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America: a walking dead-zombie country

Freitag, 20. August 2010 00:23

von Lars Schall

The high-profile financial pundit Max Keiser doesn’t shy away from crystal-clear,
unmistakable statements. The following exclusive interview is no exception. Mr.
Keiser sees an attack exercised against the majority of people in the U.S., sets out
why gold is in no bubble at all, points at a remarkable move by the Harvard
University, and has an advice to some US-American billionaires disguised as noble
philanthropists: “Just pay your taxes and shut up!”

Max Keiser, born January 23, 1960 in New Rochelle, N.Y., USA, has been
involved with markets and finance for 25 years. He started his career as a
stock broker on Wall Street after graduating 1983 from New York
University.

He is the inventor of the "Virtual Specialist Technology" (US patent


number 5950176)- a software system used by the Hollywood Stock
Exchange, and is the creator, co-founder and former CEO of HSX Holdings/Hollywood Stock
Exchange, which allows traders to exchange virtual securities such as "MovieStocks" and
"StarBonds," and a convertible virtual currency, the Hollywood Dollar. The Hollywood Stock
Exchange remains until today the highest volume stock exchange in the world. He currently
has a patent pending for “crowd funding media properties” used in his latest creation,
“piratefilm.com”.

Mr. Keiser presented / produced TV and Radio formats at NBC, CBS, BBC, BBC World News,
and the English programme of Al-Jazeera. For Iran’s Press TV he’s the host of “On the
Edge,” and with his co-host, Stacy Herbert, he presents for the Russian broadcaster RT TV
the “Keiser Report” (see for more at: http://maxkeiser.com/). In addition, he has appeared
as a financial pundit on a number of news-networks.

To his success as a financial analyst belong the following predictions:

• In the September 2004 issue of The Ecologist magazine, Keiser correctly predicted the 2008 collapse of Fannie
Mae and Freddie Mac when he wrote, "My guess is that the two stocks that look the likeliest to implode at the

hands of derivative-wielding Wall Street financial types (and other fundamentalists) preying on a US economy

made weak by cheap money are Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac."
• In 2006 he correctly predicted that sub-prime mortgage-backed securities would be the cause of recession by
2008.

• In 2007 he correctly predicted the break-down of Iceland's economy in 2008.


• In 2009 he correctly predicted that Cantor Fitzgerald would fail in their attempt to launch box office futures
contracts (based on his intellectual property).

Max Keiser, who’s also a frequent contributor to “The Huffington Post”


(http://www.huffingtonpost.com/max-keiser), lives in Paris, France.

Mr. Keiser, in your initial email you wrote to me:

“The key to understanding the current situation is to understand that house prices, jobs,
wages, and pensions in the US are all being attacked with original-issue debt dollar junk.

This will continue until the middle class has been completely wiped out.”

Can you elaborate on this, please?

Yes, it’s a Financial Holocaust. It is designed to destroy the American middle-class. We face
an original-issue deflation, if you will. It is as if Michael Milken ran the Fed. If you look at
the work of Steve Keen (http://www.debtdeflation.com/blogs/), an economist in Australia
and one of a very few economists who got the crisis of the past three years accurate, you
understand that the banking system does not work on a system where deposits are the
basis for fractional reserve. The banking system works on the basis of loans used as the
collateral for more loans.

That means that the origination of all the fractional reserve lending that is going on is just
more debt. There are no retail deposit reserves or wholesale deposit reserves, just original
issue dollar based junk debt. And when you understand that debt is at the bottom of the
pyramid and that there’s no equity at all, or capital as this term is usually understood, then
you understand that the banks and the policy makers are continuing a programme at the
behest of Wall Street to commit a Financial Holocaust to eliminate the majority in America,
which is the middle-class. Wall Street banks with their CDS's, High Frequency Trading and
bogus market making are injecting the equivalent of financial Zyklon B into the American
and world economy.

With regard to the U.S. economy, would you agree with Paul Krugman, who wrote
not a long time ago that the lights in the U.S. are about to go out?[1]

Paul Krugman is a salon monkey. You can quote me on that.


Okay, no problem (laughs).

He is a tool of the New York Times. If it wasn’t for the New York Times, no one would read
Paul Krugman. He has absolutely nothing credible to say. He is merely a mouthpiece for
neo-liberal clap-trap. Any minute you spend reading Paul Krugman is a minute of your life
that you’ll never get back.

How does the mainstream media not only in the U.S., but in the Western
hemisphere in general, play its part to ascertain its recipients that everything is
more or less alright?

Well, the mainstream media is owned by the banking system. There is no widely
disseminated media-outlet that is not owned by the banking system. Every media-outlet in
the United States – Fox News, CNN, the New York Times etc. – is an extension of CNBC and
James Cramer.

How do you feel in this context about the attempts to regulate the internet?

It’s a sad chapter in American history, because the internet came into being as the result of
the good will of the American taxpayer. Now you have private corporations like Google and
Verizon, who are stealing it. That’s unconscionable. It’s a hanging offense. If there would be
any justice, the principles of Google and Verizon would be strung up and beaten.

Will those attempts have bad effects for the journalism that’s going on in the
internet?

Yes.

What is your take on the “Financial Reform Act” that passed Congress a few weeks
ago? Does it deserve its name?

No. I’ve talked with Bill Black about this and he made all the salient points: it’s purely
cosmetic, does nothing to address the structural problems and is dead on arrival.[2]

You’ve already mentioned the problem of deflation. The Federal Reserve tries to
fix this problem, allegedly, with a new round of quantative easing. Will this not
make everything worse?

Well, getting back to the original question: the Fed can only issue debt. So they’re trying to
fix the debt-deflation problem by issuing more debt. Whatever drugs Ben Bernanke is on, he
should either take less, take more or change his prescription.
Related to the deflation in the U.S., many pundits compare the United States with
the deflationary Japan of the early 1990’s until today. Do you agree with this
analogy or do you rather share the opinion as it was expressed by Egon von
Greyerz, the co-founder of “Matterhorn Asset Management AG” in Zurich, who said
that the U.S. is in a very different situation than Japan was and is?[3]

When Japan started their deflationary spiral, they had huge savings. America has no
savings. The best comparison for me is to compare the U.S. in 2010 with Argentina in 2000.

Why so?

Because the problem in America is that the bankers and the politicians conspire to loot the
country of whatever money they can yet steal. We see a kleptocracy in action and the
people will be left homeless and starving.

This is done by design?

People steal money on purpose (laughs). The kleptocrats steal money, because they want to
steal money. They don’t accidently steal money. It’s done on purpose. It’s premeditated.
Thieves steal money, because they want the money.

Let’s take a look at the crisis of the euro. It seems to be less acute for now, but it
will come back, right?

Everything is going to be devaluated against gold.

And gold is not in a bubble?

Anyone who says gold is in a bubble, is talking out of their ass. When assets go into a
bubble-price, you have an extremely popular ownership of that asset. Take for example the
dotcom-stocks in the 1990’s or the S&P in the 1980’s – you had a very large percentage of
the population participating in the formation of those bubbles. In the case of gold bullion,
less than one per cent of the global investable assets are in gold. Not only isn’t it in a
bubble, the real bull market in gold hasn’t even started. It’s still in a bear-market. Let me
put it to you that way: gold is still in a bear-market.

During an interview with me, the President and Chief Investment Strategist of the
investment research and wealth consulting firm SmartKnowledgeU, LLC
(http://www.smartknowledgeu.com), J. S. Kim, told me the following:
“I think if U.S. regulators stepped in and said Goldman Sachs, HSBC and JPMorgan couldn’t
participate in the gold and silver futures-market for three weeks – I really think you would
see the gold and silver price more than double in that time.”[4]

Do you agree on that estimation?

Yes, he’s right. For instance in the case of JP Morgan, they have something like 30.000
contracts short in the silver futures-market. So if they would have to close up their shorts,
the price of silver would at least double – and then it would start to really move higher.

Would you then also agree that the Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee, GATA, had a
good reason to cause some trouble for the CFTC related to this problem?

The Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee are a dedicated group of whistleblowers that I hope
will continue in their work to expose the market-manipulations and insider-tradings that are
plaguing the precious-metal markets.

What are your thoughts with regards to the recent statement by the central bank
of China, the People’s Bank of China, to implement a regular gold market in its
country, and that the commercial banks in India are asking the Indian central
bank to do the same?

At the moment there is an enormous example of what you might call game-theory. There
are China, Russia and Germany as the three biggest players in this global exercise of game-
theory. One of those three countries will be the first to announce a gold-backed currency. At
that moment, every other central bank in the world will have to announce a similar move,
because if they don’t, then they risk losing a huge capital flight out of their currency. It is
just a matter of time before one of these countries announces a gold-backed currency and
the price of gold triples.

In the case of China, obviously they want to squeeze every last drop out of the brain-dead
American consumer. When the American consumer has bought the last plastic toy and show
shovel made in China from Wal Mart that he can buy from the borrowed money on the
100th uncollateralized credit-card and they can’t hyper-consume one penny more, like the
fat guy who eats the wafer at the end of the meal in the famous Monty Python sketch – who
then explodes in a storm of half eaten fois gras and guts - then China will drop the bomb by
announcing a gold-backed currency and the sale of a trillion in U.S.-government securities.

In the case of Germany, you really believe it would be able to issue a gold-backed
currency?
Germany has always held on to their gold. Germany isn’t a country that is anxious to get rid
of its gold. It has a very substantial position in gold and I am surprised that the Bundesbank
has not announced increased purchase of gold yet. Maybe they have something cooking on
the side, I don’t know. But I believe that the gnomes in Zurich and Berlin are smart enough
to see what’s happening. They know that a country with a large gold position is going to do
well.

One final question on precious metals: do you think that silver could outperform
gold in the long run?

Yes, sure.

Okay, then let’s change the subject. What is your opinion on BP’s so called “oil
spill”? Do we really get the information that we would need in order to assess the
true magnitude of the catastrophe in the Gulf of Mexico?

The most revealing aspect of the BP oil spill was that it showed to the world that America
currently has no President.

In the sense that Mr. Obama is something like a doppelganger of Mr. Bush during
Katrina?

Much worse. At least with Bush you knew where he stood. I believe with Obama there is
nobody home. He is a ghost. He doesn’t do anything. He is a Manshurian Candidate, he is a
robot, he is nothing. He has done nothing, he is doing nothing, he will never do anything.
Obama is just waiting to get a job at Goldman Sachs or JP Morgan in three or four years
time and that’s it. The White House is a way to improve his resume. The BP oil spill revealed
that America is running with no leadership at all. There is nobody at the helm of the ship.
It’s running wild with no leadership whatsoever.

Do you expect BP will go bankrupt because of the oil spill?

Well, the principles of BP are going to make lots of money, no matter what happens. The
shareholders of BP are going to struggle, but the insiders of BP will be fine.

Will the disaster in the Gulf of Mexico have effects for the price of oil and
commodity prices in general?

The biggest driver in oil price has got to be the global contraction in production. The three
biggest fields in the world, Ghawar in Saudi-Arabia, Burgan in Kuwait, and Cantarell in
Mexico are the only super-fields we have. There has not been a super-field discovered in 20
years. Cantarell in Mexico is down sharply, so that Mexico will be an energy-importer soon.
Burgan in Kuwait – down sharply. Ghawar in Saudi-Arabia – my sources tell me there are
similar losses of production to Kuwait. Of course, the Saudis publicly say that their reserves
are being replaced exactly as they have for the last ten years. But I have travelled in the
region and have talked to people in the region. There is no reason to believe that this
information is correct.

So the reserves are running out. This will obviously put a floor on the price of oil. Now, on
the demand-side you still have strong demand in Asia and elsewhere in the world. The
Peak-Oil story is really the number one driver. The BP aspect is a minor part of the overall
Peak-Oil story.

Would you say that the Peak-Oil story deserves much more coverage and attention
by the media, policy makers and so on?

The entire economy of the world runs on oil. This is a story that is ignored, because the
implications are really catastrophic if the price of oil starts to run away. It would mean that
all trade stops. So global trade would end as we know it and the current owners of the
global media would be in the service of an entirely new set of power players at the top with
America nowhere in site.

Therefore Peak Oil means the end of Globalization?

Globalization peaked as well about two or three years ago. We hit Peak Globalization.
Globalization is on the wane.

One country with the largest deposits of oil and natural gas in the world is Iran.
Do you think that the beating of the war drums, that we can hear at an increasing
level, are much closer connected to this fact than to an alleged nuclear weapons
programme?

Well, clearly it has always been the story since the 1970’s, that the world reserve currency,
the US dollar, is backed by the Saudi Petrodollarization. Everything is related to the Saudi-
Petrodollar story over the past 35 years. But the most interesting thing that I find related to
the rumoured pending attack by Israel of Iran, is this: a few days ago, Harvard University
divested themselves entirely out of all their Israeli investments.[5] Why did they do that? In
my view they anticipate that the United States will not be behind Israel when it will attack
Iran. The United States will do to Israel what they did to South Vietnam, which is to say
that they will abandon Israel. Nobody will support them. So the shekel and the Tel Aviv
stock exchange are probably gonna be marked down by 80-90%. Harvard University
obviously understands this. That’s why they dumped every shekel-based security they have
in their portfolio, because that exchange is gonna go belly-up. Hold onto your matzahs, it’s
gonna be a bumpy ride.
Paul Craig Roberts wrote in an essay called “The Ecstacy of Empire: How close is
America’s Demise?”, that was published this week, the following:

“The United States and the welfare of its 300 million people cannot be restored unless the
neocons, Wall Street, the corporations, and their servile slaves in Congress and the White
House can be defeated.

Without a revolution, Americans are history.”[6]

Do you share my opinion that the United States belongs to the least places in the
world, where a revolution has to be expected right now?

America died two years ago. It’s a walking dead-zombie country, and anybody who still lives
in that country should get re-familiarize themselves with cotton-picking, because once the
dollar crashes, the only crop that America will be able to export, is cotton. It will be King
Cotton again. It will be 1840 again. The only job available will be as a cotton-picker working
on a Wal Mart or Goldman Sachs plantation. This is the reality of the situation. There is no
turning back at this point. The die has been cast. The American experience lasted from 1776
to 2008. Those were the years it was kicking ass and taking names. But the second Obama
took office, who took Larry Summers and Timothy Geithner with him – it died. That was
the end. Every day since then has been Post-America.

At the end of this interview I would like to know what you think about this PR-
event by some of the most prominent billionaires in the U.S., who announced that
they will donate a large portion of their wealth in order to disguise them as a
noble bunch of philanthropists, I assume.

I think it would be better if those guys just paid their taxes. What percentage of the
Fortune-500 companies pay tax? Something like only 10 per cent. How about just pay your
taxes and shut up!

Thank you very much for taking your time, Mr. Keiser!

SOURCES:

1 Paul Krugman: “America Goes Dark”, published at the New York Times on August 8, 2010
under: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/09/opinion/09krugman.html

2 compare Lars Schall: “Bill Black bei Max Keiser / Mike Norman zum ,Bankrott der USA’“,
published at chaostheorien.de on August 13, 2010 under:
http://www.chaostheorien.de/artikel/-/asset_publisher/haR1/content/bill-black-bei-max-
keiser-mike-norman-zum-bankrott-der-usa?redirect=%2Fartikel
3 compare Egon v. Greyerz: “THERE WILL BE NO DOUBLE DIP…”, published August 16,
2010 under: http://matterhornassetmanagement.com/2010/08/16/there-will-be-no-double-
dip/

Mr. von Greyerz stated with regards to the often used analogy between Japan and the
United States: “In our view the US is in a totally different situation for the following
reasons:

• In the early 1990s Japan could still export their production to the rest of the world.
• In the current downturn all countries (even China and India) will suffer and there will be no one to export the
problems to.

• The ability to export made Japan a creditor nation with major payment surpluses. US are a major debtor and
have been for 25 years.

• Japan had a very high personal savings ratio at the time (which has now disappeared). US has had a declining
savings rate for years (the US savings rate is now going up which it always does in a downturn).

• The balance of payments and the personal savings surpluses made it possible for Japan to finance their budget
deficit without resorting to QE. Very soon he US will only be able to finance their deficits with QE and so will most

of the rest of the Western world.

• Japanese unemployment in 1992 was 2% and went slowly up to 5% by 2000 where it is now. Real US
unemployment is 22% and increasing.

• Many major sovereign states are now virtually bankrupt and the financial system is on life support. This was not
the case in the 1990s.

The above are some of the reasons why the current US situation is totally different to Japan.
QE will accelerate in the US and worldwide.“

4 compare Lars Schall:, “We Don’t Need Central Banks”, published at chaostheorien.de on
March 15, 2010 under:
http://www.chaostheorien.de/interviews/-/asset_publisher/rAD9/content/we-dont-need-
central-banks?redirect=%2Finterviews

5 compare Paul Woodward: “Harvard University cuts its losses and dumps all investments in
Israel”, published at War in Context on August 16, 2010 under:
http://warincontext.org/2010/08/16/harvard-university-cuts-its-losses-and-dumps-all-
investments-in-israel/

6 Paul Craig Roberts: “The Ecstasy of Empire: How Close Is America’s Demise? Without a
revolution, Americans are history”, published at Global Research on August 16, 2010 under:
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=20650

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