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Tuesday, December 20, 2011

The unpaid spies in the financial system


 by Simon Black via sovereignman.com

Here’s a quick crash course in how the intelligence business works these days.  Despite the Hollywood mystique of suave, womanizing, pun-dropping men of mystery flitting around the world, it’s much more mundane.

In reality, government operatives from a host of three-letter agencies are working to develop large networks of informants. These are mostly folks who deal with other people and are in the know– the bartender in Beirut, the luxury car dealer in Bogota, the money changer in Riyadh, the hotel manager in Shanghai, etc.
These assets are constantly being pumped for information– who did you see, what were they buying, where did they go next, who were they with, what were they discussing, etc. And in exchange, informants typically get paid.

In the United States, there are a number of laws on the books which are theoretically supposed to prevent the three letter agencies from spying on US citizens. Naturally, the government dispenses with such inconvenient formalities in its sole discretion, and Congress frequently passes legislative exceptions (USA PATRIOT Act, NDAA, etc.)

There’s a little known division of the Treasury Department called the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) whose mission is to “to enhance U.S. national security, deter and detect criminal activity, and safeguard financial systems from abuse by promoting transparency in the U.S. and international financial systems.”

Here’s a government agency rule of thumb: The more noble-sounding the mission statement, the more villainous the agency.

FinCEN is basically the CIA of the financial system. But unlike the CIA which is technically not allowed to spy on US citizens and typically has to pay informants, FinCEN has complete legal authority over US persons. And they’ve managed to turn the entire financial system into the world’s largest network of informants.

Simply put, your banker is an unpaid, often unwilling spy of the US government.
Case in point– last week, FinCEN announced that a California banker had been slapped with a $25,000 penalty for notifying a customer who had become the subject of a federal “Suspicious Activity Report” or SAR.

SARs are required to be filed by bankers, brokers, money changers, check cashers, and even casinos. You may have been the subject of dozens of SARs and never know, because it’s against the law for your banker to notify you.

As for what is considered “suspicious”, there is no clear guidance on this. It could be anything– depositing or withdrawing too much cash, ATM withdrawals in foreign countries, unusual fund transfers into your account. Basically, anything that’s a departure from a completely sterile existence.

What’s more, financial institutions frequently have a minimum quota of SARs to fill out, and those who do not comply face severe penalties. Financial institution employees can even face CRIMINAL charges for failing to file a SAR.

Now, your banker may be a good guy, but do you think s/he’s willing to do jail time? No chance.
This is how normal, everyday people end up on government watch lists or have their assets frozen ‘pending investigation’. And with the recent passing of the National Defense Authorization Act and its catch-all terrorism clauses, we can only expect this to get worse.

It’s truly despicable when you think about it– the federal government creates a currency monopoly at the point of a gun (try buying your groceries with Swiss francs). Then they make it nearly impossible to function in this world without using the banking system, and then turn the entire banking system into a network of spies.
If you want to reduce these risks and dull the impact of the coming wave of SAR-driven civil asset forfeiture, it would be a really smart move to open a foreign bank account.

Nearly every country in the world has anti-money laundering rules now. Some (such as Mongolia, where I recently opened an account yielding nearly 14%), are easier than others. But the bottom line is that you’d be moving your money out of the jurisdiction where you live, and into a place where those agencies have zero (or limited) authority.

And if you want even more financial privacy, I’d strongly recommend holding precious metals in an anonymous overseas vault like Das Safe in Vienna.

2 comments:

  1. There is WAY too much scum hanging around recently.

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  2. The one thing that i remember the most clearly over the past 39-40 years of my school days at Brandeis University in1970's are my student adviser's words that when he was growing up that his grand parents and parents used the term "‘goyishe kup,’" meaning that the "Non-Jews are Stupid"

    Later in life I learned that the exact translation of "GOYISHE KUP" means that the "Cattle are STUPID"..

    I remember him recalling whatt his father told him when he was growing up in Eastern Europe. One of them being that when his father was in high school he and a group of friends would skip school early on Fridays and go over to his friend's father's butcher shop. That they would buy at cost any cows , that had not been butchered by the end of the day on Friday before the begining of shabat . They would take the cow home and wash it and then the boys would procede to "beat the udders of the cows so that they would swell up and turn pink" so as to sell them to the "GOYISHE KUP" as milk producing cows.

    The part that I remember him asking me if the East Europeans are so naive, so gullible and so stupid to buy old "non milk producing cows" from a bunch of young Jewish Boys.

    So thinking of it now I agree with the Jewish saying that the "GOYISHE KUP" are indeed" Stupid" as they believe that a Bunch of Arab Muslim Kids who were not able to Fly a Cessna Airplane took it upon themselves to FLY a Boing Jumbo Jet outwitting the US Military and Civilian authorities. The "Jewish Lightning Insurance Scam" of the 1960's is still alive and well has been put to good use by Larry Silverstein and his SAINIM Jews in putting 15 million down and comming out with 7 billion dollars for buidings that no one wanted to buy because it would have cost a billion dollars to remove the asbestos from. Then on top of that the people in America actually believe that they actually decide who is elected President or for that that actual VOTE is really counted and makes a difference in deciding who represents them in the White House and congress. http://www.bollyn.com/index.php
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rVTXbARGXso http://www.911missinglinks.com/ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DxnpujfanUM



    Yeh I agree that the AmericanNon-Jews are indeed American "GOYISHE KUP" or "STUPID CATTLE"!

    The Israeli Defense Firm That Tallies The Iowa Caucus
    By Christopher Bollyn
    1-1-8

    The Iowa caucus is only a few days away and the nation's attention will be directed to the results, which signify the beginning of the U.S. presidential race. But does anyone watch who tallies the results of the Iowa caucus?

    The Iowa caucus results were tallied in 2004 by a company that is headed by a man whose company was bought by Elron Electronics, the Israeli defense firm. I suspect that it will be the same this year. Don't expect to see any grassroots political activists doing the tally in Iowa. The Israeli defense establishment takes care of that part of the American "democratic" election process.

    VOXEO

    In the summer of 2004, I first learned that a foreign and out-of-state company using Interactive Voice Response (IVR) technology tallied the Iowa caucus results.

    The system used to tally the 2004 Iowa caucus results was provided by a company called Voxeo, which was apparently based in Orlando, Florida. (Yellow flag goes up in the mind of those familiar with Orlando and electronic vote fraud history

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