------ Forwarded Message
> From: "M. Johnson" <micha...@america.net>
> Reply-To: <c...@yahoogroups.com>
> Date: Wed, 24 Feb 2010 23:01:00 -0500
> To: <c...@yahoogroups.com>
> Subject: [ctrl] Fed Chairman Bernanke Should Apologize to Ron Paul
> 

> 
> 
> 
> Fed Chairman Bernanke Should Apologize to Ron Paul
> 
> It seems in vogue these days to apologize for wrong doings. I am not really
> sure why Tiger Woods apologized on worldwide television to golfers, his wife,
> his mother, to me, to you...to the entire world, for what appears a personal
> matter, but I tell you who needs to apologize publicly is Federal Reserve
> Chairman Ben Bernanke. He needs to apologize for his snarky, condescending
> attitude toward Congressman Ron Paul when Paul ,
> 
> 1. asked Bernanke about allegations that the Federal Reserve was involved in
> funneling money to Saddam Hussein, when Hussein was a favorite of the U.S.,
> 
> and
> 
> 2. asked about allegations that the Fed was involved in transferring Watergate
> money.
> 
> Bernanke labeled the allegations "bizarre."
> 
> Naturally, mainstream media took up on Bernanke's cue, and are reporting
> Paul's allegations without the back story. Here is the back story.
> 
> Fed chairman Bernanke simply doesn't know Fed history as well as Ron Paul (Or
> the history conveniently slipped his memory). As far as Watergate, I always
> thought it was pretty common knowledge that the money ended up in the
> burglars' hands through some pretty fishy means. Even wikipedia has part of
> the story 
> <http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Watergate_scandal&oldid=345698141>
> : [Watergate burglar Bernard] Barker had attempted to disguise the origin of
> the funds by depositing the donors' checks into bank accounts which (though
> controlled by him), were located in banks outside of the United States. What
> Barker, Liddy, and Sloan did not know was that the complete record of all such
> transactions are held, after the funds cleared, for roughly six months.
> Barker¹s use of foreign banks to deposit checks and withdraw the funds via
> cashier¹s checks and money orders in April and May 1972 guaranteed that the
> banks would keep the entire transaction record at least until October and
> November 1972.
> 
> Wikipedia, also states: Investigative examination of the bank records of a
> Miami company run byWatergate burglar Bernard Barker
> <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bernard_Barker> revealed that an account
> controlled by him personally had deposited, and had transferred to it (through
> the Federal Reserve Check Clearing System) the funds from these financial
> instruments.
> 
> Clearly, there were some very, very odd transactions that went down which may,
> or may not, have been abnormally facilitated by the Fed. Was this a normal Fed
> wire, or something more convoluted? My sense has always been that there was
> something a bit extraordinary about the way the funds went through the Fed
> system. It does smell, for sure, and to ask about it is not bizarre. It should
> be noted that the Fed chairman at the time was Arthur Burns, who would have
> sold his own children to a white slave ring if Nixon had asked. (In a recent
> report <http://www.economicpolicyjournal.com/2010/02/block-party.html>  by
> Micahel Labeit, here at EconominPolicyJournal.com
> <http://www.economicpolicyjurnal.com/> , Labeit details the speech of former
> Columbia University PhD student Walter Block, who during the speech reminisced
> about his years studying at the school , Block specifically recalled how
> Arthur Burns in his class, instead of teaching, simply told stories of his
> dinners with Nixon.) Note, I don't think Nixon, himself, necessarily asked
> Burns to help in the transfer of the funds, but Burns would very likely have
> responded positively to a request from a Nixon lieutenant, given his adoration
> of Nixon.
> 
> Here's the late investigative reporter Sherman Skolnick reporting
> <http://www.beyondweird.com/conspiracy/cn09-07.html>  on the documents the Fed
> blocked Congress from seeing about its possible involvement with money sent to
> Hussein: ....in October, 1990, at the time of the Persian Gulf conflict, there
> was an unpublicized case in the Chicago Federal District Court (No. 90 C
> 6863). The Illinois Bank Commissioner sought an injunction against the Federal
> Reserve Board to stop them from turning over certain bank records to the House
> Banking Committee. The records were those of the Chicago branch of Italy's
> largest [bank], Banca Nazionale del Lavoro, owned in part by the Vatican.
> Called BNL, it had records of Iraqi strongman Saddam Hussein and his secret
> private joint business dealings with his partner, an American. A close crony
> of the Federal Reserve, Chicago Federal District Judge Brian Barnett Duff,
> ordered the return of any records from the Banking Committee, then headed by a
> Democrat,Rep. Henry Gonzalez (D., Texas). The House Banking Committee was an
> intervening party-litigant in the controversy. Judge Duff so opposed the House
> Banking Committee's efforts to get those records, that the Judge would not
> listen to the Committee's attorney; did not want the attorney in the Judge's
> courtroom, the Judge calling him an 800 pound gorilla showing no respect for
> the court. In May, 1991, right after the War ended in the Persian Gulf, the
> case ended up in the Federal Appeals Court in Chicago; a court dominated by
> Judges tied to the major banks and cronies of the Federal Reserve.
> 
> From what I understand,the Illinois Bank Commissioner filed against the Fed at
> the request of the Fed! What were they hiding? Ron Paul's question wasn't
> bizarre, it was Chairman Bernanke's response that was bizarre, disrespectful
> and out of order. It's time for an apology by Chairman Bernanke. And let's see
> those Fed records about Hussein, the Chicago branch of BNL and the Fed!
> 
> Bernanke's response of total ignorance reminds me of the time former Treasury
> Secretary for Economic Policy, Phil Swagel told me
> <http://www.economicpolicyjournal.com/2009/11/former-top-paulson-lieutenant-no
> w-see.html> , with a straight face, he didn't know what a gold swap was.
> 
> When it serves them, these guys have very forgetful memories. Thank the
> heavens there are people like Ron Paul around to remind them.
> 
> UPDATE Here's more on possible Fed involvment in the Watergate money. From
> David T. Beito  <http://hnn.us/blogs/entries/123737.html> (Via LRC):
> 
> Well, it seems that Paul may have been onto something...or at the very least
> raised legitimate questions that deserve investigation. A few minutes on
> google news produced
> <http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1368&dat=19820616&id=6dUVAAAAIBAJ&sjid=
> GxIEAAAAIBAJ&pg=6977,2777644>  this 1982 story from the Milwaukee Sentinel by
> Richard Bradee of the paper's Washington Bureau "Police who searched the room
> the Watergate burglars used found $4,200 in $100 dollar bills, all numbered in
> sequence. Proxmire asked the Federal Reserve Board where the money came from.
> As he explained in a letter to the late Rep. Wright Patman (D-Tex.), chairman
> of the House Banking Committee: "I got the biggest run-around [from the
> Federal Reserve] in years. They ducked, misled, lied, and gave me the idiot
> treatment."
> 
> 
> http://www.economicpolicyjournal.com/2010/02/its-time-for-apology-to-ron-paul.
> html 
>   
> 
> 

------ End of Forwarded Message

Reply via email to