
An immensely powerful international organization that most people
have never even heard of secretly controls the money supply of the
entire globe. It is called the Bank for International Settlements, and
it is the central bank of central banks. It is located in Basel,
Switzerland, but it also has branches in Hong Kong and Mexico City. It
is essentially an unelected, unaccountable central bank of the world
that has complete immunity from taxation and from national laws. Even
Wikipedia admits that “
it is not accountable to any single national government.“
The Bank for International Settlements was used to launder money for
the Nazis during World War II, but these days the main purpose of the
BIS is to guide and direct the centrally-planned global
financial system
.
Today, 58 global central banks belong to the BIS, and it has far more
power over how the U.S. economy (or any other economy for that matter)
will perform over the course of the next year than any politician does.
Every two months, the central bankers of the world gather in Basel for
another “Global Economy Meeting”. During those meetings, decisions are
made which affect every man, woman and child on the planet, and yet none
of us have any say in what goes on. The Bank for International
Settlements is an organization that was founded by the global elite and
it operates for the benefit of the global elite, and it is intended to
be one of the key cornerstones of the emerging one world economic
system. It is imperative that we get people educated about what this
organization is and where it plans to take the global economy.
Sadly, only a very small percentage of people actually know what the
Bank for International Settlements is, and even fewer people are aware
of the
Global Economy
Meetings that take place in Basel on a bi-monthly basis.
These Global Economy Meetings were discussed in a recent article
in the Wall Street Journal…
Every two months, more than a dozen bankers meet here on
Sunday evenings to talk and dine on the 18th floor of a cylindrical
building looking out on the Rhine.
The dinner discussions on money and economics are more than academic.
At the table are the chiefs of the world’s biggest central banks,
representing countries that annually produce more than $51 trillion of
gross domestic product, three-quarters of the world’s economic output.
The article goes on to describe the room that these Global Economy
Meetings are held in. It sounds like something out of a novel…
The Bank of England’s Mr. King leads the dinner
discussions in a room decorated by the Swiss architectural firm Herzog
& de Meuron, which designed the “Bird’s Nest” stadium for the
Beijing Olympics. The men have designated seats at a round table in a
dining area scented by white orchids and framed by white walls, a black
ceiling and panoramic views.
The central bankers that gather for these meetings are not there just
to socialize. No staff members are allowed into these meetings, and
they are conducted in an atmosphere of absolute secrecy…
Serious matters follow appetizers, wine and small talk,
according to people familiar with the dinners. Mr. King typically asks
his colleagues to talk about the outlook in their respective countries.
Others ask follow-up questions. The gatherings yield no transcripts or
minutes. No staff is allowed.
So the fate of the world economy is determined by unelected central bankers in secret meetings that nobody ever hears about?
That certainly does not sound very “democratic”.
But this is the direction that “global governance” is taking us. The
elite believe that the “big decisions” are far too important to be left
“to the people”, and so most of the “international institutions” that
have been established by the elite operate independently of the
democratic process.
Sadly, the truth is that all of this has been planned for a very long time.
In a recent article entitled “
Who Runs The World? Solid Proof That A Core Group Of Wealthy Elitists Is Pulling The Strings“,
I included a quote from Georgetown University history professor Carroll
Quigley from a book that he wrote all the way back in 1966 in which he
discussed the big plans that the elite had for the Bank for
International Settlements…
[T]he powers of financial capitalism had another
far-reaching aim, nothing less than to create a world system of
financial control in private hands able to dominate the political system
of each country and the economy of the world as a whole. This system
was to be controlled in a feudalist fashion by the central banks of the
world acting in concert, by secret agreements arrived at in frequent
private meetings and conferences. The apex of the system was to be the
Bank for International Settlements in Basle, Switzerland, a private bank
owned and controlled by the world’s central banks which were themselves
private corporations.
Back then, the Bank for International Settlements was only just
starting to play a major role in global affairs. But over the years the
BIS began to become increasingly important. The following is an
excerpt from an article
by Ellen Brown…
For many years the BIS kept a very low profile, operating
behind the scenes in an abandoned hotel. It was here that decisions
were reached to devalue or defend currencies, fix the price of gold,
regulate offshore banking, and raise or lower short-term interest
rates. In 1977, however, the BIS gave up its anonymity in exchange for
more efficient headquarters. The new building has been described as “an
eighteen story-high circular skyscraper that rises above the medieval
city like some misplaced nuclear reactor.” It quickly became known as
the “Tower of Basel.” Today the BIS has governmental immunity, pays no
taxes, and has its own private police force. It is, as Mayer Rothschild
envisioned, above the law.
Yes, it most definitely does bear a striking resemblance to the Tower of Babel as you can see from the photo
in this article. Once again the global elite are trying to unite humanity under a single system, and that is most definitely not a good thing.
But many of these elitists are entirely convinced that “global
governance” is what humanity desperately needs. They even publicly tell
us what they plan to do, but most people are not listening.
For example, the following is an excerpt from a speech that former
president of the European Central Bank Jean-Claude Trichet delivered to
the Council On Foreign Relations in New York…
In the area of central bank cooperation, the main forum
is the Global Economy Meeting (GEM), which gathers at the BIS
headquarters in Basel. Over the past few years, this forum has included
31 governors as permanent members plus a number of other governors
attending on a rotating basis. The GEM, in which all systemic emerging
economies’ Central Bank governors are fully participating, has become
the prime group for global governance among central banks.
The speech was entitled “Global Governance Today”, and you can find the full transcript
right here.
But most people have never even heard that such a thing as a “Global
Economy Meeting” even exists because the mainstream media rarely
discusses these sorts of things. They are too busy focusing on the
latest celebrity scandal or the latest cat fights between the
Republicans and the Democrats.
If you go to
the official BIS website, the purposes of the organization sound fairly innocent and quite boring…
The mission of the Bank for International Settlements
(BIS) is to serve central banks in their pursuit of monetary and
financial stability, to foster international cooperation in those areas
and to act as a bank for central banks.
In broad outline, the BIS pursues its mission by:
- promoting discussion and facilitating collaboration among central banks;
- supporting dialogue with other authorities that are responsible for promoting financial stability;
- conducting research on policy issues confronting central banks and financial supervisory authorities;
- acting as a prime counterparty for central banks in their financial transactions; and
- serving as an agent or trustee in connection with international financial operations.
The head office is in Basel, Switzerland and there are two
representative offices: in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region
of the People’s Republic of China and in Mexico City.
But when you start looking into the details, things get much more interesting.
So exactly how does the BIS achieve “monetary and financial stability”? An article posted
on investorsinsight.com described how this is accomplished…
It accomplishes this through control of currencies. It
currently holds 7% of the world’s available foreign exchange funds,
whose unit of account was switched in March of 2003 from the Swiss gold
franc to Special Drawing Rights (SDR), an artificial fiat “money” with a
value based on a basket of currencies (44% U.S. dollar, 34% euro, 11%
Japanese yen, 11% pound sterling).
The bank also controls a huge amount of gold, which it both stores
and lends out, giving it great leverage over the metal’s price and the
marketplace power that brings, since gold is still the only universal
currency. BIS gold reserves were listed on its 2005 annual report (the
most recent) as 712 tons. How that breaks down into member banks’
deposits and the BIS personal stash is unknown.
By controlling foreign exchange currency, plus gold, the BIS can go a
long way toward determining the economic conditions in any given
country. Remember that the next time Ben Bernanke or European Central
Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet announces an interest rate hike. You
can bet it didn’t happen without the concurrence of the BIS Board.
In recent years, it has become increasingly obvious who really has power over our economy.
When
Barack Obama speaks, the markets usually move very little.
When
Ben Bernanke speaks, the markets often respond with wild gyrations.
A recent CNBC article entitled “
Central Banks: How They Are Ruling the Financial World” detailed the enormous impact that central banks had on the global financial system during 2012…
In all, 13 other central banks in the world have followed
the Fed’s lead and set interest rates at or near zero in an effort to
keep the liquidity spigots open and prop up their ailing economies.
Those 14 economies represent a staggering $65 trillion in combined
equity and bond market capitalizations, according to Bank of America
Merrill Lynch.
Later on in that same article, the author discussed the enormous
amounts of money that global central banks were creating out of thin
air…
“When you add up all the central banks in the world, it’s
going to be over $9 trillion,” said Marc Doss, regional chief
investment officer for Wells Fargo Private Bank. “That’s like creating
the second-largest economy in the world out of thin air.”
Indeed, central banking has become an economy unto itself, a
multi-trillion-dollar empire that massages and manipulates markets,
which respond to the slightest news out of the respective entities’
policy making committees.
So who controls the money?
The central banks of the world do.
And who controls those central banks?
The Bank for International Settlements does.
If we don’t like what the Bank for International Settlements is doing, can we do anything about it?
Nope. The Bank for International Settlements is
above the law…
Maybe we’d feel better about the BIS if it were more
transparent, but most everything about it, including its bi-monthly
member and board meetings, is shrouded in secrecy. And perhaps more
worrisome is that the BIS is free from oversight. By rights granted
under its agreement with the Swiss Federal Council, all of the bank’s
archives, documents and “any data media” are “inviolable at all times
and in all places.” Furthermore, officers and employees of BIS “enjoy
immunity from criminal and administrative jurisdiction, save to the
extent that such immunity is formally waived . . . even after such
persons have ceased to be Officials of the Bank.” Finally, no claims
against BIS or its deposits may be enforced “without the prior agreement
of the Bank.”
In other words they can do whatever they want, without consequences. How’s that for a leak-proof legal umbrella?
If the BIS wants to “intervene” in the financial markets, they simply just do it.
If the BIS wants to bail out big banks or even entire nations, they simply just do it.
The BIS reminds me of this old joke…
Q: Where does an 800 pound gorilla sit?
A: Anywhere it wants to.
So what is next for the Bank for International Settlements?
Well, many have speculated that eventually the goal is to have just a
single global currency which will be administered by a single global
central bank. The BIS is already using Special Drawing Rights (SDRs),
which are considered to be a precursor to the coming global currency.
The BIS played a big role in the adoption of the euro, and more currency
integration is almost certainly on the way
in future years…
But in the end, how you feel about the BIS may come down
to how you feel about a one-world currency. The bank was a major player
promoting the adoption of the euro as Europe’s common currency. There
are rumors that its next project is persuading the U.S., Canada and
Mexico to switch to a similar regional money, perhaps to be called the
“amero,” and it’s logical to assume the bank’s ultimate goal is a single
world currency. That would simplify transactions and really solidify
the bank’s control of the planetary economy.
But if the United States ever did give up the U.S. dollar, it would be a massive blow to our national sovereignty.
When someone else controls your money, it doesn’t really matter that much who makes the laws.
Unfortunately, the global elite seem absolutely obsessed with the
idea of a global currency, a one world economic system and a global
government.
None of those things will happen this year, but that is where we are
moving. With each new crisis that arises, the solutions that we will be
given will always involve more centralization and more globalization.
So what do you think about all of this?
Please feel free to share your thoughts by leaving a comment below…
No comments:
Post a Comment