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Silver Has So Much More to Give 5 Must See Charts

4/21/2016

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Silver “Has So Much More to Give” – 5 Must See Charts

Silver has so much more to give according to Bloomberg in an interesting article replete with 5 must see silver charts.

silver coins bars

From Bloomberg:

Silver’s bull run looks like it has legs.


The metal with the best return this year of any in the Bloomberg Commodity Index is poised for more gains, investors, traders and market data suggest.


“Silver has the best-looking chart among all the commodities,” said Andy Pfaff, who as chief investment officer for commodities at MitonOptimal Group in Cape Town increased his allocation to the metal over the past two weeks. “When silver moves, it really, really moves, and everyone wants to be on the right side of that trade.”

The metal is up more than 11 percent in the last two weeks after underperforming gold in the first quarter on concerns slow Chinese growth would curb demand in the biggest consumer of commodities. While both are precious metals, silver has more uses in manufacturing. Silver traded at $16.909 an ounce on Wednesday.


silver bullion_April2016

 

Following are charts that suggest the possibility of further gains. 

 The ratio of gold to silver prices fell to the lowest level since October on Wednesday after peaking in February at the highest since 2008. It will likely fall further, according to dealers such as brokerage GoldCore Ltd. in Dublin as reported by Bloomberg.

 

Read full Bloomberg article and see 5 charts here


Gold Prices (LBMA)
21 April: USD 1,257.65, EUR 1,113.21 and GBP 877.01 per ounce
20 April: USD 1,247.75, EUR 1,098.09 and GBP 867.45 per ounce
19 April: USD 1,241.70, EUR 1,095.18 and GBP 867.01 per ounce
18 April: USD 1,237.70, EUR 1,095.02 and GBP 872.45 per ounce
15 April: USD 1,229.75, EUR 1,092.16 and GBP 867.46 per ounce

Silver Prices (LBMA)
21 April: USD 17.32, EUR 15.31 and GBP 12.05 per ounce
20 April: USD 16.97, EUR 14.93 and GBP 11.81 per ounce
19 April: USD 16.62, EUR 14.67 and GBP 11.57 per ounce
18 April: USD 16.20, EUR 14.33 and GBP 11.41 per ounce
15 April: USD 16.17, EUR 14.33 and GBP 11.40 per ounce

 

Gold News and Commentary

Silver ends at highest level since May; gold barely budges (Marketwatch)
Gold steadies as dollar firms; silver hits 11-month high (Reuters)
Silver Climbs to Highest Since May After Entering Bull Market (Bloomberg)
Chinese Gold Mining Giant Targets Overseas Buys as Demand Gains (Bloomberg)
Trader: Gold is about to break out—here’s why (CNBC)

Silver Prices May Be Ready to Shine (US News)
Silver is finally catching up to gold (Business Insider)
Why Are The Chinese Stockpiling Silver? Big Price Move Coming? (Gold Seek)
War on Savings: The Panama Papers, Bail-Ins, and the Push to Go Cashless (Ellen Brown)
Why One Analyst Believes Gold Could Hit $3,000 (Gold Seek)

Read More Here

 

Protecting_Your_Savings_in_the_Coming_Bail_In_Era_-_Copy-3.jpg   Essential_Guide_to_Storing_Gold_in_Singapore.jpg   7_Key_Storage_Must_Haves.png

Read Our Most Popular Guides in Recent Months


First published here: http://j.mp/1WHHIBq
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Silver Has So Much More to Give 5 Charts Show

4/21/2016

0 Comments

 

Silver “Has So Much More to Give” – 5 Charts Show

Silver has so much more to give according to Bloomberg in an interesting article replete with 5 must see silver charts.

 

silver coins bars

 

From Bloomberg:

Silver’s bull run looks like it has legs.


The metal with the best return this year of any in the Bloomberg Commodity Index is poised for more gains, investors, traders and market data suggest.


“Silver has the best-looking chart among all the commodities,” said Andy Pfaff, who as chief investment officer for commodities at MitonOptimal Group in Cape Town increased his allocation to the metal over the past two weeks. “When silver moves, it really, really moves, and everyone wants to be on the right side of that trade.”

The metal is up more than 11 percent in the last two weeks after underperforming gold in the first quarter on concerns slow Chinese growth would curb demand in the biggest consumer of commodities. While both are precious metals, silver has more uses in manufacturing. Silver traded at $16.909 an ounce on Wednesday.


silver bullion_April2016

 

 

Following are charts that suggest the possibility of further gains. 

The ratio of gold to silver prices fell to the lowest level since October on Wednesday after peaking in February at the highest since 2008. It will likely fall further, according to dealers such as brokerage GoldCore Ltd. in Dublin as reported by Bloomberg.

Read full Bloomberg article and see 5 charts here


Gold Prices (LBMA)
21 April: USD 1,257.65, EUR 1,113.21 and GBP 877.01 per ounce
20 April: USD 1,247.75, EUR 1,098.09 and GBP 867.45 per ounce
19 April: USD 1,241.70, EUR 1,095.18 and GBP 867.01 per ounce
18 April: USD 1,237.70, EUR 1,095.02 and GBP 872.45 per ounce
15 April: USD 1,229.75, EUR 1,092.16 and GBP 867.46 per ounce

Silver Prices (LBMA)
21 April: USD 17.32, EUR 15.31 and GBP 12.05 per ounce
20 April: USD 16.97, EUR 14.93 and GBP 11.81 per ounce
19 April: USD 16.62, EUR 14.67 and GBP 11.57 per ounce
18 April: USD 16.20, EUR 14.33 and GBP 11.41 per ounce
15 April: USD 16.17, EUR 14.33 and GBP 11.40 per ounce

 

Gold News and Commentary

Silver ends at highest level since May; gold barely budges (Marketwatch)
Gold steadies as dollar firms; silver hits 11-month high (Reuters)
Silver Climbs to Highest Since May After Entering Bull Market (Bloomberg)
Chinese Gold Mining Giant Targets Overseas Buys as Demand Gains (Bloomberg)
Trader: Gold is about to break out—here’s why (CNBC)

Silver Prices May Be Ready to Shine (US News)
Silver is finally catching up to gold (Business Insider)
Why Are The Chinese Stockpiling Silver? Big Price Move Coming? (Gold Seek)
War on Savings: The Panama Papers, Bail-Ins, and the Push to Go Cashless (Ellen Brown)
Why One Analyst Believes Gold Could Hit $3,000 (Gold Seek)

Read More Here

 

Protecting_Your_Savings_in_the_Coming_Bail_In_Era_-_Copy-3.jpg   Essential_Guide_to_Storing_Gold_in_Singapore.jpg   7_Key_Storage_Must_Haves.png

Read Our Most Popular Guides in Recent Months


First published here: http://j.mp/1SUl56U
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The Lie That Corporations Have Rights

4/21/2016

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The Lie That Corporations Have “Rights”

Written by Jeff Nielson (CLICK FOR ORIGINAL)

 

 

 

The Lie That Corporations Have “Rights” - Jeff Nielson

 

 

 

People have rights – at least we used to have them, until the mythological “War on Terror” was rammed down our throats as a pretext for stripping us of many rights. Corporations cannot have rights, which should be evident to all citizens in our pseudo-democracies.

However, thanks to the endemic brainwashing of the corporate media, this important distinction of law/logic is no longer obvious to many. Indeed, in the United States, corporations have been elevated to a legal status at least equal to that of its citizens – if not above the status of the people.

Precipitating this discussion, we offer a particularly odious piece of propaganda from the mainstream media, where a purported law professor attempts to advance the specious argument that corporations (in the United States) have “free speech rights.”

The scope of the First Amendment [free speech] lies at the heart of my thought experiment. We live in an era when criticisms of corporate speech can become overwrought. Many activists deny that corporations have any free speech rights at all.

Not even the four dissenters [judges] in Citizens United v. Federal Elections Commission took that position. They conceded that corporations possess First Amendment rights . They simply argued that the government, with sufficiently strong reason, can limit some avenues for the expression of those rights as long as it leaves other avenues open.

This is wrong, in every respect. It is “bad law” in every respect. It reflects a refusal of the corrupt U.S. judiciary system to acknowledge the limits of our governments’ authority. It is nothing less than a complete betrayal of the oath these judges take to uphold the law.

Here, the perversion of reality descends to the level of cultural insanity. In the United States, a corporation is “a person.” This is an outrageous distortion of law and reality, particularly once we place this legal perversion into its proper context. In the United States, a fetus is not “a person.”

Irrespective of one’s views on the highly emotionally-charged subject of abortion, one fact is clear. If a human fetus is not legally deemed to be “a person,” then obviously an inanimate corporation could never be deemed as such. As a matter of basic biology and elementary logic, the claim of a fetus to the status of “a person” must be above any claims by mere corporations.

Because of our brainwashing, this point still may not be obvious to some readers, thus a further definition of terms is necessary. We will begin with defining the word “right.” Since our context for examining rights is a legal one, our definition must be legally rather than linguistically oriented.

This is an important point, as the word “right” is used both very loosely and colloquially in our societies. Dictionary definitions are of little help here. Consult a half dozen different dictionaries, and one will see the word “right” defined in six different ways.

To define the word in a legal context requires first answering a preliminary question: from where do our rights originate? Primarily, our rights are derived from the Constitutions of our nations. To a lesser extent, they are also derived from the United Nation’s “Universal Declaration of Human Rights.” However, as this document has (at best) only quasi-official status within our various nations, our rights are primarily derived from the former source.

Our Constitutions exist above the level of our governments. We know this to be true, because we require that any amendments to our Constitution only be enacted via some sort of Super Majority. This is to demonstrate to the people that the proposed change(s) reflects the will of the people, and it is only under such circumstances that we allow our governments to modify our Constitution.

Our rights come from our Constitutions, and our Constitutions have a legal status above that of our governments. Thus our rights exist, legally, above the level of our governments. Why is this point of such great importance? Because it sheds light on the true definition of “a right.”

Because our rights exist above the legal level of our governments, our governments do not (and cannot) bestow rights. Rather, our human rights are intrinsic and inalienable. This conclusion simply mirrors the language of the U.N.’s Universal Declaration:

Whereas recognition of the inherent dignity and of the equal and inalienable rights of all members of the human family is the foundation of freedom, justice and peace in the world.

As a proposition of both law and logic, this makes much of our anti-terrorism laws legally null and void, since they seek to infringe upon, if not eliminate, rights which exist above the authority of our governments.

Governments cannot grant rights. Equally, they cannot take them away, except via Constitutional amendment. Here it is very important that we distinguish the word “right” from a somewhat similar word/concept: “privilege.”

Privileges resemble rights except for one crucial distinction of law/logic. Privileges are revocable. Our governments do have the legal authority to grant privileges, and thus to revoke privileges – something for which they lack the legal authority with respect to rights.

This brings us to another extremely important definition: “corporation.” A corporation is an inanimate, paper entity. More specifically, it is a front for wealth. These paper shells have been created in order to facilitate the deployment of wealth, and thus facilitate commerce. Of equal importance, corporations are a creation of government.

Why are these basic traits of corporations of such great legal relevance to this discussion?

      1) Corporations have a legal status created by our governments, and thus a legal status equal to our governments, but well below the status of our human rights.

      2) In our world of mega-corporations, corporations have become primarily the paper fronts for the ultra-wealthy.

Dealing with the second point first, it should become immediately apparent why – as an issue of justice and equity – a corporation could never have rights. As individuals, the ultra-wealthy already have rights equal to and commensurate with the rights of all other citizens. This is all they could ever be entitled to. If we grant rights to the mega-corporations owned by the ultra-wealthy, we are granting this one class of individuals a second set of rights – in addition to their intrinsic, human rights.

This is obviously unjust and inequitable. When we then examine the first point (above), we see how supposedly granting rights to corporations is clearly illegal.

We have already established that our legal rights exist above the level of our governments. They cannot create or bestow rights, nor can they take them away. Obviously, if they cannot bestow rights to the people, they cannot bestow rights upon inanimate corporations – entities with a legal status equal to that of our governments. They lack the authority.

Similarly, if a government cannot legally bestow rights upon corporations, they cannot elevate corporations to a status equal to that of the people, i.e. by defining a corporation as “a person.” This is simply an indirect means of doing what we have already established is illegal. If we allow our governments to define any entity it chooses as “a person,” we would be giving these governments the back-door power to bestow rights, something which is unequivocally beyond their legal authority.

One does not have to be a judge, or even a law professor in order to understand these elementary points of law, logic, and justice. How could someone who (supposedly) possesses the legal expertise of a law professor have constructed the fallacious and ludicrous argument that “corporations have rights”?

He did so by deliberately refusing to define the terms he was using. It is much easier to lie to people, and to pretend that corporations have rights if you scrupulously avoid any precise definition of what a “right” actually is.

A definition of terms is the foundation of all valid analysis. Refusing to define the terms that one uses in constructing their arguments is the methodology of the propagandist. Most lies and propaganda are couched in semantics, and engaging in semantic deception is impossible if one first precisely (and correctly) defines their terminology.

People have rights. People have a legal status well above that of mere corporations. Corporations can never have rights. Corporations exist at a legal level equal to that of our own governments (another form of paper entity), and well below the level of a person.

A corporation can, at best, have privileges bestowed upon it – privileges which can be taken away by any legislative act. Perhaps the greatest outrage and tragedy of this issue is that it even requires an explanation.

At one time, the citizens of our nations understood that the government serves the people, not the other way around. At one time, the citizens of our nations understood that their own legal status (and the status of their rights) exists above the authority level of our governments.

Instead, we are now mere serfs in the most illegitimate of hierarchies. Corrupt governments regularly pass pseudo-laws, which grossly exceed the level of their legal authority, and are thus null and void. Corrupt judiciaries have abdicated their own legal duty, and now simply rubber-stamp an endless stream of these null-and-void laws.

 

 

 

The people of our nations need to know their rights. But first, they have to understand them.

 

 

Please email with any questions about this article or precious metals HERE

 

 

 

The Lie That Corporations Have “Rights”

Written by Jeff Nielson (CLICK FOR ORIGINAL)



First published here: http://j.mp/1WfgH7Z
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Is This A Real Band Playing At Coachella Or Did I Just Make It Up?

4/20/2016

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Man, I can’t wait to see Victoria Oceanstar perform.


First published here: http://j.mp/1MJ1R8c
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How Well Do You Remember "Don't Stop Believin'"?

4/20/2016

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C’mon, you’ve been to a karaoke bar. You can do this!

Columbia Records


First published here: http://j.mp/1T0cL65
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18 People Told Us The Most Horrific Things They Saw At Coachella

4/20/2016

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“Shit on a flower pot ?”

"Puked on their friends"

Claire de Louraille for BuzzFeed

"A proposal gone wrong

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A DeN OF ViPeRS AND THieVeS...

4/20/2016

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GENERAL JACKSON SLAYING THE MANY HEADED MONSTER 2

 

I already know this print looks spectacular framed. But my, wouldn't it look great mounted with a Jackson FRN signed by the artist in a limited series?

Inquiries: [email protected]


First published here: http://j.mp/1QnU8XM
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Rihanna Just Dropped Her Video For "Needed Me" And I'm Sweating Just Watching It

4/20/2016

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Spoiler: It’s full of bums, guns, and Queen Rihanna.

It's 4/20, so obviously our favorite bad gal blessed us with her new video for "Needed Me":

Vevo / youtube.com

Instagram: @badgalriri

Instagram: @badgalriri


View Entire List ›


First published here: http://j.mp/1qZYRKz
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Hamiltons Good for the Ten-Spot

4/20/2016

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Authored by Steve H. Hanke of the Johns Hopkins University. Follow him on Twtter @Steve_Hanke.

Alexander Hamilton has always been a political lightning rod. In consequence, his legacy has been subjected to multiple smear campaigns. One began when Franklin Delano Roosevelt lambasted Hamilton in a speech delivered at the Commonwealth Club in 1932. Since then, the anti-capitalist crowd has used Hamilton as a whipping boy. 

The most recent attempt to tarnish Hamilton’s reputation has been mounted by the Obama administration. Treasury secretary Jack Lew has been leading the charge to remove Hamilton’s image from the ten dollar bill. 

But, Lin Manuel Miranda’s hip-hop performance, Hamilton, which has just won the 2016 Pulitzer Prize for Drama has thrown a spanner in the works, one that might preserve Hamilton on the ten-spot. 

Alexander Hamilton was not only the first and most distinguished Treasury Secretary, but was also an accomplished professional in many other fields outside the confines of finance.

During his varied career, Alexander Hamilton was a profound journalist. His most famous journalistic project was a series of 85 opinion pieces that called for the ratification of the Constitution. These essays are called The Federalist Papers, and are the most cited sources by the U.S. Supreme Court. The Federalist Papers were published in 1787 and 1788 in New York City’s Independent Journal. These important essays — written under pseudonyms by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison and John Jay — were of very high quality and set the stage for the Constitutional Convention and the resulting product.

Hamilton organized this project, wrote most of the essays, and, of all the Founding Fathers, performed most of the intellectual work for the least historical credit. That said, two notable economists have given Hamilton his due. Lionel Robbins thought The Federalist Papers was “the best book on political science and its broad practical aspects written in the last thousand years.” And if that were not enough, Milton Friedman wrote in 1973 that The Federalist Paper, No. 15, written by Hamilton, “contains a more cogent analysis of the European Common Market than any I have seen from the pen of a modern writer.”

Hamilton’s prowess as a writer and journalist wasn’t a one-shot affair. He drafted a large part of George Washington’s famous Farewell Address, which was published in the American Daily Advertiser. And only three years before his untimely death, resulting from a wound inflicted in a duel with Aaron Burr, Hamilton founded the New-York Evening Post.

Treasury Secretary Lew’s proposed demotion of Hamilton throws into question both the Secretary’s grasp of history, as well as his judgment.


First published here: http://j.mp/1Vk7Nam
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The European Commission goes after Google again

4/20/2016

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IN 2001—aeons ago in internet time—the European Commission sent a sternly worded missive to Microsoft. It accused the software maker of having illegally extended its dominance in operating systems for personal computers (PCs) into adjacent markets, for instance by tying Windows to programs that play music and videos. The legal action lasted more than a decade and took many turns, but Microsoft eventually had to unbundle its Windows monopoly from other software, in particular by giving consumers the choice of which web browser they want to use.

On April 20th the Commission presented Google, one of the brightest stars in the modern tech firmament, with a similar “statement of objections”, as the charge sheet in European Union (EU) antitrust cases is called. Google, Brussels argues, has followed a strategy to “preserve and strengthen its dominance in internet search” by tying this service and some of its popular apps to Android, its mobile operating system, which powers nearly 80% of all new smartphones (see chart). As in the Microsoft case, Google may ultimately be forced to unbundle its package of software and services.

This...Continue reading


First published here: http://j.mp/1Vk7JYl
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    This is my page of the various things that tickle my fancy to say the least. Random and sometimes informative content will pop up. If something catches my eye, it will be posted.

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