Tuesday, 5 April 2011

Stephen Wiltshire: A glimpse of our true potential

"How does he do it? The left brain, which dominates human perception, sees everything in parts while the right brain sees everything as one. Stephen's right brain takes a snapshot of the whole picture and retains that for instant recall.

If the left side of the brain tried to do this alone, it would be staring at a blank sheet of paper for a long time because, at best, it would recall only the parts that it consciously observed without connections to the whole and, even then, it would need notes to support its memory.

It is no accident that the 'education' system from top to bottom, the media, politics, mainstream 'science', and the other institutions of perception-programming are all based on left-brain 'thinking' and manipulating the population to do the same.

That is why humanity focuses on the twigs and can't see the forest." David Icke

Japan: TEPCO To DUMP 11,500 Tons of Nuclear Radioactive Water Into Pacific Ocean



'Japan: TEPCO to release 11,500 tons of nuclear radioactive water into the Pacific Ocean declaring the water to be dumped contains only low levels of radioactivity.  In reality the water about to be dumped  is highly radioactive as I point out below.'

Keiser Report: Virtual Pigs Eat Dirty Cash (E135 ft. Alex Jones)

QE3 On - QE3 Off: Bizarro World Wins, As Hatzius Threatens Lowering Forward GDP

We have now gotten to the very limits of the market, where any even modestly bad news (Services ISM) even if of a secondary importance nature, sends the market surging higher as expectations that QE3 is inevitable, hit 100%. Then when good news comes, and QE3 is deemed to be impossible, the market plunges. Bizarro world, where bad news is good news and vice versa, has won. Thank you central planning. And for all those who jettisoned gold on expectations the economy was actually, chuckle, improving, here is your chart.



 


hooofa


Portugal 'sells' Ronaldo to Spain in €160m deal on national debt

Weighed down by debt, and reeling from the latest downgrading of their country's credit status, Portugal's finance ministry has secured the co-operation of football's highest-paid player in an audacious bid to draw the nation back from the brink of economic collapse. 

In a move which some observers claimed "will lead to the destruction of the World Cup", Cristiano Ronaldo has agreed to "act like a patriot" and be sold to neighbouring Spain for €160m.

BMO On A "New Paradigm For Silver"

Courtesy of the Village Whisperer, we are happy to present BMO's latest comprehensive report on silver titled "A new paradigm for silver." While we suggest readers skip the part about price expectations for gold, silver and other metals, which at this point nobody save for the Chairsatan has any clue where these will go (and Bernanke's mind is made up for him by Jan Hatzius, so as always pay attention to Goldman buy/sell signals on PMs), the report does have a very extensive section on the key supply and demand drivers, which for anyone new to the metal, is a must read. Additionally, the report covers virtually all the key silver miners of note (incidentally for those wondering, the San Critsobal strike was lifted earlier today).
In summary:
  • BMO Research has reviewed a number of supply and demand scenarios for silver through 2015E. The analysis suggests that the projected rise in mine supply should largely be consumed by rising industrial demand through to the end of 2012E.
  • The prospects of further quantitative easing combined with sovereign debt concerns, competitive ‘fiat’ currency devaluation in western economies, and the return of inflation could result in investment demand exceeding BMO Research’s projections and extending the supply deficit through 2014E.
  • This shift in the supply/demand dynamic lies in contrast to the broader investment perception for silver, which is rooted in the 1990’s when the metal was in abundance, driven by the demise of the photographic industry and Chinese selling.
  • The paradigm shift for silver suggests that the traditional benchmarks for silver, such as the long-term historical ratio with gold, are no longer valid. Accordingly, the markets are searching for a new set of criteria againstwhich to benchmark the price of silver, with a bias to the upside.