A Trail of Breadcrumbs: The Resignation of Pope Benedict and the Great Financial Collapse
February 15, 2013Source: Richard Gleaves
On Tuesday, February 12th, Pope Benedict XVI shocked the world and his congregation with news that he was resigning the papacy; this is entirely unprecedented in the modern age. The last pope to resign, Gregory XII, did so only to solve a dilemma of leadership in the church. That was 600 years ago, and it hasn’t happened since. Every pope in 600 years has died in the arms of the church.
But not this pope. Regardless of what you
believe, it is hard to fathom how, within the Catholic framework, he can
justify rejecting the papacy theologically or practically. Despite the
advantages of medical care and luxury, despite the prospect of remaining
servant of God and meeting his creator as pope, he is rejecting his
position in relation to God and walking away.
When something extraordinary happens, one must
look for extraordinary circumstances. I think I can explain this sudden
resignation, if the reader is prepared to follow a trail of breadcrumbs,
link after link in a chain that connects five men. This is not a chain
of five conspirators, necessarily, but is intended to show the links
between our politics, our financial gurus, and our religious leaders.
First, Barack Obama. The president is bent on running the national debt to its limit. He is pushing to eliminate the debt ceiling, and calling for chump-change revenue while the government wastes trillions pouring cash down sinkhole after sinkhole of boondoggles, swindles and schemes. Every move he makes promises a parabolic curve of rising debt. Why? There are three opinions. Firstly, it is possible that he believes increased spending is the way to save the economy; perhaps his advisors have told him that the depressionary forces of the market must be countered by an inflationary monetary policy or else the economy will collapse. The second possibility is that he knows a collapse is inevitable and is buying time, either for noble motives (sparing Americans the pain in the hope that some last minute save appears) or venal (a shopping spree of spending while the reserve status makes it possible, to secure his constituency and reward his cronies). The third opinion is more sinister. Could Obama be running up the debt to cause the collapse? Who would stand to benefit? And what would happen afterwards? It is difficult to believe that this is the case. How would the man look in the mirror?
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/08/opinion/krugman-kick-that-can.html
First, Barack Obama. The president is bent on running the national debt to its limit. He is pushing to eliminate the debt ceiling, and calling for chump-change revenue while the government wastes trillions pouring cash down sinkhole after sinkhole of boondoggles, swindles and schemes. Every move he makes promises a parabolic curve of rising debt. Why? There are three opinions. Firstly, it is possible that he believes increased spending is the way to save the economy; perhaps his advisors have told him that the depressionary forces of the market must be countered by an inflationary monetary policy or else the economy will collapse. The second possibility is that he knows a collapse is inevitable and is buying time, either for noble motives (sparing Americans the pain in the hope that some last minute save appears) or venal (a shopping spree of spending while the reserve status makes it possible, to secure his constituency and reward his cronies). The third opinion is more sinister. Could Obama be running up the debt to cause the collapse? Who would stand to benefit? And what would happen afterwards? It is difficult to believe that this is the case. How would the man look in the mirror?
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/08/opinion/krugman-kick-that-can.html
The second link is Paul Volcker. Volcker is former chairman of
the Federal Reserve. He knows the dangers of monetary inflation, having
fought back the post-Nixon Shock inflationary wave of the 70s. He was
Obama’s advisor on the financial crisis until January, 21st2011.
On that date, he resigned his position, ceding it to G.E. CEO Jeffrey
Immelt. What had he been working on in his last months? In September
2010, a self-appointed group convened at the grand Palais-Royal in Paris
for what became known as the Palais-Royal Initiative. These men were
former central bankers from around the world, acting (we are told) on
their own. The group was assembled by Tommaso Padoa-Schioppa, an Italian
banker considered to be the“Father of the Euro”. (He is also adored by
George Soros, who named his own Euro-solution the “Padoa-Schioppa plan”)
The purpose of the Palais-Royal initiative? To create a framework for
the next phase of monetary policy.
On December 18th, just before the penultimate meeting of the
group, Padoa-Schioppa died, and the third man in our trail of
breadcrumbs appears. The new leader of the Palais-Royal group: Michel Camdessus,
French economist and former Managing Director of the IMF. The group
came to its conclusion. The report of the Palais-Royal Initiative,
issued in January of 2011 (and revised the next month) calls for the
creation of a supranational banking power, outside the control of any
government, which would issue the global reserve currency in the form of
SDRs, a unit of account created at Bretton Woods in 1944. Essentially,
Camdessus’ old colleagues at the IMF (and the Bank of International
Settlements) want to take over international finance. We can't blame
them for trying, right? Camdessus presented the document to French
President Sarkozy, and the report was disseminated on October 5th, 2011 among the papers of the G-20, appearing on the abstract as a paper written specifically for the G-20.
http://www.global-currencies.org/smi/gb/telechar/news/Rapport_Camdessus-integral.pdf
One may well imagine the response to this paper: "This new banking takeover might work, Monsieur Camdessus, but is it right? Is it moral?" And now the Vatican comes in. We come to our fourth name, that of Cardinal Peter Turkson. Turkson is president of the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace. On October 23rd, 2011 (18 days after the G-20 presentation) the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace surprised many by coming out with a proposal that damned “the idolatry of the market” and called for a supranational banking authority identical to the one recommended by the Palais-Royal group. What are the chances? Coincidence? Not when you look on the list of advisors to the Council. There among the names is Michel Camdessus.
One may well imagine the response to this paper: "This new banking takeover might work, Monsieur Camdessus, but is it right? Is it moral?" And now the Vatican comes in. We come to our fourth name, that of Cardinal Peter Turkson. Turkson is president of the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace. On October 23rd, 2011 (18 days after the G-20 presentation) the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace surprised many by coming out with a proposal that damned “the idolatry of the market” and called for a supranational banking authority identical to the one recommended by the Palais-Royal group. What are the chances? Coincidence? Not when you look on the list of advisors to the Council. There among the names is Michel Camdessus.
http://www.justpax.it/pcgp/eng/membri.html
And so we come to the last name on our list, full circle to Pope Benedict XVI. Why is he stepping down so unexpectedly? The answer is to be found, I believe, in the name of the man considered to have the best odds of being our next pope: Cardinal Peter Turkson. According to the Pope’s own brother, Benedict is tormented by the “Vatileaks” scandal, involving leaked Vatican documents indicating money laundering and corruption. This is not to say that Benedict himself is implicated, but he may well be resigning to protect the church, as acquiescence to someone’s threat to release more. Who would possess such documents? The financiers who are on the opposite side of the Vatican trades, naturally. Those financiers who want a new pope in power:Peter Turkson, who is fully on board, and who will declare the IMF schemes to be moral and just when the time comes, a man who is unassailable due to his skin color, who will be commanding the obedience of 1.2 billion Catholics.
If there is any truth to these speculations, whether you believe in a divinity or you don’t, I think you can appreciate and share the sentiment: God help us all.
http://www.cnbc.com/id/100450439
http://www.policymic.com/articles/25679/cardinal-peter-turkson-5-facts-about-the-potential-first-black-pope
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