What Everyone Needs to Know About the Financial and Political Turmoil Right Now

Via International Man

Financial and Political Turmoil

International Man: What types of risks — financial or otherwise — should people be aware of today?

Jeff Thomas: Well, much of the former free world, as we once knew it, is on the verge of collapse economically.

You have the U.S. after World War II suddenly taking over the world in production, and they were the future. A lot of countries got onboard: Europe, Canada, Australia, Japan. All those countries got on that particular train and did very well.

But the U.S. went from being the greatest nation in the world in terms of manufacturing to losing almost all of that and became the foremost debtor nation in the world. Now, the U.S. is in financially a worse place than possibly any country in the world. It’s just that whatever collapse is going to occur, it hasn’t happened yet.

So, that shoe hasn’t dropped, but when it does, it won’t only be the U.S. that goes down, it will be all the other countries that are on that particular train.

So, what that means is that if you want to come out of this well, then you try to diversify yourself into those countries that are not going to be as directly affected.

For example, if you wanted to leave the U.S., you wouldn’t go to Japan because it’s going to give you just as much trouble. You might choose to go to Thailand, or you might choose to go to Uruguay. There are a number of places that you could choose where you’re still going to have quite a good life and, going forward, possibly an even better life than exists in those places now.

Historically, this is always true. If you look at history over thousands of years, there’s always some country going down and another country coming up. It’s just a question of timing; when something is about to collapse, you want to get out.

In 1938, for instance, many people left Germany. It’s the same thing now. It’s hard to accept that this is about to happen to the great US of A since it’s been number one for so long, but it’s reached its sell-by date.

International Man: What is it exactly that you are looking at that might lead to a collapse?

Jeff Thomas: Well, there’s going to be a major debt collapse. It’s inescapable at this point. You get to a tipping point where, even if it hasn’t occurred yet, it’s too late to fix it.

When you get countries at the point where they’re borrowing so much money that they can’t even pay the interest any longer yet are moving headlong to borrow more and offering their people increased entitlements, the money isn’t going to be there. It simply doesn’t exist. In that regard, it’s really a question of simple arithmetic. Do the numbers add up, or do they not?

We see that in the US, where it’s rapidly moving in the direction of far greater entitlements and more Americans who are demanding much more in the way of entitlements. Somebody’s got to pay for this.

Historically, the same thing happens in every empire.

Every empire ends in the same fashion because human nature remains the same in any generation, in any era. The same mistakes end up being made by those in charge. So, you can look at what’s happened elsewhere.

For example, just in recent history, we can look at 2001 in Argentina and examine that. Or, you can visit Zimbabwe and research what happened there in 2008 and watch those that collapsed, how that unfolded. Or, we could take a trip right now to Venezuela and watch that in its collapsing stage.

I started warning about Venezuela, I think about eight years ago and, ever since then, in articles that I’ve done, since this is where they are now. They’re right in the middle of their collapse and nearing the end of it, at this point.

So, you can kind of watch the movie as it’s played out in other nations and say, “This is the pattern.” You can examine the pattern, and it’s almost always the same. So, you follow that, and you say, “Well, this is what potentially is going to be happening in the country that I live in.”

It’s not a question of trying to change the country because, historically, it doesn’t work. What you do, instead, is you step aside, you simply let it go past you by being in another jurisdiction.

International Man: You’ve written extensively about international diversification. What is the basic concept behind it?

Jeff Thomas: It’s a process of diversifying yourself amongst several jurisdictions so that no one jurisdiction can dictate to you.

It’s a known fact that countries tend to treat their guests a lot better than they treat their own citizens. Once they feel that they own you, they can be a lot rougher on you and make greater demands.

What you would ideally hope to do would be to have your citizenship in one country, probably have your residency in a second country or even more than one country, have your income in a third country, and even have your banking or wealth storage in a fourth country.

International Man: How difficult is it for someone to go about doing this?

Jeff Thomas: Well, it certainly does take some planning. But what it really takes is researching some places where you’d be happy being or where you feel that you’d be better treated and where the laws would treat you better.

For example, if you happen to be a U.S. citizen, which is one of the most difficult countries to be a citizen of right now—they tax their citizens worldwide, and other countries don’t do that—what you’d want to do is find the country that you could either be a citizen of or at least be a resident of or have investments in that has either little or no direct taxation.

Then you would have an opportunity to keep the money that you’ve made rather than simply turning it over to others.

International Man: What are some of the practical things that people should be looking to do to start this process?

Jeff Thomas: First, I tend to focus much more on what’s coming than what exists right now. Most people try to face whatever is facing them right now and saying, “Can I live with this?”

My approach is to be looking ahead 5 years, 10 years, 20 years, and for whatever reason, I’ve done that all my life. And so, based on what’s coming, I say to myself, “Can I live with that when it happens?” And if not, I want to get out of the way of it.

For example, the worst hasn’t happened in the U.S. by any means. Some people would be saying, “Well, if I see it get bad, then I’ll get out.”

But historically, what ends up happening is that you then start having capital controls. Your government places capital controls on you so that you can no longer move your money out. They will use a number of reasons why this is necessary, but they’re usually not true.

This time around, they’ll blame it on money laundering or terrorism so that you’re some sort of an evil person if you actually want to take your money out. That will be followed by migration controls where you are physically not allowed to leave. If you try to leave, you lose your passport.

A lot of these laws have already been written in the US over the last eight years. And there’s a whole pile of them that have been written but not yet implemented. So we know they’re coming. We know that they intend to implement these laws, but they’re not quite finished with what appears to be a boom time.

So, if somebody wanted to deal with this, the first thing that they’d do would be to liquidate all their assets in any country that’s at risk. They don’t want to leave anything there.

Anything that you keep behind is sacrificial, and that would include a bank account. Even if you continue to live in that country, you’d keep only three months’ worth of spending money in a bank account and then regard that as being sacrificial. It could conceivably be lost.

In the US, you have a confiscation law, as of 2010, which allows the banks to confiscate all the money that you have on deposit in a bank. Very few Americans know that, but there it is. It’s there in black and white; it’s in the American law that banks can do that.

So you’d want to liquidate your assets, then you’d want to expatriate the proceeds.

Then, if possible, if you can afford it, you would establish a residency somewhere else and then prepare an exit so that if it got to the point where you say, “Whoops, this is really beginning to fall apart now; I can’t take it any longer; I’m going to make an exit,” you would be ready.

At that point, you may not even be able to sell your house; you may have to just turn the key in the door, wave goodbye, but at least… you have an exit plan. If you’ve done everything in advance, you’d just pack a carry-on, and out you’d go.

Those people will be able to escape. A lot of people will not be able to.

International Man: It sounds like the underlying message here is to start preparing for this sooner rather than later and to have your solutions in place before people start to panic and before there’s a rush to the door, which is often the case.

Jeff Thomas: Yes, exactly right.

First, you may not be allowed to leave. But also, all those countries that are presently welcoming people from any given country may pull away the welcome mat.

And again —Nazi Germany, in 1938, there was a conference in 1938 — the Évian Conference — when the Jews attempted to begin to leave Germany, 32 governments got together and said, “There’s going to be millions of them, we can’t take them, but we don’t want to look like bad guys, so let’s all make an agreement that we won’t take them, then they’ll have nowhere to go, then they’ll just stay where they are.” And that’s exactly what happened.

So that will happen again. The welcome mat will be pulled in a lot of countries, so whatever legal residency you want to have somewhere else, you need to get it in place now while the welcome mat is still out.

Editor’s Note:

Editor’s Note: Unfortunately, most people have no idea what really happens when a government goes out of control, let alone how to prepare.

How will you protect yourself in the event of an economic crisis?

New York Times best-selling author Doug Casey and his team just released a guide that will show you exactly how. Click here to download the free PDF now.

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11 Comments
starfcker
starfcker
March 13, 2020 4:33 pm

“Now, the U.S. is in financially a worse place than possibly any country in the world.” Come on dude. You’re insulting our intelligence

Donkey
Donkey
  starfcker
March 13, 2020 4:42 pm

Trump speaks and the market jumps 1,000 points. Words man, they’re all that matter.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Donkey
March 15, 2020 12:22 pm

It’s called ‘ propaganda ‘ ( brainwashing )…Words matter only until the reality interfere…that’s the moment when the sheeple understand that she is already at the slaughter house entrance…and the ” dream ” it’s over 🙁

Dan
Dan
  starfcker
March 13, 2020 6:05 pm

Everybody knows, or knows of, the guy with the huge house, a big RV, always a brand new car, a boat, etc. who is making his payments with credit cards. So yeah, if you’re impressed with ostentatious displays, then you really think this guy is rich and you wish you could be like him.

There are others (ahem) who own everything they have, even if it’s smaller, older, cheaper. Plus have various forms of rainy day wealth, retirement savings, and enough cash on hand to pay for taxes into the intermediate future.

As nations go, the U.S. is the first guy and a lot of people are dazzled by all that debt-funded killing around the world, Tesla-driving sports heroes, whatever. Nobody really wants to look a little closer and see homeless bums shitting on the sidewalks while they shoot up, deteriorating infrastructure, new families that are paying better than half their salary just for rent.

But, hey, that’s just my opinion. You’re entitled to yours as well.

SS-The Independent
SS-The Independent
  Dan
March 15, 2020 12:16 pm

You nail it, man. For those who refuse to see/hear it’s called cognitive dissonance. As an Eastern-European immigrant to US, I’m still ‘ impressed ‘ with the American sheeple ‘ performance ‘…Not that back there many were better, but what ‘ they ‘ ( top 1% of the eye pyramid ) have here is the perfect herd to rule over ( or like some thinker – Chomsky, maybe said…that the American rulers have the electorate which every dictator/tyrant of the World dream off )…

Anonymous
Anonymous
  starfcker
March 15, 2020 12:19 pm

Well, depends what he/you understand when think of a ‘ country ‘…If you put US along Bangladesh or Somalia, yeah…it’s an insult to our ‘ intelligence ‘ ( to not be confused with information/culture/knowledge 🙂

gatsby1219
gatsby1219
March 13, 2020 8:59 pm

I’m buying on Monday, Labcorp and Quest.

Your tip for today.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  gatsby1219
March 13, 2020 10:41 pm

I’m buying a side of beef and a side of pork on monday

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
  Anonymous
March 13, 2020 10:54 pm

You close enough to me? I could use the business.

robert h siddell jr
robert h siddell jr
March 13, 2020 10:38 pm

I can’t afford a move to Tennessee much less Uruguay.

SS-The Independent
SS-The Independent
March 15, 2020 1:26 pm

Good article, but started with an error: the so-called ‘ free world ‘ wasn’t free at all…but under the control of the financial cabal, since Babylon…Money changers and usury…And the so-called ‘ free world ‘ is not only economic/financial bankrupt, but moral/intellectual bankrupt…We live not only in a ‘ neo-feudal system/order ‘ ( Prof. Michael Hudson ), but a matrix, a parallel ‘ reality ‘…Now, apparently we live the time when the ‘ real ‘ reality ‘ collided with the fake one…the one imposed on us 24/7 by corporate media…