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Like its metallic counterpart, the euro currency has the tendency to make
other currencies it comes into contact with more like itself - radioactive.
The inevitable result is the death of (natural) national currency systems.
The Nature of the Euro-Beast
The euro's architects have recognized that the worldwide dollar-reserve system
cannot be sustained. The reason: The US Fed's dual - and conflicting - mandate
of price-stability and full employment. The Fed was sold to Congress via the
'hook' that it would allow Congress to both control inflation and maximize
employment if only Congress would agree to set up this version of a central
bank in the US.
As we all know, there are very few politicians who can and will resist such
a temptation.
Since that proposition has predictably turned into a slow-moving disaster,
the euro architects figured out that they will have to give up some of the
power bestowed upon them by centralized control of interest. They did this
by limiting the ECB's function to maintaining "price stability", i.e., limiting
credit-inflation.
In so doing, they curtailed the ECB's ability to goose the markets on demand
in order paper-over occasional and inevitable economic downturns. At the same
time, they took the controls off the price of gold by (a) trying to maintain
roughly fifteen percent of the system's forex reserves in the form of gold,
and (b) by revaluing its gold reserves quarterly at market prices.
This is in no way a form of gold backing in the traditional sense. There is
no exchangeability of euros to gold at a legislatively fixed rate, but it shows
that the euro is set up to be supported by a rising price of gold, rather than
being undermined by it.
There has been and continues to be much talk about the euro being designed
to ultimately take over the dollar's reserve-currency function. That is not
the case, at least not completely.
If you were to ask whether the euro was in fact designed with that goal in
mind, the answer would have to be a definite yes and no. "Yes" in the sense
that the euro was intended to incrementally displace the dollar, and "no" in
the sense that the euro would not try to assume the full burden of the dollar's
world reserve currency function.
Because of the factors mentioned earlier, the euro can't (or rather won't)
be inflated fast enough to spread around the world and fuel global malinvestment
(er, ... economic growth) the way the dollar did.
Instead, the hidden idea behind the euro was to literally force the creation
of other regional currencies throughout the world.
By inevitably competing with the dollar for its reserve function, the euro
creators did sign the ultimate death warrant for the US dollar system. Yet,
by having this "anti-inflation" bias (which is not really adverse to inflating
the money supply at all, but merely tends to slow the process somewhat) any
attempt to merely substitute the euro for the dollar worldwide becomes simply
self-defeating.
The only solution, then, is to force the creation of other currency unions
so that the euro doesn't have to completely take over the dollar's old function.
At least, that's what the plan was.
Irradiating the Dollar?
Now, just to eliminate any misconceptions, what will "force" the creation
of these other currency unions is not some kind of magical force emanating
from the euro. Rather, what is forcing this new system to emerge is the deliberate
deconstruction of the dollar by those elected and appointed to preserve it,
so the euro-uranium comparison "limps" to that extent.
The euro is not a European "attack" on the dollar. Remember who is credited
with the title "grandfather of the euro" - Robert Mundell, a US professor of
Economics at Columbia University. Okay, so he's originally a Canadian. So what?
The design for this new system still emanated from the US, just like the US
was the birthing-den that spawned both the League of Nations and the United
Nations.
Still, the combined effect of the creation of the euro and the time-warp destruction
of the dollar is the same as if the euro was actually radioactive. Only by
creating other currency unions can the world financial system be weaned from
the dollar without turning the euro into just another dollar clone. In other
words, the idea behind the euro has a very strong tendency to clone and proliferate
itself across the globe. This is not just theory. It is happening as you read
this.
There are, of course, arguments floating around maintaining that this or that
regional currency (East Asia, for example) would not be feasible because the
different countries' economies and standards of living are too diverse, and
because trade integration is already so high that a single currency would not
be beneficial.
However, the fact remains that, once the dollar's global reserve function
is successfully eliminated via an engineered crash of the US economy, there
will be no choice but to initiate at least regional anchor currencies that
can assume the dollar's reserve role in a more limited, regional fashion. These
anchor-currency or regional reserve currency arrangements will then inevitably
lead to regional single currencies.
The Good News for Gold Investors - Sort of
The good news for gold investors is that this development will tend to take
all official opposition to rising gold prices out of the global monetary equation.
The death of the dollar will the renaissance of gold - but not as an official
currency per se; only in it store of wealth function. As such, gold will be
allowed to find its ultimate equilibrium price relative to all other currencies
without constituting an actual threat to its fractional fiat cousins.
The problem is that currency unions are also what could be labeled "sovereignty
pools." Countries participating in them will abdicate their national sovereignty
to an ever-increasing degree. The nest example for that is Europe, where the
central governing structure becomes more and more powerful in the political
sphere since political decisions become farther and farther removed from the
individual.
The Freedom of Choice
Nation states, as imperfect as they might be, are natural repositories of
individual liberty by the mere fact that, as long as you have different countries
with differing political regimes, you have a choice regarding where you want
to live. If your country gets too oppressive, you can flee to another, less
oppressive one.
In the end, the logical conclusion of the currency-union movement would be
a world without sovereign nation states, dominated by regional arrangements
that do not have the natural cohesiveness of "one language, one culture, one
country." These regional structures can then be easily subsumed into a global
body dominated by the most powerful economic and military force. By the time
this all comes to fruition, that force will be what today is known as China.
In the past and since World War II, the US was this power, but it was only
able to sustain it because of its status as the world's reserve currency issuer
and its technological superiority. These two bases for its dominant power are
now being dismantled as a result of the introduction of euranium - the new,
designer-made, radioactive element in the periodic table of world currencies.
While 'euranium' undermines the dollar's reserve currency status and thereby
its demand foundation, the US financial elites' own efforts at globalization
are destroying America's natural technological superiority. US corporations
(as well as the US government) are giving the Chinese all of our secrets -
in return for the right to rent their (still) cheap(er) labor force for a period
of ten years. After that, all installations and production facilities built
there by US corporations become the property of the Chinese government.
What investors in the West fail to appreciate is that China is a case study
in endless imperial strife, centralization of power, and political and spiritual
oppression of its own as well as its assimilated people. Chinese citizens have
been brutally oppressed for so long that the current economic boom they are
allowed to drive and enjoy is a gift from heaven - and to them, 'heaven' is
their government. They consider Western notions of self-government and individual
liberty as quaint and devoid of practical usefulness. A future world dominated
by China therefore will be a far, far different place than the world we now
live in.
So, yes, the buying power of your gold and silver will increase under this
new emerging currency regime, but it may come at a prohibitive price - unless
you act now.
Got gold?
By itself, it's not enough.
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