tv Keiser Report RT June 29, 2021 7:30am-8:01am EDT
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or transitory for temporary measures. so in an interview this morning on m p r bostic, who is the president of atlanta fed, said quote, temporary inflation is going to be a little longer than we expected initially. rather than it being 2 or 3 months. maybe 6 to 9 months, which will become 9 to 12 months and then 12 to 18 months, and then 18 to 24 months. and that's how quantitative easing was. unrolled and unveiled to the population. right. weight, you know, we predicted that inflation that would show up in the c p, i wouldn't show up and prices for stuff actually pay. think housing was up 25 percent in the last 12 months for example. yeah, we said hey, that's going to be the outcome of all this money printing and wants to get through the labor. think of having chinese labor and all of our manufacturing jobs shipped to china. but now you've got a wage parity between china, the us around the world,
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so you don't have that sync that is hiding the money printing anymore. so now it's just the money print thing is like a, a washing into the economy in the form of these higher prices. and once you get the inflation, there's that concept of the inflation genie being out of the bottle writers. it's hard to stop it because expectations begin to play apart. people start not buying things because they fear the price is going to go up. and when bostic who's over there at the, the atlanta branch of the fed, right, he is openly prevaricating. how do you like that for an ivy league word? well, if i didn't say he was lying, did i? it was prevaricating. yeah, that's called fed speak, right. so you mention expectations, and this is something that we've also been covering is that the mindset once the mindset changes, it's hard to put it back where they believe it belongs. right?
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so part of the reason why, you know, the fed and their academics in their ivory towers thought the inflation would be transitory, is that the higher prices would pull in more supply a manufacturers or start manufacturing more stuff. suppliers would start supplying more stuff, but that hasn't happened. and part of it is to do with at the same time as bostic at the back of fad is saying that temporary inflation looks like it's going to be a little bit more permanent than we thought. well, the feds, powell said, enhanced unemployment benefits may be a factor and limiting job growth. not only did workers get all these enhanced unemployment benefits on the, for the 1st time for a lot of people, you know, they had huge income increase, a pay rise. whereas like the p p p course, even billions more given to all sorts of l, l. c. corporations. they got
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a lot of money and bail out. so again, they also don't need to get out of bed to work. so we have a situation where the supply is not coming on board at the moment. and so that the inflation. yeah. it's setting into the expectations of mindset. right? it's scary when you hear professional economists say things that are patently false and are not based on any economics that anyone's ever learned in school ever had. because the price that all that is being referred to there that is evident in the business cycle, that you would see higher prices would bring in more supply. that's true if there is an economy with an underlying fundamental evaluation on the money itself, like a gold standard, then you have something called the business cycle. but when you remove the signal of gold and you put in only the signal of central planners, then you can have the expectations that you would ordinarily have. and you have
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now, runaway was going to become runaway inflation. prices are not going to come down. you know, there's a ramp of me on youtube begging for the central bank to raise rates. when i was in rotterdam a few years ago and i'm screaming actually, i'm saying, you know, you've got a raise rates, right. it's all, it's the opposite of the gym. kramer rant from the 2008 crisis. when he was begging the fed to lower rates. i was begging the fed to raise rates as a way to stem the tide was becoming a price signal nightmare. and this runaway inflation that's now taking off, and so having been the only one to predict this, having been the only one to identify the cure, let me be the only one now in any mainstream outlet to accurately predict what will be the story a year. 2 years, 3 years from now, and that is inflation will continue to ramp higher and the fee money currencies,
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particularly the dollar, will continue to be challenged. i see russia has now hit the eject button. they're not in the dollar system at all. okay, so we got a lot more countries hitting that button. el salvador hit the us dollar reject button, basically by going the coin as legal tender. the americans are going to be really in the most dire circumstances, while slightly disagree with that because the data from the fed will show that there has been a group of people in that the top one percent who do very, very, very well with inflation or even hyperinflation, those are all the assets holders as of the people. you, as you mentioned, house prices, well, 25 percent year on year and may. and who owns all the property, but big private equity firms like blackstone or very wealthy people who own many homes and things like that. so there are some people do very, very well from inflation and they like it. you will see on the cable news though, you will see, especially on the and the financial cable is they will argue that inflation is good
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for the ordinary person. and the fed data will show you that we're going to get you in a 2nd half. it'll show you that in fact, it has not been good for the, the ordinary person. the fed inflation has not been maybe the stimulus from directly from the government might have helped them, you know, extend and pretend a little bit. but the inflation is worse for the bottom, the people who have to spend the most on food and shelter, the percentage of their income is worse for them. now in terms of the housing, of course, as you mentioned, the business cycle was hasn't been allowed. we keep extending and pretending that temporary measures of the moratorium on rent and, and mortgage payments. so this is part of the problem with why supply, despite how our higher house prices, why supply is not coming on why people are selling their houses. despite the fact that they could get more money, well, because they haven't paid their mortgage for the last year and something. and so
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they want to more atoria to keep getting extended. so maybe if you get to live for free for another 6 months or 12 months, like why would you want to sell your house and try to move somewhere else? plus the bank theoretically owns it because you haven't failed to pay your mortgage . so because of the clamped down a moratorium on evictions, you're not seeing supply come on. nevertheless, like the tight supply of houses on the market. again, we're talking about the fed and their temporary measures that began in 2008 and continue to this day just to put things on perspective. u. s. existing home prices have hit fresh all time highs in tandem with fed balance sheet. so this goes back to 2005, and the yellow price. the yellow line is the fed balance sheet and the white line, there is the housing prices. as you see, they are going up in lock step, especially over the past year as has gone parabolic. so both have gone parabolic at
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the same pace in the same rate. and the fed says they don't cause us, they don't, they say the fed address, our concerns recently of the count on fact. and they claim and they insist that their policies do not cause wealth. and income gap is certainly a wealth gap. and that shows you, however, the home price is going up lock step with the feds balance sheet. they're buying the mortgage backed securities, which enables more money, more leverage, more funds to go into the limited supply of housing. so, you know, just look at the data and you to believe the fatty can believe your own eyes. yeah, you know, it kind of reminds me of the phenomenon we saw in the u. k. when fat sure opened up the public housing stock to privatization. and you had, everyone was able to buy their home at below market rates. within a few years,
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it became part of bank lead housing policies, game, which we witnessed and seen grow for 20 years. and it took housing out of reach from the average a british person, you know, they went from needing a one or 2 or 3 times annual salary to buy a house and eating 10 to 15 times annual salary to buy a house. so therefore i was not affordable and the government doubled and tripled down with more schemes by the help for example, helped by started with. right? to buy that was margaret faster is same and it's, it's all about time, right? because it becomes intergenerational. so what debt is all about is valuing time and interest rates are valuing time and time value. so the generation in charge always gets to say, well, let's roll it over. we'll come up with a plan and the next 2030 years for sure will grow. 1 our economy so much that the children are unborn grandchildren at the moment, like, we'll figure,
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way out by the time the debt rolls over onto them. and we never again, that's the plan like the these temporary measures are supposed to have a permanent solution. and the permanent solution never comes because mathematics, right? it's just the mathematics as, as einstein pointed out of compounding, debt like a compounding interest rates. this is the inevitable. right? and in the u. k, you had these property barren emerge. are they out hundreds of properties, and then during the 2008 crisis, of course they all and boss, they needed a bail out, and then the taxpayer ponies of the cash for that, you know, here in the u. s. black rock and these other like warren buffet, are berkshire hathaway. they're become the new property barons. the the biggest owner of houses in america right now is a private company called black rock blackstone, blackstone, fusing all the time. so here you have, i, are they transition from home on or shap as part of the american experience or dream s i'm calling to being outdoors to barons who are now going to engage in
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price gouging. so when you see the price of property houses up 25 percent a year, that's fine because the market is reflecting g d p growth or wage growth. now it's reflecting price, gouging by slumlord, in this case the, the black stone. yeah. right. and i want to say in the last moments of this 1st half, i just do want to point out that there is on paper, at least some benefit toward more less of a home ownership and more renting. because you're obviously more agile. you can move around, go to where the jobs are. however, that is an economy with jobs like china, say, we don't have a jobs in america. all we have is money printing. so you need the assets. if you're in an economy solely about money printing, if it's only can tell the nurse is the only way to well, is via can tell in effect, you've got to have an asset that the fad is going to pump. so yeah,
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all these people, younger generation being forced off the probably the ladder and into renting. if it doesn't look good and we'll get to that in a 2nd. yeah, we're going to take a break. when we come back, now go away. the me ah, driven by shaped by 10 percent of those with the in the me there's think me we dare to ask in ah,
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dosing cars right on police reported in december 2020 a group of anti finishes. fill out a film crew access for 3 months and people organization, it's an idea that must be opposed that can't allow the gate round. they may kill their faces, but they can say what they believe in, we believe and help our community. we believe that fascism is one of the major threats to the united states has gotten driven. this is a chance to see who and teeth are really are. in order for me. my 1st amendment right and say that my life matter, i have to be onto the teacher that that's how we can trust the police. we can't trust the government. we can't trust anyone except ourselves to protect ourselves in that you know, probably, you know, my background is under state. like i was lucky you lucky as i
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said, you'll have a lost his bus because i just got the new problem. you just gotta read you. we will be, i'm on my cell, my those up as well. so i know you know what it was, you know, so my pull up, i got your notice. i mean my almost what did i'm already set up. i just gotta go in . i remember the last thing we went up and i really here's i just don't get on to the video to chantelle that i'm one of this, but i was like, i was, i just started this, i'm looking for my family to go to kind of all my just part of it. yes, i think i was calling with you and your team, samantha katie. yeah. my thought a lot of problem. you just gotta go the me welcome back to the guys
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report i max or time now it's returned to our quarterly review of where we've been, where we're going, stacy? right, so we were talking about the temporary quantitative easing and fed intervention measures, the central bank intervention measures that began in 2008, 2009 during the financial crisis. they continue to this day all these more than a decade later. and they're starting to cause what they call transitory inflation, which is now they're starting to begin to doll those expectations that is just going to be transitory. they're saying, as we discussed in the 1st half a bunch of fed president says in fact it might not just be 2 or 3 months is going to be 6 to 9 months and they're going to keep on extending that. so we mentioned those moratoriums on evictions for rent failure to pay rent or mortgage. well, there was another story out this week, you know,
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just the large as of this money printing and the panic issuing of debt last year. trillions that the u. s. federal government borrowed, so real, real money. right. it's, it's not just fed credit and we saw that as we covered that, that in california, gavin newsom is now going to eat. they got paid so much money from the federal government that they couldn't spend it all. and so what they're doing in california is that newsome is going to use these federal tax funds and pay off all the rent that has not been paid for over the past year. they're also extending the moratorium on rent to into september. the article about this, when you read these articles, there are people with over a $100000.00 in the background that are federal taxes is going to shift to california, which is the biggest economy in the united states. one of the biggest economies in
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the world. and yet people from alabama to north carolina to maine and idaho. 5 are having to pay for the property barons in california because the fact is that the rent it pitched as just like the feds temporary measures are pitch that help these people. the tenants who, who are renters, who can't afford their rent, we're going to pay their rent. i, to the landlord, the landlords get to capture the 25 percent house gains. they don't have to share with the federal tax payers. they get to keep all their gains, but we pay their, you know, the least to them their, their toll for the, the launch a economy. right? south and other bail out. just like 2000 or 8. remember all the, the sub prime lenders were made whole. yeah. they were bailed out, and then their credit lines ricks expanded. yes. then they got into, from all the people who had to throw their keys back to their lender,
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who got bail down, particularly in the communities of color, by the way of disenfranchised the biggest disenfranchisement of black american sense slavery days. okay, that's what happened. thanks, warren buffett. and so this happened again, this year. government decided to bail out, warren buffett again, blacks down and wall street. those are the landlords. and they're using it was the federal tax money. so max and stacy max of stacy, not, not only did we have to pay for obamacare, which is a transference of liability from the government to taxpayers. like max of the stacy now are paying blackstone and warm buffets extended more over leveraging themselves and the real estate market. again, that's 9 capitalism. capitalism, you take a risk to make a reward. if you take a risk and you get paid off by the state, that's called, that's called a club talker. see, yes. right. so, i mean, the headline on that reads newsome says, california pay off all unpaid rent accrued during coven pandemic using
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$5200000000.00 pot and rent forgiveness on a scale never before seen in the united states. again, that's, it's transferring from the rest of the 49 states, the taxpayers of those states to california, which is the richest of all the u. s. states. and yet, you know, none of the other taxpayers get a cut of that. you know, they don't get paid back because especially cuz it's a california state, right. it's not the federal government. you're not going to get some tax cut out of it. just the taxpayer is the how home owners, the landlords of california benefits. right. and by the way, so the homeowners, they still don't get any kind of relief on wages that are still kept artificially low. the house prices, as we mentioned, are skyrocketing, so they won't be able to afford a house that less affordable than it was last year. that the increase in the house
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price will be used to just buy higher rents by these landlords. yeah. so you know, you end up with the casino lag as i've been talking about for years now. it's like black's down as a good leg called the american housing market. and i'm sure, and i made this prediction a few years ago that black blackstone will sell off their property of huge american homes to a chinese bank. i'm absolutely sure that's going to be the case. it doesn't at the end of the day, it doesn't matter. the fact is that whoever is benefiting from 0 percent interest rates, the top one percent, they're the ones that benefit according to the q one data that the fed just released. whoever has access to the feds discount window, the fed funds, you know, that they get to borrow 0 percent. this is the one percent. this is the data just released last week from the u. s. federal reserve. and it shows there the wealth of households in the united states. this is the data, the top green line is the top one percent. as you say,
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this is the next 9 percent. this is the next 40 percent. so these are the top 50 percent. all of the games went to the top one percent. that is the wrong class. that is, that can tell you in our class, whoever has that sort of rate of borrowing, whether it's in the united states, china, europe matter, alvi, i'm h, has got to buy tiffany at the same sort of discount rate, whoever that, that's the global class. i get the free money from the central banks wherever they are and doesn't matter nationality. the fact is, this is the system of temporary managers that creates this oligarchy class. and it's, it's in the feds own data. this is their data. it's not mine, it's financial. apartheid right, so what we don't get access to 0 percent money. so we're being victimized by apartheid in america perpetrated by our own government against us. all the central banks. yeah. ok. well that's true. most of them. okay, around the world. you have the part time model is being adopted by central banks
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using interest rates to create bantustans of ghetto. these people are paying. now we're paying a blackstone tab here. that's because we're living in the ghetto. we're in the ghetto. we're in the frank and slam. we're on wall street slump. if you're, unless you're getting 0 percent interest rate, you can buy companies for nothing down and all the earnings that creek to the bottom line instantaneously. you're living in the hurd, my friend were all on the hood. right? so let's look at the data that the fed released in terms of the household wealth which showed how much money, especially the mass of dramatic interventions by both the fed and the us treasury last year to intervene on behalf of like the pandemic, and the global loc downs what they, how much money they printed and where it all went. because on the surface in the media it was all about helping the ordinary person. but look at how much they
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helped the top one percent according to the feds own data. we all know jeff bezos, the rich man, a world made 88000000000 and wealth last year as well increased by 88000000000. well, the one percent of 126000000 us households a to wall street dot com. so. 2 that is 1260000 households in america are the prime beneficiaries of the feds actions at the end of q, one. their combined wealth was $41.00 trillion dollars for an average of $32900000.00 per household. over the past 12 months, their wealth increased by $7900000.00 per household. i guess if you do the numbers on that, their wealth increased by 20 percent last year, the top one percent, their household wealth increased by 20 percent. now cut to the bottom, 50 percent. okay. who have almost no household wealth and of their household wealth,
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about 80 percent of it is just durable goods. i, you're washing machine a refrigerator, not even any equity in the house, so they're not gaining from that. 25 percent increase and property prices. while the chart below shows the wealth of the bottom 50 percent red line on the scale of the next 40 percent, which is the green line, this wealth of the bottom 50 percent, has grown by only 14000 dollars in 20 years. so not adjusted for inflation of which 10600 occurred just over the past 12 months. thanks to the stimulus checks. so that's the chart. that's the bottom. 50 percent. less as the next 40 percent above them. so only $14000.00 in the bottom. 50 percent and 20 years, 10600 came last year. again to put it into perspective. jeff bezos, his wealth, increased by 88000000000 last year, which is the equivalent of about 9 to 10000000 households. and this bottom,
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50 percent of the, of the u. s. economy, how much they made, he made from the money printing from the feds policies, gaming, gaming systems. now there's 2 things to keep in mind. here. to get to disabuse people, the horatio alger math. while these people work hard and they make a lot of money, that's not true. there's 2 things operating here. number one is, as we've been talking about in great detail and you're free to review the data if you'd like to. that's that, that, that it's the, it's just, there's a, it's a coordinated corporate governments theft. and the people who are being stolen from are increasingly being called deplorable as yes or they're being essentially escape go. so we saw this in thirty's, in germany. people are scapegoat it, their wealth is confiscated and the people who do the confiscation think they're closer to god. this is america today. the 2nd thing is, if you want to compete with those people,
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you must strip yourself of all morals and ethics. and that's really hard for most people to do. i worked on wall street for many years. i could still be on wall street making money on wall street, but at some point come, you have to ask yourself, am i willing to be a wall street fee like a jamie diamond, for example. and i've said that many, many times. he's never disputed it because he can't, it's, it's, it's, it's however you know how that co located in your server next to that is a wall street. the actual wall street, you know, trading desk to siphon off wealth from the rest. well that's the same. you have the, the closer you can get to the new york fed, the closer you can live to the closer you can fife and off the wealth of the money printing. again, just in the last moment, say i want to show you the data. that's the top one percent. this is the fed data. this is the fed data that they provide, showing you what the, what the wealth gap between the top one percent on the rest of the americans. you know, when the, the deplorable, say they want to make america great. again, they're, they're basically talking about when the wealth gap wasn't so huge. now they're
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loaded over and mocked and called deplorable because look, look at how much since the financial crisis, especially, and in the last year, look at that parabolic loop and the top one percent, how much their wealth increased on nobody else's did. so the majority of all the, the help, the temporary to help the poor people actually help the wealthiest. so it's, it's a rig system and you have to take down the system in order to even help anybody else. because yeah, it's all, it's all funnels to them no matter what. all right, well that does it for our quarterly review. look back and look forward to what we can expect the sounds like more of the same. well, it's all nice time bio the me join me every thursday on the alex simon show and i'll be speaking to guess in the world,
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the politics sport. business. i'm show business. i'll see you then. me . i don't think they can't ride on police report in december 2020 a group of anti finishes. fill out a film crew access for 3 months. there's no like if people organization, it's an idea that must be opposed to the game they make their faces. but they can say what they believe and we believe in helping our community. we believe that fascism is one of the major threats to the united states as gotten driven. this is a chance to see who and teeth are really in order for me, my 1st amendment right and say that my life matter. i have to be onto the teeth of that. that's all america. we can't trust the police, we can't trust the government. we can't trust anyone except or so to protect ourselves in awe today,
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industry prefers to spend millions of, you know, the regulations business and about making money. i think it's about big corporation, international markets. import export. do you imagine the number of the diseases are in every family today know, due to new viruses or new microbes? it's not true. so it is due to environment. last of that, not going to take either the momentum, much time. yes, accumulate on the come in the day. mostly they don't allow us. the food industry will create more jobs, it will create more value added. it will create more so i don't see why we shouldn't also fight for the interest something into that we have regulation. we
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want regulation as the industry and if we don't have any specialty, that's fine. ah, the top headlines here when i see the highest court in texas rules. facebook is liable for quotes knowingly benefiting from sex traffickers that has several victims to the company for failing to protect them from abuses alleging they were forced into prostitution via the network. drug make a johnson and johnson avoids a huge court trial against pharma giant getting underway now in america, it's over the country's opioid crisis. it's also after reaching a settlement of $200000000.00, which critics decry is way too small. and the use pledge to go green by 2050 is branded foss by experts of the european environment bureau. they say the block members will just end up doing their own.
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