What's so funny about the Trans Texas Corridor ? Perhaps it's because you're in Flordia (if what you say is true about where you live).
Where's Flordia?
What's funny is that you can already drive from Canada to Mexico!
What's so funny about the Trans Texas Corridor ? Perhaps it's because you're in Flordia (if what you say is true about where you live).
What link?
I work in capital markets. If this was imminent, I'd be hearing it all the time from credible people, not just from conspiracists on the Internet who don't know the difference between a bond and a bon-bon.
Looks like the folks have started "celebrating" a bit early here.....
Are there any red tinfoil hats available for Xmas???
We were hearing about the euro loud and clear more than 2-3 years before its implementation. If there was any such Amero, it would be the talk of the capital markets.I didn't say it was imminent, maybe in the next 2 or 3 years.
leaves one very insecure about their portfolio.
I'm invested in bond funds like Pimco and Fidelity which are doing quite well right now. Gold is another good field during unsure times.
If you believe that the dollar is going to collapse, you shouldn't own bonds because they will collapse too.
As for the article, the "true" deficit is not $4.6 trillion, even with social security and medicare liabilities. Why? Because at any time, the government can abrogate or change the terms of the social contracts with the stroke of a pen.
A devaluation is a whole lot different than a "collapse". !
Where did I say the dollar will collapse?
The article you posted talked about a dollar collapse. That is what is supposed to precipitate the creation of the Amero
As for devaluation, well, the economies of Japan and Europe are not strong enough to absorb a dramatic devaluation. The dollar is still higher against the yen than it was 10-15 years ago when it hit Y85. The dollar is slightly weaker against the euro than when it was launched in 1999 and had appreciated 40% against the euro and other European currencies in the latter half of the 1990s. The loonie has round-tripped the greenback, hitting $0.91 in the late 1980s before collapsing to $0.62 in the late 1990s to $0.90 this year.
No big deal.
Until today, when I sold the last of my holdings (if only temporarily), I had held gold and gold stocks for most of the past five years because I could see this dollar devaluation coming. However, that does not mean I think the dollar will be replaced by a continental-wide currency.
While all of the craftyed diversions take place this nefarious scheme continues to escalate behing closed US Congress dooors with many finger prints on the dagger. The CFR continues to pour huge amounts of money into this bad nightmare and for the obvious reasons of personal profit. I sure hope the Canadian and Mexican citizens see throught this scheme for what it really is. The US has developed into a global octopus and is trying any way it can to gain global dominance.
I can't see anything different than we have now except that instead of other criminals and illegal aliens invading Canada, we'd have Mexicans, too. I'd make a bet that the number of illegals in Canada outnumbers the Canadian military personel as it is. And the only ones that the CIC seems to be interested in deporting are the ones that are easy to catch: that'd be the ones that want to become legal in the first place whose visas have expired or whatever. The entire CIC needs to be uprooted and shipped out of Canada so we can concern ourselves with the people that really are criminal.
Canadians aren't even alike from province to province (or region to region) anyway, and neither are Mexicans and Americans. If Mexico or the States think we'd all get along any better after the borders disappear, they're foolish.
What's an anchor baby?