Benjamin Fulford’s report from Monday the 15th of February 2016 has been updated with the full article. Click here to read the full report.
The Khazarian faction in the US, for its part, wants to ban cash and introduce negative interest rates. The belief negative interest rates would stimulate the real economy comes from the false assumption that paper and numbers in computers called “money” are a substitute for reality. In this view, negative rates will force people to spend their money in order to prevent it from vanishing and thus stimulate the economy. In the real world though, people know that if they put their money in the bank it will vanish so, they take it out and keep in in cash, gold, silver or anything else that actually exists in the real world and will thus not vanish through computer trickery.
In Europe, negative interest rates have failed to stimulate the real economy and instead have precipitated a death spiral of the banking system. Instead of spending more money, people, fearful for the future, are saving more and taking money out of the banking system. There are now lines around the block in London of people seeking to buy gold. Take a look at the chart on this link to see how bank shares are plunging even the gold price rises.
http://stockcharts.com/freecharts/perf.php?$GOLD,UBS,C,SCGLY,BCS,CS,DB,SCBFF
People are also hoarding cash because it is immune to negative interest rates. Even if the Khazarian bankers succeed in banishing cash, as they wish, they cannot banish gold, silver, diamonds and other real things.
This sort of thing has happened before many times. In the book selling district in Kanda, Tokyo, for example, you can buy Japanese World War 2 government bonds, formerly considered rock solid investments, as curios. The same is true in any other antique book district in the world. Paper is just paper when the illusion of money vanishes.
The illusion is rapidly vanishing despite central bank purchases of $12.3 trillion in assets as $8.3 trillion worth of government bonds now trade at negative interest rates, meaning the “money” is evaporating.
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