We are headed for a recession

Our present govt is deliberately killing off jobs and deliberately fobbing off investment into renewable Energy.

 

 

What a great Adult Government

 

beast ids

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Re: We are headed for a recession

nice

 

Peabody coal mine workers sacked by text message

 

 

Up to 100 workers at a Queensland coal mine have been told via text message that they no longer have jobs.

 

 

The contractors, employed by Thiess mainly as drivers and machinery operators at Peabody's Burton coking coal mine in central Queensland, received the SMS on Thursday.

 

 

The Construction Forestry Mining Energy Union of Queensland has accused Thiess of treating its workers like "sausages on the shelf at the butchers".

 

 

"We haven't seen this sort of nonsense since the darkest days of the Howard era," CFMEU district vice president Steve Pierce said.



Read more: http://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/queensland/peabody-coal-mine-workers-sacked-by-text-message-20140829...

 

 

Message 21 of 23
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Re: We are headed for a recession

Following explains why low interest rates would cause a crash in our economy:

 

Alas, in the long run, all that will be achieved from the introduction of macroprudential is that the authorities will be given the powers to more easily engineer an epic economic crash โ€ฆ for the benefit of their banker mates.

The reason this is so, is because the most fundamental dynamic of the economy โ€” the interest-based โ€œmoneyโ€ creation machine โ€” has not been altered.

Fact 1: Usury-based โ€œmoneyโ€ demands ever-rising โ€˜growthโ€™ in the quantum of loans, in order to sustain the payment of (uncreated) interest from the rest of the economy to the banks. Repayment of loan principle destroys โ€œmoneyโ€; therefore, ever-more new loans must continue to be created, in order for the rest of the economy to obtain the extra โ€œmoneyโ€ needed to pay their โ€œinterestโ€ obligations.

Fact 2: As household debt levels inevitably rise in concert with the โ€œmoneyโ€ (principle, + interest obligation) supply, a point must inevitably be reached where the desire / ability to take on more debt begins to lag behind the rate of growth that is actually โ€œneededโ€ in order to sustain the usurerโ€™s business model.

Fact 3: As seen in this post, the inevitable consequences of Fact 2 are that (1) central usurers will lower the OCR to make borrowing appear more attractive / โ€œaffordableโ€ (โ€œstimulateโ€) to an already over-indebted household sector, and (2) commercial usurers will weaken their lending โ€œstandardsโ€ to achieve the same end โ€” make borrowing appear more attractive / โ€œaffordableโ€.

Fact 4: The implementation of Fact 3 can only sustain the โ€œnecessaryโ€ (for the usurers) continued rate of growth in โ€œmoneyโ€ supply by drawing more people into debt, and/or more people into increasing their existing debt, thus, merely worsening the basic problem โ€” too much debt + interest obligations, versus the economyโ€™s total capacity to generate real production/value via external sales.

Fact 5: Introduction of macroprudential rules directly impacts on Fact 3 (2) โ€” the commercial usurersโ€™ ability to โ€œextend and pretendโ€ via weaker lending standards โ€” and thus, directly impacts on Fact 2, the problem of rate of growth in borrowing / new โ€œmoneyโ€ creation lagging that which is โ€œneededโ€ to sustain the usurersโ€™ business model.

Fact 6: Armed with macroprudential, the authorities are empowered with the ability only to trigger an economic collapse when it suits them.

Fact 7: Given the FSB / Vampire Squidian drive to implement its โ€œbail-inโ€ regime to โ€œresolveโ€ insolvent banks G20-wide by the end of 2015, I can only view Goldman alumnus BoE Governor & FSB chairman Carneyโ€™s move on macroprudential in the UK as a deliberate preparatory step towards triggering the global economic apocalypse, once the โ€œreviewโ€ of G20 nationsโ€™ โ€œlegislativeโ€ changes to accommodate the FSB / Vampire Squid directives that is scheduled to begin from the Brisbane 2014 G20 meeting has been finalised.

It is most unwise to consider the introduction of macroprudential rules as any sort of panacea for what ails us. Since it does not assist the most fundamental driver of the economy โ€” usury-based โ€œmoneyโ€ demanding ever-increasing growth in โ€œmoneyโ€ supply โ€” then all it can do is act as a trigger for greater problems.

In my opinion, Carneyโ€™s move is most interesting for its timing. Just a further example of the internationalist usurer class โ€” evil people, having no loyalty to any nationโ€™s well-being โ€” getting their ducks lined up.

 

http://www.macrobusiness.com.au/2014/06/bank-of-england-throws-egg-all-over-rba/#comment-380023

 

and Edit:

Per my recent post, the timing of all these central bankster announcements viz. introduction of MP is, in and of itself, worthy of consideration.

That is, in context of the fact that the Vampire Squidian / Financial Stability Board review of the G20 nationsโ€™ implementation of their bank โ€œbail-inโ€ regime is set to begin from the Brisbane 2014 G20 Summit, with full implementation demanded by end 2015.

Since MP acts counter to what the usury-based money system needs to maintain stability โ€” constant growth โ€” I maintain the view [edit: indeed, that so many are doing the same near-simultaneously strengthens my view] that what is really happening here, is the central banksters getting their ducks lined up all in a row.

MP is the gentle, oh so plausibly defensible monetary โ€œsqueezeโ€ that begins the global economic apocalypse.

http://www.macrobusiness.com.au/2014/07/stevens-gives-apra-the-nod-on-macroprudential/#comment-38699... (in comments)

 

 

 

Do Australian banks and the RBA practice fractional reserve banking?

 

No, there are no reserves

 

Soโ€ฆ they borrow from overseas at 2% and lend out to us at 5%?

making a 1% clip after costs?........Plus fees

 

 

 

Message 22 of 23
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Re: We are headed for a recession

IMO.....the 'smart' thing to do would be to NOT lower interest rates but the infestors and Banksters and property moguls would not profit then - they want sheeple to be encouraged to 'buy, buy buy!' and history shows that when interest rates are lowered, people 'spend, spend, spend!'....those with huge debt esp on high interest credit cards would be at the mercy of the Fat Controllers.

Rising unemployment with eventually crash the over-inflated property' bubble'.....we are in their grip it seems.

 

and......rich overseas infestors are being encouraged to POUR their currencies into investing in Australian Bank Shares and Australian Real Estate (Significant Investment Visa Scheme is only one example....check it out on our own fed govt Immigration and Border Protection website.....literally a smorgasboard on offer)...................Govtโ€™s are drip feeding the economy with over 350k immigrants annually that need to be housed, fed and clothed โ€“ simple economics of supply and demand for consumer produce will keep this great country moving forward to prosper for those who continue to invest in property......"Sorry the position you have applied for has already been taken by someone from Holland"....!!! true, forget jobs for Australians.

 

........What the hell else would anyone invest in in this country other than RE and Bank shares?

 

Both are guaranteed!

http://www.macrobusiness.com.au/2014/08/all-23-surveyed-economists-wrong-on-interest-rates/

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