say we dont invade iran, what kind of affect could the loss of the us
dollar's dominance have on us day to day americans? will there be rampant
inflation, or other effects for everyday americans? could our country
collapse?

-----Original Message-----
From: Dana [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, March 11, 2005 9:10 AM
To: CF-Community
Subject: Re: Onward to Iran


Yes. It sounds reasonable though I don't have enough background to
reaslly endorse it. Part of why I agree with John that yes, it's
pretty scary


On Thu, 10 Mar 2005 22:31:27 -0400, Andrew Grosset <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> There is an interesting opinion here about the demise of the American
dollar
> (from :http://www.energybulletin.net/4634.html )
> 
> [quote]
> Iran will move a step closer to establishing its much-publicized oil
exchange next week, when the Oil Ministry and the Ministry of Economic
Affairs and Finance are set to sign a memorandum of understanding (MoU),
which will set the ground for the high-profile initiative. Hossein Talebi,
the National Iranian Oil Company's director for information technology
affairs, told Fars news agency that the project would enter the executive
phase immediately after the MoU is signed. The official further said that
petrochemicals, crude oil and oil and gas products will be traded at the
petroleum exchange. "The oil exchange would strive to make Iran the main hub
for oil deals in the region", he said, adding that most deals will be
conducted through the Internet ... Iran announced in September its petroleum
exchange will become operational by March 2006 ...
> 
> ..........As William Clark argues in his forthcoming book Petrodollar
Warfare (New Society, summer 2005), the denomination of global oil sales in
US dollars has kept the American dollar artificially strong throughout the
period from 1974 to present, enabling Washington to run up huge
foreign-funded government debt and trade deficits. Tehran's action, whether
or not deliberately calculated to do so, could cause a dollar crash. Iraq
was the first nation to announce intentions to sell oil for euros instead of
dollars (in November 2000), and one of the first acts of the provisional
government put in place by in invading US forces was to return oil sales to
the dollar standard....
> 
> ......One of the Federal Reserve's nightmares may begin to unfold in 2005
or 2006, when it appears international buyers will have a choice of buying a
barrel of oil for $50 dollars on the NYMEX and IPEor purchase a barrel of
oil for 37 to 40 euros via the Iranian Bourse ... A successful Iranian
bourse would solidify the petroeuro as an alternative oil-transaction
currency, and thereby end the petrodollar's hegemonic status as the monopoly
oil currency ...
> 
> [/quote]
> 
> 
> 



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