Wednesday, 20 March 2013

http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/finance/ambroseevans-pritchard/100023466/daylight-robbery-in-cyprus-will-come-to-haunt-emu/



This Video lecture from Lindzen is one of the best I've found in giving insight into the climate "sceance" agenda
http://www.viddler.com/v/79d667f3

Around 6:30 Min mark , Lindzen discusses Mike Hulme's then recent book with some very choice and revealing quotes that really capture the prostitution of what once was science ( as an investigative tool) , into the current "religion" where the supposed Scientist is the New Priesthood of the NWO 

Later on Lindzen extensively discusses the misdirection, and mendacity of John Holdren who has been Obama's "science advisor"
Lindzen doesn't mention this but Holdren is a protege and longtime collaborator of Paul Ehrlich

all the best

b

Barack Obama's top science advisor, John P. Holdren, once wrote the following….
http://endoftheamericandream.com/archives/from-7-billion-people-to-500-million-people-the-sick-population-control-agenda-of-the-global-elite
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/eurorealist/message/49733



 Climate change: our sin of omission
 Removing climate change from the curriculum denies children the right to participate in the debate about their own future
 http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2013/mar/19/climate-change-sin-of-omission
 ____________________
 There are many sins of omission in our Common Purpose Education system! Perhaps we should make a start with the substitution of learning by state brainwashing. There was much merit in the three R's of old.
 These youngsters have had their prosperity stolen by The NWO through the flawed Carbon Footprint scam.
 The National Curriculum has done a great deal of damage.

-----------------------------------

As is painfully clear to even the most naive observer, the biggest threat for Europe from this point on, now that Cyprus is officially "unfixed" is what happens when... if the Cyprus banks reopen - will the deluge of bank withdrawals drain 10% of the savings as the country's central banker warned earlier today, 20%, 50% or all of it? It is certain that any and all foreign "oligarch" accounts will be promptly pulled never to be heard of again, and after being treated like third grade European citizens, we doubt the locals will care much for having their cash in a banking system that Europe has shown is equal to all the other "united" banking systems, which however also happen to be just that much more equal. And once foreign TV crews show lines of people scrambling to pull money in Cyprus to the local viewers in Greece, Italy and Spain, will those countries also get comparable ideas? That is precisely the Pandora's box that Europe has now opened, and
which it is scrambling to close. How? With the dreaded "contingency plans", among which are such last ditch efforts as capital controls, including "imposing limits on daily withdrawals from bank accounts; capping the amount of money that can be electronically taken out of the country and making these transactions slower to clear; and introducing border checks to cap the amount of cash leaving in the country," most recently utilized in the banana-est of republics such as Argentina.

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2013-03-19/next-steps-capital-controls


------------------------------

http://brucekrasting.com/impact-imminent/

-------------------------------

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2013-03-19/spain-preparing-its-own-deposit-levy

-------------------------------

http://www.wnd.com/2013/03/bankrupt-cyprus-today-america-tomorrow/

-------------------------------

http://business.financialpost.com/2013/03/19/why-the-cyprus-deal-is-the-best-thing-thats-happened-for-europe-in-years/

-------------------------------

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/wonkblog/wp/2013/03/19/cyprus-is-rejecting-its-bailout-now-what/

------------------------------

German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said on Tuesday he regretted a decision by Cyprus's parliament to reject a proposed levy on savings in banks as a condition for a European bailout.

"We regret the decision," Schaeuble told ZDF television. "Cyprus requested an aid program. For an aid program we need a calculable way for Cyprus to be able to return to the financial markets. For that, Cyprus's debts are too high."

Schaeuble added that it was a "serious situation" now in Cyprus and said the country had no one to blame for its situation other than itself. He said he doesn't think its "business model" works anymore and warned Cyprus must act quickly.

"In a situation like this, when an insolvency looms, then the creditors have to participate if they want to avoid an insolvency. If you want to avoid that, then the investors in the bank have to make a corresponding contribution. Whether that's a 'bail in' or a levy, that's for Cyprus to decide itself."
http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/03/19/us-eurozone-cyprus-schaeuble-idUSBRE92I16N20130319

---------------------------

The Reserve Bank is rejecting suggestions that its new policy for banks facing a collapse is anything like rejected plans to sort out the present banking crisis in Cyprus.

The RBNZ plans that will mean a "haircut" or partial loss on all deposits if a bank fails, are due to come into force in New Zealand at the end of June. 
http://www.stuff.co.nz/business/industries/8450258/Reserve-Bank-rejects-Cyprus-comparison

---------------------------