http://www.drschoon.com/articles/TheShellGame.pdf
THE SHELL GAME
Modern economics is not rocket science. In fact, it’s not science at all. It’s
a game, a confidence game. Once paper passed for money, economics
became an elaborate shell game designed to hide the fact paper had been
substituted for silver and gold. Debt ratings are an attempt to quantify
confidence in paper assets and are an essential part of the game. The shell
game is called “Where’s The Money?” The answer is simple, it’s not
there.
The question “where did the money go during the Great Depression?” has now been
answered to my satisfaction. During the Great Depression, money essentially disappeared
and, as a consequence, consumer and business demand collapsed as did prices, beginning
a downward coreolis-like spiral that was to suck the global economy into an economic
black hole.
My study of the Great Depression began in the 1990s and the subsequent collapse of the
dot.com bubble provided a real-time corroboration of assumptions about the connection
between loose credit, excessive speculation, and financial bubbles; and, now, in 2008,
one of my most troubling questions about the depression has been answered—where did
the money go during the Great Depression?
Plunge In US Commercial Property, an article by Daniel Pimlott posted on FT.com
(Financial Times) May 21, 2008 provided a critical clue:
Commercial property prices in the US in February saw their sharpest
decline since records began nearly 15 years ago as sources of finance for
deals has dried up, according to data from Standard & Poor’s out
yesterday.
The value of commercial buildings fell 1.03 percent between January and
February, the largest monthly decline since at least 1993, when the
industry was just emerging from a deep slump.
The fall in national property prices comes as banks have retrenched on
lending due to credit crisis and the slowing economy, causing the volume
of deals to slow sharply. The market for commercial mortgage-backed
securities, which until last August was a major route to cheaper
borrowing, has largely ground to a halt.
Sales of commercial properties were down 71 per cent in the first quarter
compared with a year earlier, according to data from Real Capital
Analytics.
The fact that sales of US commercial real estate fell an astounding 71 % from 1st quarter
2007 to 1st quarter 2008 is shocking and the implications are quite serious. The cause of
the slowdown, however, provided the very clue I was seeking.
Commercial property prices in the US...saw their sharpest decline…as sources of finance
for deals has dried up… as banks have retrenched on lending due to credit crisis…
DURING THE GREAT DEPRESSION
MONEY DID NOT DISAPPEAR
CREDIT DID
The answer to: Where did the money go in the Great Depression? is found in the
metaphor of the shell game. It is now clear that money didn’t disappear during the Great
Depression, credit disappeared.
The money was never there in the first place. Money had been replaced by credit in the
shell game introduced by the Federal Reserve in 1913 when the Federal Reserve began
issuing credit-based Federal Reserve notes in place of the savings-based money from the
US Treasury.
For details on how the shell game is run, Professor Antal E. Fekete’s description of the
check kiting scheme between the US Treasury and Federal Reserve provides crucial
information for those perhaps wishing themselves to live off the earnings of others.
It is epitomized by an elaborate check-kiting conspiracy between the U.S:
Treasury and the Federal Reserve. Treasury bonds, contrary to
appearances, are no more redeemable than Federal Reserve notes. It’s all
very neat: the notes are backed by the bonds, and the bonds are
redeemable by the notes. Therefore each is valued in terms of itself, rather
than by an independent outside asset. Each is an irredeemable liability of
the U.S: government. The whole scheme boils down to a farce. It is check-
kiting at the highest level. At maturity the bonds are replaced by another
with a more distant maturity date, or they are ostensibly paid in the form
of irredeemable currency. The issuer of either type of debt is usurping a
privilege without accepting the countervailing duty. They issue obligations
without taking any further responsibility for their fate or for the effect they
have on the economy. Moreover, a double standard of justice is involved.
Check-kiting is a crime under the Criminal Code. That is, provided that it
is perpetrated by private individuals. Practiced at the highest level, check-
kiting is the corner-stone of the monetary system.
GOTTERDÄMMERUNG The Twilight of Irredeemable Debt, Antal E.
Fekete, April 28, 2008
http://www.professorfekete.com/artic...rdammerung.pdf
THE STUDY OF MODERN ECONOMICS IS SIMILAR
TO THE STUDY OF RELIGION IN A TIME OF IDOLATRY
In the shell game of modern economics, credit replaces money and when credit gives rise
to speculative bubbles, the collapse of those bubbles leads to the defaulting of debt which
causes credit to disappear and the economy to collapse.
The credit based shell game, however, is nearing its end. The historic credit contraction
that began in August 2007 is still in progress. Despite the efforts of central bankers, credit
is still disappearing and, just as in the Great Depression, the credit contraction is
continuing to spread causing more and more debt to default.
Credit, the fertilizer of human debt, when no longer available effectively spells the end of
the legalized shell game masquerading as modern economics; but the kreditmeisters, their
global confidence game now damaged by an unexpected lack of confidence on the part of
the marks, sic investors, however, will not give up their scam easily.
THE CONUNDRUM OF THE KREDITMEISTERS
Those running the shell game, the central bankers and their codependent brethren,
investment bankers, are terrified of losing their day jobs, They have lived well for three
hundred years (since the establishment of the Bank of England in 1694) leveraging the
productivity of others and we can be assured they will do everything in their considerable
power to keep their lifestyle intact..
At this time the central bankers are collectively engaged in financial triage as they
attempt to replace the credit that is rapidly being withdrawn in the face of ever increasing
amounts of defaulting debt.
Following the same play book they used in the aftermath of the dot.com collapse, the Fed
has quickly cut rates from 5.25 % to 2 % but this time they will not ignite a housing
bubble as they did the last time. This time, they will do worse. This time, they will burn
down the house.
BURNING DOWN THE HOUSE
In the long run, there is no short run
In retrospect it will all be clear, the mistakes, the reasons, the excuses, the results. Now,
however, in the beginning of the collapse, events appear more problematic, the outcome
still unknown. Nonetheless, even in the fog of unexpected events, certain things can be
known and safely predicted; and, one of them is that we are now on the road to
hyperinflation.
Appointing “Helicopter Ben” Bernanke to head the Federal Reserve now is akin to
sending Sammy the Bull, the mafia hit-man, to negotiate with the Palestinians and
Israelis; and when the news comes back that Sammy the Bull shot and killed the
Palestinians and Israelis at the negotiating table, we should not be surprised—just as we
should not be surprised that Ben “the printing press” Bernanke is erring on the side of
excess in the current economic crisis by providing even more credit, by shoving even
more debt based paper into now a burning house.
WHEN A HOUSE OF PAPER MONEY BURNS
Hyperinflation is to inflation like pneumonia is to a cold. Though similar, the former is
much more consequential; and whereas pneumonia can sometimes kill, hyperinflation is a
veritable death sentence. Hyperinflation always ends in the total destruction of paper
money. In hyperinflation, the value of paper money reverts to its mean—ZERO.
The past is indeed prologue when it comes to humanity, printing presses, and the
recurrent desire of governments to turn paper into gold; which through the alchemy of
central banking is possible—though only for a limited time.
While central bankers and governments do not intend to cause hyperinflation anymore
than drunk drivers intend to crash, they are nonetheless responsible for the decisions that
lead to hyperinflation and deflationary depressions.
The United States has experienced high rates of inflation in the past and appears to be
running the same type of fiscal policies that engendered hyperinflations in 20 countries
over the past century.
Professor Laurance Kotlikoff, Federal Reserve Bank Review St Louis July/Aug 2006
The US is the largest economy in the world and the US dollar is the world’s reserve
currency. Its central bank, the Federal Reserve, is the most influential, and Ben “the
printing press” Bernanke is its chairman. We should not be surprised at what is now
going to happen to the US, the US dollar and the world economy.
As the Fed is busy bailing out international investment banks with America’s money, we
should be more concerned with what is going to happen to us; because when the US
dollar goes up in smoke, the US economy will go down in flames and the world economy
will stumble badly, if not collapse completely.
Hyperinflation will destroy both the US dollar and the US economy and the world will
not be unaffected. Professor Kotlikoff’s warning about a US hyperinflation was published
in 2006; and, now in 2008, US printing presses under Fed chairman Ben Bernanke are
running faster than they’ve ever been run before.
HYPERINFLATION IS LIKE STEPPING OFF A CLIFF.
YOU ONLY EXPERIENCE IT AFTER YOU’VE GONE TOO FAR
Friedrich Kessler, a law professor at Harvard and at Boalt Hall UC Berkeley described
the onset of hyperinflation during the Weimar Republic in Germany.
It was horrible. Horrible! Like lightening it struck. No one was prepared. You cannot
imagine the rapidity with which the whole thing happened. The shelves in the grocery
stores were empty. You could buy nothing with your paper money.
From Fiat Paper Money, The History And Evolution of Our Currency $28.50 by Ralph T.
Foster, tfdf@pacbell.net (510) 845-3015 This book, a primer on the end game, is
everything you wanted to know about fiat paper money and were too afraid to ask.
At Session III of Professor Fekete’s Gold Standard University Live in February, I
discussed the possibility of a sequential or simultaneous hyperinflationary deflationary
depression, the economic equivalent of having both a severe heart condition and a
possibly fatal cancer at the same time. Such is not impossible; in fact, it is increasingly
likely.
I highly recommend the thorough and studied analysis of hyperinflation and concurrent
possibilities in John Williams’ Hyperinflation Special Report, Shadow Government
Statistics, Series Issue No. 41, April 8, 2008, http://www.shadowstats.com/article/292.
John Williams also references and recommends Ralph T. Foster’s Fiat Paper Money, The
History And Evolution of Our Currency noted above.
The critical question should now be asked: What can we do?
THE PARACHUTE OF GOLD AND SILVER
JUMPING OUT OF UNCLE BEN’S SPUTTERING HELIPCOPTER
The following is from The Nightmare German Inflation, Scientific Market Analysis,
1970, which describes the extreme hyperinflationary conditions during the Weimar
Republic in the 1920s:
The ones who fared best were the small minority who had the foresight to exchange
marks into foreign money or gold very early, before new laws made this difficult and
before the mark lost too much value.
The difference between 1920s Germany and today is that there are no longer any
currencies convertible to precious metals. In the 1920s, when hyperinflation destroyed
the German mark, other currencies were still tied to gold. Today, this is no longer the
case. Today, only gold and silver will offer guaranteed monetary refuge during the
coming crisis.
A hyperinflation is a monetary phenomena caused by the rapid printing of money not
convertible to gold or silver. The inflation of the paper money supply happens gradually,
but hyperinflation is itself a sudden-onset phenomena. Suddenly and unexpectedly,
inflation becomes hyperinflation and unless you are already prepared, it is already too
late.
Today, we are moving closer to the end game, the resolution of past monetary sins when
the banker’s shell game is exposed for what it is—a monetary abomination, a parasite on
the economic body that over time kills the host on which it feeds.
Be aware. Be careful. Be safe.
Have faith.
Note I: I now have a blog, Moving Through The Maelstom with Darryl Robert Schoon.
My first blog discusses the underlying reasons for our increasing series of crises.
see http://www.posdev.net/pdn/index.php?...drs&Itemid=106
Note II: I will be speaking at Professor Antal E. Fekete’s Session IV of Gold Standard
University Live (GSUL) July 3-6, 2008 in Szombathely, Hungary. If you are interested in
monetary matters and gold, the opportunity to hear Professor Fekete should not be
missed. A perusal of Professor Fekete’s topics may convince you to attend (see
http://www.professorfekete.com/gsul.asp ). Professor Fekete, in my opinion, is a giant in
a time of small men.
Darryl Robert Schoon
www.survivethecrisis.com
www.drschoon.com
blog http://www.posdev.net/pdn/index.php?...drs&Itemid=106
Modern economics is not rocket science. In fact, it’s not science at all. It’s
a game, a confidence game. Once paper passed for money, economics
became an elaborate shell game designed to hide the fact paper had been
substituted for silver and gold. Debt ratings are an attempt to quantify
confidence in paper assets and are an essential part of the game. The shell
game is called “Where’s The Money?” The answer is simple, it’s not
there.
The question “where did the money go during the Great Depression?” has now been
answered to my satisfaction. During the Great Depression, money essentially disappeared
and, as a consequence, consumer and business demand collapsed as did prices, beginning
a downward coreolis-like spiral that was to suck the global economy into an economic
black hole.
My study of the Great Depression began in the 1990s and the subsequent collapse of the
dot.com bubble provided a real-time corroboration of assumptions about the connection
between loose credit, excessive speculation, and financial bubbles; and, now, in 2008,
one of my most troubling questions about the depression has been answered—where did
the money go during the Great Depression?
Plunge In US Commercial Property, an article by Daniel Pimlott posted on FT.com
(Financial Times) May 21, 2008 provided a critical clue:
Commercial property prices in the US in February saw their sharpest
decline since records began nearly 15 years ago as sources of finance for
deals has dried up, according to data from Standard & Poor’s out
yesterday.
The value of commercial buildings fell 1.03 percent between January and
February, the largest monthly decline since at least 1993, when the
industry was just emerging from a deep slump.
The fall in national property prices comes as banks have retrenched on
lending due to credit crisis and the slowing economy, causing the volume
of deals to slow sharply. The market for commercial mortgage-backed
securities, which until last August was a major route to cheaper
borrowing, has largely ground to a halt.
Sales of commercial properties were down 71 per cent in the first quarter
compared with a year earlier, according to data from Real Capital
Analytics.
The fact that sales of US commercial real estate fell an astounding 71 % from 1st quarter
2007 to 1st quarter 2008 is shocking and the implications are quite serious. The cause of
the slowdown, however, provided the very clue I was seeking.
Commercial property prices in the US...saw their sharpest decline…as sources of finance
for deals has dried up… as banks have retrenched on lending due to credit crisis…
DURING THE GREAT DEPRESSION
MONEY DID NOT DISAPPEAR
CREDIT DID
The answer to: Where did the money go in the Great Depression? is found in the
metaphor of the shell game. It is now clear that money didn’t disappear during the Great
Depression, credit disappeared.
The money was never there in the first place. Money had been replaced by credit in the
shell game introduced by the Federal Reserve in 1913 when the Federal Reserve began
issuing credit-based Federal Reserve notes in place of the savings-based money from the
US Treasury.
For details on how the shell game is run, Professor Antal E. Fekete’s description of the
check kiting scheme between the US Treasury and Federal Reserve provides crucial
information for those perhaps wishing themselves to live off the earnings of others.
It is epitomized by an elaborate check-kiting conspiracy between the U.S:
Treasury and the Federal Reserve. Treasury bonds, contrary to
appearances, are no more redeemable than Federal Reserve notes. It’s all
very neat: the notes are backed by the bonds, and the bonds are
redeemable by the notes. Therefore each is valued in terms of itself, rather
than by an independent outside asset. Each is an irredeemable liability of
the U.S: government. The whole scheme boils down to a farce. It is check-
kiting at the highest level. At maturity the bonds are replaced by another
with a more distant maturity date, or they are ostensibly paid in the form
of irredeemable currency. The issuer of either type of debt is usurping a
privilege without accepting the countervailing duty. They issue obligations
without taking any further responsibility for their fate or for the effect they
have on the economy. Moreover, a double standard of justice is involved.
Check-kiting is a crime under the Criminal Code. That is, provided that it
is perpetrated by private individuals. Practiced at the highest level, check-
kiting is the corner-stone of the monetary system.
GOTTERDÄMMERUNG The Twilight of Irredeemable Debt, Antal E.
Fekete, April 28, 2008
http://www.professorfekete.com/artic...rdammerung.pdf
THE STUDY OF MODERN ECONOMICS IS SIMILAR
TO THE STUDY OF RELIGION IN A TIME OF IDOLATRY
In the shell game of modern economics, credit replaces money and when credit gives rise
to speculative bubbles, the collapse of those bubbles leads to the defaulting of debt which
causes credit to disappear and the economy to collapse.
The credit based shell game, however, is nearing its end. The historic credit contraction
that began in August 2007 is still in progress. Despite the efforts of central bankers, credit
is still disappearing and, just as in the Great Depression, the credit contraction is
continuing to spread causing more and more debt to default.
Credit, the fertilizer of human debt, when no longer available effectively spells the end of
the legalized shell game masquerading as modern economics; but the kreditmeisters, their
global confidence game now damaged by an unexpected lack of confidence on the part of
the marks, sic investors, however, will not give up their scam easily.
THE CONUNDRUM OF THE KREDITMEISTERS
Those running the shell game, the central bankers and their codependent brethren,
investment bankers, are terrified of losing their day jobs, They have lived well for three
hundred years (since the establishment of the Bank of England in 1694) leveraging the
productivity of others and we can be assured they will do everything in their considerable
power to keep their lifestyle intact..
At this time the central bankers are collectively engaged in financial triage as they
attempt to replace the credit that is rapidly being withdrawn in the face of ever increasing
amounts of defaulting debt.
Following the same play book they used in the aftermath of the dot.com collapse, the Fed
has quickly cut rates from 5.25 % to 2 % but this time they will not ignite a housing
bubble as they did the last time. This time, they will do worse. This time, they will burn
down the house.
BURNING DOWN THE HOUSE
In the long run, there is no short run
In retrospect it will all be clear, the mistakes, the reasons, the excuses, the results. Now,
however, in the beginning of the collapse, events appear more problematic, the outcome
still unknown. Nonetheless, even in the fog of unexpected events, certain things can be
known and safely predicted; and, one of them is that we are now on the road to
hyperinflation.
Appointing “Helicopter Ben” Bernanke to head the Federal Reserve now is akin to
sending Sammy the Bull, the mafia hit-man, to negotiate with the Palestinians and
Israelis; and when the news comes back that Sammy the Bull shot and killed the
Palestinians and Israelis at the negotiating table, we should not be surprised—just as we
should not be surprised that Ben “the printing press” Bernanke is erring on the side of
excess in the current economic crisis by providing even more credit, by shoving even
more debt based paper into now a burning house.
WHEN A HOUSE OF PAPER MONEY BURNS
Hyperinflation is to inflation like pneumonia is to a cold. Though similar, the former is
much more consequential; and whereas pneumonia can sometimes kill, hyperinflation is a
veritable death sentence. Hyperinflation always ends in the total destruction of paper
money. In hyperinflation, the value of paper money reverts to its mean—ZERO.
The past is indeed prologue when it comes to humanity, printing presses, and the
recurrent desire of governments to turn paper into gold; which through the alchemy of
central banking is possible—though only for a limited time.
While central bankers and governments do not intend to cause hyperinflation anymore
than drunk drivers intend to crash, they are nonetheless responsible for the decisions that
lead to hyperinflation and deflationary depressions.
The United States has experienced high rates of inflation in the past and appears to be
running the same type of fiscal policies that engendered hyperinflations in 20 countries
over the past century.
Professor Laurance Kotlikoff, Federal Reserve Bank Review St Louis July/Aug 2006
The US is the largest economy in the world and the US dollar is the world’s reserve
currency. Its central bank, the Federal Reserve, is the most influential, and Ben “the
printing press” Bernanke is its chairman. We should not be surprised at what is now
going to happen to the US, the US dollar and the world economy.
As the Fed is busy bailing out international investment banks with America’s money, we
should be more concerned with what is going to happen to us; because when the US
dollar goes up in smoke, the US economy will go down in flames and the world economy
will stumble badly, if not collapse completely.
Hyperinflation will destroy both the US dollar and the US economy and the world will
not be unaffected. Professor Kotlikoff’s warning about a US hyperinflation was published
in 2006; and, now in 2008, US printing presses under Fed chairman Ben Bernanke are
running faster than they’ve ever been run before.
HYPERINFLATION IS LIKE STEPPING OFF A CLIFF.
YOU ONLY EXPERIENCE IT AFTER YOU’VE GONE TOO FAR
Friedrich Kessler, a law professor at Harvard and at Boalt Hall UC Berkeley described
the onset of hyperinflation during the Weimar Republic in Germany.
It was horrible. Horrible! Like lightening it struck. No one was prepared. You cannot
imagine the rapidity with which the whole thing happened. The shelves in the grocery
stores were empty. You could buy nothing with your paper money.
From Fiat Paper Money, The History And Evolution of Our Currency $28.50 by Ralph T.
Foster, tfdf@pacbell.net (510) 845-3015 This book, a primer on the end game, is
everything you wanted to know about fiat paper money and were too afraid to ask.
At Session III of Professor Fekete’s Gold Standard University Live in February, I
discussed the possibility of a sequential or simultaneous hyperinflationary deflationary
depression, the economic equivalent of having both a severe heart condition and a
possibly fatal cancer at the same time. Such is not impossible; in fact, it is increasingly
likely.
I highly recommend the thorough and studied analysis of hyperinflation and concurrent
possibilities in John Williams’ Hyperinflation Special Report, Shadow Government
Statistics, Series Issue No. 41, April 8, 2008, http://www.shadowstats.com/article/292.
John Williams also references and recommends Ralph T. Foster’s Fiat Paper Money, The
History And Evolution of Our Currency noted above.
The critical question should now be asked: What can we do?
THE PARACHUTE OF GOLD AND SILVER
JUMPING OUT OF UNCLE BEN’S SPUTTERING HELIPCOPTER
The following is from The Nightmare German Inflation, Scientific Market Analysis,
1970, which describes the extreme hyperinflationary conditions during the Weimar
Republic in the 1920s:
The ones who fared best were the small minority who had the foresight to exchange
marks into foreign money or gold very early, before new laws made this difficult and
before the mark lost too much value.
The difference between 1920s Germany and today is that there are no longer any
currencies convertible to precious metals. In the 1920s, when hyperinflation destroyed
the German mark, other currencies were still tied to gold. Today, this is no longer the
case. Today, only gold and silver will offer guaranteed monetary refuge during the
coming crisis.
A hyperinflation is a monetary phenomena caused by the rapid printing of money not
convertible to gold or silver. The inflation of the paper money supply happens gradually,
but hyperinflation is itself a sudden-onset phenomena. Suddenly and unexpectedly,
inflation becomes hyperinflation and unless you are already prepared, it is already too
late.
Today, we are moving closer to the end game, the resolution of past monetary sins when
the banker’s shell game is exposed for what it is—a monetary abomination, a parasite on
the economic body that over time kills the host on which it feeds.
Be aware. Be careful. Be safe.
Have faith.
Note I: I now have a blog, Moving Through The Maelstom with Darryl Robert Schoon.
My first blog discusses the underlying reasons for our increasing series of crises.
see http://www.posdev.net/pdn/index.php?...drs&Itemid=106
Note II: I will be speaking at Professor Antal E. Fekete’s Session IV of Gold Standard
University Live (GSUL) July 3-6, 2008 in Szombathely, Hungary. If you are interested in
monetary matters and gold, the opportunity to hear Professor Fekete should not be
missed. A perusal of Professor Fekete’s topics may convince you to attend (see
http://www.professorfekete.com/gsul.asp ). Professor Fekete, in my opinion, is a giant in
a time of small men.
Darryl Robert Schoon
www.survivethecrisis.com
www.drschoon.com
blog http://www.posdev.net/pdn/index.php?...drs&Itemid=106
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