If there is one post you should read on this blog, it’s this one.
September 29, 2008 was a historic day for America and getting out from underneath Wall Street oppression.. the first of many, i hope. Forget what the talking heads are saying, yesterday was a Victory of Populism. The only thing the market lost yesterday was a bunch of numbers in an accounting book. God didn’t come down and take $1.2 trillion worth of property from the world. Factories didn’t disappear, only paper. And paper “assets” are NOT real.
Expect the oligarchy to try every scare tactic in the world to try and extort money from America… but do NOT submit and they will collapse into their own derivatives black holes. BE STRONG and invest in sustainable production, local communities, things in the REAL world. Real commodities, real production. NOT futures. NOT indexes. NOT paper gambling.
They will NOT tell you the people are winning. DOWN WITH OLIGARCHY!
Audio mp3:
- 2008.09.29 Tarpley, Webster – Rense – 1 of 2
- 2008.09.29 Tarpley, Webster – Rense – 2 of 2
Transcript PDF:
Transcript HTML:
(more…)
Categories: +audio · Wall Street · Webster Tarpley · analysis · interview
Tagged: 1929 crash, Andrew Mellon, Austrian School, bailout, Barney Frank, Ben Bernanke, Chicago school, Citibank, elitist, Executive Order #12631, Federal Reserve, Federal Reserve Act, Friedrich von Hayek, futures, goldman sachs, Greenbacks, Grover Cleveland, hedge fund, Henry Paulson, Herbert Hoover, House of Morgan, Inter Continental Exchange, Joe Barton, JP Morgan, Libertarian, Main Street, Milton Friedman, Mont Pelerin Society, morgan stanley, Nancy Pelosi, oligarchy, options, Plunge Protection Team, Populism, PPT, reactionary, rense, Rockefeller, Ron Paul, speculation, sub-prime mortgage crisis, The Great Depression, US Treasury, Wall Street, Webster Tarpley, Working Group on Financial Markets
Categories: +audio · Wall Street · Webster Tarpley · interview
Tagged: AIG, bailout, Ben Bernanke, crisis, derivatives, Fannie Mae, Federal Reserve, Freddie Mac, goldman sachs, Henry Paulson, JP Morgan, morgan stanley, sub-prime mortgage crisis, Webster Tarpley