Abundance is not something to find or receive, it is the way. Universal laws are not dependent upon your ability to comprehend them. Economic patterns existing in our time are the result of what exactly? Do you know? The truth is ignored by many because people interpret their feelings as reality and believe information is negative or not happy making. The mind wants to be free of responsibility, it wants only what feels good. It is time to go beyond the tendencies of our enslaved senses.
There are fashions in thinking that allow people to console their feelings about their place in time during this economic weather. Many people live too much in judgments of right and wrong, thus they experience life as they believe it is, instead of what it actually is. When we resist understanding, we choose to ignore information and remain part of a cycle that will inevitably repeat the lesson until it is learned. The TRUTH is not negative, or bad, it is what you make of it.
A fundamental level of spirituality is expanding ourselves and thinking of others before our own ideologies, beliefs or thoughts. There is an old saying "a recession is when the problem is happening to you, a depression is when it happens to me." These "problems we see are the result of lack of awareness and understanding of the world we live in. Many people reject and have conflict with things the way they are. If you do not understand how you got here you will never know how to move on. And if you believe for a second that other peoples positions in life have nothing to do with you, you simply need to click away from this article. People live in the half conscious state of their day dreams and fantasies that free them from engaging in what is happening all around them. Reality makes them or their philosophies feel inadequate so they use buffers to console themselves. Buffers like " I will not participate in the recession, I won't acknowledge it, its not abundant thinking etc." In honesty, remaining ignore-ant to what is actually happening is disassociating with reality, and disconnecting from the world so many preach to be at one with. They will refuse the lesson time is teaching and thus repeat it as time goes on. We are all in the same boat. I don't offer solutions, I don't believe in cures; I KNOW balanced results come from correct knowing and proper action based on true understanding. You may say you are outside, above or refusing what is economically happening. That is a lie you may get away with telling yourself but the buck stops here.
Let me break this down easily. You have the world central banks owned by less than 15 families ( the Rothchilds , Rockefellers etc) but mostly royalty (all private). They control the banking and flooded the world with fiat numbers, not even currency and liquidity. They then bought real assets, infrastructures , defense stocks, energy stocks and positioned themselves . They bough t real assets with fiat by which they place us in debt through fiat, they are now artificially restricting the credit to the general public while giving themselves unlimited credit to buy up what they don' t have, and are purposely using these walls and 100' s of trillions of dollars to forcibly buy up governments, police and military and much, much more.
How did we get into the current financial mess? Great question..
In 1910, seven men held a meeting on Jekyll Island off the coast of Georgia. It's estimated that those seven men represented one-sixth of the world's wealth. Six were Americans representing J.P. Morgan, John D. Rockefeller, and the U.S. government. One was a European representing the Rothschilds and Warburgs.
In 1913, the U.S. Federal Reserve Bank was created as a direct result of that meeting. Interestingly, the U.S. Federal Reserve Bank isn't federal, there are no reserves, and it's not a bank. Those seven men, some American and some European, created this new entity, commonly referred to as the Fed, to take control of the banking system and the money supply of the United States.
In 1944, a meeting in Bretton Woods, N.H., led to the creation of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank. While the stated purposes for the two new organizations initially sounded admirable, the IMF and the World Bank were created to do to the world what the Federal Reserve Bank does to the United States.
In 1971, President Richard Nixon signed an executive order declaring that the United States no longer had to redeem its paper dollars for gold. With that, the first phase of the takeover of the world banking system and money supply was complete.
In 2008, the world is in economic turmoil. The rich are getting richer, but most people are becoming poorer. Much of this turmoil is directly related to those meetings that took place decades ago. In other words, much of this turmoil is by design.
There are three major problems with the events of 1913, 1944, and 1971. The first is that the Fed, the World Bank, and the IMF are allowed to create money out of nothing. This is the primary cause of global inflation. Global inflation devalues our work and our savings by raising the prices of necessities.
For example, when gas prices soared, many people said that the price of oil was going up. In reality, the main cause of the high price of oil is the decreasing value of the dollar. The Fed, the World Bank, and the IMF, like Zimbabwe, are mass-producing funny money, thereby increasing prices and devaluing our quality of life.
The second problem is that our economic crises are getting bigger. In the 1970s, the Fed faced and solved million-dollar crises. In the 1980s, it was billion-dollar crises. Today, we have trillion-dollar crises. Unfortunately, these bigger crises mean more funny money entering the system.
The third problem is that in 1913, the Fed only protected the large commercial banks such as Bank of America. After 1944, the Fed, the World Bank, and the IMF began bailing out Third World nations such as Tanzania and Mexico. Then, in 2008, the Fed began bailing out investment banks such as Bear Sterns, and its role in the Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac debacle is well known. By 2020, the biggest of bailout of all will probably occur: Social Security and Medicare, which will cost at least a $100 trillion.
Even if we find more oil and produce more food, prices will continue to rise because the value of the dollar will continue to decline. The dollar has lost over 90 percent of its value since the Fed was created. The U.S. dollar will continue to decline because of those seven men on Jekyll Island in 1910.
Alan Greenspan, years before he became Federal Reserve Board Chairman in charge of flagrantly debasing the U.S. dollar, wrote about this connection between sound money, prosperity, and freedom. In his article “Gold and Economic Freedom” (The Objectivist, July 1966), Greenspan starts by saying: “An almost hysterical antagonism toward the gold standard is an issue that unites statists of all persuasions. They seem to sense…that gold and economic freedom are inseparable.” Further he states that: “Under the gold standard, a free banking system stands as the protector of an economy’s stability and balanced growth.” Astoundingly, Mr. Greenspan’s analysis of the 1929 market crash, and how the Fed precipitated the crisis, directly parallels current conditions we are experienced under his management of the Fed. Greenspan explains: “The excess credit which the Fed pumped into the economy spilled over into the stock market- triggering a fantastic speculative boom.” And, “…By 1929 the speculative imbalances had become overwhelming and unmanageable by the Fed.” Greenspan concluded his article by stating: “In the absence of the gold standard, there is no way to protect savings from confiscation through inflation.” He explains that the “shabby secret” of the proponents of big government and paper money is that deficit spending is simply nothing more than a “scheme for the hidden confiscation of wealth.” Yet here we are today with a purely fiat monetary system, once managed almost exclusively by Alan Greenspan, who once so correctly denounced the Fed’s role in the Depression while recognizing the need for sound money.