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 Deutsche Bank woes stoking fears of 2008 financial crisis repeat

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PostSubject: Deutsche Bank woes stoking fears of 2008 financial crisis repeat   Deutsche Bank woes stoking fears of 2008 financial crisis repeat I_icon_minitimeWed Sep 28, 2016 11:01 am

SEPTEMBER 28, 2016 / LAMARZULLI

Deutsche Bank woes stoking fears of 2008 financial crisis repeat Dollar-crash





Commentary & Analysis





by





L. A. Marzulli





Deutsche Bank woes stoking fears of 2008 financial crisis repeat


https://www.rt.com/business/360917-deutsche-bank-lehman-crisis/





We’ve heard rumblings of a coming financial collapse for a while now. However, Deutsche Bank seems to be on the ropes. (Please check out the article above) Our dollar—which by the way is fiat currency—might not be worth the paper it’s printed on.

Everywhere I go, including my recent trip to Saskatchewan, people think we’re worse off now than we were 15 years ago, before the tragic events of 911.

By the way, O’Bummer vetoed the bill that would have allowed victims of 911 to sue the Saudi’s. In the TANK anyone? Rigged system?


 http://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/obama-vetoes-bill-let-9-11-families-sue-saudi-arabia-n652911

We’ve seen Greece’s financial system collapse as well as Cyprus. Now, Venezuela’s economy has reached a crises level and basic goods are almost impossible to purchase, if you can find 
them.


 https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/jun/22/venezuela-economic-crisis-guardian-briefing

There are roving gangs, riots, murders, and a mass exodus from that country, which is now the new normal, along with three parented babies. (End times?Days of Noah?)

The crises in Venezuela is a direct results of what happens when a country embraces SOCIALISM! It doesn’t work and never will. Of course you won’t hear about this on the 6’Oclock news. Vote for Bernie!  (LOL)

The Federal Reserve— which, as most of us know, has nothing to do with our government, but is a private banking cartel that controls our money supply—might be poised to raise interest rates. Trump stated, in the debates, that if the FEDS do this the Stock Market might collapse.

The last collapse was in 2008 and we’re still reeling from it as there are 93 million people who remain unemployed. If we awaken one morning to see that our net worth has been cut in half—welcome to Cyprus—how then should we react?

I’ve harped on this before and I’ll say it again here. Stockpile food and water. PERIOD!

All one has to do is look at what is taking place in Venezuela to see what happens when the financial system goes south. Bread lines, soup lines, anarchy, riots, looting and killing. When people are hungry they do desperate things.

In closing todays post. Our country is in the midst of racial tension that I heaven’s seen since the Martin Luther King era. Food prices continue to go up for basic necessities like milk.

http://www.ers.usda.gov/data-products/food-price-outlook.aspx

Our dollar continues to shrink and folks wonder how to make ends meet. If the system is rigged, if there is a push to form a New World Order—and I believe there is—then we should not be surprised if the dollar tanks completely.

Of course, this is where Trump comes into play. He’s the spoiler. He’s not supposed to be there. He’s the man who might upset the New World Order Apple Cart.

He just might reverse the downward financial spiral that we find ourselves in. He’s got my vote as he’s on top of the worlds financial markets and he’s warning us that we might be on the verge of a nasty recession, or worse.
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PostSubject: DEUTSCHE BANK FAILING(?), COMMERZBANK LAYOFFS, AND ...   Deutsche Bank woes stoking fears of 2008 financial crisis repeat I_icon_minitimeSat Oct 01, 2016 1:16 pm

DEUTSCHE BANK FAILING(?), COMMERZBANK LAYOFFS, AND ...




Posted on October 1, 2016 by Joseph P. Farrell • 5 Comments


Deutsche Bank woes stoking fears of 2008 financial crisis repeat 39728594_s-718x430



It has been a wild and rocky week once again, with so many excellent articles being send by the readership here that I spent much more time than usual trying to sift through them all, but surely one of the biggest stories of the week has been the continuing fall of Deutschebank stock, and now, courtesy some thoughts and articles shared by Mr. C.S., some news about Germany's other giant bank, Commerzbank.

And here's an article on Commerzbank:

The first article makes it abundantly clear that the government of Bundeskanzlerin Angela Merkel will not get any bail out from the European Central Bank, and there has been talk of a bail-in, which, as the authoress of the first article avers, might be one of the reasons Germans have been warned by their government to stock up for a pending emergency. Meanwhile, Deutschebank itself has indicated it simply will refuse to pay a fourteen billion dollar fine for participating in mortgage frauds. Meanwhile, Mr. C.S. emailed me and informed me that there are now commercials being run in German media by Commerzbank reassuring Germans that there is another "deutsche Bank," namely, Commerzbank.


So what's going on behind Deutschebank's refusal to pay on the fine?

With that question, we are at the high octane speculation of the day: why is Deutschebank refusing to pay the fine? I suspect - and have suspected for a very long time - that there has been a quiet and covert economic war going on between Washington and Berlin. Consider: both France and Germany attempted to negotiate directly with Russia during the Ukrainian mess - a mess Washington, and to a lesser extent, Berlin, helped create in the first place. But as Washington began to voice the idea of economic sanctions against Russia for its "aggression" in the Ukraine, the real target, as a moment's reflection would yield, was not so much Moscow, but Berlin, whose export-driven economy is dependent on his huge volume of trade with, you guessed it, Russia and China. As the sanctions took effect amid the growing refugee crisis - also fostered by Frau Merkel's government, but driven at a much deeper level by the American deep state (think Darthsoros here folks) - we then witnessed German Laender governments by-passing Berlin and talking directly to Moscow, and individual German businesses trying to skirt the sanctions regime. None of this, I submit, would have happened without the tacit permission of the federal government in Berlin. During this time period as well, German Defense Minister Ursula von der Leyen indicated that Germany's military size would be tripled over the next few years, making it one of the largest standing militaries in the world, while at the same time, aBundeswehr white paper indicated that Russia was the major strategic threat to Germany in the decades to come. This, of course, is a kind of special sleight of hand, for it's very difficult to perceive one of one's largest trading partners as a threat. I suspected then, and suspect now, that this was simply an effort of the German Atlanticists to make the usual noises of support for Washington, while the reality was quite different. The USSA has been basing its military in Eastern Europe, in my opinion in an effort to re-create the old post-Versaillescordon sanitaire to prevent a Russo-German entente. In other words, geopolitically speaking, that re-basing is as much about Germany as it is about Russia.


Then we witnesses the merger of two large European armaments firms, one French, the other German (Rheinmetall Defense Systems), into a huge conglomerate, doubtless in aid of the creation of a pan-European army with the French and German militaries as the core. Once again, I viewed this and continue to view this as an effort to side-step NATO and render it irrelevant.


Which brings us back to Deutschebank: why the refusal to pay the fines? Here is where the high octane speculation gets positively orbital, for one notes a dissimilarity between the fines imposed on the German banking giant and those large American banks that participated in the same activities. In other words, Deutschebank, by stating that it intends to fight the fine, might be viewed as really saying that they intend to expose the double standard, and hence, expose the rest of the fraud in the system, and that means, to be blunt, exposing the deep connection between all the fraud in the system and the American deep state, and the use of such fraud to prop up the American military. And let us remember, in this context, the recent statements of German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schauble(sorry folks, I don't have an umlaut!), that there is no fix of the financial system that is not a reform. This statement preceded the now open and growing discussions in the international financial "community" and calls for a global "jubilee," a cancellation of all debt. (Frankly, be extremely skeptical of this one, for it to my mind is a trap being laid: cancellation of your debts, in return for your submission to a global financial, and possibly cashless, financial system all being run on "secure" computers, and having an element of religion added for good measure.)


In Asia, Chinese private debt threatens to implode that economy as well, and that, once again, does not bode well for Germany's export-driven economy. So how does that fit in?


I suspect that one of the things to watch for now are increasingly open, and blunt, statements out of Berlin and Beijing, united in a critique of American financial "unipolarism." But these may come from corporations rather then the governments themselves.


See you on the flip side...
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