Showing posts with label gold. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gold. Show all posts

3/01/2009

More on the Rand Paul & the Senate Race in Kentucky

It"s now hard to see how Bunning can win or gracefully step aside. If Rand Paul, a Bowling Green eye doctor and the son of Republican Ron Paul who mounted an unsuccessful challenge in last year"s Republican presidential primary, gets in the race, he could raise a lot of money and make it very difficult for whomever the party wants to replace Bunning, including Secretary of State Trey Grayson, who seems to be the favored alternative.

Republicans are in a bind. [Republican Senator Mitch] McConnell doesn"t want to lose another Senate seat to Democrats, especially one in his own state. Republicans, weighed down by an exceptionally unpopular president, have suffered through two disastrous election cycles. McConnell was his party"s Senate leader for only one of those. But his position as Republican Leader might be at risk if his party loses more seats in 2010 and he can"t keep one of Kentucky"s in the Republican column.

This is a big opportunity for Rand, and for the ongoing Revolution!

Read the whole story

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2/22/2009

SWAT Team Raid on Homeschool and Food and Health Ministry for Hungry Families

UPDATE: Video and new information:

It happened before Christmas 2008 at a food and health ministry for hungry families in Ohio. It was as if the family were bio-terrorists or something.

Three snipers with high-powered rifles were aimed at the home with ten children being homeschooled. Babies and toddlers were inside also. About twelve armed sheriff deputies along with agents from the Lorain County (Ohio) Health Department and the Ohio Department of Agriculture raided and ransacked the inside and held the family for six hours inside a room in their home outside Lagange, Ohio.

http://wholefoodusa.wordp...

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[Source: Ron Paul Wins! | Campaign for Liberty at the Daily Paul - Blog - Posted by FreeAutoBlogger]

1/16/2009

Dr. Paul's Walls I - German Hyperinflation



http://youtube.com/watch?...



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1/13/2009

Ron Paul on International Banking and Gaza 1-12-09



http://www.campaignforlib...
http://www.youtube.com/wa...
Dr. Paul discusses the TARP funds and Bernanke's slight to Congress



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[Source: Ron Paul Wins! | Campaign for Liberty at the Daily Paul - Blog

Bernanke just dodged a question about Austrian Economics vs the FED and it's existence!

This morning 1/13/09, during a live press conference on CNBC, Bernanke dodged a question about Austrian Economics vs the FED and it's existence!

The questioner asked BB about the course we have been on for the last 90 years, (obviously referring to the existence of the FED) vs. the Austrian model of economics. He asked that considering the problems that are now coming home to roost whether a new way of doing things should be considered.

In his answer, BB changed the topic to focus on capitalism! I hope someone caught this on Youtube.

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[Source: Ron Paul Wins! | Campaign for Liberty at the Daily Paul - Blog

The Time Clock Has Run Out: Israel Ready to Strike Iran

More Fear tactics and fulfillment of Biden's prophecy?
A set up for Obama to save the day?

"Informed sources in Washington tell Newsmax that Israel indeed will launch a strike against Iran's nuclear facilities soon, possibly in just days as President George W. Bush prepares to leave office. "

http://www.newsmax.com/he...



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[Source: Ron Paul Wins! | Campaign for Liberty at the Daily Paul - Blog

When Corporations Rule the World

Hey everyone,

Here is a book that I believe everyone should read. You can read some excerpts here: http://books.google.com/b...



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[Source: Ron Paul Wins! | Campaign for Liberty at the Daily Paul - Blog

Jews that are Zionists are the Minority

An interesting article for those unaware.

The Longand Largely UntoldHistory Of Jewish Opposition to Zionism

http://www.wrmea.org/arch...



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[Source: Ron Paul Wins! | Campaign for Liberty at the Daily Paul - Blog

1/10/2009

The New Way to Give: Venture-Cap Charity

The digital age is changing philanthropy, as smaller donors use the web to pick and choose — and evaluate and criticize — the charities that matter to them.

This is shaking up the status quo for charities of all sizes, raising concerns that people might think that they’ve done enough by just clicking their mouse. But supporters say the new approaches are letting individuals to take more control of their philanthropy.

For a look at the new giving, SmartMoney focused on three individuals on the vanguard of philanthropy. Below, we tell about an approach that borrows from the world of venture capital. (For an overview and a look at how one man started up his own web-based charity to fight hunger, read part one of “The New Way to Give”; for an examination of how charities can tap virtual worlds, read part three. )

The Entrepreneurial Donor: Venture-Cap Charity

Shortly after turning 50, Sister Eileen McNerney coaxed three other nuns to move into a gang-ridden neighborhood in Orange County, Calif. The California native had read stories about rising drug use and gang violence not far from her home and felt an urgency to understand the root of it all. But the move to Santa Ana was a major adjustment and often meant rolling out of bed onto the floor to seek shelter from the sound of gunfire, McNerney says.

After listening to the wails of a woman mourning the second gang-related death of a son, McNerney snapped into action. “You couldn’t live here and just be an observer,” she says. In 1995, she started Taller San Jose to provide focused job training and placement for at-risk youth — many with rap sheets and pasts as gang members — in areas like construction. The nonprofit has helped about 4,000 young adults, with 72% attending college or landing a job paying more than minimum wage after completing the program, and 92% of the kids who had already spent time in prison stayed out of jail. There are now waiting lists for the program.

Much of the funding and support for groups like Taller San Jose comes from local donors. But thanks to its recent win in an online competition, McNerney expects to develop a much broader base. The competition, called Changemakers, is run by a nonprofit called Ashoka, which supports “social entrepreneurs” who apply business-like discipline to doing good.

The goal of Changemakers is to shake up the exclusivity and black-box nature of traditional philanthropy by pairing the monolithic philanthropic organizations with the scrappy upstarts that can use their help — and their funding. Past competitons have helped a former child soldier in Mozambique who heads a charity that exchanges guns for tractors and sewing machines get an audience with the Rockefeller Foundation and Nike executives.

“In many ways, we’re a matchmaking service,” says Changemakers executive director Charlie Brown. For some entrants, Changemakers has opened the door to foundations they have been trying to meet for years. Ashoka awards each winner with $5,000, and typically a corporate sponsor or foundation puts up as much as $5 million for proposals from all the entrants, not just winners. Each entrant also benefits from the feedback it and its rivals get, creating higher quality and more effective projects in the end, says Maria Blair, associate vice president at Rockefeller Foundation, which funds the program.

Competitions in philanthropy are nothing new, of course: Charles Lindbergh’s trans-Atlantic flight was spurred by charity’s challenge for innovative ideas. (It also won him $25,000.) More recently, foundations have offered multimillion dollar prizes for other scientific ideas. The idea is that rather than old-guard, billion-dollar foundations determining which causes or projects they want to fund, the newest endeavors take input from people in the trenches.

Anyone familiar with “American Idol” can be forgiven for questioning the wisdom of allowing the masses to determine the Next Big Thing — even if that is a charitable cause. But Jane Lowe, program officer at the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, says online competitions generate more varied and unusual ideas. “We tend to get a lot of grant requests for more ‘mainstream’ and less grass roots projects,” Lowe says. “We miss really good ideas.”

SMARTMONEY ® Layout and look and feel of SmartMoney.com are trademarks of SmartMoney, a joint venture between Dow Jones & Company, Inc. and Hearst SM Partnership. © 1995 - 2009 SmartMoney. All Rights Reserved.




[Source:
SmartMoney.com - Consumer Action

1/07/2009

Israel and Gaza: Now the ground war

Fighting continues within the Gaza Strip, as Israeli soldiers push into the territory

ISRAELI forces pushed deeper into the Gaza Strip on Monday January 5th, the second full day of their ground assault. Israeli troops have encircled Gaza City and are gingerly moving against Hamas fighters who are entrenched in built-up areas. For Israel so far the price has been relatively low—one soldier has been killed and over 50 injured. Israel claims that dozens of Hamas men have died in firefights while others have been captured and taken to Israel for interrogation.

On the other side the death toll is far higher. Palestinian and UN sources count more than 530 Palestinian dead since the Israeli aerial bombardment began ten days ago. Civilians make up at least a quarter of the dead. These casualties include the wives and children of two senior Hamas commanders targeted by Israeli airstrikes at the weekend and a family of seven killed, according to Palestinian reports, by an Israeli naval shell on Monday. ...



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[Source: The Economist: News analysis

Ron Paul: Failure of dollar will dwarf current crisis

President-elect Barack Obama has started warning that getting the country out of its current economic hole may mean trillion-dollar deficits for years to come — but Rep. Ron Paul has very different ideas.“I think it’s just more of the same,” the former presidential candidate told CNN’s John Roberts on Wednesday. “I don’t think it’ll solve [...]

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[Source: vote tags: Tracking the Vote

10/06/2008

Europeans scramble to save failing banks

Germany became the latest country to move to allay fears about the financial meltdown, enhancing a rescue plan for Hypo Real Estate AG and guaranteeing private bank accounts as European governments scrambled on their own Sunday to save failing banks.

Chancellor Angela Merkel said that no citizen should fear for the safety of their investments. Hours later, her government announced a new bailout package totaling 50 billion euros ($69 billion) for Hypo Real Estate, Germany's second-biggest commercial property lender.

Hypo said an original 35 billion ($48 billion) rescue plan fell apart after private lenders withdrew support, a key element to the proposal that had already been approved by the EU.

The deal was on top of the guarantees of private accounts. German Finance Ministry spokesman Torsten Albig said the unlimited guarantee covered some 568 billion euros ($785 billion) in savings and checking accounts as well as time deposits, or CDs.

At the same time, Belgian Prime Minister Yves Leterme said that France's BNP Paribas SA had committed to taking a 75-percent stake in Fortis NV.

Leterme said the Belgian and Luxembourg governments would, in turn, take a blocking minority share in BNP Paribas.

The deal came after two days of closed-door talks between the Paris-based bank, Fortis and government authorities in an effort to restore confidence in the company before markets open Monday.

In Iceland — particularly hard-hit by the credit crunch — government officials and banking chiefs were discussing a possible rescue plan for the country's overstretched commercial banks.

British treasury chief Alistair Darling said he was ready to take "pretty big steps that we wouldn't take in ordinary times" to help the country weather the credit crunch.

In the past year the government has nationalized struggling mortgage lenders Northern Rock and Bradford & Bingley.

"The European banking industry is feeling the wind of default blowing from the other side of the Atlantic," said Axel Pierron, senior vice president at Celent, a Boston, Massachusetts-based financial research and consulting firm.

The erosion has also injured overall confidence and caused concern among investors, politicians and the European public.

The leaders of Germany, France, Britain and Italy met Saturday to discuss the meltdown that has leapfrogged across the Atlantic from the U.S. to Europe, but shied away from action on the scale of the massive $700 billion bailout passed by the U.S. Congress on Friday and later signed into law by President Bush.

Their failure to agree to an EU-wide plan showcased the divisions in Europe on how to deal with the crisis.

France had suggested a multibillion-euro (multibillion-dollar) EU-wide government bailout plan, but backed off after Germany said banks must find their own way out.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy's top adviser, Claude Gueant, insisted that a "common European plan" had come out of the summit.

"What is certain and what the citizens of France and Europe must know is that their (banking) establishments won't be left in difficulty," he told Europe-1 radio on Sunday.

Icelandic banks expanded rapidly after deregulation of the domestic financial market in the 1990s and now have combined foreign liabilities in excess of 100 billion euros ($138 billion) — dwarfing the tiny country's gross domestic product of 14 billion euros ($19 billion euros).

The government last week took over Iceland's third-largest bank, Glitnir, a decision that prompted major credit ratings agencies to downgrade both Iceland's four major banks and its government credit rating.

Looming large was a growing sense that the Federal Reserve and Europe's major central banks — which have been flooding euros and dollars to banks that have grown increasingly unwilling to lend money even to themselves — were ready to institute emergency cuts to their benchmark interest rates this week.

None of the banks, including the European Central Bank and Bank of England, have commented on potential rate hikes or cuts. But analysts believe the Bank of England, which meets this Thursday, will likely lower its rate below 5 percent. The ECB left its rate unchanged at 4.25 percent on Thursday, but opened the door to a rate cut.

Robert Brusca, chief economist at the New York-based Fact and Opinion Economics, said that the ECB does issue such a cut it would a be a sign "that they're really, really scared."

By MATT MOORE, AP Business Writer
Meltdown

10/05/2008

H.R. 1424 - Congress Sells Soul to the Bankers & Gives Americans the Boot

It’s wait and see after Bush signs rescue planBy JIM ABRAMS, Associated Press Writer 2 hours, 18 minutes agoWASHINGTON - After two weeks of anguishing debate, Congress has passed and President Bush signed a massive plan to save the financial industry and the economy at large from an unthinkable free fall. Now, the world holds [...]

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$700 Billion Bailout Could Balloon to $5 Trillion

So now they try to solve the problem by having this credit bubble actually extended and I think the $700 billion will be like a drop in the bucket because the total credit market in the U.S. is something close to $60 trillion, then you have the CDS market credit default swap of [...]

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9/04/2008

The coming days: The week ahead

• EUROPEAN UNION leaders are set for an emergency meeting on Monday September 1st to review the block’s relations with Russia in light of the war in Georgia. EU leaders are also likely to discuss new aid for the war-torn regions of Georgia. More strong words of criticism for Russia’s behaviour are expected, but little else, as Europe worries about energy supplies from its vast neighbour. Russia’s government has scored a victory on the home front with its new aggressive foreign policy.


• THE Republican Party holds its four-day national convention in St Paul, Minnesota, beginning on Monday September 1st. As well as the Obama-bashing that most pundits expect, the convention will give John McCain, the Republican presidential nominee, the opportunity to gauge party reaction to his surprising announcement that Sarah Palin will run beside him to become vice-president. Mr McCain wants to distance himself from the current Republican administration, so will be pleased that both George Bush and Dick Cheney are expected to skip the convention because of the probable arrival of hurricane Gustav in New Orleans.



• THE European Central Bank meets on Thursday September 4th to consider its response to deteriorating economic conditions in the euro area. Recession looms and inflation has been creeping up. The ECB may reckon that less growth will lessen the prospects of price rises; falling oil prices may ease inflation pressures too. But most think that the bank will wait until the beginning of 2009 before cutting rates to boost the economy.



• PAKISTAN is set to elect a new president on Saturday September 6th. Members of Pakistan's parliament and regional assemblies will vote for a replacement for Pervez Musharaff, who stepped down in August to avoid impeachment charges. Pakistan’s coalition government has already split over the candidacy of Asif Zardari, leader of the coalition’s main member, the Pakistan People’s Party, and favourite to become president. The coalition’s second-biggest constituent, the Pakistan Muslim League (N), walked out, in objection to Mr Zardari’s standing for a presidency with dictatorial powers. This is all an unwelcome distraction in a country facing an ever-worsening Taliban insurgency and a troubled economy.

RNC: Moles Wanted: Minneapolis City Pages advertise for recruits.

In the months leading up to the Republican National Convention, the FBI-led Minneapolis Joint Terrorist Task Force actively recruited people to infiltrate vegan groups and other leftist organizations and report back about their activities. On May 21, t...

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[Source: Ron Paul forum

Japan: Get someone else

Yasuo Fukuda quits as prime minister of Japan, as the country struggles to find stable leadership

IT HAD been the wish of Japan’s 72-year-old prime minister, Yasuo Fukuda of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), to outlast his hapless predecessor, Shinzo Abe, whom he privately despised. He was supposed to provide a steady hand on the helm after Mr Abe’s poor performance. But Mr Fukuda did not manage even Mr Abe’s year in office. On Monday September 1st the prime minister announced his resignation, saying bluntly that “I thought it would be better for someone else to do the job”.

From the start, he had struggled in the face of the opposition Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) which had won unprecedented control of the upper house of the Diet (parliament). Important legislation was rammed through the Diet thanks only to the two-third’s majority enjoyed by the ruling coalition in the lower house. Most notable was a bill renewing the Japanese navy’s refuelling mission in the Indian Ocean, a part of the anti-terror effort in Afghanistan and thus a gauge of Japan’s willingness to play a part in the world. ...



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[Source: The Economist: News analysis -

Army opens prep school for dropouts to fill ranks

FORT JACKSON, S.C. (AP) - Austin Swarner left high school to care for his mother while she fought a losing battle with cancer. Tony Brown wanted to begin supporting himself and left two classes shy of a diploma. Haelee Holden got tired of trying to make it through school while flipping burgers until 1 a.m.But [...]

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The Republicans: Staying the course

The Republican convention, though battered, goes ahead

IT HAS been a rocky week for the Republican Party, as its convention gets under way in St Paul, Minnesota. After the focus on the Democrats last week, John McCain snatched back attention at the weekend with his choice of Sarah Palin, the young governor of Alaska, as his running mate. But little since that announcement has gone according to plan.

The first difficulty was Hurricane Gustav which crossed the Gulf of Mexico before hitting Louisiana on Monday September 1st. The storm provoked memories of Katrina, the hurricane which drowned New Orleans in 2005 and whose aftermath was mishandled by George Bush’s administration. Nearly 2m people left their homes in Louisiana this week, fleeing the storm. And as a result of the upheaval, Mr Bush and his vice-president, Dick Cheney, decided to stay away from the Republican convention, scrapping planned speeches. Mr McCain was no doubt relieved: the less he is associated with the deeply unpopular incumbent, the happier he will be. ...



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[Source: The Economist: News analysis

8/28/2008

The Democrats:

Barack Obama picks Joe Biden as his running mate

LIKE much else about Barack Obama's campaign, his announcement of a running-made was unconventional. It came in the form of emails and text-messages released simultaneously to the tens of thousands of people who had signed up to receive them, at the distinctly unconventional hour of 3am Eastern time. “Dear [recipient's name], I have some important news that I want to make official”, read the message, purportedly sent by the candidate himself. “I've chosen Joe Biden to be my running-mate.”

After an entire week of press-teasing over the timing of the announcement, some might be forgiven for feeling slightly let down. Mr Biden, a six-term senator and head of the Senate foreign relations committee, was neither a surprise nor, for all his qualities, an especially exciting choice, as the selection of Hillary Clinton or Al Gore would have been. ...



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