The Golden Key

Spiritual Dynamics  February 23 2014

EarlyModelCarThe 1920′s, the Roaring Twenties, ushered in the technologies of radio entertainment and movies with sound tracks. Before that, ‘the movies’ had been silent moving picture dramas with subtitles. Now, with the addition of sound, they became ‘the talkies.’

The new media of radio, as well as the newsreels that played before each movie, began providing people with new sources of information and entertainment. Henry Ford’s mass production of motor cars was creating a demand for the dirt roads of the day to be hard-covered with tarmac. Progressive towns began boasting that, as well as a hard-covered main street, they also had a traffic light!

Television was still twenty years into the future, but the telephone was becoming a fashion statement, especially when its use was demonstrated by glamorous starlets in the movies. With the separate earpiece held up to one ear, they would loudly and clearly intone the magic words, “Hello, calling long distance!” in order to be connected with their intended party through a relay of human telephone operators. In the movies, if not in real life, they always succeeded in getting through on the first attempt.

Meanwhile, the young adults of the day, such as the fashionable flappers, showed their newfound freedom from tradition by dancing to the Jazz music that reflected their sense of lightness and fun.

Continue reading

There Will Be No Default On The U.S. Debt. Here Is Exactly Why

BeforeItsNews  October 8 2013

This is the third time the moneylenders have tried take over the known civilized world and bankrupt it with usury. With the leverage of a Permanent War Policy, this time they’re as near as we are damned to succeeding!

[youtube=http://youtu.be/Tsn80mDQjG8&w=500]

Tiberius threw them out of Rome around the time of Jesus (although He gets the credit) and twelve hundred years later, Edward the First threw them out of England, lock, stock and anyone associated with them “over matters of Usury, which the moneylenders did not apply to themselves or their families and relatives”.

They are back.

“The real truth of the matter is, as you and I know, that a financial element in the larger centers has owned the government since the days of Andrew Jackson. It may be recalled that (he)… was so enraged by the tactics of bankers that he said: “You are a den of vipers. I intend to rout you out and by the Eternal God I will rout you out. If the people only understood the rank injustice of our money and banking system, there would be a revolution before morning” President Wlson, November 1933

And have been back for four hundred years this time. But this time they sit on Tiberius’ throne, on Henry’s – as our rulers. – Tom Dennen

Federal Reserve SystemThe third attempt to bankrupt civilization after Tiberius’ Rome and Henry’s England began with the first ‘pump and dump’ demonstration on the Amsterdam stock market in 1670, a commonly sidelined phenomenon called Tulip Mania .

The ‘Tulip Mania’ demonstration was in reality the beginning of financial coup that finally allowed the moneylenders to achieve loan sharking ‘legitimacy’ among European governments who, instead of throwing them out, embraced them and colluded with them in the creation of the “Boom-Bust” Capitalist paradigm.

The rich began to get richer and the poor, poorer.

But the middle class merchants, just like in Amsterdam, amassed enough wealth to continue with ‘stock market investments’ in a system rigged to the House and were reguarly cleaned out.

Continue reading

Don’t Fear The Collapse: The Future Will Be Better

FreemansPerspective.com May 9 2013

Yes, we’ve all seen scary post-apocalyptic films like Mad Max, or TV shows like Jericho. A real collapse, however, will be quite different from such dramas. And beyond that, there’s a good chance the future will be better.

From where I now live, you could draw a 25 mile arc which would include competent people of almost any imaginable specialty: The guys who know how to build and repair refrigerators, machines of all types, cars and roads and houses and windows and computers and a thousand other things.

So, I’m not overly worried about the dollar going to zero – as long as these guys have two critical things:

  1. They must be able to communicate with each other.
  2. They must be left alone, with no one telling them “you can’t do that without our permission.”

If either one of these two things are missing, we’re screwed, but as long as we have them, we’ll be okay. Sure, there will be some bad days, a few tragedies, and a surfeit of terror from the fear factories (that is, the mainstream media), but in general, we productive people will be okay.

I knew men who ran a business through the Great Depression, in precisely my specialties (contracting and engineering). We discussed the difficulties they faced and how they coped with them. They worked through the depression end to end, and did some pretty impressive projects – with absolutely no credit available anywhere.

They paid for things creatively – in sections, with barter, and on trust – but they also got the job done, from the beginning of the depression to the end.

Our period of difficulty (which most of us presume will be coming somehow or another) will be different from the Great Depression, but so long as we retain the two items mentioned above – and I will tell you precisely how we can keep them below – we’ll get through it.

Continue reading

The Real Fundamental Transformation of America

Wealth Wire April 24 2013 (Thanks, A.L.)

“How to defeat terrorism? Don’t be terrorized. Don’t let fear rule your life. Even if you are scared.”— Salman Rushdie, Step Across This Line

Federal Reserve SystemThe events of last week seemed straight from the pages of graphic suspense drama…

Macabre images of terror and blood in the streets, cowardly terrorists on the run, and families destroyed by unfathomable tragedy in the aftermath of the Boston Marathon bombing.

How could something this horrifying be happening… again?

The most shameful part in all of this is I’ve found it’s often easier to cope with the chaos in our world by treating it as if it were just something we find in the fiction shelves at a local library.

But the reality is pandemonium fills the streets, even if most of us are watching it unfold on television from the comfort of our own living rooms.

This leads us to have difficulty in separating ourselves from the discord that plagues even the strongest of our nation’s cities.

What we must do is begin to accept reality for what it is, not what we wish it to be… Then, and only then, can we as individuals and communities take positive steps forward to overcome the fear that has relentlessly befallen us, especially over the last decade.

Responsively, today’s Americans are suffering the most severe levels of stress to date. Suicide now outranks car accidents in leading cause of injury death in America; one-third of our nation’s employees suffer chronic debilitating stress while millions are dependent on SSRI antidepressants – highly controversial, mood-altering psychiatric drugs with the FDA’s “suicidality” warning label and alarming correlation with school shooters.

Times are tough, and events like the recent Boston Bombing remind us that everyday living is full of unpredictabilities with the power to transform individuals, families, communities, and the world at large.

Not Your Grandfather’s America

Continue reading

9 Lifelong Secrets From A 90-Year-Old Veteran

Activist Post February 16 2013

Grandpa is a good soul who overcame tremendous hardship and is alive and well to this day despite some recent medical issues he’s happily recovering from. We’ll call him Fred. We’ve studied him forever to figure out the secrets to his long happy life. Some will sound like common sense; and some you may never have heard of or correlated with longer life.

Singing – For real? Grandpa is a lover not a fighter who always enjoyed music, especially theater. But that doesn’t have to be you to apply. How many of us sing in our car or hum while we work? He sang his whole life and was the leading man in numerous plays, always ready to lend a hand to community entertainment. It turns out – singing is good for the heart, mind and soul. Singing is seen as a symptom of happiness.

Sense of Humor – it must be Fred’s sense of humor that brought him through hardships. Let’s just say he joined WW2 to escape his home life. He made it through the Great Depression as well. But he never takes himself too seriously. He doesn’t fear the eccentricity label – he doesn’t seem to fear anything. Embrace humor if you want to cope with what lies ahead.

When his heart recently stopped, he had been in the middle of singing with his seniors follies choir that appears at nursing homes, many of the residents of which are much younger than him. One hospital visit and pacemaker later, he’s sitting up in bed laughing, saying: “So much for that singing health study you sent me – look where it’s landed me!” He was joking and serenading the nurses and back at home in no time. A sense of humor must mean something if it can change our entire physiology in seconds.

When a thyroid surgery changed his voice, we were afraid he couldn’t sing anymore. “Oh but hey!” he exclaimed. “I can start singing like Johnny Cash! He talks a lot when he sings anyways.” You can’t keep a humorous man down – you can’t hold anything over his head – he laughs in the face of his troubles. He was clear into his 80s before significant health problems arose – that’s a life many of us envy and aren’t granted.

Continue reading