Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Crimes of Agelo Mozilo

Where are the handcuffs for influence pedaling? How long will average Americans tolerate the bankster politican rip-off?

The letter from Rep. Elijah Cummings (D., Md.) said that Countrywide records obtained as part of a congressional investigation of its VIP loan program indicate that Mr. McKeon was given "a significant discount on his VIP loan as a direct result of personal intervention" by Mr. Mozilo, who ran the mortgage giant at the time.

JPMorgan Chase = FRAUD

Where are the handcuffs? Why do the banksters have a different standard of law?

JPMorgan Chase routinely fabricated documents to deceive bankruptcy judges, going so far as to Photoshop documents to "create the illusion" of standing "in tens of thousands of bankruptcy cases," according to a federal class action.

Hungary To Choose

Hungary has a choice: debt slavery or economic self-determiniation

A few years ago, Iceland told the bankers to get lost. Iceland had a sharp period of economic turmoil which rapidly became a vibrant recovery. Iceland is recovering without burdening citizens with the bankers' bad gambles.
Ireland recently chose to bail out the banker's bad gambles by putting those debts on the citizens. Ireland is muddling along, weighed down by unpayable debt.

Hungary must now choose to burden citizens with the banker's bad gambles, or to choose a path of economic self-determination. Will Hungary choose sovereignty (ruin for banksters) or slavery (slavery to the banksters)?

Hungary faces ruin as EU loses patience
"Governments must refrain from seeking to influence their central bank," said EU economics commissioner Olli Rehn. "Certain provisions in the new constitution are in breach of these principles. This needs to be addressed before we can start formal negotiations on the requested EU/IMF financial system."

Why would the people, through their duly elected government, not regulate the central bank? Who in their right mind would give the banksters unchecked powers to manipulate the money?

Friday, January 13, 2012

Dumping Greek Children

While this article blames the "Euro crisis", it is actually a debt crisis. Countries spent beyond their means. To protect the banks from taking losses, the debt is not being cleared through defaults. Therefore, countries such as Greece and their politicians are to blame.

Children are being abandoned on Greece's streets by their poverty-stricken families who cannot afford to look after them any more.

Youngsters are being dumped by their parents who are struggling to make ends meet in what is fast becoming the most tragic human consequence of the Euro crisis.