Rep. Ron Paul: Next US Crash Will Be Comparable To That Of Soviet Union, QE2 Is A ‘Total Failure’ And The Fed Is A ‘Central Planning Cartel’

This will be the greatest financial collapse in history and it will be NOT comparable to that of the Soviet Union, which has been a cake-walk in comparison.

As it is seen now there will be chaos and blood in the streets, which is maybe what the elite wants.

“The best time to buy is when blood is running in the street.”
– Nathan M. Rothschild

Wake up America and stand up now to soften the coming collapse and to prevent total chaos.

In case you still believe in your elite puppet government telling you the truth about the current situation:

Quotes from the Great Depression

Only this time things will be much worse than during the Great Depression.

“This much is true: you have been lied to.”
– Rep. Ron Paul


Ron Paul has just stepped up his war of rhetoric with his nemesis the Archchairsatan Rudolf Vissarionovich von Bernankestein (because never before have we had a genocidal central planner hell bent on printing the world’s fate out of a deflationary collapse), and in an interview with Larry Kudlow said what everyone who is watching the day after day melt up (and wondering what comes next) openly thinks: that when all is said and done, and there is no incremental vapor and no incremental HFT levitation effect, that the US collapse will be comparable only to that of the Soviet Union.

Needless to say, we are confident he is optimistic. Some economic observations from Paul:

“We have so much unemployment, it is so undercounted. The free market economists report that there is probably 22% of unemployment. They pumped in $4 trillion, they should have added a lot of jobs, but how much did it cost us, and that of course is the price inflation that will come. We are moving into another 30 year period where we are going to see a reversal of interest rates, and we are going to see a crashing of the bonds like we saw 30 years ago and it’s going to last a long, long time.The Fed deserves the blame for the inflation, and for the unemployment.”

On the amount of damage done by the Fed:

“I think it’s unimaginable, it could be so devastating, and could bring a strong, worldwide run on the dollar. We are in uncharted territories. I think we will see changes in our economy and our country almost equivalent to the change that occurred in the Soviet system. I think it will bring down our empire, we won’t be able to afford our welfare state, and we won’t be able to afford taking care of the world.”

And as Zero Hedge suggested previously, Ron Paul believes that the Fed’s policies will actually lead to a spike in unemployment when all is said and done. Lastly, on Ron Paul view of Bernanke’s central planning:

“One time when Greenspan was before the committee, I told him if you can make this fiat system work as if it is the market system working, you have repealed economic law. It is positively baffling that we as a country have accepted that one individual can control the economy… I’d like to get the monopoly power away from this cartel that pretends that they know how to run the entire economy.

And just in case the message was not heard loud and clear, Paul followed up earlier with some more thoughts:

QE2 is a “total failure,” except for those folks who work on Wall Street,” Rep. Paul says. “It hasn’t done anything for Main Street; hasn’t done anything to give us real jobs; hasn’t done anything for people who are losing their houses.”

As for inflation, “I think there’s plenty,” Rep. Paul says, citing “skyrocketing” commodity prices and rising food prices. One problem is the Fed’s reliance on core CPI, which famously excludes food and energy and relies on hedonic adjustments. “They rig that number,” he says. “[Bernanke] looks at government stats that are fudged to reassure him he doesn’t have to do anything.”

“We’re trying to correct the massive problems we had this decade with more” of the same policies, he laments. “He’s supposed to give us full employment and stable prices and we have neither. How did the Fed do?”

Rep. Paul says he’d support stripping the Fed of its dual mandate – full employment and price stability – as others in Congress have discussed. But he doesn’t think it will do much good and continue to push for a full audit of the Fed and some “competition” for the dollar, as you’ll see in part 2 of this interview.

Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/10/2011 12:59 -0500

Source: ZeroHedge

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