segunda-feira, janeiro 12, 2015

Os príncipes do dinheiro

Japão, 2005

Capitalismo de estado, ou banksterismo? Haverá uma terceira via?


E se todos expandirem o crédito ao mesmo tempo? E se o problema for económico, tecnológico e social, antes de ser financeiro e orçamental?

Seja como for, este vídeo é uma peça analítica fundamental para compreender uma parte crucial da crise sistémica do capitalismo global em mais uma das suas dolorosas metamorfoses.

O ponto de vista de Richard Werner — autor da expressão quantitative easing e do “Quantity Theory of Credit”, é a da defesa da expansão do crédito através de políticas monetárias controladas pelos cidadãos, ou seja pelos governos eleitos, em detrimento, portanto, do poder exagerado e perverso dos príncipes do dinheiro e das suas organizações sombrias.



Princes of the Yen, publicado no YouTube a 04/11/2014

“Princes of the Yen” reveals how Japanese society was transformed to suit the agenda and desire of powerful interest groups, and how citizens were kept entirely in the dark about this.

Based on a book by Professor Richard Werner, a visiting researcher at the Bank of Japan during the 90s crash, during which the stock market dropped by 80% and house prices by up to 84%. The film uncovers the real cause of this extraordinary period in recent Japanese history.

Making extensive use of archival footage and TV appearances of Richard Werner from the time, the viewer is guided to a new understanding of what makes the world tick. And discovers that what happened in Japan almost 25 years ago is again repeating itself in Europe. To understand how, why and by whom, watch this film.

“Princes of the Yen” is an unprecedented challenge to today’s dominant ideological belief system, and the control levers that underpin it. Piece by piece, reality is deconstructed to reveal the world as it is, not as those in power would like us to believe that it is.

“Because only power that is hidden is power that endures.”

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