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Business/Finance
See other Business/Finance Articles

Title: Market Crash ... Depression ... Revolution ... Blood on the Streets - This is the sixth time since the South Sea Bubble burst in 1720 that huge amounts of wealth have been transferred from those who create it to the already wealthy.
Source: beforeitsnews.com
URL Source: http://tinyurl.com/3673quh
Published: Jul 7, 2010
Author: Tom Dennen
Post Date: 2010-07-07 22:57:06 by GreyLmist
Keywords: Cyclical Market Crashes, The Great Reckoning
Views: 1308
Comments: 3

Market Crash ... Depression ... Revolution ... Blood on the Streets - This is the sixth time since the South Sea Bubble burst in 1720 that huge amounts of wealth have been transferred from those who create it to the already wealthy.

And it's all on record!

By Tom Dennen

The Great Reckoning, by James Dale Davidson and Lord Rees-Mogg, documents a nine-year gap between commodity peaks and market crashes over the last three hundred years.

Add forty-one years (the average number of years between the 9-year peak-and-crash cycles) and you have a boom-bust cycle twice every hundred years or once every other generation, meaning every second generation of western working and middle-class citizens has, for the last three hundred years, been good and truly and thoroughly plucked.

Today's 'Great Recession;' is just another plucking that started with the sub prime foreclosures, the first modern major transfer of wealth through the confiscation of 'cheap' properties.

The more 'expensive' properties, shopping malls and office blocks will be taken in the next bubble, the Commercial Real Estate (CRE) bubble).

Follow the trend:

•First Plucking: Commodity prices peaked in London in 1711. The ‘South Sea Bubble’ burst exactly nine years later in 1720. A Depression followed.

•Second Plucking: Producer prices peaked in London in 1763. The London stock market crashed again in 1772 (nine years later). A Depression followed.

•Third: Commodity prices peaked in London in 1816.The London stock market crashed in 1825 (nine years later). Another Depression followed.

•Fourth: Wholesale prices peaked in New York in 1864. Worldwide assets crash began in May 1873 (nine years later). Yet again, Depression followed.

•Fifth: Then followed our beloved Great Depression in the 30s, about which much has been said, from which, little learned. Commodity prices peaked some fifty years later – the sixth time, this time, in Tokyo, 1980.

The Tokyo stock market crashed in 1989 (again, nine years later). The depression following that crash is now upon us and will seriously dig in by 2020, which is the reason for all those dire predictions: Gerald Celente knows, Nouriel Roubini knows. The trend is three hundred years old.

Look around you and do the math: I'm not a conspiracy theorist but I consider it FACT that once is an accident, twice is a coincidence, and three times is a Declaration of War.

Four times is the realization that the Declaration fell on the deaf ears of sleeping fools, five times is simple daylight rape and plunder of the same fools – the sixth time, this time, what I call Grand Theft, Planet ©, is perhaps and hopefully, the lesson finally learned, and do we now wake up?

All we have to do is throw them out of the Temple. For the last time. Forever.

_______________

** (Compiled from ‘The Great Reckoning: Protecting Yourself in the Coming Depression James Dale Davidson, William Rees-Mogg - 1994 - Business & Economics - 608 pages.)

James Dale Davidson is an American investment newsletter writer and author of The Sovereign Individual, The Great Reckoning, and Blood in the Streets, all three co-authored with William Rees-Mogg. He also wrote The Plague of the Black Debt - How to Survive the Coming Depression. He is also the founder and former head of the National Taxpayers Union.[1] He has helped fund the Arkansas Project against President Bill Clinton and is an investor in NewsMax.com.

Rees-Mogg began his career in journalism at The Financial Times in 1952, before moving to The Sunday Times in 1960, become its Deputy Editor. Here he wrote an article which many believe convinced Alec Douglas-Home to resign as Tory leader, making way for Edward Heath, in July 1965. He was Conservative candidate for the safe Labour seat of Chester-le-Street in a by-election on 27 September 1956, losing to theLabour candidate Norman Pentland by 21,287 votes.

Rees-Mogg was editor of The Times from 1967 to 1981, and still writes comment for that paper.


Poster Comment:

Just FYI. The online book is linked above (in the parenthesis below the article) but I haven't read it. Thought the article was interesting, though. I also haven't read The Fourth Turning by William Strauss and Neil Howe but that's another example which indicates we are being cyclically set up for falls and suffering according to designs of TPTB going way back. That junk is being peddled as "a provocative theory of American history as a series of recurring 80- to 100-year cycles. Each cycle has four "turnings"-a High, an Awakening, an Unraveling, and a Crisis." Tough luck, seemingly, for those generations that wind up looking like historical failures because they are pre-slated for an engineered unraveling or a crisis as the reflection of their group's efforts.

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#1. To: GreyLmist (#0)

All we have to do is throw them out of the Temple. For the last time. Forever

Plucked? We're getting a plucking? I have another way of putting it.

Yes, we need to throw THEM out of the temple. Right on! But so far, all we're doing is giving THEM a stern look.

angK  posted on  2010-07-08   0:24:26 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: angK (#1)

Plucked? We're getting a plucking? I have another way of putting it.

Yes, we need to throw THEM out of the temple. Right on! But so far, all we're doing is giving THEM a stern look.

I was looking very stern until I read your first line. lol You're second line put me in mind of this short story at http://www.rense.com/general88/beating.htm:

Castles with walls 20ft. thick were built 500 years ago with massive blocks of stone to provide the best possible protection. A siege, if extended long enough, forced the surrender of those inside the castle sooner or later. But it was tedious, expensive and time consuming. Soldiers out in tents holding the siege froze their butts off while those in the castle had a good time.

But there was no need to hold a long, expensive siege. There was a better way to conquer what appeared at first, to be unconquerable.

While a thick wall might seem impenetrable, a simple shovel and a fire allowed these massive buildings to be conquered. A tunnel was started under the corner of the castle wall from far enough away from the deadly arrows volleyed by castle archers. During construction the long tunnel was shored up with heavy timbers. When the tunnel penetrated far enough under the wall, a fire was built to destroy and the weaken timbers. When the tunnel collapsed it brought down the corner of the castle into the tunnel. Once the wall began moving, nothing could stop it. A partial collapse of the wall was enough to allow soldiers to enter and take the castle. Do you see the key element here? Once the wall began moving ­ nothing could stop it.

Soon castles would no longer be constructed due to the great cost of construction, as well as not being 100% secure. So where's the messenger when all this is happening? He's standing out there in the woods, giving soldiers shovels and explaining to them the steps they need to do.

Messengers come in all forms, shapes and sizes. Every problem no matter what it is, has a solution. Sometimes a little time is needed to solve it.

________________

Usury-free wampum:

Local Currencies - Replacing Scarcity with Trust
http://www.youtube.com/watch? v=Aflp7jC1Yuw&feature=related

Francis Ayley established over a dozen local currencies in the UK before moving to the U.S. He contrasts our standard, scarcity and debt-based money system with local currencies in which "there's always as much as you need." Local currencies like his Fourth Corner Exchange issue money when members trade goods and services. Communities with local currencies will be less affected when recession or depression hits the mainstream economy.
www.fourthcornerexchange.com

-------

"They're on our left, they're on our right, they're in front of us, they're behind us...they can't get away this time." -- Col. Puller, USMC

GreyLmist  posted on  2010-07-08   2:43:01 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: angK, All (#1)

Around 21:27, the gentleman in the video mentions a Use of Product warning that should be printed on the "mainstream" money system currency. I'd like to recommend that, too. He also mentions YES! magazine around that point, so I'd like to recommend these 2 articles from it:

Looking Backward: Economics and the Cult of Yesterday

GDP and productivity don't measure what's really going on in the economy—or in people's lives. Jonathan Rowe on measuring what matters. -- 2 pgs.

Looking Forward:

Path to a Peace Economy by David Korten - 5 pgs.

-------

"They're on our left, they're on our right, they're in front of us, they're behind us...they can't get away this time." -- Col. Puller, USMC

GreyLmist  posted on  2010-07-08   9:22:07 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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