The Fiat World

The Fiat World

Fund manager Bill Gross mentioned how unhappy he is that Mitt Romney's VP is in favor of stealing less from citizens. Corruption isn't just at the upper class levels, almost everyone and everything expects something from the state. Not only that, many people don't realize that almost everything has been stolen from underneath them and they are left holding worthless items.

Jeff Berwick
16 August 2012
Gold Eagle

Today, the power of the state has corrupted society absolutely.

This week, fund manager Bill Gross tweeted how unhappy he is that Mitt Romney's VP selection is in favor of stealing less from citizens. He is calling for more theft and yet not a person at the cocktail parties he attends will slight him or call him a violent thief.

The corruption isn't just at the upper echelons of society either. It's everywhere. Almost everyone and everything in the US today suckles at the teat of the state.

[Note: The number of people on welfare including food stamps and other welfare stamp programs was taken from this link; to this we added those on Socialist InSecurity; those on Medicare; government workers who produce nothing; and those in the Department of Offense - on right wing welfare. While we recognize that there is probably some significant overlap... the total came to 252,496,754 US unproductive US citizens who need the payouts from the fasco-communist state]

Not only that, but thanks to decades of public indoctrination camps that would make Vladimir Lenin jealous and an onslaught of television programming most people today don't even realize that almost everything has been stolen from underneath them and they are left holding worthless items instead.

The Olympics were held in the UK this month and the number of items we can point out about the country that provided the inspiration for the book, 1984, are lengthy.

Look no further than the currency used in the UK, the British Pound Sterling. Not one in a million English citizens see the irony of calling a piece of paper with no backing a "pound" of sterling.

The original pound originated over 1200 years ago, born about AD 785. Back then 240 silver pennies equaled one pound. The pennies were made with the purest silver available and were as much as 99.9% silver. Later in 1158 King Henry II introduced much more durable 92.5% silver pennies into circulation. Today these are known as sterlings since they have the same percentage of silver as sterling metal.

Debasement came to the silver currency during the reigns of criminals Henry VIII and Edward VI. The pound was redefined as a "troy pound" which contained just 12 ounces. The troy ounce is smaller than the avoirdupois ounce and the troy pound is smaller than the avoirdupois pound.

Without getting too bogged down in that, let's just look at the modern paper "pound" in terms of the original pound. At today's silver price of £17.75 per ounce, and with 16 ounces in a pound, the value of one pound sterling (assuming 92.5% silver) today would be worth £262. (Just look at the astronomical money supply growth)

Instead, the modern paper "pound" is only worth its £1 face value and there is no silver nor gold at all backing it. It is literally worth only 1/284 or so of the original pound...which is even less than the original silver penny which was worth 1/240 of the original pound. Yet people are so brainwashed that they still call a piece of paper a pound.

The same goes for many other things. People carry around "gold cards" but the only bank card that we know of that is actually backed by gold is through Peter Schiff's EuroPac bank in St. Vincent (See our Special Report on EuroPac Bank here). For all other cards, they are only gold in color not in substance.

And, look no further than the Olympics where athletes competed for gold, silver and bronze colored metals! The last time the gold medal was made out of gold was at the Stockholm Olympics in 1912… a year before the financial coup of the US and the institution of the Federal Reserve crime organization. The timing is likely not a coincidence.

In 2012, the gold medals handed out have a makeup of 1.34% gold! The rest is 92.5% silver and 6.16% copper. The resulting medallion is worth about $500. For the silver medal, the gold is replaced with more copper, for a $260 make-up of metals. The bronze medal is 97% copper, 2.5% zinc and 0.5% tin. That's about $3, worth less than most trinkets.

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