https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IFnBTPJzcis
‘When Wall Street banks control the supply of both commodities and financial products, there’s a potential for anticompetitive behavior and manipulation’ —U.S. Senator Sherrod Brown.
The problem with today’s financial system is not a weak economy, or a lack of full time jobs. The problem is that people don’t really understand what the concept of ‘too big to fail’ is and what they can do about it. Investopedia tells us, too big to fail is the idea that a business has become so large and ingrained in the economy that a government will provide assistance to prevent its failure. ‘Too big to fail’ describes the belief that if an enormous company fails, it will have a disastrous ripple effect throughout the economy. It adds, large companies generally do business with many other companies for supplies and services. If a large company fails, the companies that rely on it for portions of their income might be brought down as well, not to mention the number of jobs that would be eliminated.
The reality of too big to fail is that the big banks have congress bought out. This is why you see banks committing the most obscene crimes only to be fined a billion or two. Nobody gets fired, they don’t even get a slap on the wrist, they get a handshake.
View examples here, here and here.
It has been this way for a long time and the proof is in the pudding. This is a confusing topic for most, but just think about this. What would it mean if major banks were hoarding unimaginable amounts of precious metals and fixing commodity prices? If somebody gets their news from the TV, they will unfortunately never know the answer to this question. This action gives the most powerful men in the world the ability to blackmail congress into doing anything. According to the original ‘08/’09 bailout bill, foreign investors were to receive about half of the package, with Wall St picking up the rest. Let me be clear, the only thing that allows this is people “not caring”. In one horrifying instance, select members of congress were told in private conversations that if they had voted against the ‘08/’09 bailout bill “the sky would fall, the market would drop 2 or 3 thousand points the first day, another couple thousand the second day, and a few members were even told there would be martial law in America.” Don’t believe this goes on? Click here to have the Congressman shock you. (I would sit down first)
Although the CNN, CNBC, FOX and others seem to consistently miss these stories, there are many well written articles buried away on the web. In the last days of 2013, The Wall Street Journal’s Tatyana Shumsky reported that tens of millions of tons of aluminum, copper, nickel, and zinc are being secretly stashed away in private facilities. These facilities are known as “shadow warehouses” because they are unregulated and don’t disclose their holdings. If you haven’t figured it out already, this allows banks, hedge funds and others to manipulate the market at a moment’s notice.
In late August 2013, the US commodities watchdog subpoenaed companies including Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase.
This portion of the article will be focusing on the oddly-timed deaths of over 25 high level bankers within the last few months. Business Insider, along with others have teamed up to create the theory that the bankers are committing suicide because they are under a lot of stress. Another theory is that they are being killed for insurance money. Both of these scenarios have occurred in the past, prior to The Great Depression and the recent market crash.
One compilation, for instance, shows that from June 1 2013 to April 7, 2014, some 25 individuals linked to the banking racket died or disappeared.
Here are a few important examples:
(Note)- Reader, a man is found dead, covered from head to toe with 7-8 nail gun wounds. Did he commit suicide, or was he murdered?
January 11, 2014: David Bird, 55, a long-time messenger boy for the financial media, went for a walk near his New Jersey home and vanished. A charge was made to a credit card in his name in Mexico the day after his initial disappearance. As of this writing, he is still nowhere to be found, despite the posting of a $10,000 reward for information about his whereabouts, and despite extensive searches.
January 27, 2014: Gabriel Magee, 39, a J. P. Morgan Chase Vice-President in the U.K., “fell” from the roof of the London headquarters of that bank. According to Pam Martens, “No solid evidence exists currently to suggest that the death was a suicide." In fact, there is strong evidence pointing in the very opposite direction. "Magee had emailed his girlfriend, Veronica, on the evening of January 27 to say that he was about to leave the office and would see her shortly.” Martens goes on to write: “The Chief Medical Examiner’s office will only say that the cause of death is ‘pending’ and final results will not be announced for several more weeks. Wall Street On Parade called the Stamford Police last week to ask for the police incident report. Under Connecticut sunshine laws that report should be available to the press. We were informed that if we were able to obtain the incident report, most information would likely be redacted.”
February 4, 2014: Richard Talley, 57, CEO of American Title, “was found in the garage of his Colorado home dead from seven or eight ‘self-inflicted’ wounds from a nail gun fired into his torso and head.” The police and media say it’s a suicide, but anyone with half a brain can deduce that they are probably lying. They really think you're that dumb.
June 13, 2014: Richard Gilder Rockefeller, 65, Rockefeller Fund, died in a small plane crash in New York State. He was flying back to his Maine home, after attending, the evening before, the 99th birthday celebration of his father. The death of Richard merits special attention in part because he was David Rockefeller’s son and also because of his immense influence.
June 26, 2014: Artan Santo, 58, head and part owner of Albania’s 4th largest bank and an Albanian media tycoon, was shot not once, not twice, but six times as he entered his bank in the capital city of Tirana.
July 6, 2014: Alita Knott, 47, a sales associate at Coldwell Banker, and her husband, Julian Knott, 45, executive director of J. P. Morgan Chase Global Network Operations Center in Whippany, New Jersey, were found dead in their home. To no surprise, the police have already “solved” the case, alleging that it was a murder/suicide.
What do these bankers have in common? They know something you don’t. People often claim that if there was any serious corruption going on, good people on the inside would speak out and save the day. Well folks, what do you think happens? Banker death epidemics are always covered up and always followed by some sort of market crash. Not only are all the tell-tell signs of a market crash apparent, but we are seeing a lot of sketchy "suicides" and plain, old murders. Do you really think the bad guys would be exposed?