It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
originally posted by: InverseLookingGlass
a reply to: darkstar57
Make sure to keep a close eye on those so-called elections. If NYPD can declare open warfare on lawful citizens, what makes you think they can't suspend elections and just take over?
originally posted by: darkstar57
a reply to: UnBreakable
I was hoping someone in Chicago would respond maybe with a pic of the current front view of the Fed on Lasalle...nothing like empirical confirmation...
originally posted by: darkstar57
Are the windows of the Chicago Federal Reserve on LaSalle street newly bricked up??? Not seen on google maps street view...and mentioned by karen hudes/ben fulford.
originally posted by: InverseLookingGlass
a reply to: darkstar57
NYPD declaring war on citizens & the US constitution
originally posted by: jimmyx
originally posted by: darkstar57
Are the windows of the Chicago Federal Reserve on LaSalle street newly bricked up??? Not seen on google maps street view...and mentioned by karen hudes/ben fulford.
so the windows of a building are bricked up, and the only reason you can come up with, is a financial collapse?...those dots are simply too far apart to connect.
The BDI of course is the cost of shipping raw materials world wide via four different classes of ships:
Capemax (100,000+ dead weight tons of cargo),
Panamax (60,000-80,000 dead weight tons of cargo),
Handymax (45,000-59,000 dead weight tons of cargo), and
Handysize (15,000-35,000 dead weight tons of cargo).
The last two categories of ships compose approximately 70% of the world's shipping fleet.
Since the demand for raw materials such as coal, iron, commodities on the world market is going down because of worldwide economic contraction -- the price of shipping, which is what the BDI actually measures, drops.
Moreover, commodity based currencies such as AUD, CAN, and NZD will also drop since there is a correspondingly lower demand for such currencies -- and indeed, these are also not doing well against other monetary assets even as the FOREX is manipulated by the central banks.
Since manufacturers are not demanding raw materials, the currency indexes are dropping as shipping prices are dropping, and the prospective demand for future finished goods is also dropping.
This kind of "supply and demand" index, such as the BDI, is very difficult to manipulate unlike stocks which are "going up" ...!
"...One alarming sign obviously was the treasury department issuing survival kits..."