TRUMP IS ABOUT TO HAMMER THE FEDERAL RESERVE

By JC Collins Via POM

Back in October of 2015 I wrote a post titled De-Fang the Federal Reserve – The Conspiracy on How the Fed is Being Integrated into the Multilateral Framework. It served as a summary of how the Fed acted as the global central bank almost from its inception in 1913 and how this would change in the lead up to a multilateral monetary framework.

The Trump mandate on “America First” is being misconstrued as an isolationist policy but is in fact the cover for integrating America into the emerging multilateral. This is difficult to see for most because it is hard to reconcile the idea of an isolationist mandate with that of a multilateral mandate. It appears to most that America is dumping the globalist script when in fact the script is in fact the same only the characters and events have changed. The theme remains the same.

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This is one of the main reasons why the media is in fact pushing this isolationist script. It prevents Americans from accurately deciphering the shift towards the multilateral. The opposition to the Federal Reserve and the establishment was built up through alternative media to the point where the masses are now clamoring for the changes which in fact were always required in order to make the multilateral transition.

The most obvious point is a changing role for the Federal Reserve. In a multilateral world it will no longer be required to serve the function as an international central bank providing access to a reserve asset. The Fed will be transformed to focus on domestic concerns while the international mandates begin to transition to an institution like the International Monetary Fund and the SDR asset.

In the 2015 post on the Fed I referenced something called the Centennial Monetary Commission which was tasked with defining changes to the Federal Reserve’s roles and responsibilities. This study has now been completed and the recommendations are being made. Some of these recommendations were reviewed in the 2015 post, which is included below.

Of course this will all be sold to the people as what is good for America as the “mismanaged Fed” is straightened out. The mainstream media will play its function as opposition to the Trump administration by rounding out the cognitive dissonance and getting the masses to accept all the changes that are coming.

When it’s all said and done, the new Trump America with renegotiated trade deals, new financial arrangements with international institutions such as the United Nations, and a decreased role for the USD in the world, will be aligned with a new multilateral world. From the moment Trump announced his candidacy I said he would sell this to the American people, and he is, and will continue to do so.

Expect the Trump against the Federal Reserve script to increase in pace and intensity in the coming weeks as major changes are made. I keep saying it’s only a matter of time until the term SDR comes out of Trump’s mouth. It will be sold as what is good for America. Something like Nixon saying America will not be held hostage by international interests when he ended the gold window in 1971. More from the 2015 post:

Sometimes the complexity and level of artisan skill required to engineer the multilateral monetary framework is staggering. The socioeconomic and geopolitical shifting which takes place behind the closed doors of think tanks and international institutions would make for intriguing spy-like novels on par with the tales of John le Carré.

Such stories would be reminiscent of the old movie the House of Rothschild where skullduggery and manipulation were used to increase the sovereign debt of European nations. The leaders and Kings of Europe refused to borrow money from Mayer Rothschild and in turn Napoleon conveniently escaped from exile on the Island of Elba in February of 1815 and began to wage war upon Europe again.

The allies formed the Seventh Coalition to fight against Napoleon and quickly diminished their reserves and loan capacities before finally turning to Mayer Rothschild for additional funding to continue the fight. Once the Rothschild loan was secured Napoleon was defeated at the Battle of Waterloo and the tide of history was changed forever.

The Federal Reserve should be looked upon as the Napoleon of the 20th Century. It was used to fund the growth of the military industrial complex and expand the central banking system all around the world. And like Napoleon, the Federal Reserve performed its function as strategized and will now be modified to fit within the larger macro multilateral framework which it helped create.

The evolution of the Federal Reserve is complicated and would require almost a book length discourse to fully grasp the details and policies which have grown and shaped monetary and fiscal policy both within the United Stated, and throughout the world.

This evolution took a leap forward in March of 1951 when the Fed gained broader independence from the US Treasury, executive branch, and Congress. The Federal Reserve Treasury Accord ended the pressure on the Fed to peg long-term interest rates and minimize accountability to the US Congress.

This evolution of strategy and mandate allowed for the Fed to become the central bank of the world and indirectly set international monetary policy for other countries. Not to mention expand funding for the military industrial complex and leverage both physical and economic influence on foreign countries.

With that being said, the US Congress still has a duty to exercise oversight and can adjust or modernize the Federal Reserve Act when it is appropriate to do so. What exactly would entail appropriate causation can be extremely suggestive of external influence and special interests within the larger international banking community, such as experienced by the leaders of Europe when confronted with the threat of Napoleon.

The Fed is now operating in a vacuum and its mandates are no longer aligned with the domestic interests of the United States. This inevitable discourse between domestic fiscal responsibility and the waning foreign responsibility to those central banks holding vast amounts of USD denominated securities is creating a situation which will need to be addressed sooner rather than later. The inability of the Fed to raise interest rates is based primarily on the negative effect such a move will have on foreign countries. This lack of movement on policy normalization by the Fed could very well act as the catalyst for Federal Reserve reform.

In a recent speech to Congress, Paul H. Kupiec of the American Enterprise Institute stated that it is the responsibility of Congress to re-examine the mandates, powers, and responsibilities of the Federal Reserve. An appropriate revision of Fed legislation would be enacted based on that re-examination.

Kupiec goes on to discuss how the overall structure and strategy of the Fed would need to be addressed within a reasonable time frame. The Centennial Monetary Commission is scheduled to complete a report by December, 2016, on changes to Fed policies and mandates. Kupiec suggests that this time table be shortened while stating that the monetary mandate of the Federal Reserve must be more specific and less open to interpretation.

The interesting thing about Paul H. Kupiec is that he has previously worked on banking and financial market policy for the International Monetary Fund (IMF), Federal Reserve Board itself, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), and the Bank for International Settlements.

The BIS is considered the apex of the central banking system which the US funded military industrial complex helped establish around the world. As such, it is the BIS which set the international mandates on monetary reform and multilateral macroprudential policy.

A BIS and IMF affiliated economist and policy maker testifying before Congress on reforming the Federal Reserve Act is tantamount to Mayer Rothschild cutting off military funding to Napoleon during the Battle for Waterloo after the leadership of Europe had been consolidated under his loan mandates and terms.

The interesting part is that the suggestions on reforms to the Federal Reserve Act are strategically similar to what many Americans have been conditioned to demand of the Fed. The engineering of an opposition to the Federal Reserve has been extremely effective. Whether it’s Ron Paul or the Alex Jones network, opposition to the Federal Reserve has been directed and focused on a few key points.

These points were itemized by Paul H. Kupiec, formerly of the IMF and Bank for International Settlements, in his testimony before Congress on July 22, 2015. The points of interests regarding the Federal Reserve Reform Act of 2015 are as follows:

  1. Requirement for Policy Rules of the Federal Open Market Committee – This point would give the General Accounting Office (GAO) the opportunity to validate
  2. FOMC policies and improve the transparency of the Fed process.
    FOMC Membership – This would put an end to favored voting rights within the FOMC as such rights are less important today now that the Fed has completed its initial mandate.
  3. Stress Test Transparency and Disclosure of Supervisory Correspondence – This would force the Fed to disclose stress test models used to determine and set specific monetary policies and mandates.
  4. Cost-Benefit Analysis and Review of New Regulations – The Fed has been exempt from regulations that require it to perform cost/benefit analysis of new regulations. This would change under the defined reforms.
  5. Notification of Intent to Engage in International Standard Setting Bodies – Congress and the public must be made aware of international standard meetings in which the Fed participates, as well as the material implications for the US. (Do not let this reform mislead you into thinking that American sovereignty will be protected. As long as the Congress set has oversight, this reform will ensure that the Fed implements the multilateral mandates as designed. A new cheques and balances maintained by the leveraged politicians.)
  6. Federal Reserve Special Lending Powers – This reform will prevent the Fed from legally lending to a distressed and potentially insolvent financial firm. This was a big issue during the last financial crisis.
  7. GAO Audits – Ensures and validates that the FOMC’s policy directive is consistent with the directive policy rule reported to Congress. Most will recall the Ron Paul push to audit the Fed. As long as the Congress is controlled and leveraged by international banking interests, the GAO audits will serve the purpose of the multilateral mandates.

This short list of Federal Reserve policy reforms accurately reflect the Cultural and Socioeconomic Interception (CSI) engineering which has taken place through the alternative media and Tea Party propaganda. (Reference post The First False Flags for a definition of CSI) The fact that these reforms are being promoted and testified before Congress by someone affiliated with the Bank for International Settlements, representing the international banking interests, should give all Americans pause.

Those who have been leading us down the garden path of liberty and conspiracy have failed to both recognize and educate the disorganized masses on the actual methodology of the multilateral transmutation of the international monetary system. Reducing the power and influence of the Federal Reserve fits exactly into the mandates of the multilateral.

The same can be said of the political platform of Donald Trump. The “Make America Great Again” pledge and mantra is the condensed talking point which is based on the depreciation of the dollar. This multilateral depreciation will reduce the cost of US manufactured goods and increase exports. This means higher GDP, reduced debt-to-GDP ratio, and more jobs for Americans.

The multilateral mandates are being sold to Americans through alternative media and establishment opposition. The analysis presented here on POM has been attacked and/or ignored by so many sites which promise the truth. Yet, readers and followers of those sites and personalities have been left more confused and less informed about everything that is taking place internationally.

Long-time readers of POM have been provided a front row seat on the transition from a unipolar USD dominated world to a multilateral SDR denominated world. The fact that so much of the information presented here is trending accurately is a testament to the validity of the analysis.

Who would have thought that the Bank for International Settlements and the Tea Party, Ron Paul, and the Alex Jones network would all want the same thing? Truth is definitely stranger than fiction, and conspiracy theory is not the conspiracy we thought it was at all. – JC

Interested readers may also gain additional insight into the strategies and workings of the international banking interests by reading the post The Bretton Woods Origin of the Cold War.

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18 Comments
starfcker
starfcker
January 30, 2017 6:28 am

Francis, this guy is a full blown loon. Interesting, if you believe in an almighty, super secret cabal, that controls everything. Interesting, if you believe Donald Trump is anybody’s patsy. Interesting, if you believe some fruit loop blogging from his mom’s basement has a better take on the world than Donald Trump. And by the way, I didn’t pick any favorite commenters on that other thread, Francis, but if I had, you’d have cracked the top 200 for sure. ?

starfcker
starfcker
  Francis Marion
January 30, 2017 11:20 am

Francis, T4c was a little puzzled that I liked some of Collin’s other stuff, I just don’t buy this theory, for the reasons stated. This dude is no fool, and I doubt the IMF is going to be in any shape to call any shots, they’re liable to be diminished severely. And it’s a big honor to make your top 200. That’s going to make me happy all day

Brian
Brian
January 30, 2017 6:37 am

It’s really simple.

“All banks operating as a member bank of the FRS under Title 12 USC shall in payment of wages, or compensation for labor, only pay current money created by and issued from the U.S. Treasury unless specifically objected to by the payee.”

SONNY JIM
SONNY JIM
  Brian
January 30, 2017 12:15 pm

CURRENT MONEY IS NOT ISSUED BY THE US TREASURY ,,,
READ THE GREEN SEAL ( FED RESERVE ) NOTES IN YOUR POCKET !!
FIND A PHOTO OF A RED SEAL TREASURY NOTE OR BUY ONE AT A COIN SHOP …
AND READ THAT !
THAT IS WHAT JFK WANTED AND IT GOT HIM KILLED !!!

Not Sure
Not Sure
January 30, 2017 8:03 am

Alrighty then, get out the pitch forks and storm the castle and destroy the SDR monster. But wait, how do we destroy the beast? The USD is tied to a deteriorating petrol dollar and is hopelessly worthless as paper money with no backing, except for the occasional QE that comes along to prop it up for a few months. It would seem that the USD is dead already and any attempt to resurrect it will have the same look as the cat in Pet Semetary, from the Steven King movie.

Ag
Ag
January 30, 2017 10:30 am

It will start with the auctioning of T-bills, being bought with SDRs by China, instead of Dollars.

Once this bell is rung, the petrodollar looses status and value, which is the game plan.
the plan is to “pay down the national debt with dollars that are worth-less”

The SDR is not designed for people, it is designed for countries, and will be the new debt instrument for others to peg their currency to.

If you hear Trump speak positively of the SDR, then you will know he is nothing but another puppet.

Robert Gore
Robert Gore
January 30, 2017 11:37 am

Francis,
I don’t reject or accept JC Collins’ hypothesis, for a hypothesis is all it is. Rather, I ask, if for the sake of argument the hypothesis is accepted, what difference will it make? Collins is suffering from the “Potent Director’s” fallacy so aptly destroyed by the empirical work of Robert Prechter. The idea that economies are just puppets dancing on strings controlled by central bankers is a myth, which can be exposed simply by looking at a historical record replete with instances when central bankers had no such control; economies did the opposite of what the central bankers desired and intended. Central bankers are influenced by the same waves of social mood that move financial markets and ultimately, economies. The consideration of a global monetary authority can only happen at the tail end of a long-running upturn in social mood. Nobody pounds the table for multinational institutions, financial or otherwise, after long bear markets.

It will not make a difference if the world moves from a fiat reserve currency administered by the Federal Reserve to a global fiat currency administered by the BIS and the IMF. The exchange value of fiat currencies goes to zero, regardless of who’s doing the administering and whether the currency is that of one or more nations. The political impetus to devalue a fiat currency is overwhelming; it’s why fiat currencies rule the world right now. Wiping away the fiat currency money mirage, the reality is the world has issued paper claims far in excess of the real production that must support them. The impending massive global default renders insignificant the currency in which creditors hold their claims. At the end of the day, it matters not whether you’re stiffed in dollars, euros, yen, yuan, or SDRs, and at the end of the day honest producers are going to get stiffed, regardless of whether or not Collins’ scenario plays out.

mark branham
mark branham
  Robert Gore
January 30, 2017 2:50 pm

There exist no reason why “the impending massive global default” must take place. That meme has been around for decades, still not relevant… but makes for interesting click bait.

The move from the dollar to the SDR as the global reserve currency, to be used by all for trade, is well under way, and a good thing for the dollar. The adjustment, however will be a little rough; how is anyone’s guess. But in the end, the game will continue for a good while longer.

The game though must someday come to an end if for no other reason than it is the major contributor to income inequality. ‘Course, to understand that you’d need to differentiate between money and debt-money, a topic too big for a mere comment.

by the way, JC is the only commentator who has consistently hit the mark… he knows whereof he speaks, unlike most who opine on this subject.

Stucky
Stucky
  Francis Marion
January 30, 2017 7:52 pm

“Although I must say, the love scene between the two colleagues (can’t remember their names off the top of my head) left me thinking you might have missed your calling!! ”

Wow. Nice praise! Did you choke your chicken afterwards? Be honest.

Robert Gore
Robert Gore
  Stucky
January 30, 2017 7:54 pm

I choked my chicken after I wrote it.

Robert Gore
Robert Gore
  Francis Marion
January 30, 2017 8:11 pm

Francis,
I am closing in on completing Robert Prechter’s magnum opus, the Socionomic Theory of Finance, for which I will write a review. The difficult part people have with Prechter’s theory is that it requires a 180 degree mental reorientation. You ask: “Do central banks determine/influence people’s economic behaviour or does our social mood determine/influence central bank policy?” Social mood influences and determines both people’s economic behavior and central bank policy, central bankers being people (I think) when people act as herds, in contexts of uncertainty. The present infatuation with central banks, governments, and multilateral institutions reflects an upward social mood trend that dates back to the bottom of the Great Depression. When the mood turns decisively down, Prechter’s Grand Supercycle bear market, the 4th Turning, the big kahuna, whatever you want to call it, that infatuation will be shattered. Depression, default, deflation, and devolution will be the orders of the day, and they will wipe out many political and economic institutions we think of as permenant. I’ll refer you to Prechter for much, much more. I find him compelling because his predictions have made me a ton of money through the years, and one instance where I ignored him cost me a ton of money. It is his predictive record that compels attention to his theories. The Elliott Wave Theory is probabilistic, so not all his predictions work, but he’s had many huge ones since the 1980s. I will post my review of his tome on TBP, fully expecting few people to read it. That is, in fact, an implication of his theory. From my review you will understand why.

Thank you for the kind words on my book. I’m glad you enjoyed it. If my current endeavors don’t pay off, I’ll consider romance novels.

platoplubius
platoplubius
January 30, 2017 5:12 pm

the author said:
The same can be said of the political platform of Donald Trump. The “Make America Great Again” pledge and mantra is the condensed talking point which is based on the depreciation of the dollar.

Finally, someone else who gets it! Let the shit throwing monkeys’ attacks begin!