dollar

Posted: Wed Jan 02, 2019 1:18 pm
by Butcher Bob
Down to $1.84/gallon here.

the petro dollar

Posted: Wed Jan 02, 2019 1:34 pm
by bentech
its fortunate we don't need clean ground water...

the petro dollar

Posted: Fri Jan 04, 2019 7:36 am
by bentech
wheres the hell is this guy getting this shit?

“This rally in gold is based on investors increasingly realizing that gold is ‘safe money’,” Rainer Michael Preiss, an executive director at Taurus Wealth Advisors said, according to Bloomberg. The demand for the precious metal was also triggered by the potential downturn in the global economy, rising US debt and possible central bank mistakes, the analyst believes.
However, some experts believe that despite the bright start to the year, gold may face great losses in 2019 as the US currency is about to strengthen.
“Gold prices are going lower,” President of Lucid Investment Tyler Jenks said in a New Year’s special of the Keiser Report. “I believe we can see a $600 on gold…because the dollar is going up and silver and gold have been moving inversely to the dollar.”

https://www.rt.com/business/448059-gold ... rice-rise/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

the petro dollar

Posted: Thu Jan 10, 2019 8:29 pm
by bentech
The Central Bank of Russia has moved further away from reliance on the US dollar and has axed its share in the country’s foreign reserves to a historic low, transferring about $100 billion into euro, Japanese yen and Chinese yuan.
The share of the US currency in Russia’s international reserves portfolio has dramatically decreased in just three months between March and June 2018, from 43.7 percent to a new low of 21.9 percent, according to the Central Bank’s latest quarterly report, which is issued with a six-month lag.
The money pulled from the dollar reserves was redistributed to increase the share of the euro to 32 percent and the share of Chinese yuan to 14.7 percent. Another 14.7 percent of the portfolio was invested in other currencies, including the British pound (6.3 percent), Japanese yen (4.5 percent), as well as Canadian (2.3 percent) and Australian (1 percent) dollars.
The Central Bank’s total assets in foreign currencies and gold increased by $40.4 billion from July 2017 to June 2018, reaching $458.1 billion.



https://www.globalresearch.ca/russia-sh ... mp/5665157" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

the petro dollar

Posted: Tue Jan 15, 2019 12:05 pm
by bentech
i don't get it
since it mostly electronic

why cant these other governments create a mechanism to replace the dollar overnight???

the petro dollar

Posted: Tue Jan 29, 2019 11:02 pm
by bentech
Bank of England is independent of UK govt – but not of foreign govt ?!?!?


Pirates don't have to look like Johnny Depp in Pirates of the Caribbean. They can fly the Union Jack rather than the skull and crossbones. They can be called the Bank of England rather than the Jolly Roger.
The 'Old Lady of Threadneedle Street' is a port in a stormy world for all kinds of countries in which to moor their national wealth. And it's not even necessarily voluntary.
After the fall of the communist regime in Albania, I had a brief tenure as joint chairman of the Britain-Albania Society with the Tory MP Steve Norris. He and I had to move mountains to try and persuade the British government (which then entirely controlled the Bank of England) to give the Albanians back their gold, which had been seized by the British during Second World War.
This week's brigandry – unnoticed by any commentator I read – took place in an era when the Bank of England is officially independent of government control. And yet it was triggered by a phone call from a foreign government official.
The bank's decision to seize – a polite word for steal – more than a billion dollars' worth of Venezuelan gold was reported to have been ordered by the governor after a call from US National Security Advisor John Bolton and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo – not even the president himself.
Read more
Bank of England refused to return $1.2bn in gold to Venezuela – reports
If I'm right, then this decision to damage – hopefully irreparably – the safety of deposits in the Bank of England was taken by an unelected, unaccountable Canadian citizen (who only got his British citizenship in November). He is here today but gone tomorrow as the governor of the Bank of England. The foreign policy of the state – whose bank it is – was thus at least anticipated if not usurped by Bolton, a minor official of a foreign country. Was that what the Tory champions of Brexit had in mind when they campaigned for Britain to "take back control"?
Of course the governor, Mark Carney, will have known that Bolton was pushing at an open bank vault door and that Britain is no more independent from the United States than the Bank of England is independent from the British government.
In addition, no Caribbean crocodile could shed tears more insincere than those currently being shed by British politicians for the "poor suffering people" of Venezuela. After all, what kind of monster could seize a billion dollars from "poor and suffering people"?
In around 72 hours last week, Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro was transformed from somebody hardly anyone in Britain had ever heard of, into the new "Hitler on the Nile."
This appellation was first applied in post-war Britain to President Nasser of Egypt when he nationalized the Suez Canal. Unfortunately for the imperium, this was actually in Egypt, the country of which he was the president. After all, to paraphrase Donald Rumsfeld, it wasn't Britain's fault that God put Britain's canals in other people's countries.
And there have been many since: Yasser Arafat, Muammar Gaddafi, Bashar Assad, Slobodan Milosevic, Vladimir Putin, and more.
The transformation has been astonishing to watch, even for me, who has been active in politics for 50 years.
Read more
Venezuela plot thickens… UN should be probing Washington and allies for regime-change crimes
All the carefully tended gardens of NGOs, "independent journalists," and experts all flooded forward with their long-husbanded narratives about the perfidy of the Chavez revolution in Venezuela. They did universally suffer two disadvantages however: none of them could even pronounce the name of the man in a street in Caracas whose self-proclaimed presidency they were recognizing. And none of them appeared to know that the US had been imposing a medieval siege of sanctions, sabotage and subversion against Venezuela. At least none of them mentioned it.
None of them, like in every other foreign regime-change operation they'd pushed for, had the remotest idea of what would happen in Venezuela if they succeeded, not least how the many millions of armed Chavez supporters might take to their government being overthrown by foreigners. It is hard to work out whether these journalists and politicians demanding civil war on the world's biggest oil-fields are criminally insane, just criminals, or whether they can plead diminished responsibility on the grounds they didn't actually know what had already happened in Afghanistan, Iraq, Yemen, Syria, Ukraine, etc.
The demonization of Venezuela across even those Western countries which scarcely have functioning governments themselves has been a tidal wave. The pitiful resources Venezuela has invested in solidarity work in Britain – or if they did invest it no-one can explain where it went – was summed up by the complete refusal of the Venezuelan Solidarity Campaign to put someone up for my RT show Sputnik last week, referring me to the Cuba Solidarity Campaign next door.
They, in turn, suggested the Englishman who ably edits the British newspaper, the Morning Star. Seldom can a big and important oil-rich country – vulnerable to Western invasion as it has predictably turned out to be – have bothered to make so few friends.
Events on the ground in Venezuela will decide what happens next, however. In my view, there will be many cutlasses flashing and slashing before this is through. And just like in all the other cases I've referred to, the outcome will prove to be the opposite of what the hirelings of the imperium now imagine.




https://www.rt.com/op-ed/450061-venezue ... k-england/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

the petro dollar

Posted: Wed Jan 30, 2019 8:44 pm
by bentech
Venezuela Gold: Bank of England ‘no longer neutral player’ – Richard Wolff

The freezing of Venezuelan gold by the Bank of England is a signal to all countries out of step with US interests to withdraw their money, according to economist and co-founder of Democracy at Work, Professor Richard Wolff.

He told RT America that Britain and its central bank have shown themselves to be “under the thumb of the United States.”

“That is a signal to every country that has or may have difficulties with the US, [that they had] better get their money out of England and out of London because it’s not the safe place as it once was,” he said.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vBKZLGdPuWo" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

the petro dollar

Posted: Mon Feb 04, 2019 2:17 pm
by bentech
can you explain the mechanism which harms the dollars value which occurs when a country decides not to accept them as payment for goods?

the petro dollar

Posted: Mon Feb 04, 2019 3:32 pm
by bentech
The historian Ronald Robinson argued that British imperial rule died “when colonial rulers had run out of indigenous collaborators.” The result, he noted, was that the “inversion of collaboration into noncooperation largely determined the timing of the decolonization.” This process of alienating traditional U.S. allies and collaborators will have the same effect. As McCoy points out, “all modern empires have relied on dependable surrogates to translate their global power into local control—and for most of them, the moment when those elites began to stir, talk back, and assert their own agendas was also the moment when you knew that imperial collapse was in the cards.”

https://www.truthdig.com/articles/goodb ... he-dollar/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

the petro dollar

Posted: Fri Feb 08, 2019 11:38 pm
by bentech
Gold bar buyers in Russia are currently obliged to pay 20 percent VAT. However, when selling ingots, the tax is not returned. As a result, demand for gold investment in the country sits at just under 3 tons per year. Experts say that if the tax is dropped, demand could skyrocket to 50–100 tons.


https://www.rt.com/business/450967-russ ... -gold-tax/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

the petro dollar

Posted: Sat Feb 09, 2019 1:22 pm
by bentech
what do we think abou Max Keiser?

the petro dollar

Posted: Sat Feb 16, 2019 10:22 am
by bentech
seen this?

"JPMorgan Chase Moves to Be First Big U.S. Bank With Its Own Cryptocurrency"


is the below comment correct?

Chase is using a blockchain technology to back a method for doing very large international monetary transfers faster and in a more on-demand way than is possible with SWIFT.
This is not a cryptocurrency and is neither a consumer tool or an investment vehicle.

the petro dollar

Posted: Tue Feb 19, 2019 11:36 am
by bentech
feb 19th 2019

In this episode of the Keiser Report, Max and Stacy discuss reviews of Bruno Maçães’s new book, "Belt and Road: A Chinese World Order,” on the rise of China to superpower status through trade. The “nine arrows crisscrossing Eurasia’ was a vision first realized by Deng Xiaoping who saw a “world organized as a network.” What does a rising power mean in a world where a fading hegemon is always reluctant to share?

Keiser Report: The One Belt, One Road to Superpower (E1347)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_5X_42WasvM" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

the petro dollar

Posted: Mon Mar 11, 2019 5:29 am
by bentech
seen this one?

A Well-Kept Open Secret: Washington Is Behind India’s Brutal Demonetization Project


Four weeks earlier

Not even four weeks before this assault on Indians, USAID had announced the establishment of „Catalyst: Inclusive Cashless Payment Partnership“, with the goal of effecting a quantum leap in cashless payment in India. The press statement of October 14 says that Catalyst “marks the next phase of partnership between USAID and Ministry of Finance to facilitate universal financial inclusion”. The statement does not show up in the list of press statements on the website of USAID (anymore?). Not even filtering statements with the word “India” would bring it up. To find it, you seem to have to know it exists, or stumble upon it in a web search. Indeed, this and other statements, which seemed rather boring before, have become a lot more interesting and revealing after November 8.

Reading the statements with hindsight it becomes obvious, that Catalyst and the partnership of USAID and the Indian Ministry of Finance, from which Catalyst originated, are little more than fronts which were used to be able to prepare the assault on all Indians using cash without arousing undue suspicion. Even the name Catalyst sounds a lot more ominous, once you know what happened on November 9.

Catalyst’s Director of Project Incubation is Alok Gupta, who used to be Chief Operating Officer of the World Resources Institute in Washington, which has USAID as one of its main sponsors. He was also an original member of the team that developed Aadhaar, the Big-Brother-like biometric identification system.

According to a report of the Indian Economic Times, USAID has committed to finance Catalyst for three years.
Amounts are kept secret.

https://www.globalresearch.ca/a-well-ke ... -2/5566167" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

the petro dollar

Posted: Mon Mar 11, 2019 5:31 am
by bentech
gotta love the corperateeze…


Badal Malick was Vice President of India’s most important online marketplace Snapdeal, before he was appointed as CEO of Catalyst. He commented:
Catalyst’s mission is to solve multiple coordination problems that have blocked the penetration of digital payments among merchants and low-income consumers. We look forward to creating a sustainable and replicable model. (…) While there has been (…) a concerted push for digital payments by the government, there is still a last mile gap when it comes to merchant acceptance and coordination issues. We want to bring a holistic ecosystem approach to these problems.

the petro dollar

Posted: Mon Mar 11, 2019 5:39 am
by bentech
Who are the institutions behind this decisive attack on cash? Upon the presentation of the Beyond-Cash-report, USAID declared: “Over 35 key Indian, American and international organizations have partnered with the Ministry of Finance and USAID on this initiative.” On the website catalyst.org one can see that they are mostly IT- and payment service providers who want to make money from digital payments or from the associated data generation on users. Many are veterans of,what a high-ranking official of Deutsche Bundesbank called the “war of interested financial institutions on cash” (in German). They include the Better Than Cash Alliance, the Gates Foundation (Microsoft), Omidyar Network (eBay), the Dell Foundation Mastercard, Visa, Metlife Foundation.

the petro dollar

Posted: Mon Mar 11, 2019 7:17 am
by rrbgrpdreslt
Applicants! Prior Railway Recruitment Board reported the Recruitment of Group D Posts 2018. Directly after the official declaration, startling quantities of candidates connected for CEN 02/2018 group d result

the petro dollar

Posted: Mon Mar 11, 2019 9:07 pm
by bentech
how is the target rate of inflation the federal reserve shoots for relate to its desire to prevent hording?

the petro dollar

Posted: Wed May 01, 2019 3:31 am
by bentech
4
The peak of globalization has actually already come and gone, according to David Roche, president and global strategist at London-based Independent Strategy.
He told CNBC that “the actual reversal of globalization started over seven years ago,” as countries worldwide initiated more protectionist policies.
Roche projected that even China will see most of its future growth come from domestic pursuits.

???

id like to hear the definition of those terms he uses...

https://www.rt.com/business/458018-glob ... hina-deal/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

the petro dollar

Posted: Sat Jun 22, 2019 10:02 pm
by rSin
Noticed that its trump begging iran to come to the table?

Heh

Same as in 2002 with w
Iran can crash the worldwide dirivatives market
Valued at .5 to 1.5 quadrillion dollars

By simply landing 15% of the missiles
It has aimed at the Persian gulfs oil production
Capacity

Meanwhile the eart asian billdaberger
Conference hasnt a need to be secret about
What its talking about...

Enjoy!

the petro dollar

Posted: Mon Jul 22, 2019 7:22 pm
by rSin
What dn you think?

Is deutsche bank
on the ropes?

50 trillion in dirivatives there...

the petro dollar

Posted: Wed Sep 04, 2019 4:38 pm
by rSin
Is the Fed Preparing to Topple the US Dollar?
By F. William Engdahl
Global Research, September 02, 2019



Unusual remarks and actions by the outgoing head of the Bank of England and other central banking insiders strongly suggest that there is a very ugly scenario in the works to end the role of the US dollar as world reserve currency. In the process, this would involve that the Fed deliberately triggers a dramatic economic depression. If this scenario is actually deployed in coming months, Donald Trump will go down in history books as the second Herbert Hoover, and the world economy will be pushed into the worst collapse since the 1930s. Here are some elements worth considering.
Bank of England speech
The about-to-retire head of the very special Bank of England, Mark Carney, delivered a remarkable speech at the recent annual meeting of central bankers and finance elites at Jackson Hole Wyoming on August 23. The 23-page address to fellow central bankers and financial insiders is clearly a major signal of where the Powers That Be who run world central banks plan to take the world.
Carney addresses obvious flaws with the post-1944 dollar reserve system, noting that,
“…a destabilising asymmetry at the heart of the IMFS (International Monetary and Financial System) is growing. While the world economy is being reordered, the US dollar remains as important as when Bretton Woods collapsed.” He states bluntly, “…In the longer term, we need to change the game…Risks are building, and they are structural.”
What he then goes on to outline is a remarkably detailed blueprint for global central bank transformation of the dollar order, a revolutionary shift.
Carney discusses the fact that China as the world leading trading nation is the obvious candidate to replace the dollar as leading reserve, however, he notes,
“…for the Renminbi to become a truly global currency, much more is required. Moreover, history teaches that the transition to a new global reserve currency may not proceed smoothly.”
He indicates that means it often needs wars or depressions, as he cites the role of World War I forcing out sterling in favor of the US dollar. What Carney finds more immediate is a new IMF-based monetary system to replace the dominant role of the dollar. Carney declares,
“While the rise of the Renminbi may over time provide a second best solution to the current problems with the IMFS, first best would be to build a multipolar system. The main advantage of a multipolar IMFS is diversification… “ He adds, “… When change comes, it shouldn’t be to swap one currency hegemon for another. Any unipolar system is unsuited to a multi-polar world… In other words he says, “Sorry, Beijing, you must wait.”
The Bank of England Governor proposes in effect that the IMF, with its multi-currency Special Drawing Rights (SDR), a basket of five currencies—dollar, Pound, Yen, Euro and now Renminbi—should play the central role creating a new monetary system:
“The IMF should play a central role in informing both domestic and cross border policies. … Pooling resources at the IMF, and thereby distributing the costs across all 189 member countries…”
For that to work he proposes raising the IMF SDR funds triple to $3 trillions as the core of a new monetary system.
Then Carney proposes that the IMF oversee creation of a new payments infrastructure based on an international “stablecoin.” Referring to the private Libra, he clearly states a “new Synthetic Hegemonic Currency (SHC) would be best provided by the public sector, perhaps through a network of central bank digital currencies.” Note that Carney, a former Goldman Sachs banker, is mentioned as a leading candidate to replace Christine Lagarde as IMF head. Is his speech open admission of what is being planned by the world’s leading central bankers as the next step to a world currency and global economic control? Let’s look further.
“Globalization is the Demise of Humanity”: Towards an “Economy of Peace” with an Alternative Monetary System
Lagarde to ECB
The Carney speech, when deciphered from its central bank language, gives us for the first time a clear roadmap where the powers that control world central banking would like to take us. The world reserve role of the US dollar must end; it must be replaced by some form of IMF SDRs as basis for a multi-currency reserve. That in turn would ultimately be based on digital money, so-called block chain currencies. Such currencies, make no mistake, would be completely controlled by central bank authorities and the IMF. That would require their often-proposed elimination of all cash in favor of digital money where every cent we spend can be monitored by the state. This cashless society would also set the stage for the next great financial crisis and the confiscation by governments of ordinary citizens’ bank deposits under new “bank bail-in” laws now on the books since 2014 in every major industrial country including the EU and USA.
The IMF is fully behind the turn to global blockchain digital currencies and use of SDR to replace the dominant US dollar. In a little-noticed speech in November 14, 2018, IMF chief Lagarde strongly indicated that the IMF was behind central bank digital currencies as well as cashless societies. She noted very carefully,
“I believe we should consider the possibility to issue digital currency. There may be a role for the state to supply money to the digital economy.” She added, “A new wind is blowing, that of digitalization…What role will remain for cash in this digital world? … demand for cash is decreasing—as shown in recent IMF work. And in ten, twenty, thirty years, who will still be exchanging pieces of paper?”
Dudley Remarks
The introduction of this central bankers’ new digital currency world will require, as Carney suggests, dramatic upheavals of the status quo, upheavals that would lead to the end of the dominant role of the US dollar since the 1944 Bretton Woods agreement. As that dollar reserve currency role is a pillar of American power in the world, for that to happen would require nothing short of catastrophe. Is this in fact what the Federal Reserve is quietly planning with its money policies?
A remarkable hint of what might be in the works came in an OpEd by the person who until 2018 was the very important President of the New York Federal Reserve Bank, Bill Dudley, who like Mark Carney is a senior Goldman Sachs alumnus. Dudley is no minor actor in the central bankers’ world. Until last year he also was a member of the Bank for International Settlements Board of Directors and chaired the BIS Committee on Payment Settlement Systems and the Committee on the Global Financial System.
Dudley, pointing to the Trump trade war policies and economic dangers of same, then issues the following rare undiplomatic declaration:
“Trump’s re-election arguably presents a threat to the U.S. and global economy, to the Fed’s independence and its ability to achieve its employment and inflation objectives. If the goal of monetary policy is to achieve the best long-term economic outcome, then Fed officials should consider how their decisions will affect the political outcome in 2020.”
While it shocked many, Dudley is merely making public what the Fed has done since its creation in 1913 — influence the course of world and US politics stealthily behind the cover of “neutral” monetary policies. Dudley suggests not “Russian interference” but rather Fed interference.
The Fed could easily tip the US into crisis. The debt levels of the US economy are at record high levels for private households, Federal government, and US corporate debt. Most US corporations have used growing debt, well over $9 trillion, to make stock buybacks rather than invest in new plant and equipment, fueling an unprecedented bubble in the S&P stocks. The rising stocks are not a sign of economic health but of a dangerous speculative bubble vulnerable to collapse.
Were the Fed now to resume rate rises and continue its less-publicized Quantitative Tightening into 2020, a domino-style series of debt defaults, corporate bankruptcies, home mortgage foreclosures, default on car loans and student loans could quickly make a second Trump Presidency in 2020 more than doubtful. However that would be no grounds for the rest of the world opposed to Trump policies to cheer. It would also trigger collapse in major emerging market countries who have borrowed hundreds of billions denominated in US dollars, including Chinese state companies, Turkey, Argentina, Brazil to name a few. EU banks from Italy to Germany to France would fail.
If this Dudley scenario comes to pass in 2020 or not, only the key central bank actors know for sure. It is clear that, after almost eleven years since the 2008 global financial meltdown, the unprecedented central bank zero interest rate policies in the EU and until recently the US, have fueled creation of what some call an “everything bubble”, not only in stocks, in corporate and public bonds, in home prices. Is a new Fed intervention to raise rates and tighten credit the event– the deliberate central bank rupturing of this inflated bubble using the excuse of the Trump danger to the world economy– that Carney has in mind when he says, “transition to a new global reserve currency may not proceed smoothly,”? Let us hope not. The coming months will tell.
*
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F. William Engdahl is strategic risk consultant and lecturer, he holds a degree in politics from Princeton University and is a best-selling author on oil and geopolitics, exclusively for the online magazine “New Eastern Outlook” where this article was originally published. He is a frequent contributor to Global Research.

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the petro dollar

Posted: Fri Jan 03, 2020 7:07 am
by bentech
White Supremacy = Capitalism



By Cheikh Amma Diop

Global Research, January 02, 2020



The term ‘white supremacy’ (WS) is being used a lot these days, finding a home in many discussions on social media and in activist circles. Definitions of WS largely fall into two categories, that it is a belief system or that it is an elitist, inequitable hierarchy (see above). Such definitions tend to be descriptive only, seldom if ever offering a history-based analysis, which would necessarily emphasize the emergence and revolutionary political innovations of capitalist elites in medieval Europe, particularly England (11th– 16th century c.e.). This, of course, begs the question as to how an effective counter strategy can be executed in the absence of such radical analysis.

The Color Game

It is first necessary to explain the meaning and significance of the use of ‘color’, in this case ‘black and white’, in the context of socio-political analysis. Why do European-American capitalists (EACs) and their European capitalist brothers (ECs) use ‘white’ to describe Europeans and their ascendants around the globe? Why do they designate ALL non-Europeans as “black”? The answer is found in the academic term “differentiation of oppression.”

Capitalism originated in England about 500 years ago after a long evolutionary process that began with the Norman invasion in 1066 c.e. Subsequent to their successful invasion and colonization, Norman elites led by William the Conqueror faced the challenge of dominating and exploiting the newly conquered population, who were resistant and significantly outnumbered them. Thus, they needed to devise strategies and tactics to undermine peasant solidarity in the face of a common colonizing enemy and exploiter.

This was accomplished in England, the birthplace of capitalism, in a variety of ways including

1.Overturning customary law especially regarding peasant land tenure and substituting elite-friendly common law (the courts).
2.Monopolizing free access to natural resources, especially land (enclosure).
3.Implementing the legal concept of dominium or ‘absolute private property’, which blocked communal oversight and/or intervention.
4.Creation of a management/supervisory buffer class (“middle class”).
5.Violent coercion.



After successfully conquering the peoples of the Americas and the Caribbean in the 16th and 17th centuries, ECs (from England, France, Spain, Portugal, Denmark, et al) were tasked with the same challenge, sustainably dominating and exploiting an angry, disenfranchised majority. The obvious solution was to use much the same strategies and tactics used successfully in England and Continental Europe where they faced the same problem. It was one thing for ECs/EACs to take advantage of their colonial political organization (capitalism) and superior military technology to successfully conquer another people. It was quite another thing, however, to hold that power. They had to find a viable way to keep their subjects distrustful of and at odds with each other.

The forays of European capitalist agents into Africa, the Caribbean, the Americas, and East Asia including India, Japan, China and the Pacific Islands, led them to a remarkable discovery, that the skin color of most of the world’s peoples are varying degrees of brown rather than the albinism characterized by most Europeans and, again, they found themselves to be heavily outnumbered. Seizing upon this physiological difference, Feudal lords and the capitalist lords they evolved into created various narratives regarding the non-European brown majority on the planet to justify their lawless, violent activities that characterised the emergence of capitalists and capitalism.

The White Supremacy narrative (WSN) has several elements that are closely interrelated including:

1.Race/Color – ‘White’ skinned (European) people are superior to ‘Black’ skinned (Afrikan and other non-European) people.

2.Religion – The European version of Christianity is superior to non-European religions and spiritual systems.

3.Culture – European culture is superior to non-European cultures.

A hierarchy of exploitation was created using various pseudo political constructs including – race/color, culture, lifestyle, gender, age, religion and nationality. Moving up in the hierarchy eases exploitation and increases one’s political and economic opportunities. Academics call this the “differentiation of oppression” because the level and intensity of exploitation is not the same for everyone. Consequently, people are much more likely to focus on “moving on up” by any means necessary, including exploiting other landless wage laborers, rather than making fundamental change in the society.

EACs/ECs insist by way of the WSN that Afrikans and other non-Europeans, that is, “blacks,” can be and in fact, must be exploited more than Europeans, that is, “whites”. In fact, the level and intensity of exploitation of ‘blacks’ and ‘whites’ is further differentiated WITHIN each respective political construct. Thus, darker ‘blacks’ are exploited more than lighter ‘blacks’ and lighter ‘whites’ (e.g. northern Europeans) are less exploited than darker ‘whites’ (e.g. southern Europeans). Therefore, as can be surmised from the foregoing, the purpose of WS and other interrelated tactics is to facilitate and sustain the exploitation of the masses of the people by a tiny group of elite European-American men.

Obviously, the ‘color game’ must be rejected as an illegitimate tool used by EACs/ECs to maintain their dominance, however, Afrikans in America and around the globe should reject it for another very important reason. The forced acceptance of the pseudo political construct ‘black’ has all but erased the ancestral identities of far too many Afrikans in the Americas and throughout the Diaspora, e.g. Igbo, Ashante, Akan, Wolof, Fon, Yoruba, Ngola, et al.

Elite European and European-American Men Dominate and Control Global Capitalism

According to Forbes magazine, as of 2019 there are 2,208 billionaires on the planet.

By continent:
◾Asia – 719
◾North America – 631
◾Europe – 559
◾South America – 85
◾Oceania – 35
◾Afrika – 25

Adding North America, Europe and South America captures most billionaires of European ascent:
◾631 + 559 + 85 = 1,275

Therefore, over half of the 2,208 billionaires in the world are of European ascent.

According to Bloomberg magazine the wealthiest families on the planet in 2018 were as follows:

1.Walton, Walmart, $151B, U.S.
2.Koch, Koch Ind., $99B, U.S.
3.Mars, Mars, $90B, U.S.
4.Van Damme, Anheuser-Busch, $54B, Belgium
5.Dumas, Hermes, $49B, France
6.Wertheimer, Chanel, $46B, France
7.Ambani, Reliance Ind., $43B, India
8.Quandt, BMW, $43B, Germany
9.Cargill/Macmillan, Cargill, $42B, U.S.
10.Boehringer, Boehringer Ingelheim, $42B, Germany
11.Albrecht, Aldi, $39B, Germany
12.Mulliez, Auchan, $37.5B, France
13.Kwok, Sun Hung Kai Properties, $34B, China
14.Cox, Cox Ent., $34B, U.S.
15.Pritzker, Hyatt Hotes, $34B, U.S.
16.Lee, Samsung, $31B, South Korea
17.Rausing, Tetra Pak, $31B, UK
18.Thomson, Thomson Reuters, $31B, Canada
19.Johnson, SC Johnson, $28B, U.S.
20.Dassault, Dassault Grp, $28B, France
21.Duncan, Enterprise Products, $26B, U.S.
22.Hoffman, Roche, $25B, Switzerland
23.Hearst, Hearst Corp, $25B, U.S.
24.Lauder, Estee Lauder, $24B, U.S.
25.Ferrero, Ferrero, $23B, Italy


European families (includes the U.S., Europe and Canada) constitute a whopping 88% of the world’s richest families! Non-European families in China, India and South Korea, make up the remainder. Clearly, something other than an egalitarian, meritocracy has determined the ownership, management, control and distribution of resources on much of the planet. This comes as no surprise when one becomes familiar with the historical origins and subsequent development of capitalism.

The emergence of capitalism in England 500 years ago was an imperial scheme marked by violence, colonialism, the monopolization of natural resources especially land and the overthrow of customary communal law, which presented a legal road block to the efforts of feudal lords to sustain and expand their power, status and privilege.

Norman feudal lords used several revolutionary tactics to maintain and expand their wealth extraction from their English colonial subjects including:

1.Enclosure stripped peasants of their customary rights ensuring free access to land by constructing physical and legal barriers around common and ‘waste’ land from which peasants extracted resources for day-to-day life, thereby forcing formerly self-sufficient people into life or death dependency.

2.Absolute private property (dominium), a legal concept adopted by Norman feudal lords from imperial Rome, which removed privately owned land and resources from communal management and control, thereby eliminating barriers to the maximum extraction of wealth.

3.Leased Land, created by the elite-friendly common law, gradually replaced freehold, copyhold, etc., thereby removing peasant’s access to land under customary law.

Thus, the landless wage laborer was born, forced into life-or-death dependency upon the capitalist owned and controlled market.

Keep in mind that capitalism only existed in Europe, specifically England in the 16th century. This means that ECs had a tremendous advantage over their competitors on the European continent and elsewhere who had yet to make the revolutionary changes necessary to enable them to compete.

By way of the capitalist elite owned and controlled courts and legal system, the illegitimate colonial activities of capitalists were now “legal”, which helped to diffuse resistance to the new political system. This new legal environment set the stage for the emergence of the industrial revolution in England beginning in earnest in the 17th century. Feudal elites on the European mainland quickly adopted the new political system of capitalism in order to economically compete. ECs then aggressively spread capitalism to the Americas, the Caribbean, Afrika and Asia by violence and legal chicanery.

ECs mercilessly invaded, conquered, enslaved and colonized the people of Afrika, the Americas and the Caribbean. Their objective was to capture new lands and peoples to exploit. They outlawed the cultures and systems of governance of the conquered people and installed capitalism. The people and their lands were renamed and, in many cases, national borders were redrawn, often arbitrarily. Clearly, such actions must be seen as illegitimate.

To this day, the ascendants of the ECs who invaded the Americas are firmly in power and have ensured that the ‘nations’ of the Americas remain firmly integrated into global capitalism. Therefore, these ‘nations’ must be viewed for what they are -capitalist colonies dominated by elite European men and their zombie followers in central and South America. The same holds true for the ‘nations’ of the Caribbean and Afrika.

Returning to the chart above, we see that EACs make up 40% of the world’s richest families, followed by France at 16% and Germany at 12%. The primary position of the U.S. is largely explained by the destruction of its major economic competitors in Europe and Asia during World War 2 and changes in the financial architecture of U.S. and global capitalism.

The destruction of the industrial infrastructure of Europe, southwest Asia and parts of East Asia, especially Japan, Korea, China and the South Pacific Isles is well known. Less well known is the initiative by EACs/ECs to construct and dominate the financial architecture of global capitalism. Today, they control a whopping 82% of the world’s foreign currency reserves. This means that the dollar and the Euro are used predominately in international trade, especially for the purchase of petroleum and its derivatives, another clear indication of the extent to which elite European men dominate global capitalism today.

The Bretton Woods Conference

In July 1944, the Bretton Woods Conference was held in Bretton Woods, NH that included 730 delegates from 44 ‘nations’:

◾The Americas (19): United States, Bolivia, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Iceland, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay and Venezuela.
◾Europe (10): Belgium, Czechoslovakia, France, Greece, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, United Kingdom and Yugoslavia.
◾Afrika (4): Egypt, Ethiopia, Liberia and South Afrika.
◾Asia (5): British Raj, China, Iran, Iraq and the Soviet Union
◾The Caribbean (3): Cuba, Dominican Republic and Haiti.
◾Pacific (3): Australia, New Zealand and the Philippines.



The Bretton Woods conference (image above) was held when the outcome of the war had been decided in favor of the ‘allies’. The conference was an initiative of the treasury departments of the U.S. and the UK.

The stated goals of the conference were:

1.Promote stability of exchange rates and financial flows (International Monetary Fund).

2.Organize and manage speedy reconstruction in the aftermath of the war and promote economic development, especially through loans to rebuild infrastructure (International Bank for Reconstruction and Development – IBRD).

Representatives pledged to peg their exchange rates to gold, make their currencies convertible and were required to subscribe to the IMF’s capital in order to receive funding for reconstruction from the IBRD. The underlying goals of the conference were also to promote ‘open markets’, which meant lowering barriers to trade and the international movement of capital. Thus, the fundamental building blocks of the financial architecture of global capitalism were put in place by 44 ‘nations’ dominated by EACs/ECs, the ‘victors’ in the aftermath of a devastating war that killed tens of millions of people.

The U.S. took upon itself the role of leading the capitalist world, referred to as ‘the free world’ by the Dominant Capitalist Narrative (DCN), which at the time was composed of 44 capitalist nations and their colonies. To do so, EACs aggressively intervened in the affairs of other ‘nations,’ particularly those who had not yet agreed to integrate their political economies into the capitalist owned and controlled system. To do so, they massively expanded their military reach and aggressively intervened in the Americas, the Caribbean, South West Asia and East Asia, which was a huge drain on the treasury. EAC’s direct military involvement in the Vietnam War (1955 – 1975) in particular had a tremendous negative impact on their financial and political capital.

The Bretton Woods system began to fall apart in the 1960s as nations began to compete economically with the U.S. as they shook off the effects of WW2. Nations started demanding that their dollar reserves be converted to gold as agreed because it was suspected that the U.S. was overleveraged, that it had printed more dollars than the value of its gold reserves. Others decided to leave Bretton Woods altogether (France, West Germany, Switzerland). Bretton Woods would remain in effect until 1971 when the Nixon Administration ended the convertibility of the dollar to gold as required by the Bretton Woods agreement. This made the dollar a floating currency (also called fiat) whose value is determined by market events.

The Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT), another very important component of the financial architecture of global capitalism was founded in Brussels in 1973, two years after the ‘Nixon Shock’. Representatives from 239 banks in 15 countries, worked to transition toward a more reliable and automated messaging system. The SWIFT network makes it possible for financial institutions to send and receive transaction information.

Since the dollar is the world’s leading reserve currency (62%) and the Euro is second at 20%, most international currency transactions must pass through SWIFT, which is a privately owned cooperative. Remember that one of the key features of capitalism is absolute private property meaning that such property is legally immune from community or communal intervention. This gives EACs/ECs tremendous leverage over global financial transactions. The financial transactions of governments, corporations, institutions and individuals who use the dollar and/or the Euro all must pass through the SWIFT network.

EACs/ECs have had considerable success in pressuring SWIFT to block nations, institutions and individuals that violate illegal, unilateral sanctions imposed by the U.S.

The Petro Dollar

The formation of the ‘U.S.-Saudi Arabian Joint Commission on Economic Cooperation’ in 1974 by Secretary of State Henry Kissinger established another key component of the architecture of global capitalism, the petro dollar.

“The Commission was established on the heels of the Arab oil embargo and price increases. The embargo emphasized that closer U.S.-Arab ties were needed. The oil price increases gave Saudi Arabia a substantial amount of petrodollars, which could be used for development purposes.

The Commission was perceived as an important mechanism for:

1.Fostering closer political ties between the two countries through economic cooperation.

2.Assisting Saudi industrialization and development while recycling petro-dollars.

3.Facilitating the flow to Saudi Arabia of American goods, services, and technology.”

Report by the Comptroller General of the United States: U.S.-Saudi Arabian Joint Commission on Economic Cooperation’ (March 1979)

In July 1974, U.S. Treasury secretary William Simon traveled to Saudi Arabia to negotiate an agreement to:

“…neutralize crude oil as an economic weapon and find a way to persuade a hostile kingdom to finance America’s widening deficit with its newfound petrodollar wealth.

The basic framework was strikingly simple. The U.S. would buy oil from Saudi Arabia and provide the kingdom military aid and equipment. In return, the Saudis would plow billions of their petrodollar revenue back into Treasuries and finance America’s spending.” – Andrea Wong, “Behind Saudi Arabia’s 41-Year U.S. Debt Secret”, Bloomberg (May 2016).

Saudi monarchs agreed to the arrangement under the stipulation that their large purchases of U.S. treasury bonds be kept secret.

“By December 1974 the US Treasury had signed an agreement in Riyadh with the Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency, whose mission was, “to establish a new relationship through the Federal Reserve Bank of New York with the (US) Treasury borrowing operation. Under this arrangement, SAMA will purchase new US Treasury securities with maturities of at least one year,” explained Assistant Secretary of the U.S. Treasury, Jack F. Bennett, later to become a director of Exxon.” – F. William Engdahl, “From Golden Dollar to Petro Dollar to Narco Dollar” (Sept. 2016)

Saudi Arabia’s agreement to only accept the U.S. dollar for petroleum purchases pressured the remaining members of OPEC, many of whom were absolute monarchies like the House of Saud and thus required protection from their unhappy people, to follow suit in 1975. Thus the free-floating, fiat dollar became, in effect, backed by petroleum and the military.

The recycling of petrodollars is as follows:

1.From oil consuming “nations” to oil producing “nations” for the purchase of petroleum and its derivatives.

2.From oil producing “nations” to businesses and financial institutions in America and the UK through the purchase of government treasury bonds and military weapons and equipment.

3.From American and UK financial institutions to oil consumers by way of direct loans, which enable them to buy petroleum and its derivatives from oil producers.

The fact that the U.S. dollar’s value is free-floating and constantly recycled internationally permits EACs to print money without fear of inflation thereby enabling their pursuit of endless war, entangling weaker nations in ‘debt traps, unrestrained market speculation and manipulation, and other malign strategies and tactics that would otherwise be a prohibitive drain on the economy.

Summary

The domination of global capitalism by elite European and European-American men has resulted in European-American capitalists occupying the top of the global capitalist pyramid followed by their European brothers.

The “White Supremacy Narrative” (WSN) should be rejected because it uses pseudo political constructs such as, race/color, to justify tactics that differentiate the level and intensity of exploitation of landless wage laborers under capitalism. EACs/ECs assigned the pseudo political term “black” to Afrikans and all non-Europeans and the term “white” to all Europeans. It is not merely a belief but a tried-and-true tactic used to sustainably dominate the proverbial 99%.

The forced acceptance of the pseudo political term “black” has damaged the connection between Afrikans in the Diaspora and their Afrikan identities, thus the connection with their ancestors is compromised. Today, far too many of the ascendants of enslaved Afrikans in the Diaspora find no value in identifying with their original identities, such as Ngola, Fon, Oromo, Igbo, Yoruba. Many also find no value in identifying merely as Afrikans.

The differentiation of oppression is indispensable to an elite minority in dominating a resistant majority. It effectively pits wage laborers who occupy different positions in the capitalist hierarchy against each other. They are coerced into focusing their attention and resources on surviving and “moving up the ladder” rather than on fundamentally changing the system.

The WSN is but one tactic in the hegemonic tool kit of EACs/ECs. Others include endless war, institutionalized colonialism, slavery and sexism. They have evolved their tactics over the 500 years since the birth of their revolutionary political system in England. They continue to dominate every area of life in the colonies aka nations created by their ancestors, especially their currencies and thus their economies. The aim of such domination continues unchanged, that being, to maintain the power, privilege and status of elite European men.

EACs found themselves in the driver’s seat in the aftermath of World War 2 due to the massive destruction of the manufacturing infrastructure of their competitors around the globe. They along with their European capitalist brothers established the International Monetary Fund and the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development through coercive agreements at the Bretton Woods Conference (1944), which established currency exchange rates relative to gold and ensured that elite European-American men were the prime beneficiaries of the reconstruction boom.

The Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT) another very important component of the financial architecture of global capitalism was founded by ECs in Brussels in 1973, two years after the Nixon administration ended the convertibility of the dollar to gold. Thus, all international transactions involving the dollar and the Euro must pass through the SWIFT network giving elite European men (capitalists) tremendous power and leverage over “independent nations.”

EACs created the petrodollar in 1974 with the ‘U.S.-Saudi Arabian Joint Commission on Economic Cooperation’. In this agreement, Saudi elites agreed to only accept the dollar in payment for its petroleum products and use its burgeoning petrodollar reserves to purchase U.S. Treasury notes, weapons and military equipment. In return, EACs committed to military aid and assisting with economic development, which has resulted in the seemingly permanent entrenchment of millions of advisors, technicians, consultants and contractors from Europe and America.

The recycling petrodollar allows EACs to print money without fear of inflation thus enabling their pursuit of “full spectrum dominance”, that is, superiority in every possible combat environment, against any “enemy” without suffering defeat (Joint Vision 2020, America’s Military Planning For Tomorrow, National Defense University, Institute for National Strategic Studies, 2000). EACs are estimated to have 800-1,000 military bases in dozens of ‘countries’ around the globe (Jules Dufour, “The Worldwide Network of US Military Bases”, Global Research, July 2007).

The chokehold that EACs and their European brothers have on the financial architecture of global capitalism make possible such a tremendous projection of power beyond U.S. borders and relentless military interventions such as the illegal invasion of Iraq, the destruction of Libya, the invasion and occupation of Afghanistan, ongoing bombing campaigns in Somalia, Iraq and Syria. EACs/ECs are able to impose crippling economic sanctions on targeted ‘governments’, institutions and individuals, effectively blocking them from international transactions using the petrodollar and the Euro, e.g. Cuba, Russia, Iran, Somalia, Nicaragua, Venezuela, Zimbabwe, Lebanon, Syria, China, et al.

The emergence of global regional powers over the past 25 years is changing the geopolitical landscape, favoring Greater Asia led by China and Russia. They and other regional powers are determined to end their subservience to elite European men by de-dollarizing and decoupling their economies from global capitalism, which will, of course, take time. In the meantime, they are engaging in currency swaps, barter, futures trading, import substitution, economic diversification and so on to lessen the control that elite European men have over their political economies.

The de-dollarization and decoupling project is picking up steam globally and will, undoubtedly continue until the goal is achieved, that being, sovereignty and self-reliance. These initiatives cannot be stopped short of EACs/ECs waging a catastrophic global war that would dwarf the ‘world wars’ of the 20thcentury in its destructiveness. The ongoing efforts by capitalist colonies to free themselves from the hegemony of elite European men will have major negative impacts on the economies of capitalist “nations.”

But that’s another story for another time.

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