- Now this *is* interesting...
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- Remember those two "Japanese" who were caught
out a few days ago trying to smuggle $134.5 billion in U.S. bearer bonds
into Switzerland?
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- Two Japanese caught smuggling US bonds worth $134.5 billion
- http://ca.news.yahoo.com/s/capress/090615/world/eu_italy_switzerland_smuggled_bonds
- http://www.japanprobe.com/?p=10797
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- Well, the Wall Street Journal reported on 30 March 2009
that there were $134.5 billion of TARP funds left in the U.S. Treasury
Department's financial rescue fund.
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- Treasury Has $134.5 Billion Left in TARP
- http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123828522318566241.html
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- What a coincidence, eh? Here's a thought: could it possibly
be that the $134.5 billion left in the TARP fund is the *same* $134.5 billion
that the two "Japanese" tried to smuggle into Switzerland last
week? Maybe the Feds are trying to smuggle their *own* money out of the
country via back channels and into Switzerland, because they know the whole
American financial system is headed for the toilet at warp speed?
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- You see, if you want to avoid paying duties, taxes, imposts,
etc., or if you are converting public monies to private purposes, or funding
black budget undertakings, then you resort to suitcases with false bottoms
and mysterious "Japanese" couriers. Can you say Yakuza errand
boys? See how easy high finance is?
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- Think of it: the IRS leans on you, you get nervous, you
pay the IRS, the IRS converts the funds to bearer bonds, the U.S. Treasury
then contacts the Japanese mob's courier service and a couple of "Japanese"
errand boys take care of things from there. Well, except these two got
caught. But maybe ten others slip through. It's the law of averages. And
you thought you needed an MBA from Yale or Harvard to understand how big
money works and how governments handle money. Silly you... Trix are for
kids!
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- dr_samizdat@yahoo.com
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