GERALD CELENTE: CURRENCY & GOLD WARS NOW. GOLD PRICE IS RIGGED! (ARCHIVES)
Here are a few famous lines from some motion pictures that could very well be uttered prior to and during the economic collapse:
"Be
afraid. Be very afraid." "I'm mad as hell, and I'm not going to take
this anymore!" "What a dump." Well, you get the picture. If one were to
ask those who predicted the economic collapse in 2007/2008 if the worst
is over, it would be pretty much a given that they would respond with a
quote from the hit 1950 motion picture "All About Eve," "Fasten your
seatbelts, it's going to be a bumpy night!"
From
enormous debt loads to rampant inflation to government incompetence, the
United States is on the brink of severe economic depression. With a
real national debt of $222 trillion including all unfunded liabilities
and expenditures, it's surprising that no one talks about how the U.S.
will eventually become a bankrupt nation -- if it isn't already.
"We've
got a much bigger collapse coming, and not just of the markets but of
the economy. It's like what you're seeing in Europe right now, only
worse," stated Peter Schiff, president of Euro Pacific Capital, in an
interview with Yahoo's Breakout.
"That's when it
really is going to get interesting, because that's when we hit our real
fiscal cliff, when we're going to have to slash — and I mean slash —
government spending. "Alternatively, we can bail everybody out, pretend
we can print our way out of a crisis, and, instead, we have runaway
inflation, or hyper-inflation, which is going to be far worse than the
collapse we would have if we did the right thing and just let everything
implode."
With that being said, there are various
things a person must accomplish in order to prepare a household for the
coming economic collapse. Whether it be owning precious metals, storing
enough food and water, having some form of protection from perpetrators
or having a basket of currencies, there are lot of ways people can make
preparations while we are on the brink of disaster.
The cost of gold plunged Friday amid investor optimism about the the U.S. economy.
Shortly
before the end of trading, the price of the metal fell $73 to $1,487 an
ounce, its biggest drop in more than a year and the lowest level since
July 2011. Gold futures also plunged, notching their biggest one-day
fall in more than a year. Gold for June delivery plunged $63.50 to close
at $1,501.40 an ounce Friday, the largest drop since February 2012.
In
stocks, a drop in energy and mining companies ended a four-day surge in
the stock market. The Dow Jones industrial average closed flat points
at 14,865. In the first four days of the week the Dow rose 300 points, a
gain of 2 percent.
In other trading, the Standard &
Poor's 500 fell 5 points, or 0.3 percent, to 1,589. Materials and energy
stocks fell the most of the 10 industry groups in the index, 1.7
percent and 1.4 percent. The Nasdaq composite dropped 5 points, or 0.2
percent, to 3,295.
The price of crude oil dropped
$2.50 to $91 a barrel in New York trading. The International Energy
Agency lowered its forecast for global oil demand this year, echoing
predictions made earlier this week by OPEC and the U.S. Energy
Department.
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