90 Miles From Tyranny

infinite scrolling

Sunday, March 27, 2016

How Did You Know?


The Radical Islamic Get Out Of Gitmo Free Card...




If your country’s broke, don’t hold all of your savings there

On Friday March 15, 2013–just over three years ago–people across the entire nation of Cyprus went to bed believing that everything was OK.

The next morning they woke up to a different reality.

It turned out that their banking system was totally broke. After suffering enormous losses, banks no longer had sufficient liquidity or capital to maintain customer account balances.

People realized immediately that just because you can log in to a bank’s website and see an account balance printed on the screen that doesn’t actually mean that the money is there.

To make matters worse for depositors, the government was insolvent and unable to lift a finger to support the banks.

Plus the deposit guarantee from Cyprus’s central bank wasn’t worth the paper it was printed on.

So in order to save the banking system, Cypriot politicians resorted to the unthinkable– freezing every bank account in the country. It all happened overnight.

This is precisely the sort of thing that happens when a poorly structured banking system meets an insolvent government.

And we should expect more of it. Because three years later, much of the West looks like Cyprus did back then.

Western banking systems are extremely illiquid, and many banks are very thinly capitalized with minimal reserves.


Deposit insurance funds are woefully undercapitalized and lack the financial capacity to guarantee the system.

And the governments who stand behind it all are themselves completely insolvent.

Bear in mind, all of these assertions are backed by publicly available data.

It’s not some wild conspiracy theory to suggest that the governments of the United States, Japan, and most of Western Europe are totally bankrupt.

These are facts. And each government publishes its own financial statements attesting to its insolvency.

It’s not crazy to say that the FDIC is undercapitalized and fails to maintain the amount of reserves that are required by law, let alone “the minimum level [of capital] needed to withstand future crises of the magnitude of past crises.”

This information is published in the FDIC’s own annual report.

And you don’t have to be a radical to review your bank’s financial statements and find, for example, that US Bank maintains cash reserves amounting to just 3.5% of its customer deposits.

Or that Italy’s Unicredit Bank holds cash reserves of just 1.7% of its customer deposits.

These numbers are not even remotely conservative. And they’re all available in the banks’ most recent reports.

Looking at the big picture, when it’s clear that your government is broke, your deposit insurance fund is undercapitalized, and your bank is hazardously illiquid, it seems obvious that you shouldn’t hold 100% of your savings in that banking system.

There are a multitude of solutions to reduce this risk.

One option that we have discussed is opening an account at a liquid, well-capitalized foreign bank located in a jurisdiction with no debt.

Banks in Asia tend to have extremely high levels of liquidity and hold generous, conservative reserves to safeguard their customer deposits.

An even easier option is to hold physical cash; buy a safe and start making withdrawals from your bank account.

Even if you’re completely skeptical about everything you’ve just read, you won’t be worse off for having cash instead of...

Hot Pick Of The Late Night

Saturday, March 26, 2016

Girls With Guns

Mr. Obama, Wash That Hand.


Canada's Prime Minister: Honor Killings Shouldn't Be Called "Barbaric"


*corrected that spelling for you, eh!



The Cancer That Is Justin Trudeau:

Canada's Prime Minister: "If You Kill Your Enemies, They Win"

The Cancer Of Liberalism Infects Canada Also...

Canada Has Gone Completely Batshit Crazy With Their Cuckold Prime Minister Trudeau...

Thanks Obamacare: Healthcare Grew Twice As Fast As Any Other Household Spending

Obamacare has inspired me to write a song:

Ahem...

How Do You Kill The Middle Class?
OOOO B A M A   CARE
How Do You Get Kicked In The Ass?
OOOO B A M A   CARE
How Do You Kill A Nation Fast?
OOOO B A M A   CARE
How Do We Know We Are Going To Crash?
OOOO B A M A   CARE
How Do We Become Socialist Trash?
OOOO B A M A   CARE
Should We Keep It, Should We Take A Poll?
Hell No, Let's Roll.






We have been covering the consumption tax, pardon, endless spending black hole that is Obamacare for over a year, so we doubt it will come as a surprise to anyone that in 2015 healthcare was the second biggest use of US consumer funds, soaking up a record $1.9 trillion in real dollars, and more importantly for US economic "growth", the single biggest source of incremental spending by nearly a factor of two.

Incidentally, with spending on healthcare (courtesy of the Supreme Court's Obamacare tax) soaring, while outlays on the traditionally most consumption-intensive category, housing and utilities, going nowhere for the past several years, it is only a matter of 2-3 quarters before Healthcare surpasses Housing as the biggest use of American cash.

Putting this in context, a recent report from Freedom Partners Health found that health insurance premiums have increased faster than wages and inflation in recent years, rising an average of 28 percent from 2009 to 2014 despite the enactment of Obamacare, or rather "because of." Obama signed the Affordable Care Act into law on March 23, 2010, and Wednesday is the law’s sixth anniversary.

So, without further ado, this is what drove American consumer spending in the officially concluded, for GDP purposes, 2015. We show this just in case there is still any confusion why...

Watch This Guy Build A Great Bow And Arrows Without Even Using A Knife...



IFL - Voter Handbook & Insult Repellent – A PSA


Friday, March 25, 2016

Girls With Guns

Now THIS Is How You Visit Cuba...




More On Cuba:

Human Rights Watch: Cuba

Why Cuban cab drivers earn more than doctors

The Questions John Kerry Should Demand Cuba Answer