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THE YEAR OF THE GREAT VAMPIRE SQUID by Catherine Austin Fitts, Mapping the Real Deal www.solari.com The world’s most powerful investment bank is a great vampire squid wrapped around the face of humanity, relentlessly jamming its blood funnel into anything that smells like money. - Matt Tabbi, “Inside the Great American Bubble Machine” The Great Vampire Squid For years, it was hard for many of us to fathom the psychopathic nature of our financial elites, or to expand the meaning of Matt Tabbi’s marvelous description of Goldman Sachs, the great vampire squid. Squid seems a fitting name for the financial cartel that drives what I have traditionally called the Tapeworm. There were some who saw the danger immediately and tried to warn us, like Sir James Goldsmith. There were some, like myself, who tried to prevent the housing bubble and find alternatives to investing our life savings in it. While those efforts did not stop the squid, they certainly made it clear that the squid take down of the planet was, indeed, a plan. That’s all documented now. The Squid Shifts the Money I often tell the story of my meeting with a group of pension fund leaders in 1997 in which the President of the CalPERs pension fund - the largest in the country - said, “You don’t understand. It’s too late. They have given up on the country. They are moving all the money out in the fall (of 1997). They are moving it to Asia.” Sure enough, in the fall of 1997 trillions of dollars began to shift out of North America and into the emerging markets, including Asia and China. This included over $4 trillion that went missing from the US government, which I have referred to for years as “the missing money.” My back of the envelope estimate was that approximately $10 trillion was moved out legally and illegally between that fall of 1997 and 9-11. Given the implications to US pension funds and retirement savings, I have said for years that perhaps the most important question of our generation is where did the money go and how do we get it back? To the squid’s credit, shifting investment from places with aging populations to places with younger, more dynamic populations makes sense. Problem is that often times the money left by sneaky means, leaving many high and dry to the benefit of the few engineering the moves. Equity owned by the many disappeared out the back door, and turned Squid Crime Pays The criminality of this massive capital shift was extensive. If there was any doubt of the profound and growing influence of narco dollars, the European Union’s lawsuit against RJR (under the ownership and control of leveraged buyout firm KKR) for global money laundering in partnership with the The US Housing and Derivatives Bubble However, the most important source of capital was the theft of U.S. retirement savings through the engineering of the U.S. housing and debt bubbles. This involved By early 2009, the squid was facing a global financial bloodbath that could potentially cook them into little bits of calamari. Those stuck with bum paper were threatening to pull their money out of the squid and worse. The squid panicked. Best Investment Performance of 2009: $1 Billion to Elect Obama Riding to the rescue was Barack Obama. Based on what was clearly extensive domestic and global profiling, the great vampire squid spent approximately $1 billion (and likely more covertly) to get Obama elected in November 2008 and adored globally. The squid’s returns make this the single best performing investment of 2009 and the decade, if not the last century. Bloomberg recently announced that gold was the best performing investment for the decade. They failed to mention that gold’s near 400% rise of the decade Electing a Harvard lawyer who inspired the hopes and dreams of those who had been most brutally drained by the housing bubble and drug wars clearly was a stroke of financial genius. While gold had passed the $1,200 per oz. level before the end of the 2009, it’s performance still did not compare to the $10,000 plus per oz. the squid was realizing on the opium flowing from the fields in Afghanistan. This is not in any way to diminish the importance of the squid’s investment in governmental and private intelligence agencies. However, at times like this, you can’t kill everyone. Although, we admit that there were moments in 2009 when it started to look like someone was trying. (See 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7) From the revolutionary war through 2009, the U.S. government accumulated $12 trillion in debt. And then in one year, President elect and President Obama restored to office the very people who had engineered the fraud. With the squid’s preferred team in place in the White House, at the US Treasury and at the Department of Defense, President Obama lead the gifting and lending of an additional $12 Trillion to the great vampire squid. Let me underscore the enormity of this number again. An amount equivalent to all the debt we had The Squid to Main Street: “Drop Dead!” Capital it would seem is available only for squid speculation. The real economy is a source of capital for the squid. It is no longer a use of capital. Hence, drain on communities and the failure to reinvest in serious innovation and long term U.S. growth accelerated during 2009. The political reality is that the U.S. government is deeply dependent on the squid to finance growing deficits, and engineer global economic warfare and manage markets in the precious metals, oil, commodities and financial markets. So with U.S. unemployment over 10% (says the government) or 20% (says John Williams at www.shadowstats.com, a far more reliable source) and significant unemployment around the globe, the great vampire squid could care less what the man in the street thinks. As Dick Cheney said about deficits, “they don’t matter.” The Squid Bottom Line In 2009, the great vampire squid finished engineering the single greatest financial shift in the history of the planet. It took two decades and constituted a financial coup d’ etat. Even our hero Congresswoman Kaptur said so. The year finished with the squid congratulating themselves The Good News The good news is that those of you who took to heart the risks and opportunities we discussed in our 2008: Looking Back did a good job of evading the squid. You were energized by the |




