The UK Recovery that Isn’t … the Market Recovery that Is

"What central bankers do is print money – digitally these days – and then transfer those digits to financial firms. Now the money finds its way into the financial economy, including, most importantly, the bond and stock markets. Once the money has swelled the financial markets, the 'real' economy should benefit. And then once companies are feeling better about a 'recovery' they will finally start to hire. This convoluted chain of events is simply illogical. It would be much simpler just to GIVE people money if central bankers really wanted stimulate job growth and create prosperity. But that's not what is happening because the object of central banking is to create money and maintain control of it." Continue reading

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C.I.A. Collecting Data on International Money Transfers, Officials Say

"The Central Intelligence Agency is secretly collecting bulk records of international money transfers handled by companies like Western Union — including transactions into and out of the United States — under the same law that the National Security Agency uses for its huge database of Americans’ phone records, according to current and former government officials. Several officials also said more than one other bulk collection program has yet to come to light. 'The intelligence community collects bulk data in a number of different ways under multiple authorities,' one intelligence official said. Orders for business records from the surveillance court generally prohibit recipients from talking about them." Continue reading

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Bitcoin Transcends Novelty Status

"We live in a world of fiat currencies subject to monetary adjustments or downright manipulations that many of us have no say in. Frequently, the decisions that are made for us negatively impact the very foundation that we've worked so hard to build. Bitcoin is a known quantity in a world full of unknowns. It travels globally without the processing fees of PayPal, Western Union or the banking industries. In fact, the current banking systems' loss of processing fees is both a boon to Bitcoin business as well as the reason for the most vocal arguments against it. After all, JP Morgan has to recoup the $8 billion they've received in regulatory fines over the last two years somehow, right?" Continue reading

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Investment Manager Explains Why 99.5% Of Americans Can Never Win

"The bottom line is this: A highly complex set of laws and exemptions from laws and taxes has been put in place by those in the uppermost reaches of the U.S. financial system. It allows them to protect and increase their wealth and significantly affect the U.S. political and legislative processes. They have real power and real wealth. Ordinary citizens in the bottom 99.9% are largely not aware of these systems, do not understand how they work, are unlikely to participate in them, and have little likelihood of entering the top 0.5%, much less the top 0.1%. Moreover, those at the very top have no incentive whatsoever for revealing or changing the rules. I am not optimistic." Continue reading

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A Propaganda War

"We’ve long imagined that only the state and its central bankers can issue money. The Bitcoin protocol directly challenges that notion. Most importantly, unlike similar inventions before it, Bitcoin can only be stifled. It can never be stopped. Its importance is unequivocal. As Bitcoin continues to spread globally, we, as a community, must grapple with a very challenging and unsettling question of principle: should Bitcoin actively engage the apparatus of state? Bitcoin is getting political. Parties are forming. unSystem, through its Dark Wallet, has ostensibly drawn a line in the sand. There is much at stake. A battle is now on for the protocol and the hearts and minds of we, the 99%." Continue reading

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American Express Ex-Chief Privacy Officer On ‘The Last Days of Cash’

"Andy Roth, a partner in Dentons' Privacy and Security Group, and Victor Boyajian, a partner in Dentons' Venture Technology Group, explore the evolution of digital payments, virtual currencies and security. The video examines: Bitcoin and other virtual currencies; Regulatory issues in connection to digital payments; The balance between privacy and technological progress; Privacy as a product or feature; and The outlook for consumer payments." Continue reading

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Here’s Why The Winklevoss Twins LOVE Bitcoin

"'This idea that people aren't betting when they hang on to a dollar is incorrect.' They also love the currency's transparency, explaining that 'there is nothing predictable or transparent about the US dollar. No one has any idea what the Federal Reserve's going to do, how they operate.' Bitcoin, on the other hand, is fixed at 21 million coins that will come out incrementally and predictably over time. 'Bitcoin brings the promise of email to the finance sector. Now it's instant and effectively free to send money anywhere,' the twins said." Continue reading

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Virtual cash is no threat to the real thing, Bank of Canada paper says

"The case of Bitcoin – a fully convertible, pure digital currency – is more problematic. Earlier this year, the U.S. Treasury department started requiring that all virtual transactions worth more than $10,000 (U.S.) be reported to authorities to prevent virtual currencies being used for money laundering and other illegal purposes. The authors don’t reach a firm conclusion on whether governments should crack down on virtual currencies, pointing out that regulation might stifle innovation. At the same time, they warn that 'multiple competing platforms creates inefficiency' that will dissuade people from embracing them." Continue reading

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Black Market Dollar Exchange Sparks Argentina Luxury Sales Crackdown

"Argentines who buy a car valued at more than 350,000 pesos ($58,600) will now be required to justify the transaction with the Financial Information Unit, the nation’s money-laundering watchdog, according to a Nov. 11 decree. Argentina is boosting its currency controls as consumers faced with 25 percent annual inflation turn to everything from luxury cars to gold and bitcoins as a store of savings. With the black market offering holders of undeclared U.S. currency 3.8 pesos more than the official exchange rate of 5.9764 pesos per dollar, demand for premium cars from Volkswagen AG’s Porsche and Bayerische Motoren Werke AG is causing a 33 percent jump in imports this year." Continue reading

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