Bilderberg’s Roman Circus: Italian junta effectively outlaws cash


As Richard Cottrell says in the following ‘End the Lie’ post –

I have made the point already that the Monti administration looks very much  like a trial run in itself for future outings in like style elsewhere in Europe,  and possibly even the United States, Canada, Australia and New Zealand.

For the moment we have an experiment in demonetization which as far as I can  see has no modern precedents in the capitalist world.”

So do we have here an explanation for the current handling mishandling of the global financial crisis that otherwise makes no sense?  The start of something BIG! Private individual takes over leadership of a country! Drives the country into destruct mode! Does this send a shiver down your spine? New World Order??

When Bilderberg Man Mario Monti promoted himself to  regent of Italy almost three weeks ago, the air was thick with Valkyries warning  that should the great witch doctor fail to square the books pretty damn quick,  then not only would Italy go down the chute but she would take with her the euro  and the entire apparatus of the European Union.

It was nonsense then and remains so today. There is no Euro crisis, the end  of the world as we know it is not imminent – unless Angela Merkel and Nicholas  Sarkozy pull off their sinister scheme for full European fiscal union  on the back of what is nothing more than an entirely  contrived and artificial crisis.

If Monti expected to walk on to the world stage and win the Oscar for fiscal  probity, then he has been rudely disappointed. The great austerity package to save Rome  from the fate she inflicted on Carthage two thousand years ago received a very  loud raspberry.

In the words of one respected commentator, the  Italian cuts look like a token effort by the technocratic cabinet in the  hope that the ECB will ride to the rescue to lower bond yields, at least.

Perhaps, but I have strong doubts if that is the real story.

Something really big is cooking which may lead to a total revolution in the  use of money — first in Italy, then across Europe — buried away in the small  print of the fabulous austerity project, which we examine in a moment.

Yes, there are token cuts all right, although they are straight from the  typical Bilderberg austerity playbook.

Italians will certainly work longer for less. Real incomes will drop even further, squeezed by  refrigerated wage packets and biting inflation.

Crimping the public budgets,  especially in the provinces, will shaft many small business firms (the backbone  of Italy) who count local and regional authorities among their most important  customers.

The proposal that millionaires should pay more tax to dock their yachts in  Italy will have no more effect on the cruising classes than the first gin and  tonic as the sun sinks over the yardarm.

The reintroduction of the property tax – whipped away by Silvio  Berlusconi as a blatant exercise in electioneering — is I grant you, reasonable  and prudent.

But Sgr. Monti, was it really necessary to shove democracy out of the window  to achieve something so modest? For any incoming elected government  would have had no option but to bring back the tax.

Being Italy, there were theatrical dramas to accompany the plan to raise  retirement ages, in the form of a weeping lady minister appearing on prime time  television.

Welcome to the ongoing Roman Circus.

But all this is but smoke and mirrors to disguise the real thrust of the  unelected government’s program, and in all likelihood the real explanation for  the precipitate overthrow of the Berlusconi administration.

My impression is that the Monti cabinet is charged with nothing less than a  massive laboratory experiment performed on real live people to see if it is  actually possible to effectively demonetize an entire nation.

Let me explain what I mean.

A few days back I put up a post at End the Lie warning that fiscal  fascism might well take as its first priority the elimination of ready cash for  the vast majority of Italians.

Behold, it has come to pass: The Monti administration proposes to outlaw any  transactions in excess of €1,000 that are performed in cash.

Well, it’s not so much of a proposal as a diktat which comes into immediate  effect. The atrophied parliament  could vote it down in sixty days. But rest assured, they won’t.

Sgr. Monti says he wants to collect the taxes which Italians are  dodging.  This is a statement of such Himalayan remoteness from the  everyday lives of ordinary Italians, moreover uttered in the land of the Mafia,  one is inclined to at first conclude that a lofty remote career in the ivory  tower of a private university has divorced the good professor from any sense of  reality.

Particularly as Milan, his own home city and host to his prestigious  independent seat of learning, is in the throes of a massive gang war  between rivals formed by immigrant Albanian and Serbian drug traffickers and  their rivals from the Italian south. There are big pickings to be reaped from  the estimated 140,000 heroin addicts in what is now one of the major narcotics  capitals of Europe.

Accurate figures are of course impossible, but most educated guesses put the  turnover attributable to organized crime at approximately €125 -€150 billion, of  which narcotics account for the lion’s share. This is the equivalent of around  8%-10% of Italy’s GDP.

One is waiting with baited breath to learn how the professor-prime minister  is going to get a slice of the action, that is if he intends to bother.

No previous Italian government has managed to tax the Mob, which so far  preserves its evasive powers thanks to a massive network of corruption of public  officials.

The prime minister is a former advisor to Goldman Sachs, which as we all know  is to Bilderberg what the sun is to our solar system.

A constant goal of Goldman Sachs (aka Wall Street, the ECB and the City of  London) is to control as much as possible of all money in free circulation.  Since banks circulate electronic money, this leaves only one alternative  possibility for reflation.

And that of course is the money in the form of notes and coins which passes  between ordinary individuals and their daily activities.

Capture that and there is no need for the bankers to bother with reflating  their balance sheets by using money borrowed from the markets, or each other, at  inordinate interest rates.

The directive will mean that ordinary honest Italians will have no choice but  to move many of their transactions through the  banks, of which two — namely Unicredit  and Intesa Sanpaolo — have recently undergone strains connected to cash-flow  problems.

What a fantastic booster the automatic capture of all ticket items over a  thousand euros will prove!

And remember, if the banks have all your money, they can then decide whether  to let you have it, or not as the case may be.

The machinery to effectively ration money is already in  place, namely the hundred thousand ATM’s scattered across the country.   There is more interesting technology waiting in the wings, as we see below.

It is a very short step from there to Italians being cross-examined as to why  they want to withdraw their own money.

In fact, it has already been taken.

I recently heard news from Italy of a man who was rung up by his bank manager  to inquire why this customer was milking the ATM every morning.  The rest  of this story contains explicit language unsuitable for reproduction here.

Who has thought this through? How will Italy’s famous financial police, the  Guardia di Finanza, cope with the massive new load of work?

Even the present 68,000 officers, with all the advantages of their own  independent navy and air force, will be hard put to police sixty million  Italians and virtually everything they spend, down to the small change.

The additional costs will run into, well, billions. This is before we get  around to the work of the courts dealing with miscreants.

With all the skills and facilities at their disposal, the Guardia have failed  to dent the financial armor plating erected around organized crime.

It is a fair guess anyway that the gain in revenues will far outweigh the  additional policing and administration costs. Frankly I think the movers behind this  ambitious project care very little about that.

You see if you reflect for a moment, it makes a pack of sense from certain perspectives to pick on  a country like Italy, known for its traditional fiscal laxities, and then have a  trial run at demonetization on a huge scale.

It is also an enormous asset that Italy, practically uniquely, has a large  militarized fiscal police force, whose powers (including random stop and search)  are already highly developed.

I have made the point already that the Monti administration looks very much  like a trial run in itself for future outings in like style elsewhere in Europe,  and possibly even the United States, Canada, Australia and New Zealand.

For the moment we have an experiment in demonetization which as far as I can  see has no modern precedents in the capitalist world.

The tax gathering cloak is actually no more than that. The over-dramatized  Euro crisis brought the Monti government into power with almost unseemly haste.  Now the serious experimental work can begin.

Demonetization, assuming that it survives the initial hurdles, has  significant social consequences.

It effectively licenses access to ready cash. It acts as a form of social  manipulation because of the intimacy between banks, the international financial  oligarchy and large powerful bodies such as the European Union. It is part of  the unfolding destruction of civil liberties and private freedoms that flowed  from 9/11.

It means that the banks can, effectively, own and even confiscate private  earnings and deposits. This is a dramatic and significant departure from our  usual understanding of banks, poor as that may now be in the light of  events.

Of course seizing control of cash transactions will also avoid the drastic  run on the banks which is now occurring in the Bilderberg/Goldman Sachs province  called Greece.

In September and October, savings and deposits shrank by more than €13  billion as Greeks resorted to the security of the Home Sock and Mattress Bank.  In November the run continued unchecked, causing a prominent central banker to  inform a tame parliamentary committee, “Our banking system lacks the scope to  finance growth.”

He meant of course the tsunami of money fleeing Greek banks. I do not think  the foreigners who are now yet again in charge of Greece will allow this to  continue for much longer.

The navel gazers of the global financial commentariat unity are so utterly  mesmerized by the unfolding “Euro crisis” they are completely unable to think  outside the box. What is happening in Italy, and will shortly be copied in  Greece, is part and parcel of the Sarkozy-Merkel project of manufacturing an  artificial crisis in order to enforce full fiscal unity on the European  continent.

In the end, that is all about the digitalization of money, the second kick-in  from the demonetization process.

Real money will cease to exist as a tangible presence in your pocket or  purse. Instead you will have something like a pocket phone to make every  transaction, no matter how small, like a beer or a coffee in a bar. You can  recharge – as you are permitted – by the centralized computer.

Isaac Asimov must be looking down on all this with  abject fascination.

Money that works in cyberspace is easily within the reach of current  technologies. It is actually a bastardization of Friedrich Hayek’s  arguments for private enterprise money that he made in his famous book on the  subject back in 1977. The great master Hayek, perhaps the most brilliant  economist of all time, rightly feared the over-arching power of the central  issuers of currencies, which he suspected would end up with serfdom on a grand  scale.

So should we. Not for the first time, what Italy does today, the rest of the  world may be compelled to follow tomorrow.

Did I forget to mention that digitalization of money leading to a single  global financial order is a pet project of Bilderberg and Wall Street, which  undoubtedly topped the agenda at the St. Moritz Bilderberg summit this year, by  the look of  subsequent developments?

And of course, it would stuff the Mafia too. Perhaps Professor Monti has  already thought of that.

Read the original post here, together with references etc.

Thanks to TIP for pointer.

About Ken McMurtrie

Retired Electronics Engineer, most recently installing and maintaining medical X-Ray equipment. A mature age "student" of Life and Nature, an advocate of Truth, Justice and Humanity, promoting awareness of the injustices in the world.
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