Monday, July 6, 2009

Foreclosure Fraud

foreclosure fraud
In my backyard garden talking about the courts threatening to allow the banks to unlawfully hijack my family legacy and they usually use a Sheriff, ,,, (who are supposed to protect ordinary folks from big corporate criminals who steal our family's labor, and sell our childrens futures to foreign entities who are impersonating a de-jure representative government of the unanimous majority,,,, or was that only 51% of them telling the other 49 that
they can steal your land if the 'majority' feels like it, thats called "Mob Rule" .. people need to understand their own personal sovereignty, before this gangster bankster game will ever end, people will have to be responsible for themselves, and revert to simpler ways, clean ways of life, and what is free, money is what got us into9 this mess and getting rid of it will get us out, but we ALL need to walk out from under the pyramid, not just a few, but MILLIONS need to all STOP using their monopoly money
Category: Nonprofits & Activism
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foreclosure fraud banksters banks bailout GMAC Mortgageit Inc united vision financial courts clerks judges corruption criminal government rico

Sunday, July 5, 2009

The dollar goes up and the gold goes down

When the dollar went up, the markets went down

Mundell says “The US Federal Reserve system and the Secretary of the Treasury made two big mistakes last fall. They allowed the dollar to soar in the third quarter last year – the dollar went up by 30% – and this was damaging to the US and … all those countries that were tied to the dollar, they had bad stock markets over that period. This was due to tight money, which you could prove by the appreciation of the dollar and also the falling price of gold, which went down by about $250 in that period. When those two things come together – the dollar goes up and the gold goes down a lot – then you know that there’s some tightness in the monetary system.”






Shell looks to LNG boost from Russia

Shell looks to LNG boost from Russia


Russia has invited Royal Dutch Shell to take part in the Sakhalin-3 and Sakhalin-4 oil and gas projects in Russia's Far East.

Prime Minister Vladimir Putin made the offer at a meeting with the company on Saturday. Putin said the projects will require Shell's experience in deep offshore extraction.

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The company has been active in exploring Russia's Far East since the Sakhalin-2 project in the 1990's. Together with Gazprom, Shell is building Russia's first Liquefied Natural Gas plant, with Putin saying he supported Shell's plans to increase production.

“We know about your plans to expand the LNG plant to increase the output. This will ensure supplies for the domestic market and the Asia – Pacific region.”

Shell has also signed a deal with Russian shipbuilder Sovcomflot, which will provide it with LNG tankers. Several days before the meeting, Shell's vice-president Chris Finlayson spoke on perspectives of LNG use exclusively to RT.

“LNG is certainly the way forward. It’s the dominant form of delivering gas in the Pacific basin, which Sakhalin is uniquely positioned to serve – its only 2 and a half days sailing time to Tokyo. Gas flows from as far away as the Middle East to Japan, so you can see the advantage that exists there. Pricing is based on oil, in that Pacific basin market, and also it’s very well positioned for delivering into the United States, and to Southern California and into Mexico where there are also contracts that both ourselves and Gazprom global LNG trading have. It’s a profitable way, an effective way of delivering a premium fuel. That’s why of course, in Europe, many countries are building LNG terminals as well. There will be clearly competition between pipeline gas, LNG gas, and LNG gas has to be competitive to grow in those markets too. So I think it is very much a fuel where we see significant growth, not just for a few years but for the next few decades, both because of the lower carbon content but also because of the efficacy and the ability to deliver that fuel to any destination worldwide.”

RT: How do Shell’s activities in Russia differ from those in other emerging markets, particularly the other BRIC countries?

CF: “We have operations in all of the other BRIC countries indeed. I don’t think that I would say that our approach varies greatly between the countries. In all of the countries we work together with the state companies in the upstream sector. And in all the countries we see downstream entries, and Russia has been somewhere where we have put a lot of effort into – we are the largest foreign lubricant seller in Russia, we are the only foreign company that does refueling of aircraft in Russia.”




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