In this episode,
Max Keiser and
Stacy Herbert discuss flash crashes, reputation woes on the
U.S. exchanges and sheep screaming at all the fraud.
Max also talks to one of the
Queen's sheep for its opinion on quantitative easing
. In the second half of the show, Max Keiser talks to
Jim Rickards, author of
Currency Wars, about QE to
infinity, the dollar, the euro and a gold standard.
Currency Wars (simplified
Chinese: 货币战争; traditional Chinese: 貨幣戰爭; pinyin: Huòbì zhànzhēng) by
Song Hongbing, also known as The
Currency War, is a bestselling book in
China, reportedly selling over
200,
000 copies in addition to an estimated 400,000 pirated copies in circulation and is reportedly being read by many senior level government and business leaders in China.
Originally published in
2007 the book gained a resurgence in 2009 and is seen as a prominent exponent of a recently emerged genre labeled "economic nationalist" literature. Another bestselling book within this genre is
Unhappy China, however, unlike this and other books within this genre, Currency Wars has been received more positively by the
Chinese leadership as its recommendations are seen as less aggressive towards the US. The premise of this book is that
Western countries are ultimately controlled by a group of private banks, which, according to the book, runs their central banks. This book uses the claim[citation needed] that the
Federal Reserve is a private body to support its role. The book's author correctly predicted a banking crisis in the US in 2008.More than one million copies of this book have been sold.
In July 2009, the book was followed by a sequel, Currency Wars 2:
World of
Gold Privilege (Chinese: 货币战争2:金权天下), published by China
Industry and
Commerce Publishing
House (
ISBN 978-9573265214), which
The Financial Times reported as being one of the most popular books in China by late 2009.
More than two million copies have been sold. In this book, Song predicted that by 2024, the world's single currency system will mature. He believes that if China can not be dominant in this system, it should not participate, but should be self-hill, have their own sphere of financial influence. This last topic is much more developed in the second sequel.
In May
2011, Currency Wars 3: Financial
High Frontier (Chinese: 货币战争3:金融高边疆), a second sequel was published by Yuan-Liou Publishing (ISBN 978-9573267843). It discuss more specifically the modern
Chinese History (from
Chiang Kai-shek to the depreciation in the long term trend of
U.S. dollar) seen from a Currency War perspective. It pushes towards an isolationist financial policy.
According to the book, the western countries in general and the US in particular are controlled by a clique of international bankers, which use currency manipulation (hence the title) to gain wealth by first loaning money in
USD to developing nations and then shorting their currency. The
Japanese Lost decade, the
1997 Asian Financial Crisis, the
Latin American financial crisis and others are attributed to this cause. It also claims that the
Rothschild Family has the wealth of 5 trillion dollars whereas
Bill Gates only has 40 billion dollars.
Song also is of the opinion that the famous U.S. central bank, the Federal Reserve, is not a department of state functions, but several private banks operated by the private sector, and that these private banks are loyal to the ubiquitous
Rothschild family.
On June 4,
1963,
President Kennedy signed an executive order, which, as an amendment to
Executive Order 10289, delegated the authority to issue silver certificates (notes convertible to silver on demand) to the
Secretary of the Treasury. Song says the direct consequence was that the Federal Reserve lost its monopoly to control money.
The book looks back at history and argues that fiat currency itself is a conspiracy; it sees in the abolition of representative currency and the installment of fiat currency a struggle between the "banking clique" and the governments of the western nations, ending in the victory of the former. It advises the
Chinese government to keep a vigilant eye on
China's currency and instate a representative currency. The book, published in 2007, also correctly described and warned of the various forms of derivative speculation used by
Wall Street which eventually became the causes of massive margin call sell offs and stock market crash in late 2008.
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- published: 21 Sep 2012
- views: 1745