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$134 Billion in Bonds: Funny Money or Major Cover-Up? |
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Written by Holly Golightly
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Friday, 19 June 2009 23:46 |
So, apparently two Japanese men with $134 billion in United States Treasury bonds hidden in a secret compartment of their suitcases is not considered breaking news, not a top story. I have been following this story for the past week trying to find some facts but no one seems to want to talk about it. The American Media think that Obama killing a fly and Heidi and Spencer Pratt’s idiocracy are bigger stories than what could be the greatest financial fraud story in history? According to Asia news, the Italian financial police seized the $134 billion in United States bonds (worth US$ 500 million each, plus ten Kennedy bonds and other US government securities worth a $1 billion each) from two Japanese Nationals on the border of Italy and Switzerland. There has been a lot of speculation as to whether or not the bonds are real and if there really is such a thing as a Kennedy bond. Washington officials claim that there are no Federal Reserve or Kennedy bonds issued by the United States. Other sources state that the United States has issued $205 billion in treasury securities in the Caribbean banking sector in the Bahamas, Bermuda, Cayman Islands, and Netherlands Antilles, Panama and from the British Virgin Islands since 2006. The United States has acknowledged the fact that hidden-money or “black money” does exist in the form of treasury bonds and the financial world has even coined it “funny money.” All I know is someone is covering something up and even if the bonds are real where did they come from and what government had the audacity to unload them? If they are indeed fake than this is a colossal counterfeit operation. But we doubt their fake! Stephen Meyerhardt, a representative for the Bureau of Public Debt in Washington said that he could tell from the photograph on the Internet that the Treasury securities were fake. REALLY, that’s it? No further investigation necessary? You can barely see the bonds in the photograph, how can a little picture from the Internet be considered substantial evidence? This sound’s a bit fishy to me. Rumor has it that Italy gets to keep 40% of all unclaimed funds discovered in their country so my theory is the bonds are real, the United States told Italy they are worthless so they will throw them away and get nothing, You Fuckin’ Losers!
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Last Updated on Wednesday, 14 October 2009 22:42 |