A different metal topic for someone wanting some off-reading

Clouds, cumulus, the pretty fluffy ones, the natural ones
Chem-trais, “SAG”, the fake stringy sick ones. The difference is how they look, several thousand feet elevation difference, and what’s in them.

Contents is argued. Some Experts say it ain’t so, and we know, “They” wouldn’t lie. The patent itself says al. is to be used. Soil tests in some areas are showing extreemly high metal readings. The readings were taken due to plant life dieing. Metal makes acidic soil, it get’s high enough and the global warming premise for the cloud seeding falls mute to a greater created problem as the soils need more monsanto type gmo designed seeds to grow in it, treated of course with special weederizer and fertilizer, and patented along with the seeds, insanely stamped healthy, of course. Anyway, the picture, ain’t pretty. Oh yea, these sky chems make an excellent aural backboard for the HARP system in the upper atmosphere (think of it as a kindergarten primer for the Norway spiral culmination), elf waves and brain pattern influence. The particles are suspended in air due to small size and other means.
Then there are the health factors of breathing heavy metals at 10 micron size.

Chemtrails: US Patent #5003186 on March 26 1991: Stratospheric Welsbach Seeding For Reduction Of Global Warming

And HR 2977 and 3616- congressional dictates concerning the peaceful use of space technology applying to the above and other methods. 2977 was supposedly the first where “chemtrails” were listed, the second supposedly took this word out.
Became public law 105-261 according to library of congress authorizing the dept. of defense to????

Made possible by fiat, foreign entity banks, and our credit, my opinion, of course

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Goldballoon Just great !


Balloon

That is what I thought…I am not misreading the paperwork then….did you put grease on your puss today or are you a red lobster again…

Irish

Yeah, it’s the right kind of slow here after a nice day skiing with friends.  Somehow we managed to enjoy yet another day while the world as we know it ends…  actually it’s just changing, not really ending.

My bus trip through Mexico was not direct, there were some stops along the way.

Gold’s in lock down-the $ isdown 260 tix and gold’s down a buck…

for 3 or 4 trading sessions–when the $ falls gold falls–tonight the same thing—gold is helpless as a new born kitten…..then for no reason and with no transition, it just goes on 22-25- day bull run-right now, high oil or a falling $ won’t help gold.

balloon

Things are slow in old Bend eh..haaaaa…Question ..did you get a straight trip from the Mexican border to Belize when you used the bus lines in 2008.?

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US DX

Ok what gives…is it time for more change ….dollar getting whipped like a stepchild and we are sitting still…on Gold…hmmmm

FGC (20:56) Cheers. It isnt so much a matter of going

silent as a lurker, but switching towards the floridagold approach of posting links that have a powerful message without attaching one’s personal views or comments on the link just posted. I find that an increasingly attractive, less intellectually challenging, way to dip into Goldtent occasionally. Best wishes. Equiz.

more rotten news

Get your passports now…..fees are going to be hiked into the triple digits and added pages which are free now will be 85 bucks …the reason …HLS…and the good old RFD chip which will be in them soon….slowly the door closes……

why currency trading is going to get halted….they don’t want money made here

China faces new pressure to let currency rise
15 minutes ago

By JOE McDONALD
AP Business Writer

~;
(AP:BEIJING) China faces mounting pressure from trading partners to loosen currency controls and is giving signs it might raise the value of the yuan to ease strains on its fast-growing economy.

A stronger yuan could help China’s leaders achieve their goal of making the economy more self-sustaining by boosting consumer buying power and reducing dependence on exports and investment. It could narrow China’s politically volatile trade surplus, making the flood of foreign money pouring into the economy more manageable.

A change might also help defuse tensions with the United States, Europe and other trading partners that complain an undervalued yuan makes China’s exports unfairly cheap and hurts foreign competitors, possibly prolonging the global economic crisis. Some American lawmakers are calling for punitive tariffs on Chinese goods if Beijing fails to act.

Analysts say Beijing might allow the yuan to rise against the dollar before the middle of this year. But they say any increase will be gradual and do little to narrow U.S. and European trade deficits and create jobs.

“Even if China starts to appreciate, the possibility is it will be very slow and gradual, without an immediate impact on trade,” said Nicholas Consonery, an analyst in Washington for Eurasia Group, a consulting firm.

On Friday, Premier Wen Jiabao said in a speech to China’s legislature that the yuan will be kept “basically stable” at an “appropriate and balanced” level this year, though he gave no explanation of what that would mean.

Beijing tied the yuan to the dollar for decades but broke that link in 2005 and allowed it to rise by about 20 percent through late 2008. The government slammed on the brakes after the crisis hit and has held its currency steady against the greenback to help exporters compete as a plunge in global demand wiped out millions of Chinese factory jobs.

The United States and Europe downplayed currency complaints as they worked together with Beijing to revive global growth. But facing pressure to create jobs, they and governments as farflung as Brazil have renewed demands for China to act.

President Barack Obama vowed in early February to “get much tougher” in trade disputes with China and to press for an end to currency regimes that he said depress export prices and put U.S. companies at a disadvantage. The U.S. Treasury has the option of declaring Beijing a currency manipulator in a report due out in April, which could set the stage for a complaint to the World Trade Organization and possible sanctions on Chinese goods.

Last year’s U.S. trade deficit with China was $227 billion, down 15 percent from 2008 but among the highest ever. The 27-nation European Union reported a 65 billion euro ($88 billion) deficit with China for the first half of 2009.

A bipartisan group of 15 American senators urged Commerce Secretary Gary Locke in a Feb. 25 letter to investigate whether Beijing improperly helps Chinese companies by holding down the yuan. They said it is undervalued by up to 40 percent.

A stronger yuan would help Beijing get back on track to boosting household spending power after its 4 trillion yuan ($586 billion) stimulus package helped China to rebound quickly from the global crisis but worsened the tilt toward relying on investment to create jobs.

Chinese leaders worry that reckless overspending on unneeded factories and other assets could lead to financial problems, while the country can no longer count on double-digit annual export gains to drive growth.

But they face a daunting potential pitfall: A stronger yuan might hurt exports and cost jobs, fueling social tensions, while spending by China’s consumers might not rise fast enough to fill the gap.

“They are in a difficult balancing act,” said Michael Pettis, an associate professor of finance at Peking University’s Guanghua School of Management. “The steps that need to be taken to rebalance the economy worsen the unemployment problem, and the steps that are taken to resolve unemployment worsen the imbalance.”

Analysts say a rise in the yuan could begin before the middle of this year if export growth, which revived in December, stays on track.

That might coincide with the June meeting of the U.S.-China Strategic and Economic Dialogue, where the Americans are expected to make currency a priority. It would let Beijing’s envoys respond to U.S. complaints by saying it was already taking action.

In a signal Beijing might be about to act, President Hu Jintao used the term “speed up” 50 times in a Feb. 3 speech to refer to building a consumption-based economy.

“There is an urgency about this. They realize this investment- and export-based economy needs to be balanced,” said Citigroup economist Ken Peng.

But currency policy changes aren’t expected during the two-week annual meeting of China’s ceremonial legislature that ends in mid-March _ a high-profile event when communist leaders try to prevent any shocks to business.

Analysts say a likely scenario is a small one-time rise in the yuan’s value against the dollar, followed by a gradual, long-term increase to allow exporters of shoes, toys and other low-profit goods to adapt to tougher conditions.

China took a similar approach in 2005, when it revalued the yuan by 2 percent in a single day, then allowed a gradual, tightly controlled upward crawl that saw it gain about 5 percent annually.

“It’s impossible for them to revalue in a sharp one-off move,” Peng said. “If you do a one-time adjustment of 5 percent, that will put a lot of businesses into the red instantly. so that’s not something they are willing to do.”

In a possible effort to prepare the public for a change, government researchers have been quoted in the state press discussing possible approaches to a revaluation. A commentary in the China Securities Journal newspaper by Zhang Ming, a finance specialist at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said the yuan might be allowed to rise by 5 percent this year.

Yet even if Chinese goods get more expensive in dollar terms, that won’t drive American job growth because U.S. factories no longer make what China supplies, said UBS economist Dong Tao in a report this month. He said business would shift instead to Malaysia, Mexico or other low-cost suppliers.

“Unless the U.S. rebuilds its manufacturing base, China’s loss would not be the U.S.’s gain,” Tao wrote.

And the array of tensions with Washington over Taiwan, Tibet and the Internet could complicate Beijing’s timing by making some leaders reluctant to look like they were giving in to pressure, said Citigroup’s Peng.

“It will be very difficult for Chinese authorities to justify why they are allowing the currency to appreciate now,” Peng said. “Appreciation is still viewed as some sort of a concession.”

Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

geotrader

Glad you saw that article about curency futures margins….it is another indication that the turmoil is close at hand….wish it wern’t true but……

claptona

 I hear ya. If enough people just stopped paying taxes and mortgages the whole system would go down in flames.

Geotrader…thats crazy…and it makes no sense

……If all the Small Specs are forced out of Forex…who is Goldman gonna Fleece ?

Gold Weekly

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CFTC to shutdown Currency Tradin [ For Individuals]

http://www.economicpolicyjournal.com/2010/03/cftc-to-shutdown-currency-trading-for.html

Equiz…

….So you feel Silence is Golden in the Golden Years…

…..cheers to you too my Island friend…

…….are the spring flowers blooming in Victoria yet ?

FGC (20:13) You asked ‘Where is everybody’?

I am here, but truth is I am finding that lurking is much less stressful than participating in Goldtent debate. In my decade in life, a search for less daily stress seems rewarding. However I do recognize the point of those who might suggest that it is important to keep the mind challenged by participating in the intellectual aspects of website debate. Anyway, I like the physical PM portions of our portfolio and also the share/warrant portions of our PM/uramium/natgas holdings. Best wishes to you and others who keep Goldtent going. Equiz.

Check it out

arch09.goldtent.net/2009/11/03/about-time-for-gold-to-fly-in-all-currenciessays-the-macd/

Hey where is everybody ?


Let the Greeks ruin themselves

Greece, which joined the euro two years after its inception, has concealed the dodgy state of its finances. Now it is under attack from speculators. A default could spread panic to other deficit-plagued economies, including those of Spain and Portugal, with scary consequences for Europe’s already shaky banking system. But if Greece’s partners bail it out, defying the euro’s founding treaty, the currency will suffer. Either way, the euro is in trouble.This dilemma is felt especially keenly in Germany. It was a wrench to surrender the Deutschmark, symbol of post-war recovery and economic success. On the eve of monetary union 55% of Germans were against it, making their nation the euro zone’s most reluctant founders. When a “rescue” is mentioned, all eyes fix on Germany, Europe’s biggest economy and most creditworthy borrower. Germans fear that a rescue of Greece would, in effect, extend their welfare state to the Mediterranean.

Greece’s travails put Angela Merkel, the chancellor, in an uncomfortable position. German taxpayers are in no mood to save what they see as profligate Greeks, having already pledged €500 billion ($682 billion) to shore up their own banks and billions more for companies. The liberal Free Democratic Party (FDP), the junior partner in her coalition government, is against a rescue, as are many politicians from her own Christian Democratic Union (CDU). The Young Entrepreneurs’ Association declared that it would be “fatal” for Germany to foot the bill for Greece’s “budget chaos”.

A domestic row over welfare makes charity for foreigners a still more awkward subject. This month the constitutional court ruled that the government had erred in setting benefits for the main welfare programme, called Hartz IV. It has until the end of the year to come up with a new formula, which may cost more money. Guido Westerwelle, the FDP leader, lamented the “late Roman decadence” of a society that treats welfare beneficiaries more generously than workers. His outburst, in turn, annoyed Ms Merkel. “I can’t explain to someone on Hartz IV that we can’t give him a single cent more but that a Greek gets to retire at 63”, said Michael Fuchs, a CDU leader in the Bundestag.

www.economist.com/world/europe/displayStory.cfm?story_id=15549449&source=most_commented

Claptona

I think one thing people can do is start a web site similar to this I see there are freedom sites but see they do little but talk and complain. It does some good at getting the word out but doesnt go to the source of the problem. People are busy or tired they need to gather and complain to the polititians and put the heat on them not just housing but out sourcing and in soucring problems.A site where they can gather thousands of petitions on these matters and send them out and followed up with phone calls by thousands of people to adress these issues. And if they continue on ignore go public on them as well as these companies. These freedom sites would draw more attention if they  could address multi issues as well as set up electronic petitions sent to multi people senators traitor for pay legislators the house the senate and the white house.

Here what happens. People you would coplain to individually. For instance pig farmers whiped out but corporate farming but instead of scatered farms its piling  up in single huge places stincking up nearby citys devaluating propertys putting farmerr out of work and being dumped in streems killing fish and getting people sick with bugs they carry.. They will take over everything if we let them and we let them by saying well Im nnt a home owner or I dont work for a company that out sources, one by one their taking over everything.

Pig sheet problem. For instance MARK REY UNDRSECUTARY OF NAT RESOURRSES AND ENVIROMENT, currently in charge of forests, Previously lobbied for POLLUTERS of forests. B Raley ASSIST. SECRETARY OF WATER AND SCIENCE previously lobbied for polluters of water. One person cant get it done we need a army of them to not only back one cause for Americans but all causes and take our country back . Electronic petitions phone calls and the media. Does media care their jobs cant be out sourced ah but they could be insourced.

Independent Financial Advisor Rips Wall Street

Hmm- maybe, just maybe - the beginnings of some sort of spine?

Frank Congemi spends his own money for radio ads

BobbyC

Glad to hear your still in Paris. Contrair you do have things to say. You can tell us what Paris thinks about the Greek crisis for one. How Paris is doing economically. Whats going on over there we wont hear about. Sounds like things are pretty hard over there too as well as England. Im sure anything you tell us any new about what is going on on the other side of the ocean would be appreciated by the tenters. All we see or I see anyways is that maybe France and Germany might try to bail out Greese but other countrys are in financial trouble as well.