Classic FX

My bias for USD is weak against precious metals this coming week.

Xag/usd long: $30.884

Xau/usd long: $1420.55
:)
Still holding these precious metal positions.
Current prices,

Xag/usd $33.56
+8.68%

Xau/usd $1412.04
-0.60%

:)


Democrat urges unions to 'get a little bloody when necessary'
By Michael O'Brien - 02/23/11 07:57 AM ET
http://thehill.com/blogs/blog-brief...r-protests-get-a-little-bloody-when-necessary

Sometimes it's necessary to get out on the streets and "get a little bloody," a Massachusetts Democrat said Tuesday in reference to labor battles in Wisconsin.

Rep. Michael Capuano (D-Mass.) fired up a group of union members in Boston with a speech urging them to work down in the trenches to fend off limits to workers' rights like those proposed in Wisconsin.

"I’m proud to be here with people who understand that it’s more than just sending an email to get you going," Capuano said, according to the Statehouse News. "Every once and awhile you need to get out on the streets and get a little bloody when necessary."

Political observers have been the lookout for potentially incendiary rhetoric in the wake of January's shooting in Tucson, Ariz., where Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D) survived an assassination attempt, six were killed, and 12 others were injured.

On Wednesday afternoon, Capuano issued a brief apology: "I strongly believe in standing up for worker rights and my passion for preserving those rights may have gotten the best of me yesterday in an unscripted speech. I wish I had used different language to express my passion and I regret my choice of words."



Political rhetoric has become especially heated in Madison, Wis., where Republican Gov. Scott Walker has proposed major labor reforms that sparked more than a week's worth of rowdy protests at the state capitol.

"We take security seriously, whether it's for me, the lieutenant governor and all 132 members of the state legislature, Democrats or Republicans alike, because there's a lot of passion down here," Walker said Tuesday on MSNBC about his safety in Wisconsin. "And particularly when we see people coming in being bussed in from other states, that's what worries us."

Capuano made his remarks before a crowd of union members in Boston, along with other members of the state's congressional delegation. Massachusetts has an influential union population that could loom large over the 2012 Senate race. Capuano is considering getting in that race to challenge Sen. Scott Brown (R-Mass.) next fall.

“This is going to be a struggle at least for the next two years. Let’s be serious about this. They’re not going to back down and we’re not going to back down. This is a struggle for the hearts and minds of America,” Capuano told union members.
 
My bias for USD is weak against precious metals this coming week.

Xag/usd long: $30.884

Xau/usd long: $1420.55
:)
Still holding precious metal positions.
Current balance,

Xag/usd $33.23
+7.60%

Xau/usd $1414.33
-0.44%

:)


Middle East Chaos: What To Learn And What To Expect
http://neithercorp.us/npress/2011/02/middle-east-chaos-what-to-learn-and-what-to-expect/
By Giordano Bruno
Neithercorp Press – 2/24/2011

There are many different kinds of revolution; some more effective than others. Telling the difference between a successful revolution and a failed revolution can be tricky. Often, on the surface, they look exactly the same. The secret is to set aside what we would “like” to see, and be brutally honest about what was actually accomplished in the course of the dissenting action. Has power been fully rescinded by the offending government or regime to the people, or, to yet another corrupt bureaucracy with a slightly different face? Have the puppet strings of corporate globalists been severed from your country, or do they remain strong as ever? Has ANY corrupt official actually been punished for the crimes that led to the insurgency in the first place, or, did they fly off scot-free to their million dollar villas in Ecuador, drinking mojitos in wicker recliners and watching the disaster they created unfold on CNN? Who ultimately benefited from the event?

Today, the entire Middle East is on the verge of complete destabilization and possibly civil war. Tunisia, Egypt, Libya, Bahrain, Yemen, and other nations are experiencing a shockwave of unrest not seen since the 1970’s. Western media sources are calling it a “people’s revolt”, one which the Obama administration is heartily embracing like an old relative. But are we witnessing the democratization of the cradle of civilization, or something else entirely? How will we be affected by this tide of confusion? Instead of falling into panic and fear over the growing chaos, what can discerning Americans learn from a social implosion on the other side of the world that will help us to survive a similar occurrence here? Let’s examine some of the distinct moments that have characterized the Middle East debacle, the underlying and corrupt influences that surround them, as well as certain historical facts of the region that globalist engineers would rather we forget…

Molding The Arab World

Are globalist interests involved in the breakdown of the Middle East? Most certainly. However, this much widespread resentment and pent-up collective rage is not something that can be easily fabricated. It is far more likely that anger over the feudal governing tactics of dictators in the Arab world (many of which were installed or supported by U.S. and European interests) is very real, and has been building for quite some time. So then, why are Western governments applauding the overthrow of despots they themselves placed in power?

The Mubarak regime was the second largest recipient of U.S. financial and military aid in the world. One third of ALL publicly reported U.S. foreign aid goes to Egypt and Israel:

http://www.vaughns-1-pagers.com/politics/us-foreign-aid.htm

Without this vast military aid from the U.S., Mubarak would not have been able to maintain his 30 year reign. This is a cold hard fact. So then, why go against a leader you already have firmly in your grasp?

When the Shah of Iran (a violent madman we anointed) was overthrown by popular revolt in 1979, the U.S. government responded with vitriol and saber rattling. When Hosni Mubarak (a violent madman we anointed) was overthrown this past month, the U.S. government responded with cheers and warm regards. What was the difference between the revolution in Iran, and the revolutions all over the Middle East today? Insurance…

Like most puppet leaders and figureheads, Mubarak was an errand boy, a conduit for implementing globalist policies in Egypt. His relinquishment of power was in reality nothing of the kind, because the power was never his to give back. It is important to take note that Mubarak’s cabinet and most of the existing government and military structure remains firmly entrenched:

http://www.haaretz.com/news/interna...abinet-retains-mubarak-era-ministers-1.345069

Field Marshal Mohamed Hussein Tantawi, who leads the ruling military council and has been defense minister for about 20 years, took “temporary” control of Egypt after Mubarak ceded authority. Tantawi retains very strong ties to Washington D.C. and an unerring loyalty to Mubarak’s policies, which is perhaps why Barack Obama seemed so jubilant about Mubarak’s departure. In the recent and controversial Wikileaks release of private diplomatic cables, Tantawi is famously referred to as “Mubarak’s Poodle”:

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2011/02/16/501364/main20032166.shtml

The key here is that globalist circles support the change in Egypt exactly because nothing will change for the citizenry. The Egyptian people will not gain true influence in the politics of their own country, and they may have even less influence over their own lives if a military infrastructure remains embedded within their government. Their entire rebellion was diluted and redirected, because they naively focused on Mubarak as the source of all their ills, instead of the corrupt system he was a mere front-man for.

What about Libya? Muammar Gaddafi, the crazy bag lady of third world dictators, was the darling of the UN in 2009 when he was nominated the head of the African Union. He was just as much a monster then as he is today, and as far as I know his human rights record has remained dismal, but then again, he was helping the globalists by paying the AU dues of numerous countries with Libyan oil money and luring them towards centralization:

http://www.saiia.org.za/diplomatic-pouch/libya-s-oil-makes-all-the-difference.html

Apparently, Gaddafi has outlived his usefulness as international bodies now fully support the rebellion in Libya.

Remember Tunisia? That fight for freedom that the mainstream media essentially ignored until it was almost over and the two decade rule of Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali (another despot with a history of human rights violations who was also installed with the help of Western interests, primarily Italy) was finally overthrown? Well, now globalist proponents suddenly “love” Tunisia and are promoting it as a “model revolution”. Why? Maybe because the dastardly duo of McCain and Lieberman are in town to offer the new Tunisian government “training from the U.S. to help Tunisia’s military provide security”:

http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/02/21/us-tunisia-turkey-idUSTRE71K2YE20110221

Yikes. These are the same guys who drafted the ‘Enemy Belligerents Act’ which would allow the U.S. government to treat any American citizen as an “enemy combatant”, removing Habeas Corpus and all Constitutional rights to a fair trial. I guess the lesson to Americans and most importantly the Liberty Movement is that if they can’t beat you, they’ll try to join you, and then co-opt you. My hope is that the Tunisians will turn down the Trojan Horse offerings of sewer rats like McCain and Lieberman, but if they do, I imagine the globalists will not be quite so friendly anymore.

What is happening in the Middle East is a perfect example of the manipulation of existing dissent towards establishment ends. The surface trigger for these events is obviously the doubling of food prices across the world in the past two years (you can thank the orchestrated devaluation of western currencies for a large part of this). People have a bad tendency to weather all kinds of atrocities as long as they are fed, but once certain necessities are taken from the masses, they WILL act, usually in a violent and unfocused manner. These revolutions are, for the most part, legitimate when they begin, but are co-opted as they progress, chiefly because the cultures involved do not understand where the real threat is coming from. Is centralization of the Middle East through catastrophe the goal? Perhaps, though, when all is said and done, I think the upheaval in the Middle East is much more about the U.S., than the Muslim world…

Déjà Vu All Over Again…

For those who really want a comprehensive sense of what is happening in the Middle East and why, I suggest a look into the last major Egyptian revolution of 1952. At that time, Britain was still the preeminent western power in the Arab world, and its control of the oil supply was absolute, much like the stranglehold the U.S. has enjoyed for many decades. Oil was pegged to the British sterling and any trade in crude required a conversion to the British currency. In fact, it was often said that the British Empire’s power after World War II was entirely dependent on its reserve currency status in oil markets. Any of this beginning to sound familiar?

In 1952, a revolution against the Egyptian puppet monarchy and its British overseers burst seemingly from nowhere, led by a group called the “Free Officers Movement”. In reality, the insurrection, fed by years of corrupt Aristocratic rule, was initiated and in some cases funded by both U.S. and Soviet agencies in tandem! In 1951-1952, nationalist police officers backed by the U.S. and Russia began supporting fedayeen terrorist groups using false flag attacks to weaken the region (is this sounding even more familiar?). Interestingly, this era was the birth of the so called “Muslim Brotherhood”, a group which has suddenly resurfaced in media discussion today.

Riots spread through Cairo, King Farouk was overthrown, the British were eventually run out, and their control of the Suez Canal was lost. But the story doesn’t end there…

The British and the French wanted the Suez back (at least that’s what they claimed), for control of the Suez meant control of Middle East oil markets. A plan was initiated by the two European powers to take back the canal using an Israeli invasion of the Gaza Strip as a spring board. This time, Israeli agents were used by the British to conduct false flag attacks, which were presented as a pretext for Israel to move against Egypt. The British and French followed by landing troops near Cyprus and Algeria.

The plan would have worked, except for one thing, the British were financially weak after two world wars and were completely dependent on American investment in their treasury debt. In response to the British action, the U.S. along with the UN threatened to halt investment in British debt and to stop price support of the Pound Sterling. This led to the eventual fall of the pound as the world reserve currency, and the rise of the dollar.

Official history portrays this move by the U.S., Russia, and the UN, as an attempt to undermine the long reach of the English. It is rather convenient however that the pound was dethroned just as plans for the European Union were beginning to be implemented in the early 1950’s. It seems to me that the British elites were fully aware that their futile attempts to hold onto the Middle East would result in the fall of the Pound; it was simply the British people’s turn to be taken down a few notches, and centralized. The similarities between the British Empire’s decline over Middle East oil in the 1950’s and our decline over Middle East oil today, are startling.

If history was to repeat itself, I would guess that the U.S. will soon be embroiled in political or even military operations to control the Suez, and retain its dollar peg to oil, which will illicit a negative response by international investment, causing central banks to dump their U.S. treasury investments and the dollar as a reserve currency.

Think of it as a grand theater meant to amuse only global bankers…

Energy Crisis To Strike The U.S. And Protect Globalists

An unstable Middle East benefits very few people, and that, I suppose, is the point. As we have covered here in a multitude of articles, the U.S. is on the verge of engineered economic collapse, driven mainly by the steady and purposeful devaluation of the dollar and our quickly expanding national debt. If you are a corporate central banking group seeking the death of the greenback as the world reserve currency, you face the very serious problem of avoiding immediate blame or retribution for your actions. What better way to escape the torches and pitchforks of the furious populace than to find a scapegoat, or a distraction even more terrifying than poverty?

Middle East turbulence provides the perfect smokescreen for the inflationary destruction of the dollar.

First and foremost, it hides the already skyrocketing price of energy, which was inevitable due to our devaluing currency (oil is traded primarily in dollars), but can now be blamed entirely on “Middle Eastern instability”. Already, the cost of crude has spiked to $100 a barrel, with no sign of relenting. Certainly, many Americans will now blame Egypt or Libya for their empty wallets, instead of global banks.

To add to the confusion, various agencies are feeding the MSM with a rainbow of mixed messages, which leave Americans vulnerable to uncertainty, making them far more malleable. For instance, the IMF has recently stated that the world can easily withstand $100 oil (a lie), while the International Energy Agency has stated that $100 oil would be “very very bad”, leading to a complete derailment of the global economy (which was going to occur anyway):

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-...-term-surge-in-crude-oil-prices-imf-says.html

http://www.cnbc.com//id/41714336

Social and economic disaster ANYWHERE in the world today will invariably cut the thin threads of psychological faith in our so called recovery. The system was a sham to begin with, and the quantitative easing methods of the Federal Reserve were never intended to actually “save” our financial house from collapsing, just prolong the event until they were ready to sweep away the ailing remains and offer us an IMF controlled replacement. It is designed to fail, and fail spectacularly. However, these facts will sink into the fog of history if Americans are suckered into fixating on a single area of the planet as the sole source of economic catastrophe.

Finally, if the tension spreads to other nations such as Saudi Arabia and triggers violent in-fighting, or Israel is tapped as an asset to instigate wider conflict, we could be looking at all out war on an incredible scale. This would be the distraction to top all distractions.

Is American Upheaval Next?

If crude oil continues to climb above $100 for more than a couple months, the negative effects will be undeniable. If you thought we had inflation before, just wait until gas hits $5 to $6 a gallon, and shipping costs for goods explode. This doesn’t even take into account the very real possibility that once the Middle East is fully destabilized, and certain political influences are dissolved, OPEC will completely de-peg oil from the dollar. From there, the sky is the limit on gasoline values. Already, Mohamed El-Erian, chief executive officer at Pacific Investment Management Co. (PIMCO) is calling for a “stagflationary” market reaction to the turmoil in Libya:

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-...g-act-tackling-debt-crisis-el-erian-says.html

What will be the U.S. government response to a crashing currency and climbing costs? Austerity! Although, they will probably use different terminology to describe it. The onset of cost cutting measures is becoming more visible, especially within the states, where municipal bond investment has run screaming off a cliff. Large scale protests are erupting in Wisconsin and Ohio due to state cuts designed to help them stay financially afloat:

http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/02/22/us-ohio-protests-idUSTRE71L7SR20110222

The debate here becomes two sided; do state workers deserve to have their wages or benefits cut because state governments were fiscally irresponsible? Should states continue to run up incredible deficits just to appease state workers (who many consider overpaid) in the short term? They are both meaningful positions that need to be considered, however, these two sides miss the full picture.

The fact is, state governments are beyond broke, and eventually, they will have to nix spending and entitlement programs regardless of how anyone is affected, especially in the face of unchecked inflation. State employees and all people dependent on welfare are not necessarily the culprits behind financial clear-cutting either. The argument cannot be allowed to devolve into a mindless cage match over who deserves the money, because, first, there is no money, and second, this distracts from the original cause of the distress; the corporate banking elites who instigated the disaster in the first place. Already, I can see a certain subsection of the populace lashing out wildly at figureheads and opposition parties, just like in Egypt, instead of the corrupt system and the banking moguls who built it.

If an Egyptian or Libyan style revolt, driven by blind mob mentality, takes place in the U.S., we can expect several things to occur. Normal means of communication will be disrupted; both Egypt and Libya responded to protests by shutting down all internet and cell phone traffic. Martial Law will be enacted, and Constitutional rights suspended; continuity of government programs are already in place to legally bind states into bowing to DHS and FEMA authority in the event of any “national disaster”, including a dissenting citizenry. Immediate bank closures will follow, just as occurred in Egypt, causing a lack of liquidity in local markets and panic among those who were financially unprepared. Violence will unavoidably result, giving the Department of Homeland Security the perfect excuse to implement even more controls, all for our own “safety” of course.

Some may welcome such bedlam as a sign of change. I don’t see it that way. Revolution without direction, without a plan, and without a clear understanding of the source of the problem, is meaningless. We can allow ourselves to be herded by our own rage into even more pronounced tyranny, or we can stay focused, collected, and act with purpose by organizing our communities with the objective of self sufficiency and self protection. We can work with state legislators to bring support to Tenth Amendment issues, giving them the strength to withstand an economic collapse and the ability to turn down DHS or FEMA’s “help” when the time comes. We can organize intelligently, without centralized control, or we can hand over our destinies to yet another elite group of unaccountable autocrats. As impossible as it might seem, the choice really is up to us. How we act and react in the coming months will mean the difference between a free and prosperous America, or a scorch mark in the annals of history.

You can contact Giordano Bruno at: [email protected]

If you would like to contribute to our soon to be launched Alternative Market Project, visit our donate page here: http://neithercorp.us/npress/donate/
 
My bias for USD is weak against precious metals this coming week.

Xag/usd long: $30.884

Xau/usd long: $1420.55
:)
Still holding precious metal buys. I am going to hold these until the end of the week, then will close these positions.
Have also re-worked my strategy for trading precious metals and currencies. The re-work looking over the past few months, shows a 100% profitability for the calls on direction.

Current balance on positions.

Xag/usd $36.06
+16.76%

Xau/usd $1426.73
+0.44%
:)



Wars Should Be Declared by Congress, Not Merely Launched by Presidents
John Nichols
March 20, 2011

The grotesque extremes to which Muammar Qaddafi has gone to threaten the people of Libya—and to act on those threats—have left the self-proclaimed “king of kings” with few defenders in northern Africa, the Middle East or the international community.

Even among frequent critics of US interventions abroad, there is disgust with Qaddafi, and with the palpable disdain he has expressed for the legitimate aspirations of his own people.

So it is that the advocacy for military intervention has spread far beyond the usual circle of neoconservative hawks.

The circumstance is made easier by the fact that the bombing of Libya by US and allied planes is being carried out under the auspices of the United Nations. And with his words and his initial reluctance with regard to taking military action, President Obama has seemed to avoid many of the excesses of his predecessors.

Yet, now the headline on CNN reads “Libya War.”

And anyone who takes the Constitution seriously should have a problem with the fact that, once again, the United States is involved in a war that has neither been debated nor declared by the Congress of the United States.

The penchant of presidents of embark upon military adventures without consulting Congress is now so pronounced that it is barely noted anymore that the Constitution says “Congress shall have power to…declare War.”

Unless the United States is immediately threatened, presidents aren’t supposed to declare wars or launch them on their own.

Of all the checks and balances outlined in the Constitution, none is more significant than the power to declare war.

Yet, since World War II, presidents have launched attacks, interventions and wars without declarations. And now that has happened again.

There are plenty of explanations for why this happens. Treaties that require to bind the United States to the United Nations. The War Powers Act. The general sense that members of Congress would prefer to let presidents call the shots.

But the Constitution does not establish any exit strategies for members of the Congress, They are supposed to provide advice and consent—or to deny it.

Unfortunately, that just does not happen anymore.

When the United States ratified the United Nations treaty after World War II, Henrik Shipstead and William Langer were the only senators to cast “no” votes on the UN Charter. Other senators, California’s Hiram Johnson and Wisconsin’s Robert M. La Follette Jr., expressed reservations.

What was their fear? The senators worried that, under the agreement with the United Nations, presidents would involve US troops in wars launched by the United Nations—without ever consulting Congress.

That fear proved to be well founded, as history would soon confirm, when President Truman sent US troops to Korea as part of a UN mission—but without a Congressional declaration.

President Obama’s approval of an intervention in Libya has also skipped the Congress.

Was this necessary? Of course not. Obama could have consulted Congress; indeed, if the issue was pressing, he could have asked that the House and Senate be called into session over the weekend.

That is what Congressman Dennis Kucinich proposed, when he declared last week that “Congress should be called back into session immediately to decide whether or not to authorize the United States’ participation in a military strike. If it does not, the action of the President is contrary to [the] US Constitution. Article 1, Section 8 of the Constitution clearly states that the United States Congress has the power to declare war. The President does not. That was the Founders’ intent.”

The Ohio Democrat sent a letter to Congressional leaders “indicating that the national interest requires that Congress be called back quickly to Washington to exercise its Constitutional authority to determine whether our armed forces should participate in the UN mission.”

“Both houses of Congress must weigh in,” Kucinich added. “This is not for the President alone, or for a few high ranking Members of Congress to decide.”

Consulting Congress does not mean that Congress will block a war. The constitutional system of checks and balances was not established merely to stop wars, although the wisest of the founders did hope that the requirements they imposed would “chain the dogs of war.”

The decision to place the power to declare wars was placed with the House and Senate in order to allow members of Congress to add their insights, to propose timelines, to set limits and parameters for military initiatives.

The debate, the discussion, the sifting and winnowing of information: This is the point.

Unfortunately, it is a point that Obama has missed.

The United States is now deep into what CNN calls the ”Libya War,” yet there has been no Congressional debate, no advice or consent, no checks and balances.

The Republic was well served by the drafters of a constitution, who gave the war-making power to Congress.

They were wise, and right, to do so. And any president who steers the country into an offensive war without consulting Congress ill serves the founding document and the republic.
 
My bias for USD is weak against precious metals this coming week.

Xag/usd long: $30.884

Xau/usd long: $1420.55
:)
Still holding metal buy positions.
Current prices.

Xag/usd $36.39
+17.83%

Xau/usd $1426.25
+0.40%
:)


Defendant Convicted of Minting His Own Currency
For Immediate Release
March 18, 2011
http://charlotte.fbi.gov/dojpressrel/pressrel11/ce031811.htm

STATESVILLE, NC—Bernard von NotHaus, 67, was convicted today by a federal jury of making, possessing, and selling his own coins, announced Anne M. Tompkins, U.S. Attorney for the Western District of North Carolina. Following an eight-day trial and less than two hours of deliberation, von NotHaus, the founder and monetary architect of a currency known as the Liberty Dollar, was found guilty by a jury in Statesville, North Carolina, of making coins resembling and similar to United States coins; of issuing, passing, selling, and possessing Liberty Dollar coins; of issuing and passing Liberty Dollar coins intended for use as current money; and of conspiracy against the United States. The guilty verdict concluded an investigation which began in 2005 and involved the minting of Liberty Dollar coins with a current value of approximately $7 million. Joining the U.S. Attorney Anne M. Tompkins in making today’s announcement are Edward J. Montooth, Acting Special Agent in Charge of the FBI, Charlotte Division; Russell F. Nelson, Special Agent in Charge of the United States Secret Service, Charlotte Division; and Sheriff Van Duncan of the Buncombe County Sheriff’s Office.

According to the evidence introduced during the trial, von NotHaus was the founder of an organization called the National Organization for the Repeal of the Federal Reserve and Internal Revenue Code, commonly known as NORFED and also known as Liberty Services. Von NotHaus was the president of NORFED and the executive director of Liberty Dollar Services, Inc. until on or about September 30, 2008.

Von NotHaus designed the Liberty Dollar currency in 1998 and the Liberty coins were marked with the dollar sign ($); the words dollar, USA, Liberty, Trust in God (instead of In God We Trust); and other features associated with legitimate U.S. coinage. Since 1998, NORFED has been issuing, disseminating, and placing into circulation the Liberty Dollar in all its forms throughout the United States and Puerto Rico. NORFED’s purpose was to mix Liberty Dollars into the current money of the United States. NORFED intended for the Liberty Dollar to be used as current money in order to limit reliance on, and to compete with, United States currency.

In coordination with the Department of Justice, on September 14, 2006, the United States Mint issued a press release and warning to American citizens that the Liberty Dollar was “not legal tender.” The U.S. Mint press release and public service announcement stated that the Department of Justice had determined that the use of Liberty Dollars as circulating money was a federal crime.

Article I, section 8, clause 5 of the United States Constitution delegates to Congress the power to coin money and to regulate the value thereof. This power was delegated to Congress in order to establish and preserve a uniform standard of value and to insure a singular monetary system for all purchases and debts in the United States, public and private. Along with the power to coin money, Congress has the concurrent power to restrain the circulation of money which is not issued under its own authority in order to protect and preserve the constitutional currency for the benefit of all citizens of the nation. It is a violation of federal law for individuals, such as von NotHaus, or organizations, such as NORFED, to create private coin or currency systems to compete with the official coinage and currency of the United States.

Von NotHaus, who remains free on bond, faces a sentence of up to 15 years’ imprisonment on count two of the indictment and a fine of not more than $250,000. Von NotHaus faces a prison sentence of five years and fines of $250,000 on both counts one and three. In addition, the United States is seeking the forfeiture of approximately 16,000 pounds of Liberty Dollar coins and precious metals, currently valued at nearly $7 million. The forfeiture trial, which began today before United States District Court Judge Richard Voorhees, will resume on April 4, 2011 in the federal courthouse in Statesville. Judge Voorhees has not yet set a date for the sentencing of von NotHaus.

“Attempts to undermine the legitimate currency of this country are simply a unique form of domestic terrorism,” U.S. Attorney Tompkins said in announcing the verdict. “While these forms of anti-government activities do not involve violence, they are every bit as insidious and represent a clear and present danger to the economic stability of this country,” she added. “We are determined to meet these threats through infiltration, disruption, and dismantling of organizations which seek to challenge the legitimacy of our democratic form of government.”

The case was investigated by the FBI, Buncombe County Sheriff’s Department, and the U.S. Secret Service, in cooperation with and invaluable assistance of the United States Mint. The case was prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorneys Jill Westmoreland Rose and Craig D. Randall, and the forfeiture trial is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorneys Tom Ascik and Ben Bain Creed.
 
Still holding metal buy positions.
Current prices.

Xag/usd $36.39
+17.83%

Xau/usd $1426.25
+0.40%
:)
Still holding previous metal buys.
Have just entered the following Xag/usd buy..

Xag/usd long $ 36.30493
S/l $ 36.20861

:)


General Motors lays off workers at NY plant
Mar 21 12:28 PM US/Eastern
By DEE-ANN DURBIN
AP Auto Writer
http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=D9M3NPGO0&show_article=1

DETROIT (AP) - General Motors Co. on Monday is halting some production and temporarily laying off workers at a Buffalo, N.Y., engine plant, another sign that Japan's disaster is affecting automakers around the globe.
GM's Tonawanda plant in Buffalo makes four- and five-cylinder engines for the Chevrolet Colorado and GMC Canyon compact pickups, which are assembled at a GM plant in Shreveport, La. GM has shut down the Shreveport plant this week because of a shortage of parts from Japan.

GM spokeswoman Kim Carpenter Carpenter said Tonawanda has the parts it needs to make the engines, but it's not producing the engines because Shreveport doesn't need them.

She said GM doesn't know when production will resume at either plant.

Carpenter said 59 of the 623 workers at the engine plant will be affected. Workers will get around 75 percent of their pay while they're laid off.

GM hasn't said which parts are affected in Louisiana. Automakers tend to withhold such information for competitive reasons. GM uses a five-speed manual transmission made by Japanese supplier Aisin Seiki Co. in the Canyon and Colorado, but Aisin said last week that it has enough transmissions and parts to continue supplying GM and hasn't shut down any of its plants in North America.

So far, GM is the only U.S.-based automaker to be affected by parts shortages. Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler Group LLC said Monday that they haven't slowed production but are monitoring the situation.

Also Monday, GM slowed production of its Corsa compact car in Europe because of a shortage of parts. GM cancelled two of the three shifts at its Eisenach, Germany, plant and closed another plant in Zaragoza, Spain.

GM said last week it was cutting unnecessary spending companywide as it assesses the impact of production disruptions from the March 11 earthquake and tsunami in Japan.
 
Last edited:
Still holding previous metal buys.
Have just entered the following Xag/usd buy..

Xag/usd long $ 36.30493
S/l $ 36.20861

:)
Stop loss hit for a loss of -1.86%

Have entered the following position..

Xag/usd long $ 36.26855
s/l $ 36.1526



THE REALITY DETACHED AMERICAN : a SGTbull micro-doc
 
Stoploss hit on this last position -1.58%, still holding previous positions as mentioned.

Have entered the following position..

Xag/usd long $36.21439
s/l $36.1492
:)
Have exited this Xag/usd position.
Gain on position..

Xag/usd out $37.10
+9.66%
:)


Egypt Shares Slump, Sending Index to Two-Year Low After Two-Month Closure

By Ahmed A Namatalla and Alaa Shahine - Mar 23, 2011 7:37 AM PT
http://www.trade2win.com/boards/newreply.php?do=newreply&p=1480478

Egypt’s benchmark stock index fell to the lowest level in almost two years after a two-month suspension amid a popular revolt that toppled the North African country’s president.

The EGX 30 Index (EGX30), the world’s worst performing stock measure this year, retreated 8.9 percent to 5,142.71, the lowest level since April 2009, at the 1:30 p.m. close in Cairo. Trading was halted today for 30 minutes after the EGX 100 index fell 7 percent. Orascom Construction Industries, the nation’s largest publicly traded builder, retreated to the lowest since July 2009. Commercial International Bank plunged 10 percent.

The drop “is normal given the lock-up period and the political and economic circumstances,” said Walaa Hazem, who helps oversee about $1 billion in Egyptian assets as vice president for asset management at HC Security & Investment in Cairo. Shares may fall another day or two, he said.

Egypt’s bourse, North Africa’s second-largest after Morocco by market value, resumed trading two days before a deadline that could have led to its removal from the MSCI Emerging Markets Index. The bourse will allow the EGX 100 Index to drop as much as 10 percent, exchange spokesman Hisham Turk said today. The measure lost 9 percent at the close.

Slow Recovery
President Hosni Mubarak bowed to mass protests and resigned Feb. 11 after three decades in power. The uprising against his regime caused tourists to flee, companies and banks to shutter and raised the government’s borrowing costs.

The yield on Egypt’s 10-year dollar bond fell for a seventh day to 6.5 percent, the lowest level since the middle of February, data compiled by Bloomberg show. The rate reached 7.21 percent on Jan. 31. The cost of protecting Egyptian government debt against default fell 2 basis points to 351 from the London close yesterday, according to CMA prices. They have dropped 25 basis points this week.

The Egyptian Financial Supervisory Authority, which regulates financial markets, said last month trading will be halted for 30 minutes if the EGX 100 Index falls more than 5 percent. If the drop extends to 10 percent, trading will be suspended for a period to be set by the bourse chairman. Daily share price movements will be limited to 10 percent and trading reduced to three hours from four.

“The circuit breakers are hurting the market and they have to be removed soon so we can get back to a free market,” said Ashraf Akhnoukh, senior equity sales trader at Cairo-based Commercial International Brokerage Co. “We expected this to happen.”

Egypt’s stock exchange suspended trading of 46 companies today after they failed to meet disclosure requirements. Ezz Steel, the country’s largest traded steel producer, and property developer Amer Group were among those whose shares were halted. Ahmed Ezz, the Ezz Steel’s chairman and a former senior official in Mubarak’s National Democratic Party, is on trial for corruption charges. He has denied any wrongdoing.

Best Performer
Orascom Telecom Holding SAE, North Africa’s biggest mobile- phone operator by subscribers, rose as much as 7.7 percent after shareholders of Russia’s VimpelCom approved issuing stock to complete a merger with its mother company, Wind Telecom SpA. The shares closed 2.8 percent lower, making them the best performer in the EGX 30.

The merger may be completed within weeks even though a key shareholder opposes it, Khaled Bichara, Wind’s chief executive officer, said in an interview on March 17. Wind holds a 51.7 percent stake in Orascom. Moody’s Investors Service placed Orascom’s B2 corporate family rating on review for a possible upgrade on March 21.

Economic Toll
Egyptians voted in a March 19 referendum to change the constitution, paving the way for presidential and parliamentary elections by the end of the year. The vote was the first since Mubarak’s ouster.

“While there have been positive developments on the political side, the protests in Egypt did take a toll on the economy,” Yong Wei Lee, who helps oversee about $1.2 billion as a senior fund manager at Emirates NBD Asset Management in Dubai, said yesterday. “It’s too early to consider bargain hunting. The Egyptian market will remain volatile for a while.”

Finance Minister Samir Radwan said in a telephone interview on Feb. 12 that economic growth may slow to 4 percent in the fiscal year through June from an earlier estimate of 6 percent.

The EGX 30 Index is the world’s worst-performing gauge this year after plunging 28 percent, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The measure rose 15 percent last year and 35 percent in 2009.

Further Declines
Orascom Construction fell 10 percent to 204.37 Egyptian pounds, before announcing a plan to buy back 750,000 shares after trading ended. Commercial International Bank, the biggest publicly traded lender, also slid 10 percent to 32.86 pounds.

Egyptian shares tumbled in New York and London yesterday, with the Market Vectors Egypt Index ETF, a U.S.-listed fund that holds Egyptian stocks, retreating 5.7 percent. London-listed global depositary receipts of Orascom Construction fell 2 percent today, declining for a third day.

“We expect that the Egyptian market may fall by 20 percent to 30 percent in the first few weeks of trading post-reopening, with the pace slowed by circuit breakers,” Simon Kitchen, strategist at Cairo-based EFG-Hermes Holding SAE, wrote in an e- mailed report before trading started today. “The market’s recovery will be slow and will depend on the pace of political developments and the extent of economic recovery.”
 
Have entered the following buy position.

Xau/usd long $1438.844
s/l $1436.334
t/p $1441.276
:)


Trump Tells Obama to Show the Birth Certificate
Infowars.com
March 23, 2011
http://www.infowars.com/trump-tells-obama-to-show-the-birth-certificate/

Is Donald Trump a “birther,” that political fate worse than death — or almost? Only “truthers” are more reviled by the establishment.

The Donald went on The View and said Obama needs to show the birth certificate.

“I want him to show his birth certificate. I want him to show his birth certificate,” he said. “Everybody else has to. Excuse me. I really believe there is a birth certificate. Look, she’s smiling. Why doesn’t he show his birth certificate? I wish he would. I think it’s a terrible pale hanging over him.”

And if it is discovered Barry was not born in the United States? What then?

Can we send him back to Chicago? Or to prison for tricking the nation?
 
Have entered the following buy position.

Xau/usd long $1438.844
s/l $1436.334
t/p $1441.276
:)
Stoploss hit on this Xau/usd position. My strategy set up again early in the morning for another long which would have now been at a gain, but it was 00:45 and I was asleep.

Xau/usd out $1436.334
-1.12%


Will JPMorgan Now Make and Take 'Delivery' of Its Own Silver Shorts?
http://seekingalpha.com/article/259...ke-and-take-delivery-of-its-own-silver-shorts

There is nothing inherently wrong and certainly nothing "illegal" about J.P. Morgan Chase (JPM) gaining a vault license for storing and taking delivery of gold/silver/platinum/palladium from the futures markets known as NYMEX/COMEX. However, the speed, timing and manner in which the exchanges just granted it troubles us.

The process of being approved as a licensed vault or weigh-master/assayer for the NYMEX/COMEX futures exchange usually involves a careful security inspection of the vaults, a full report of that inspection, and a completely transparent package submitted to the U.S. Commodity Futures Exchange Commission (CFTC) for approval. This process will ordinarily consume considerably more than 45 days. Apparently, such correct and careful practices apply only to banks and independent storage facilities that are not J.P. Morgan Chase.

Some vault operators are more equal than others. JPM appears immune from processes that everyone else must suffer through. On March 15, 2011, the Commodity Exchange (COMEX) and the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX) advised the CFTC that they had approved J.P. Morgan's application to become a licensed vault facility, using a "self-certification" process. The newly licensed vault, located at 1 Chase Manhattan Plaza, NY, NY, is ready to roll as both “weighmaster” and depository, for delivery of gold, silver, platinum and palladium contracts, as of March 17, 2011, two days later.

As a smaller player, the NYSE-Liffe exchange uses COMEX licensed depositories for delivery and storage of its metals. The new JPM vault, therefore, will also qualify to accept delivery of metal coming from the maturity of NYSE-Liffe gold and silver futures contracts, including the smaller 1,000 ounce silver contract.

Departures from usual practices, and special treatment in favor of some over others are events that lawyers describe as having "the appearance of impropriety", if nothing more. J.P. Morgan is a huge player in the London precious metals market, especially in derivatives. It has always been a very important player at NYMEX/COMEX, especially if you include its Bear Stearns division. The bank is heavily involved in infamous "unallocated storage" schemes in London. A more complete description of London-style storage can be found in my previous article.

JPM is one of six big bank owners of the London Precious Metals Clearing Limited (LPMCL) which clears, “delivers” and sets standards for “storing” precious metals allegedly “sold” at the London Bullion Market Association (LBMA) and the London Platinum and Palladium Market (LPPM). Unallocated storage is the norm at LPMCL member banks, including J.P. Morgan Chase.

Allocated storage, however, is the norm for precious metals vaults licensed by NYMEX and COMEX. The two futures exchanges have approved a small group of vault operators, who provide allocated storage to clearing members and their customers. This has given greater legitimacy to the NY exchange traded precious metals venue than the LBMA now has. It is true that NYMEX/COMEX warehouse supplies are wholly insufficient to cover the number of short contracts the exchange allows its clearing members to write. However, at least the numbers are transparent and published. That is more than can be said for the storage facilities that participate in the secretive LPMCL in London.

Allocated storage, under the common law, is known as a "bailment." When precious metal is allocated, the vault is the "bailee" and the owner is the "bailor". The bailee is keeping the property safe for the bailor and, in return, it charges a fee for its services, but the property belongs to the bailor at all times. The property cannot be legally leased, loaned, borrowed or used in any way without overt consent by the bailor. Whereas unallocated metal is an asset that is seized by a vault's creditors in bankruptcy, allocated metal is immune from this.

A bailment cannot be legally seized or encumbered by the bailee's creditors. Some of the NYMEX/COMEX vaults require a written bailment contract, setting out all rights and responsibilities of the customer and vault. Others operate in the old fashioned way (though the handshake is now often electronic) and, in such cases, the agreement between bailor and bailee is governed by traditional common law standards with no need to sign anything.

There are two storage categories in the NYMEX/COMEX scheme, known as “registered” and “eligible”. Regardless of the category, all bars are allocated by title, and are always of a size, weight and composition that would satisfy "good delivery" if the owner decided to deliver it. An exception to the idea of "global" allocation may occur if "registered" metal is kept in the name of a clearing member, but the bars actually belong to a customer.

This might happen when and if the clearing broker uses the bars as a form of "collateral" to back up performance bonds in a customer account. In such a case, the "bailment" (and allocated storage) would exist between the vault and the clearing member. I use the word "collateral" loosely because true collateral would remain titled to the debtor. In the NYMEX/COMEX scheme, registered bars are always titled in the name of a clearing member of the exchange, whereas eligible bars can be titled in the name of a customer or a clearing member.

In order to be delivered, eligible bars must be transferred into the registered category. This involves nothing more than an electronic entry, "wrapping" the correct number of units into what is called a warehouse "warrant." Each warrant constitutes a "good delivery" unit of metal sufficient to satisfy one short contract obligation. "Good delivery" means that each bar must be of a standard weight sufficient to meet the rules of the exchange and must be numbered and weighed. Each storage facility must always keep a "chain of title" history record for each bar.

Delivery at NYMEX/COMEX is first made to any licensed vault facility. Once the unit of metal arrives, title is transferred to the new owner. The new owner can do whatever he wants with his property. He can remove it from the bailment and take it into his own personal possession. He can transfer to a different vault. Or, he can keep the metal at the initial point of delivery. In many cases, the last option is chosen, so, often the bar never leaves the delivery vault until it is eventually resold and, usually, not even then. Bars can be delivered, and title transferred, without ever having left the vault.

Until now, JP Morgan did not have a NYMEX/COMEX vault license. They had to send silver, for example, to HSBC, Brinks, Scotia Mocatta and/or the Delaware Depository in order to "deliver" it on COMEX. Those vaults have been NYMEX/COMEX licensed for a very long time. But now J.P. Morgan has its own vault license, and the manner in which it seems to have obtained it, is troubling. The bank can now, potentially, deliver short obligations to itself. Yes, you read that correctly. The bank itself, if it still holds short silver positions, and/or the hedge funds/related financial institutions who may have taken over the positions, can now deliver the alleged metal to J.P. Morgan's own vault.

The American legal standard requires us to maintain a presumption of innocence until guilt is proven. That doesn't mean Americans are stupid. Only a fool would ignore the testimony given at the CFTC hearing held on March 25, 2010, or the fact that J.P. Morgan Chase is being sued, in two different class actions, accused of being a racketeering and corrupt influenced organization (RICO). Both lawsuits claim that the bank is using allegedly immense silver short positions in various venues, including COMEX, to manipulate prices.

If a short seller must deliver a commodity, and the commodity is not readily available, there is no better way to buy extra time than to be able to deliver into its own vault. Most of the metal will never leave the vault, and most delivered metal that will leave the vault won't leave right away. Indeed, paperwork tasks of transferring title can consume a few days. Thus, a late delivery may not be noticed if it is to the short seller's own vault if the vault operation staff chooses to remain silent.

Why was JPM awarded a vault license almost overnight, avoiding the lengthy vetting process others must undergo? Why did it happen in the middle of a major COMEX silver delivery month, during a massive worldwide silver short squeeze, at a time when physical silver is in severe shortage? We do not know the answers to these questions. The exchange rules should prohibit proprietary trading divisions, hedge funds and other closely associated or controlled financial institutions, from delivering to vaults owned or controlled by their own family of companies. Yet, no such rules exist.

Does the licensing of a NYMEX/COMEX JPM vault reflect short-seller panic? Paper money can be printed, of course, ad infinitum and endless reams of it can be borrowed from the Fed. The issue is how much paper money is needed to pry sufficient physical silver loose from the hands of its owners. We believe that an equilibrium level of about $52 per troy ounce would be sufficient. Assuming that the holdings of the various ETFs are not the scam that some have claimed, there is a huge potential supply right there.

Large delivery requirements can be met by cashing in on "baskets" of ETF shares for silver. There is also a huge supply of hoarded bars outside of ETFs, waiting for the right price to set them free. If supply problems continue, the price must rise further until sufficient selling occurs. Most owners of ETF shares, as well as holders of real physical silver, are not momentum chasers. They buy low and sell high in a traditional manner. Momentum chasers are irrelevant because they generally have only paper, and no real metal to deliver.

Remember, your bars can be transferred from one licensed facility to another very quickly. If any storage facility imposes a significant delay, that should be publicized, and met with resolute opposition. Neither silver nor other metals must be stored at licensed vault. They certainly need not be left at the first point of delivery. If you intend to use silver, for example, in commerce (such as a jeweler or industrial user might) or if you expect to keep it off the market for 20 years or so as a retirement fund, it is economically more efficient to physically remove the metal.

If anyone has any positive or negative experiences with the newly licensed J.P. Morgan vault, we would be very interested in learning about them.
 
My bias for USD is weak against precious metals this coming week.

Xag/usd long: $30.884

Xau/usd long: $1420.55
:)
Still holding these positions.
Current balance.

Xag/usd $37.42
+21.16%

Xau/usd $1431.84
+0.79%
:)


Will yen fuel Japan's next crisis?The natural disaster and nuclear crisis there rightly get the most attention, but battered Japan could soon face big troubles stemming from its currency. Here's why.
3/18/2011 12:27 PM ET
|By Bill Fleckenstein, MSN Money
http://money.msn.com/currency/will-yen-fuel-japans-next-crisis-fleckenstein.aspx

Obviously, the focus worldwide over the last week has been the disastrous combination of the earthquake, tsunami and nuclear power plant crisis in Japan. As a result, the fact that Japan's financial markets have experienced a crash, which may or may not have run its course, has been somewhat ignored.

On the night of March 14 (Pacific time), circuit breakers on the Tokyo Stock Exchange were tripped by falling prices and, as a consequence, that market quickly reached the point where it was not trading. All the action then spilled into the futures market in Singapore, where such trading limits don't exist. At the height of the panic, the Japanese futures market had declined almost 18%, pushing the losses at the intraday lows since the earthquake to almost 30%. (Prices have recovered somewhat since then.)



Latest news on Japan's earthquake and its aftermath

Cloudy future for the Land of the Rising Sun
It is still impossible to have any kind of a strong view about what is liable to happen financially and economically in Japan. However, one potentially scary problem is that, because interest rates have been so low there for so long, individuals and corporations (especially financial ones) have long been casting about the rest of the world in search of yield.



Bill Fleckenstein
Thus, as an unintended consequence of a decade of 0% interest rates, there is a very large, structurally imbedded short position in the yen. In other words, Japanese citizens in aggregate have been net sellers of yen and buyers of any currency they can find that gives them a better yield -- more return on their money -- over both short and long durations. If the yen's value increases, those investors will begin to lose money and may start to buy back their yen (i.e., cover their "short"), which in turn will feed demand. So even with the Bank of Japan printing gazillions of yen, that currency continues to fly higher.

That is how, as stop-loss orders were triggered the evening of March 16, the yen plunged from 80 to the dollar to 76.25 in less than an hour -- a truly monumental move for a currency in that short a time.

Following the Flying Yen

View more MSN videosGo to CNBC


At least initially, there were no financial reverberations, as the yen slowly but surely crawled its way back the morning of March 17 to a loss of about 1%. With concerns over the danger a stronger yen poses to Japan's economy mounting, the Group of Seven stepped in the following day to check the currency's fall relative to the dollar. This is a clear sign that the industrialized world is worried about the depth of Japan's currency problems.

I think that if the yen spends much time below 80 (lower in yen terms means it is stronger against the dollar), which I think it will, it could unleash some financial chaos -- not that we haven't seen plenty already. I don't know what sort of derivative structure may exist in the Japanese banking system or its insurance companies, but I assume there will be plenty of bizarre losses that will be uncovered eventually. I don't have any hard facts to back this up; it's just an educated guess on my part.

I am also keeping my eye on the Japanese government bond market for signs that something different may be taking place, as it continues to act as though Japan is not struggling under an immense load of debt. (It is.)

In summary, when it comes to Japan, I am even more worried about what I can't see than what I can.

Beware the option chain reaction
When one thinks about all of that, in addition to the shakiness of the sovereign debt of the PIIGS (and their banking systems), it is quite clear to me that the world's financial infrastructure is potentially going to need some help from the authorities. In other words, more confetti currency from multiple central banks is quite likely to be seen sooner rather than later.



I bring up the potential for a Japanese-inspired derivative problem just for folks to be aware of and alert to clues that something may be starting to happen, although I haven't seen anything yet to suggest that is the case. Whatever happens next, I doubt it will be orderly.

When one looks at Japan, the PIIGS, the instability in the Middle East and North Africa, and our own laundry list of domestic problems, why anyone would want to buy stocks generically is beyond my comprehension.
 
This week USD is going to be weak against the following products;
Xag, Xau, Chf, Jpy.

My suggestion is to buy Xag/usd & Xau/usd
and to sell Usd/chf & Usd/Jpy.

Xag/usd long $37.41

Xau/usd long $1430.93

Usd/chf short 0.9194

Usd/jpy short 81.31
:)


 
On a shorter time frame I have also entered another long position in xag/usd.

Xag/usd long $36.89858
s/l $36.423
:)


Global food scare widens from Japan nuclear plant
Mar 24 09:08 AM US/Eastern
http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=CNG.3e3ed7e3434b06408e36d7c289534e29.5c1&show_article=1

Countries across the world shunned Japanese food imports Thursday as radioactive steam leaked from a disaster-struck nuclear plant, straining nerves in Tokyo.
The grim toll of dead and missing from Japan's monster quake and tsunami on March 11 topped 26,000, as hundreds of thousands remained huddled in evacuation shelters and fears grew in the megacity of Tokyo over water safety.

The damage to the ***ushima nuclear plant from the tectonic calamity and a series of explosions has stoked global anxiety. The United States and Hong Kong have already restricted Japanese food, and France wants the EU to do the same.

Russia ordered a halt to food imports from four prefectures -- ***ushima, Gunma, Ibaraki and Tochigi -- near the stricken plant 250 kilometres (155 miles) northeast of Tokyo.

Moscow also placed in quarantine a Panama-flagged cargo ship that had passed near the plant and put its 19 crew under medical supervision after detecting radiation levels three times the norm in the engine room.

Australia banned produce from the area, including seaweed and seafood, milk, dairy products, fresh fruit and vegetables.

It said, however, that Japanese food already on store shelves was safe, as it had shipped before the quake, and that "the risk of Australian consumers being exposed to radionuclides in food imported from Japan is negligible".

Singapore also suspended imports of milk products and other foodstuffs from the same four prefectures and Canada implemented enhanced import controls on products from the quartet.

The Philippines banned Japanese chocolate imports.

"Food safety issues are an additional dimension of the emergency," said three UN agencies in a joint statement issued in Geneva, pledging they were "committed to mobilising their knowledge and expertise" to help Japan.

Japan was taking the right actions, said the International Atomic Energy Agency, World Health Organization, and Food and Agriculture Organization.

"Food monitoring is being implemented, measurements of radioactivity in food are taking place, and the results are being communicated publicly."

In greater Tokyo, an urban sprawl of more than 30 million people, strong aftershocks overnight and in the morning served as uncomfortable reminders that Japan's capital itself is believed to be decades overdue for a mega-quake.

The anxiety was compounded by the Tokyo government's revelation Wednesday that radioactive iodine in the drinking water was more than twice the level deemed safe for infants, although it remained within safe adult limits.

The news triggered a run on bottled water in shops and the city's ubiquitous vending machines, while the Tokyo government started to give families three 550-millilitre (18.5-ounce) bottles of water per infant.

A measurement on Thursday was in the safe zone for infants again, officials said, but this was not enough to soothe all parents of young children.

"I don't want to panic," Kazuko Hara, 39, told AFP as she collected her three allotted bottles of water in Tokyo's Bunkyo ward.

"I will use bottled water for now. If we run out, I will use tap water. Experts say it's OK. But when you see people buying bottled water at stores and emptying store shelves, that makes you worry again."

Japan's government has also halted shipments of untreated milk and vegetables from ***ushima and three adjoining prefectures, and stepped up radiation monitoring at another six, covering an area that borders Tokyo.

The health ministry has detected 82,000 becquerels of radioactive caesium -- 164 times the safe limit -- in the green vegetable kukitachina, and elevated levels in another 10 vegetables, including cabbage and turnips.

At the source of the radiation -- the ***ushima plant located on the Pacific coast -- white smoke could be seen wafting from four of the six reactors.

Fire engines again aimed their high-pressure water jets at the number three reactor, a day after a plume of dark smoke there forced workers to evacuate, in their bid to avert a full meltdown that would release greater radiation.

Highlighting the risks taken by the emergency crew, three workers were exposed to high radiation -- at least 170 millisieverts.

Two of them were sent to hospital after they stepped into a puddle of water that reached the skin on their legs despite their radiation suits.

Engineers have now linked up an external electricity supply to all six reactors and are testing system components and equipment in an effort to soon restart the tsunami-hit cooling systems and stabilise the reactors.

On Thursday, they partially restored power to the control room at reactor number one.

The grim statistics from Japan's worst post-war disaster kept on rising, with 9,737 now confirmed dead and 16,423 listed as missing by national police.

Scientists at the Port and Airport Research Institute meanwhile found that the tsunami that swallowed entire towns was even bigger than first thought. In devastated Ofunato, Iwate prefecture, it topped 23 metres (76 feet).
 
Have just opened a Xau/usd buy position.

Xau/usd long $1419.948
s/l $1410.133
:)


Ron Paul: There Is Nothing In Our Law That Says the UN Supercedes OUR Constitution!

 
On a shorter time frame I have also entered another long position in xag/usd.

Xag/usd long $36.89858
s/l $36.423
:)
Have modified this S/L to $37.02234

Have also added another Xag/usd buy position.

Xag/usd long $37.25493
s/l $37.02234
:)
 
Top