Now
Mexico Bans Cash
18
October, 2012
Large
Cash Transactions Banned In Mexico ...
Outgoing
Mexican President Felipe
Calderon has
signed into law a ban on large cash transactions. The ban will take
effect in about 90 days and it is part of a broader effort to control
monetary flows within the country. Under the law, a Specialized Unit
in Financial Analysis operating within the Attorney General's Office
will be created to investigate financial operations "that are
related to resources of unknown origin." For real estate
transactions, cash payments of more than a half million pesos
($38,750) will be forbidden and, for automobiles or items like
jewelry, art, and lottery tickets, cash payments of more than 200,000
pesos ($15,500) will be forbidden. The law carries a minimum penalty
of five years in prison. – Forbes
Dominant
Social Theme: Terrorism
must be combated by controlling people's money.
Free-Market
Analysis: What
we consider to be the "phony" war
on terror is
the gift that keeps on giving to those who run our governments.
The
phony war on drugs only adds to the rationales for telling people
what they can and cannot do with their resources.
What
is going on is a pattern, not a series of defensive moves taken out
of desperation. The power
elite intends
to lock down the world, it seems, in order to track every monetary
transaction of any significance.
...
As we have long predicted, the phony "sovereign
debt"
crisis in Europe is being used to justify all sorts
of authoritarian measures.
It
is government pols that gladly borrowed what European banks threw at
them. And somehow the upshot earlier this week is that Spanish
citizens now lose the right to conduct many transactions in cash.
Spectacularly,
the reports such as this one, excerpted above, don't even both to
hide the real point. The Spanish government wants to ensure that it
can "track transactions and make sure that people and businesses
are paying taxes."
Of
course, anyone who has visited Spain of late knows that the tax
burden in Spain is onerous indeed, and is one reason that the
truculent tribes that have co-existed uneasily with Madrid are again
beginning to beat the drums of secession.
The
taxes that the central government levies on small businesses
especially are verging on punitive. But there are no apologies. The
official position is one of unflinching demands.
And
now Mexico is going the way of Spain. Always there is a
justification. But the reality of the project is much broader and has
to do with a power elite wish, apparently, to create a world
government that is fully in charge of what people can and cannot
transact. Here's some more from the Forbes article
excerpted above:
In
2010, Mexico instituted strict limits on foreign exchange cash
transactions to $1,500 per person per month, which caused several
cash dollar exchanges to withdraw from the business and had the
effect of penalizing tourists.
Of
course, US dollars are a huge portion of the actual paper cash that
this effort is aimed at, but the Mexican peso is the 12th most traded
currency in the world and by far the most traded currency in Latin
America.
Reuters reported
that, "Sales of drugs from marijuana to cocaine and
methamphetamine in the United States are worth about $60 billion
annually, according to the United
Nations.
About half of that amount is estimated to find its way back to
cartels in Mexico."
The Woodrow
Wilson International
Center For Scholars' Mexico Institute published a comprehensive study
in May 2012 entitled "It's All about the Money." The report
recommended tight integration and coordination with the United States
in the areas of legal framework, financial institution regulation,
intelligence on cross-border currency flows, and non-conviction based
asset forfeiture.
Two
years in the making, the new law also requires notaries, real estate
brokers, and other dealers to report the forms of payment for
transactions above the respective limits. Financial institutions will
also be required to report monthly credit card balances in excess of
50,000 pesos ($3,875).
The
article mentions that Italy has also banned cash transactions above a
certain amount. Certainly this is a growing trend.
The Forbes article
mentions the prevalence of the Mexican drug trade but it is well
known at this point in alternative news circles that US Intel is
behind much Western drug trade in order to fund various black and
gray ops. Presumably, MI6 and the Mossad are also involved.
The
British Crown made a fortune in the 1800s selling opium to the
Chinese. Government drug trafficking is an ancient business. In order
for something to be maximally profitable, it has to be in short
supply. Making something illegal is one way to damp supplies and
raise profits.
Conclusion: We
figure at some point gold
and
silver
will also come under attack, as that's the way the world is trending.
But in the meantime, these national bans continually pressure more
and more freedoms, including the freedom of shielding one's wealth
from prying eyes. And that's just the point ...
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