tv Keiser Report RT July 31, 2021 3:30am-4:01am EDT
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the 50 years of fia, if you see my eyes are a bit runny, i have had some giggling fits as i look at these charts. i don't know why, but it's giving me the giggles of 50 years of fi. remember in 1971 august 15, richard nixon slammed shut the gold window. it's known as the nixon shock. and i'm going to look at this 1st chart here. 50 years later, it was the shortest recession ever. so that little recession we had from february 2020 to april 2020 was just 2 months, is the shortest recession in history. and i thought, you know, what, with the accelerated parabolic printing of the money that we've seen, especially since 2008. but every single little dip in the market number used to cars back then, it used to as a pretty substantial crash on the market for any sort of intervention. but max worked and wall street in 1987. it took
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a 20 percent crash over 20 percent crash one day. well now it takes like a bike less than 2 percent crash and they start intervening. so i think in the future, you know, everyone will suffer 15 minutes of recession. so what happens when the length of the recession goes to 0? what's another word for that? pop quiz procession is 0 time in length. what do you call that? what is that word? is called communism right? only in communism or state run countries, they have no recession, but they also have no way for anybody to have a life other than being a slave. so ok, that's where america is. that is certainly, it would seem that it would eventually start to invite a sort, a zombie economy, right, right, zombie economy and 8. so in other words, volatility is the stuff of life. you need volatility to create life. because
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if it's a just one, like the k g machine, you notice if it's going like this and that means you're dead. you know what fish flow with the current stead fish, right? in k g of a healthy person think don't think, don't think damped as volatility. that's the volatility of life. look at the salmon spawning in the river. you see it's volatile because it's alive. it's alive. if you're trying to reduce volatility in your economy, you're trying to create either want to prison, to a slave ship, or 3 america in the 21st century. as many of the western economies, including europe, australia, the english speaking language sort of economies and the interventions are greater and greater that and the united kingdom is pretty amazing. the amount of a debt they've had to accumulate to make sure that the economy stays like constant
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. there is no recession, the recessions are business cycles, right? they used to be what was called the business cycle, and badly poorly run companies would go out of business. and unemployment might rise. yes, but that would force people to move to where jobs were, and it would reallocate capital and labor in the economy. we don't have that anymore. and they hope to eradicate recessions for good. and you can see that in this and next tweet here from charlie below. one stocks all time highs to home prices all time high for 3 incomes all time highs for job openings all time. high. 5, u. s. corps inflation highest 991. 6 fed, we need 0 percent rates through at least 2023, and trillions more in bond buying to boost asset prices. an increase inflation plus be clear about that. so these markets and asset prices are all time highs in the money terms. ok, so whenever you have a dictatorship or authoritarianism,
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as you do in the united states, now you've got the top dogs to get free money from the central bank and they bid up prices or assets the all time highs. and you know, you have now permanent underclass of wage slaves that are, you know, scrounging for ham sandwich who are part of the poor that's growing quite rapidly in lot of countries including the u. s. so that's the has to be taken in context in money terms. if you look at the big coin world and big coin, well that's a completely different picture. but in terms of money, this is what this characteristic of a dictatorship and i'll talk or see whether it's saudi arabia or the united states . so the thing is we've talked about the 4th term and we talked about this, this sort of cycles outside of the control of the command, the control central bank. so you have generational cycle that can't be stopped even, even though their entire wealth has already been spent by a debt, right?
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that's just pulling forward all the consumption for the past. 50 years is coming due, the generation is arriving generation z is here and they're here to say, we're not going to stick with this program, right. on the other hand, you have this facility's trap that's also 50 years in the making. i think it was 1972, wasn't it? that nixon went to china started to bring them into the global economy then, and of course in 2001 they became part of the w t o and favored nation status. so these are cycles that are all coming to ahead and you can only control one part of the cycle, right? the cycle that is the recession has been effectively managed or cancelled through central bank machinations and manipulation of the money supply and, and the co option of the banker's buy authoritarian and the bigger cycles that you're talking about there in terms of the 4th turning as it's called or the 3
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cities trap, which is a multi decade kind of cycle. the cycles like the cycles of the planets cannot be changed. yeah. using fear by dictate, by pronouncing the sun will rise in the west if that's not going to work. so at some point, like putting a beach ball under water, you know, a little kid. he's pushing the beach paul, under water at some point. they can't do it anymore and pops up to the surface. so no matter how much the central banks try to pretend that there's no inflation as a result of the money printing no matter how many in basilica snell, i'll idiocies. the president joe biden utters by trying to push that baseball inflation under water. at some point his feeble, let his hands give out and the inflation is like, you know, and it's actually out of control. i like the way that you said that recessions have been cancelled. because it does make sense that all of these, the domestic lee from the domestic front of this 50 years of fi out. and of course
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the u. s. the out is the most important because us the world reserve currency. but that, that cancel culture that has emerged in the last few years of its life seems to be not accidental. it seems to be a natural progression out of a desire to control all to agree that the dollar is still king. yeah, the council culture is part of the millennial generation seems to be really in favor of the council of culture. and the generation z then are just getting out of college. now we're actually anti count council culture. so with a generation z, they're actually going to start to see a return to hyper volatility in millennials already or into big coined does, a generation is not yet firmly on the big coin that will change. and now then you'll have 2 generations simultaneously, heavily into big coin. and then you'll see fab money, which is already freaking out. the central banks are already resorting to a pure of neil feudalism to try to control the wildfire. that is big coin and that
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will fail. remember we just pointed out that stocks are all time highs. home prices that all time high income said all time highs. job openings at all time highs. well, he also just opposes that headline, that tweet with this chart here. the feds balance sheet had another record high this week at $8.00 trillion dollars. so this is really the chart to look at for 50 years of fi out. this is print 2008, pretty flat balance sheet. then it jumped up, kept on climbing slowly and then we saw that little tiny, tiny, tiny taper when they tried to taper the pansy and obviously it didn't work. fortunately, perhaps for these money printers, there was a global lockdown on pandemic, but the, the balance sheet has certainly gone parabolic exponential, the right. another way to look at that central bank balance sheet would be the apartheid wall. the financial apartheid was getting higher and higher and higher in
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excluding greater percentage of the population. and just like all the cycles tend to revert to their mean, you know, the apartheid was eventually collapse. and so again, what on the other side of that would be a bond collapse arise and interest rate and the gen z, inheriting total chaos that they have to reconfigure reality from an a disenfranchisement of the baby boomer. so by that time already falling off the demographics chart entirely, something like, you know, 20000 a day are dying. the so you know, they're, they're trying to stick and hold on to that last glimmer of the post world war 2 american century by shop t. a drop mentality. but we're in the final thrust. again, you can't taper a ponzi and the, the problem with that is, as encapsulated in the final headline,
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because all those plans of, of, of keeping, of actually being able to extract other equity from those record high house prices of record high crisis is you need new suckers to come in, right, well after slashing, 33 percent of the workers and 6 years, roads complain about labor shortages. i mean, uproar over slow shipments. so there are a few hiccups in the u. s. economy right now. james foot, the chief executive, a c s x, one of the largest railroads in the u. s. put it this way during the earnest call recently, i've never seen any kind of thing like this and the transportation environment in my entire career where everything seems to be going 5 ways. at the same time. they're saying that they did not anticipate that nobody would want to actually work . and that in fact, a lot of their workers would actually decide to just leave because they were adding more money on enhanced unemployment benefits. but we do seem at that again, one of the cycles, like the solar system of the plan is revolving around it. star is that the inevitability that the central bank can control this. they can't control,
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they can put all this money in there. but at a certain point, if you're, you have to keep them putting too much money and you're now having to put money in the hands of the consumers. you're going to reach a situation where nobody wants to work to support it, right? although the rail up roads are perfect example because it's the economies of scale networks that occupy vast stretches of land mass they, they need to have certain economies of scale that work on a very small margin to be impactful, are to sustain any kind of profit whatsoever. and if their workers decide to go on strike, then that entire network fails, which has incredible ripple effects data, the transportation of energy and food. and so these workers are figuring out that a, they do get federal transfer payments from the government that are in excess of whatever wages they would get from the railway to there are so many opportunities. now these micro economies doing local, sustainable activities,
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commerce that are within one community, that is fine to aggregate or to make some cash flow. and a lot of that cash was going into perfect money like, like bitcoin and with the expectation that in 10 years, that money is going to have gone up 100-200-3000 percent in purchasing value. so there's a real dynamic evolving. we're going to take a break and when we come back, much more coming your way the me ah, ah, will be, come with me seeking the best rights for people, children. and that should have the best education as to emily. if the time to continue to oppose this will be confronted. i wanted to confront
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dition to be political if they don't allow that and they continue to to, to seek their own. don't the nation of, of kind of the way they incorporate that will give rise to an uprising without a doubt. and i'll be want to, i mean, my phone are 60 and i don't, i just saw up dollar format isis fighters and they're now boarding a philippine naval ship with this has been
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all this got amazing insights, stacy. right, jim, we are happy to tell you you are part of our 50th anniversary special of the nixon shock. that is the 50th anniversary on august 15th, we're asking our guest just for their general views on basically what your feelings are of 50 years of fi out. well, i look back on the nixon era with a great deal of fun. this. i was a young newspaper reporter and it was a great time to be in the news room. and i remember august 15th, and i kinda miss nick, see now, don't you considering that, you know, we have the medicine living dead in the white house. so at least he was a lively fellow. it, i didn't know you were a new person in the news room actually on august 15th. so what was the vibe and like, was it anticipated? was it expected where people prepared for this? like what was the mood in the country like,
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i don't think anybody. i think very few people even understood what it was about or even cared that much at the time. but it was the lead up to basically was a moment. it was a momentous thing, but like many momentous things that happened in history, a kind of just, you know, went over people's head and you know what, we're talking about the shutting the door on the gold window. correct? yeah, yeah. shut the door on a gold, basically defaulted to the united kingdom because i don't think people understood what bad men as a general thing, including educated people. you know, it was just something that happened in the abstract. and, you know, proof of that is that it didn't really become part of the public conversation all for years and years and years really, except among academic economists. right. i mean, at the time, of course, you are in, in vietnam, the country was in vietnam. there approach us all over the place. i don't really
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remember the protest, but i'm sure you do if you are a new person at that time, oh yeah, we're going to compare that draft of all. yeah. i had a really high lottery number. well, let's compare that to this day and age, but 50 years later since we went off the gold standard in 1970. the obesity rate in the united states was 15 percent. it's now $42.00 and a half percent. the average real wages down since 970 desa despair are way up. but we have a similar sort of stagflation situation, and we have a similar sort of situation of domestic unrest back then describe what it was done because it seemed like from the footage i watch, it was like the ordinary young person against the government. now we have a weird situation where by half of the young people are with the government and with the f b i n c a against another half of the population. yeah, it was certainly a curious thing that, you know, the left at that time was against tyranny, and against dest spotted action and against censorship,
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and against so many of the things that are now characteristic of the less than i, you know, i, i never consider myself a person as a lest, but i was a registered democrat and you know, i can't identify with that fashion at all anymore. so it was. 1 it was a trim looking back, looks like it was relatively orderly, despite the fact that we were engaged in as far and war, it was a kind of a tough economy for a lot of young people. and i'm writing a book about that now called young man blues about my own youth. but, you know, i eventually was employed as a journalist and it was, you know, the music was good. it was probably 1971, or 27171971. it was a great year for music and i ended up only a few years later working for rolling stone. just at the time the disco came out.
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so that was kind of a bad development for me. right. so what's the starting about the nixon years is that you did have a response from the free press. there was a press that was doing a vigorous job and investigating the white house at that time, which led to the resignation of the president. and the also had an adherence to the constitution. so the whole case went to court and the precepts of the constitution or apply vigorously. and that's kind of what people i think are installed to about is that there was a guy, the president who broke laws and he was ended up resigning these days. we do not have an impactful or meaningful press in any sense of the word. and to me, this represents a catastrophic failure across many, many aspects and parts of,
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of our culture and society. jim, of course, you know, the watergate thing hadn't started $971.00 when we went off the gold standard. that didn't start until after the election of 972 and really got going in 1973. so that was a different thing, but you know, it's hard to really understand what's going on with our press today unless you subscribe to the idea that somehow the, the chinese are possibly influencing them in some way. because otherwise, it's such a massive institutional failure that you can't account for it by, you know, just as simple india logical failure is something much deeper and more dangerous about it. and certainly, you know, let's kind of treacherous as far as our country is concerned. there is no, there is no governor in the mechanical sense on any of the institutions that can really do a lot of damage to people, especially the justice department. you know,
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and it's that child the f b i. yeah. and to make the next and reference again, of course, he brought china into world trade again, setting up for their eventual entrance through the world trade organization. and so that's another book. and between now and the 197 days, you know that now inclusion of china in the world trade organization led to, as you write about in your work extensively, a massive problems in terms of shipping america's jobs over to china. and the results and rust bells and loss of any kind of organized labor or wage ability to increase wages. jim. yeah, and at the time that when that process began, we were sending our jobs to mexico and sending the, you know, industrial production to japan for a while. now that's where we were getting our cars in the, you know, in the, after the mid seventy's. and that's, that process is continued and has been extremely destructive. what i notice
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happening really is that, you know, this process of what appears to be kind of slow motion, train wreck of a whole culture is throwing off a lot of what i would call entropic after burn. you know, a lot of just disorganization failure. you know, things strange things happening that seem to be inexplicable. and yet we're not really capable of doing anything to halt it. and the institutional destruction is so bad that you know, even availing to the court doesn't work anymore. so, you know, i don't know how we're going to fix this thing. as far as the money thing is concerned, you know, we're stuck in really a terrible quandary that we've engineers, system where that's based on issuing debt in which there is no longer any expectation that debt will be paid back. and you just can't have that. if you have
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a system based on lending, and the borrowers no longer pay the money back and it's totally broken system. and you know, it ends up just being kind of an act of magical levitation to keep it going. i don't know how they're keeping it going and i daresay, just about every observer watching it is just kind of stupified watching this whole infernal machine. just click along, but i think many of us are convinced that some something bad is going to happen. you know, at some point when some important crucial creditor fails to pay back a particular loan, you know, it's going to sit in motion some kind of cascade of defaults. that's going to put it into the game. we don't know when it's going to happen. and people like me, i've kind of given up trying to predict that it's going to happen. but how could it be otherwise?
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let's pick up on that young man blues because comparing today to the 1900 seventy's, there's quite something quite remarkable as nobody's working anymore. right, we all have an a difference between now and 50 years ago for young people, i think is that despite the difficulties that people go through and they're young, you know, and we, we are all as boomers did back then, we at least felt that there was some kind of a future, and it's easy to see that young people today can barely conceive of a plausible future in our we're certainly not one that includes making a living, having a house, raising a family, having something to believe in carrying about your country. you know, and these are all kind of fundamental things in there, they are now out the window. so you end up with a kind of vivid nihilism that's being expressed. it was expressed in the streets
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last year and p for and b l m. and we really don't know where it's going from here, but it doesn't look good, vivid nihilism, and tropic after burn. these are a good words, but i want to continue again on this. the young people. we have a situation where everybody does have a universal basic income. incomes rose last year. remarkably average household well set up. remarkably, thanks a huge stimulus checks that's very unlike than i do saturdays. nobody got welfare you. nobody, you got anything, right? even the federal government, which is when ford, he told new york city to drop dead, right? let's go bankruptcy min. nobody goes bankrupt anymore. like, do you think that's a better or worse situation compared to 50 years ago when we were still kind of linked to the gold standard mentality? at least. yeah, i think we're just inviting an enormous large scale immersion in unreality. and that is never a good thing, right?
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this phrase and tropic afterburner is great and just us to stacy's point, you know, going back to 71 and closing the gold window. and then shortly thereafter, next in, involved a huge scandal. is there a humorist involved with dis associating your currency with gold and other words, does goal aside from the monetary value and is the bedrock of the economy? does it also help people stop from straying into ultra hubris activity and is it bringing gold. busy back what it is still some kind of you know, rectitude back well, i think that that was the theory for a couple of 1000 years where at least through the industrial experience that if you had a currency and it was associated with gold that it would enforce a certain discipline on, on both sovereign nation and on people doing business. and you know what we seemed, or we appeared to replace that with after 1971 was the idea that the currency was
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based on the full faith and credit, not just of the nation as an abstract thing, but on the productive capacity of the nation, and the problem now is that we can't pretend that the productive capacity of the nation is behind the dollar because we've off short and gotten rid of the productive capacity. and what's really left is kind of a nation composed of racketeering of different kinds. all right, hold it right there. thanks times our counselor. well, you're welcome. all right, that's going to do it for this additional kaiser report with re max kaiser and stacy eric want to thank i guess james howard counselor of counselor dot com. and so next time by the me, driven by adrian shaped control. those with me
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in me dares thing we dare to ask in algorithms and neural networks have been following us every we look on line because our relationships are what matters most of us. and that's how we find meaning and how we make sense in our place in silicon valley see, don't mention in the slick presentations. however, the ghost workers who train the software human they're involved in every step of the process when you're using anything online. but we're sold, as is miracle of automation behind your screen. it's
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a ruble workforce that seems algorithm is for next to nothing on a very good day to do $5.00 now. a really bad day. i think retention use workers are available by design. it's about labor costs, but it's also about creating layers of lessening responsibility between those who solicit the kind of work and need if and those who do it me. a new gold rushes underway, and gunner thousands of ill equipped workers flocking to the goldfields, hoping to strike it. rich, give the children a tune between gold and education. my family was very poor. i thought i was doing my best to get back to school, which still it will have the strongest appeal. the
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the boils among health care workers in england who say their own spend it over a proposed 3 percent pay rise, reward for the reference. during the pandemic. it's revealed civil servants, something 100 probably more during the cobra price. it's also the only tones, only cordial friends reacts with rage as it becomes the only you countries not to exempt from corona virus florentine rules in the u. k. we ask people in paris for their thoughts on the live thing. it's political, it's nothing else has anything to do with relative myers. i do think.
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