<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss version="2.0"
	xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"
	xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"
	xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"
	xmlns:sy="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/syndication/"
		>
<channel>
	<title>Comments on: More BRICs Through Our Financial Window</title>
	<atom:link href="http://www.noquarterusa.net/blog/26359/more-brics-through-our-financial-window/feed/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
	<link>http://www.noquarterusa.net/blog/26359/more-brics-through-our-financial-window/</link>
	<description></description>
	<lastBuildDate>Sun, 27 May 2012 08:25:00 +0000</lastBuildDate>
	<sy:updatePeriod>hourly</sy:updatePeriod>
	<sy:updateFrequency>1</sy:updateFrequency>
	<generator>http://wordpress.org/?v=3.0.4</generator>
	<item>
		<title>By: TeakWoodKite</title>
		<link>http://www.noquarterusa.net/blog/26359/more-brics-through-our-financial-window/#comment-1219261</link>
		<dc:creator>TeakWoodKite</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 18 Jun 2009 01:06:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.noquarterusa.net/blog/?p=26359#comment-1219261</guid>
		<description>I am watching BO with the sound off on the Financial Regulations deal. Is it me or is it intentional that they keep the shot with out panning back to TOTUS?

Is he really answering questions on the fly? So to speak?

Look at the press Gaggle in the room. All the &quot;heavy hitters&quot; from the financial media looking dismayed and forlorn...

One guy scratching his 5 o&#039;clock stubble, a woman two seats down with her ears on fire and eyes glazed over ...

oops! DARN! C-span ruined it for me, they pulled the camera angle to left 45 degrees. There he is, flanked by the TOTUS twins.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I am watching BO with the sound off on the Financial Regulations deal. Is it me or is it intentional that they keep the shot with out panning back to TOTUS?</p>
<p>Is he really answering questions on the fly? So to speak?</p>
<p>Look at the press Gaggle in the room. All the &#8220;heavy hitters&#8221; from the financial media looking dismayed and forlorn&#8230;</p>
<p>One guy scratching his 5 o&#8217;clock stubble, a woman two seats down with her ears on fire and eyes glazed over &#8230;</p>
<p>oops! DARN! C-span ruined it for me, they pulled the camera angle to left 45 degrees. There he is, flanked by the TOTUS twins.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: Mary</title>
		<link>http://www.noquarterusa.net/blog/26359/more-brics-through-our-financial-window/#comment-1219252</link>
		<dc:creator>Mary</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 18 Jun 2009 00:35:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.noquarterusa.net/blog/?p=26359#comment-1219252</guid>
		<description>Yes,  LD. 

THIS  was  the  big news  the  last  week.    

Not  Letterman,  not  Palin,  not   Twitter&#039;s  success  in   Iran,  not  gays,  not  whether   Obama    likes  Fox  News,   not  Olbermann  vs  O&#039;Reilly,   or  any  of the other   braindead  mush  our media  serves  up  to us.      

THIS.  

And  the  fact  that   Ahmadinejad  was invited  to,  and  attended,   this  BRIC,   as  did  reps  from  Afghanistan   and  Pakistan. 

Our  media  did not tell  Americans  that    the  United  States  was not invited,   or  that  when Obama&#039;s  administration    asked   to  attend,   they  were    turned  down.    

And not  a single one of  the   stations  that  got  1 on 1  interviews,   even  asked  him  a  question about it.  

More  impressed  that  he swatted  a  fly.   

Sad,  sad,  sad.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Yes,  LD. </p>
<p>THIS  was  the  big news  the  last  week.    </p>
<p>Not  Letterman,  not  Palin,  not   Twitter&#8217;s  success  in   Iran,  not  gays,  not  whether   Obama    likes  Fox  News,   not  Olbermann  vs  O&#8217;Reilly,   or  any  of the other   braindead  mush  our media  serves  up  to us.      </p>
<p>THIS.  </p>
<p>And  the  fact  that   Ahmadinejad  was invited  to,  and  attended,   this  BRIC,   as  did  reps  from  Afghanistan   and  Pakistan. </p>
<p>Our  media  did not tell  Americans  that    the  United  States  was not invited,   or  that  when Obama&#8217;s  administration    asked   to  attend,   they  were    turned  down.    </p>
<p>And not  a single one of  the   stations  that  got  1 on 1  interviews,   even  asked  him  a  question about it.  </p>
<p>More  impressed  that  he swatted  a  fly.   </p>
<p>Sad,  sad,  sad.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: Mary</title>
		<link>http://www.noquarterusa.net/blog/26359/more-brics-through-our-financial-window/#comment-1219249</link>
		<dc:creator>Mary</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 18 Jun 2009 00:29:14 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.noquarterusa.net/blog/?p=26359#comment-1219249</guid>
		<description>Mao   always  said,  with   a   sly smile on his  face, that    China  would  take  us  down   without  firing  a single  bullet.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Mao   always  said,  with   a   sly smile on his  face, that    China  would  take  us  down   without  firing  a single  bullet.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: foxyladi14</title>
		<link>http://www.noquarterusa.net/blog/26359/more-brics-through-our-financial-window/#comment-1219155</link>
		<dc:creator>foxyladi14</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 17 Jun 2009 21:41:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.noquarterusa.net/blog/?p=26359#comment-1219155</guid>
		<description>this is alarming.L.D. what can we do..??</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>this is alarming.L.D. what can we do..??</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: Sammie</title>
		<link>http://www.noquarterusa.net/blog/26359/more-brics-through-our-financial-window/#comment-1219138</link>
		<dc:creator>Sammie</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 17 Jun 2009 21:01:39 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.noquarterusa.net/blog/?p=26359#comment-1219138</guid>
		<description>I&#039;ve been worried about inflation, but I guess there are also concerns about asset deflation.  At this point, I&#039;m not sure if anyone has a clear indication of what we&#039;re in for.

http://market-ticker.denninger.net/archives/1127-Ssssshhh....-Its-D-D-D-D-.....html

&quot;... debt deflation cannot be avoided once you blow asset bubbles supported by debt - it simply can&#039;t.  That cycle must end and when it does you wind up with the debt service sucking all the oxygen out of room and prohibiting growth.  Once that condition asserts itself asset prices collapse and defaults go parabolic.&quot;</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I&#8217;ve been worried about inflation, but I guess there are also concerns about asset deflation.  At this point, I&#8217;m not sure if anyone has a clear indication of what we&#8217;re in for.</p>
<p><a href="http://market-ticker.denninger.net/archives/1127-Ssssshhh....-Its-D-D-D-D-.....html" rel="nofollow">http://market-ticker.denninger.net/archives/1127-Ssssshhh&#8230;.-Its-D-D-D-D-&#8230;..html</a></p>
<p>&#8220;&#8230; debt deflation cannot be avoided once you blow asset bubbles supported by debt &#8211; it simply can&#8217;t.  That cycle must end and when it does you wind up with the debt service sucking all the oxygen out of room and prohibiting growth.  Once that condition asserts itself asset prices collapse and defaults go parabolic.&#8221;</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: wbboei</title>
		<link>http://www.noquarterusa.net/blog/26359/more-brics-through-our-financial-window/#comment-1219080</link>
		<dc:creator>wbboei</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 17 Jun 2009 18:46:42 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.noquarterusa.net/blog/?p=26359#comment-1219080</guid>
		<description>Here is a concurring opinion from the only journalist I can honestly say I trust.  He was mid east Bureau Chief for the New York Times and resigned after they reprimanded him for causing them to &quot;lose the perception of impartiality&quot; when he criticzed the Bush Administration which NYT supported at that point over the Iraq War.  How many other  journalists do you know who would give their stall fed existence in defense of truth and principle.  That makes him a hero in my book, and I must warn you his assessment is even bleaker.
------------------------------------------

The American Empire Is Bankrupt
 
Posted on Jun 14, 2009
 
By Chris Hedges

This week marks the end of the dollar’s reign as the world’s reserve currency. It marks the start of a terrible period of economic and political decline in the United States. And it signals the last gasp of the American imperium. That’s over. It is not coming back. And what is to come will be very, very painful.

Barack Obama, and the criminal class on Wall Street, aided by a corporate media that continues to peddle fatuous gossip and trash talk as news while we endure the greatest economic crisis in our history, may have fooled us, but the rest of the world knows we are bankrupt. And these nations are damned if they are going to continue to prop up an inflated dollar and sustain the massive federal budget deficits, swollen to over $2 trillion, which fund America’s imperial expansion in Eurasia and our system of casino capitalism. They have us by the throat. They are about to squeeze.
 
There are meetings being held Monday and Tuesday in Yekaterinburg, Russia, (formerly Sverdlovsk) among Chinese President Hu Jintao, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev and other top officials of the six-nation Shanghai Cooperation Organization. The United States, which asked to attend, was denied admittance. Watch what happens there carefully. The gathering is, in the words of economist Michael Hudson, “the most important meeting of the 21st century so far.” 

It is the first formal step by our major trading partners to replace the dollar as the world’s reserve currency. If they succeed, the dollar will dramatically plummet in value, the cost of imports, including oil, will skyrocket, interest rates will climb and jobs will hemorrhage at a rate that will make the last few months look like boom times. State and federal services will be reduced or shut down for lack of funds. The United States will begin to resemble the Weimar Republic or Zimbabwe. Obama, endowed by many with the qualities of a savior, will suddenly look pitiful, inept and weak. And the rage that has kindled a handful of shootings and hate crimes in the past few weeks will engulf vast segments of a disenfranchised and bewildered working and middle class. The people of this class will demand vengeance, radical change, order and moral renewal, which an array of proto-fascists, from the Christian right to the goons who disseminate hate talk on Fox News, will assure the country they will impose.

I called Hudson, who has an article in Monday’s Financial Times called “The Yekaterinburg Turning Point: De-Dollarization and the Ending of America’s Financial-Military Hegemony.” “Yekaterinburg,” Hudson writes, “may become known not only as the death place of the czars but of the American empire as well.” His article is worth reading, along with John Lanchester’s disturbing exposé of the world’s banking system, titled “It’s Finished,” which appeared in the May 28 issue of the London Review of Books.

“This means the end of the dollar,” Hudson told me. “It means China, Russia, India, Pakistan, Iran are forming an official financial and military area to get America out of Eurasia. The balance-of-payments deficit is mainly military in nature. Half of America’s discretionary spending is military. The deficit ends up in the hands of foreign banks, central banks. They don’t have any choice but to recycle the money to buy U.S. government debt. The Asian countries have been financing their own military encirclement. They have been forced to accept dollars that have no chance of being repaid. They are paying for America’s military aggression against them. They want to get rid of this.” 

China, as Hudson points out, has already struck bilateral trade deals with Brazil and Malaysia to denominate their trade in China’s yuan rather than the dollar, pound or euro. Russia promises to begin trading in the ruble and local currencies. The governor of China’s central bank has openly called for the abandonment of the dollar as reserve currency, suggesting in its place the use of the International Monetary Fund’s Special Drawing Rights. What the new system will be remains unclear, but the flight from the dollar has clearly begun. The goal, in the words of the Russian president, is to build a “multipolar world order” which will break the economic and, by extension, military domination by the United States. China is frantically spending its dollar reserves to buy factories and property around the globe so it can unload its U.S. currency. This is why Aluminum Corp. of China made so many major concessions in the failed attempt to salvage its $19.5 billion alliance with the Rio Tinto mining concern in Australia. It desperately needs to shed its dollars.

“China is trying to get rid of all the dollars they can in a trash-for-resource deal,” Hudson said. “They will give the dollars to countries willing to sell off their resources since America refuses to sell any of its high-tech industries, even Unocal, to the yellow peril. It realizes these dollars are going to be worthless pretty quickly.”
The architects of this new global exchange realize that if they break the dollar they also break America’s military domination. Our military spending cannot be sustained without this cycle of heavy borrowing. The official U.S. defense budget for fiscal year 2008 is $623 billion, before we add on things like nuclear research. The next closest national military budget is China’s, at $65 billion, according to the Central Intelligence Agency.
There are three categories of the balance-of-payment deficits. America imports more than it exports. This is trade. Wall Street and American corporations buy up foreign companies. This is capital movement. The third and most important balance-of-payment deficit for the past 50 years has been Pentagon spending abroad. It is primarily military spending that has been responsible for the balance-of-payments deficit for the last five decades. Look at table five in the Balance of Payments Report, published in the Survey of Current Business quarterly, and check under military spending. There you can see the deficit. 
To fund our permanent war economy, we have been flooding the world with dollars. The foreign recipients turn the dollars over to their central banks for local currency. The central banks then have a problem. If a central bank does not spend the money in the United States then the exchange rate against the dollar will go up. This will penalize exporters. This has allowed America to print money without restraint to buy imports and foreign companies, fund our military expansion and ensure that foreign nations like China continue to buy our treasury bonds. This cycle appears now to be over. Once the dollar cannot flood central banks and no one buys our treasury bonds, our empire collapses. The profligate spending on the military, some $1 trillion when everything is counted, will be unsustainable.
 
“We will have to finance our own military spending,” Hudson warned, “and the only way to do this will be to sharply cut back wage rates. The class war is back in business. Wall Street understands that. This is why it had Bush and Obama give it $10 trillion in a huge rip-off so it can have enough money to survive.”

The desperate effort to borrow our way out of financial collapse has promoted a level of state intervention unseen since World War II. It has also led us into uncharted territory.
 
“We have in effect had to declare war to get us out of the hole created by our economic system,” Lanchester wrote in the London Review of Books. “There is no model or precedent for this, and no way to argue that it’s all right really, because under such-and-such a model of capitalism ... there is no such model. It isn’t supposed to work like this, and there is no road-map for what’s happened.”
The cost of daily living, from buying food to getting medical care, will become difficult for all but a few as the dollar plunges. States and cities will see their pension funds drained and finally shut down. The government will be forced to sell off infrastructure, including roads and transport, to private corporations. We will be increasingly charged by privatized utilities—think Enron—for what was once regulated and subsidized. Commercial and private real estate will be worth less than half its current value. The negative equity that already plagues 25 percent of American homes will expand to include nearly all property owners. It will be difficult to borrow and impossible to sell real estate unless we accept massive losses. There will be block after block of empty stores and boarded-up houses. Foreclosures will be epidemic. There will be long lines at soup kitchens and many, many homeless. Our corporate-controlled media, already banal and trivial, will work overtime to anesthetize us with useless gossip, spectacles, sex, gratuitous violence, fear and tawdry junk politics. America will be composed of a large dispossessed underclass and a tiny empowered oligarchy that will run a ruthless and brutal system of neo-feudalism from secure compounds. Those who resist will be silenced, many by force. We will pay a terrible price, and we will pay this price soon, for the gross malfeasance of our power elite.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Here is a concurring opinion from the only journalist I can honestly say I trust.  He was mid east Bureau Chief for the New York Times and resigned after they reprimanded him for causing them to &#8220;lose the perception of impartiality&#8221; when he criticzed the Bush Administration which NYT supported at that point over the Iraq War.  How many other  journalists do you know who would give their stall fed existence in defense of truth and principle.  That makes him a hero in my book, and I must warn you his assessment is even bleaker.<br />
&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;</p>
<p>The American Empire Is Bankrupt</p>
<p>Posted on Jun 14, 2009</p>
<p>By Chris Hedges</p>
<p>This week marks the end of the dollar’s reign as the world’s reserve currency. It marks the start of a terrible period of economic and political decline in the United States. And it signals the last gasp of the American imperium. That’s over. It is not coming back. And what is to come will be very, very painful.</p>
<p>Barack Obama, and the criminal class on Wall Street, aided by a corporate media that continues to peddle fatuous gossip and trash talk as news while we endure the greatest economic crisis in our history, may have fooled us, but the rest of the world knows we are bankrupt. And these nations are damned if they are going to continue to prop up an inflated dollar and sustain the massive federal budget deficits, swollen to over $2 trillion, which fund America’s imperial expansion in Eurasia and our system of casino capitalism. They have us by the throat. They are about to squeeze.</p>
<p>There are meetings being held Monday and Tuesday in Yekaterinburg, Russia, (formerly Sverdlovsk) among Chinese President Hu Jintao, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev and other top officials of the six-nation Shanghai Cooperation Organization. The United States, which asked to attend, was denied admittance. Watch what happens there carefully. The gathering is, in the words of economist Michael Hudson, “the most important meeting of the 21st century so far.” </p>
<p>It is the first formal step by our major trading partners to replace the dollar as the world’s reserve currency. If they succeed, the dollar will dramatically plummet in value, the cost of imports, including oil, will skyrocket, interest rates will climb and jobs will hemorrhage at a rate that will make the last few months look like boom times. State and federal services will be reduced or shut down for lack of funds. The United States will begin to resemble the Weimar Republic or Zimbabwe. Obama, endowed by many with the qualities of a savior, will suddenly look pitiful, inept and weak. And the rage that has kindled a handful of shootings and hate crimes in the past few weeks will engulf vast segments of a disenfranchised and bewildered working and middle class. The people of this class will demand vengeance, radical change, order and moral renewal, which an array of proto-fascists, from the Christian right to the goons who disseminate hate talk on Fox News, will assure the country they will impose.</p>
<p>I called Hudson, who has an article in Monday’s Financial Times called “The Yekaterinburg Turning Point: De-Dollarization and the Ending of America’s Financial-Military Hegemony.” “Yekaterinburg,” Hudson writes, “may become known not only as the death place of the czars but of the American empire as well.” His article is worth reading, along with John Lanchester’s disturbing exposé of the world’s banking system, titled “It’s Finished,” which appeared in the May 28 issue of the London Review of Books.</p>
<p>“This means the end of the dollar,” Hudson told me. “It means China, Russia, India, Pakistan, Iran are forming an official financial and military area to get America out of Eurasia. The balance-of-payments deficit is mainly military in nature. Half of America’s discretionary spending is military. The deficit ends up in the hands of foreign banks, central banks. They don’t have any choice but to recycle the money to buy U.S. government debt. The Asian countries have been financing their own military encirclement. They have been forced to accept dollars that have no chance of being repaid. They are paying for America’s military aggression against them. They want to get rid of this.” </p>
<p>China, as Hudson points out, has already struck bilateral trade deals with Brazil and Malaysia to denominate their trade in China’s yuan rather than the dollar, pound or euro. Russia promises to begin trading in the ruble and local currencies. The governor of China’s central bank has openly called for the abandonment of the dollar as reserve currency, suggesting in its place the use of the International Monetary Fund’s Special Drawing Rights. What the new system will be remains unclear, but the flight from the dollar has clearly begun. The goal, in the words of the Russian president, is to build a “multipolar world order” which will break the economic and, by extension, military domination by the United States. China is frantically spending its dollar reserves to buy factories and property around the globe so it can unload its U.S. currency. This is why Aluminum Corp. of China made so many major concessions in the failed attempt to salvage its $19.5 billion alliance with the Rio Tinto mining concern in Australia. It desperately needs to shed its dollars.</p>
<p>“China is trying to get rid of all the dollars they can in a trash-for-resource deal,” Hudson said. “They will give the dollars to countries willing to sell off their resources since America refuses to sell any of its high-tech industries, even Unocal, to the yellow peril. It realizes these dollars are going to be worthless pretty quickly.”<br />
The architects of this new global exchange realize that if they break the dollar they also break America’s military domination. Our military spending cannot be sustained without this cycle of heavy borrowing. The official U.S. defense budget for fiscal year 2008 is $623 billion, before we add on things like nuclear research. The next closest national military budget is China’s, at $65 billion, according to the Central Intelligence Agency.<br />
There are three categories of the balance-of-payment deficits. America imports more than it exports. This is trade. Wall Street and American corporations buy up foreign companies. This is capital movement. The third and most important balance-of-payment deficit for the past 50 years has been Pentagon spending abroad. It is primarily military spending that has been responsible for the balance-of-payments deficit for the last five decades. Look at table five in the Balance of Payments Report, published in the Survey of Current Business quarterly, and check under military spending. There you can see the deficit.<br />
To fund our permanent war economy, we have been flooding the world with dollars. The foreign recipients turn the dollars over to their central banks for local currency. The central banks then have a problem. If a central bank does not spend the money in the United States then the exchange rate against the dollar will go up. This will penalize exporters. This has allowed America to print money without restraint to buy imports and foreign companies, fund our military expansion and ensure that foreign nations like China continue to buy our treasury bonds. This cycle appears now to be over. Once the dollar cannot flood central banks and no one buys our treasury bonds, our empire collapses. The profligate spending on the military, some $1 trillion when everything is counted, will be unsustainable.</p>
<p>“We will have to finance our own military spending,” Hudson warned, “and the only way to do this will be to sharply cut back wage rates. The class war is back in business. Wall Street understands that. This is why it had Bush and Obama give it $10 trillion in a huge rip-off so it can have enough money to survive.”</p>
<p>The desperate effort to borrow our way out of financial collapse has promoted a level of state intervention unseen since World War II. It has also led us into uncharted territory.</p>
<p>“We have in effect had to declare war to get us out of the hole created by our economic system,” Lanchester wrote in the London Review of Books. “There is no model or precedent for this, and no way to argue that it’s all right really, because under such-and-such a model of capitalism &#8230; there is no such model. It isn’t supposed to work like this, and there is no road-map for what’s happened.”<br />
The cost of daily living, from buying food to getting medical care, will become difficult for all but a few as the dollar plunges. States and cities will see their pension funds drained and finally shut down. The government will be forced to sell off infrastructure, including roads and transport, to private corporations. We will be increasingly charged by privatized utilities—think Enron—for what was once regulated and subsidized. Commercial and private real estate will be worth less than half its current value. The negative equity that already plagues 25 percent of American homes will expand to include nearly all property owners. It will be difficult to borrow and impossible to sell real estate unless we accept massive losses. There will be block after block of empty stores and boarded-up houses. Foreclosures will be epidemic. There will be long lines at soup kitchens and many, many homeless. Our corporate-controlled media, already banal and trivial, will work overtime to anesthetize us with useless gossip, spectacles, sex, gratuitous violence, fear and tawdry junk politics. America will be composed of a large dispossessed underclass and a tiny empowered oligarchy that will run a ruthless and brutal system of neo-feudalism from secure compounds. Those who resist will be silenced, many by force. We will pay a terrible price, and we will pay this price soon, for the gross malfeasance of our power elite.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: felizarte</title>
		<link>http://www.noquarterusa.net/blog/26359/more-brics-through-our-financial-window/#comment-1219079</link>
		<dc:creator>felizarte</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 17 Jun 2009 18:46:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.noquarterusa.net/blog/?p=26359#comment-1219079</guid>
		<description>Nixon, in one of his books wrote about World War III being an economic war.  Except at the time he wrote his book, he was looking at Japan and its global influence which is gone now.  Now the US faces its old-time military antagonists--Russia and China.  I fear that Obama does not have the historical perspective to handle this situation. His advisers are mostly quite young--post cold war babies.  There is a perspective that can only be gained by living through a period.

I am in great fear for this country.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Nixon, in one of his books wrote about World War III being an economic war.  Except at the time he wrote his book, he was looking at Japan and its global influence which is gone now.  Now the US faces its old-time military antagonists&#8211;Russia and China.  I fear that Obama does not have the historical perspective to handle this situation. His advisers are mostly quite young&#8211;post cold war babies.  There is a perspective that can only be gained by living through a period.</p>
<p>I am in great fear for this country.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: mark connette</title>
		<link>http://www.noquarterusa.net/blog/26359/more-brics-through-our-financial-window/#comment-1219061</link>
		<dc:creator>mark connette</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 17 Jun 2009 17:39:01 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.noquarterusa.net/blog/?p=26359#comment-1219061</guid>
		<description>The lower dollar will only lead to one thing...INFLATION   and with the way democrats are trying to spend money,  possibly hyper inflation. Can you say Carter&#039;s second term chicago style?</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The lower dollar will only lead to one thing&#8230;INFLATION   and with the way democrats are trying to spend money,  possibly hyper inflation. Can you say Carter&#8217;s second term chicago style?</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: Craig Della Penna</title>
		<link>http://www.noquarterusa.net/blog/26359/more-brics-through-our-financial-window/#comment-1219054</link>
		<dc:creator>Craig Della Penna</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 17 Jun 2009 17:31:49 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.noquarterusa.net/blog/?p=26359#comment-1219054</guid>
		<description>It seems like we&#039;ve been in an undeclared economic war for some years now with Russia and China always looking for ways to attack us. Now we&#039;ve suffered serious injury through a completely self-inflicted wound.
Perhaps it&#039;s time for all those American-originated trans-national corporations to decide what side they&#039;re on...</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>It seems like we&#8217;ve been in an undeclared economic war for some years now with Russia and China always looking for ways to attack us. Now we&#8217;ve suffered serious injury through a completely self-inflicted wound.<br />
Perhaps it&#8217;s time for all those American-originated trans-national corporations to decide what side they&#8217;re on&#8230;</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: felizarte</title>
		<link>http://www.noquarterusa.net/blog/26359/more-brics-through-our-financial-window/#comment-1219051</link>
		<dc:creator>felizarte</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 17 Jun 2009 17:21:49 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.noquarterusa.net/blog/?p=26359#comment-1219051</guid>
		<description>a lower dollar should make US manufactured products cheaper for other countries to import and imports from other countries will be more expensive for American consumers. Perhaps in the long run, it might spur domestic manufacturing again.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>a lower dollar should make US manufactured products cheaper for other countries to import and imports from other countries will be more expensive for American consumers. Perhaps in the long run, it might spur domestic manufacturing again.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
</channel>
</rss>

