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One World Currency – New World Order

02.17.2010 by Matt Jabs //

Buy silver to hedge dollar collapse

  • Buying silver may be the best thing the average investor can do right now.  Given the global financial situation experts advise against waiting for a price dip, they’re saying,”just buy physical silver, it could explode at any time.”  My opinion is to buy only physical silver like $1,000 bags of 90% coins (or $100 bags if you cannot afford larger,) and not ETF’s (SLV.)

Global currency videos

  • New World Order
  • Endgame: Blueprint for Global Enslavement
  • The Obama Deception: The Mask Comes Off
  • Fall Of The Republic: The Presidency Of Barack H Obama
  • Camp Fema: American Lockdown

A one world [global]currency?

Many people, including the president of Russia, have an interest in debasing the U.S. dollar as a currency and eliminating it as a global standard currency.  This is not a Democratic idea, a Republican idea, or even an American idea but an international idea.

It would be wise for you to educate yourself concerning the interest in and implementation of a one world currency.  This is not the rambling of a conspiracy theorist, as many would have you to believe, but simply a cry for awareness to my fellow man, specifically my fellow Americans.

I do not wish to delve into apologetics concerning the gross errors and corruption in monetary policy of my government.  Rather I wish to point out a few necessary and powerful critiques of a centralized one world currency.  I am also looking to raise awareness in my readership, because I care and want you to be informed.

CNN Money sees the writing on the wall.

The Washing Times sees the writing on the wall:

“Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner and Austan Goolsbee, member of the Council of Economic Advisers, have refused to rule out a global currency. Such views by top policymakers cause the dollar to drop. Even worse, this shows that the Obama administration supports dramatically greater centralization on a national and international scale.”

Here are a few of the reasons a one world currency is abhorrent:

“Unlimited power is apt to corrupt the minds of those who possess it”

  1. Lack of competition – No currency is void of the possibility of becoming debased.  Competition between differing national currencies the globe over is healthy.  It allows citizens and businesses to choose opposing currencies if they do not agree with the direction of their government’s monetary policy.  If there is a one world currency, there is no more room for debate, choice, or alternatives.  It empowers government and removes power from people, which brings us to our next point.
  2. Centralized Power – Consider again the unification of world banks all having common interest in one currency and one currency alone.  Of a certainty in this world, money is power.  If the richest and most powerful people on earth share a common goal for their money, where will that ultimate power lead the nations of this world?

Here is one reason why none of this scares the spiritual man within me:

  1. Biblical Prophesy – The bible predicts the adoption of a one world currency and aligns its adoption with periods of incredible famine, disease, brutality, and enslavement.  The concept of a one world government — and with it a one world economy — is prophesied in both Daniel and Revelations, there is nothing new under the sun.

“Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely. Great men are almost always bad men.”  – John “Lord” Acton

Global currency? So what’s the answer?

Thomas Jefferson knew that the power of government, if left unabated, would always follow its natural course of corruption and power grasping.

“God forbid we should ever be twenty years without such a rebellion.  The people cannot be all, and always, well informed. The part which is wrong will be discontented, in proportion to the importance of the facts they misconceive. If they remain quiet under such misconceptions, it is lethargy, the forerunner of death to the public liberty.  And what country can preserve its liberties, if it’s rulers are not warned from time to time, that this people preserve the spirit of resistance? Let them take arms. The remedy is to set them right as to the facts, pardon and pacify them. What signify a few lives lost in a century or two? The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time, with the blood of patriots and tyrants.  It is its natural manure.”  – Thomas Jefferson in reference to the 1st American Revolution

The ultimate answer lies with faith in the God of the bible, faith in the truth of His Word, and faith in the death, burial, and resurrection of His Son, Jesus of Nazareth – indeed the Christ.  The answer lies in loving God, submitting ourselves to Him and thus enabling ourselves to love our fellow man as ourselves.

Earthly action and answers lie in the people empowering themselves with knowledge and courage.  Begging God for increased spiritual faith and courage.  The complacency, apathy, moral decay, and increased social dependence on government of our day are frighteningly reminiscent of so many other societies throughout world history.

Here are the typical stages of society as history teaches:

  1. From bondage to spiritual faith
  2. From spiritual faith to great courage
  3. From great courage to liberty
  4. From liberty to abundance
  5. From abundance to selfishness
  6. From selfishness to complacency
  7. From complacency to apathy
  8. From apathy to moral decay
  9. From moral decay to dependence
  10. From dependence to bondage

Where do you see our nation?

I see our nation as having just surpassed the crest of number five and heading downward into steps 6 – 10.  I believe we are currently immersed in step 6, 7, 8, and 9.  I believe only a return to spiritual faith, morality, and charity can reverse the current course we are on.

Global currency videos

  • New World Order
  • Endgame: Blueprint for Global Enslavement
  • The Obama Deception: The Mask Comes Off
  • Fall Of The Republic: The Presidency Of Barack H Obama
  • Camp Fema: American Lockdown

Buy silver to hedge dollar collapse

  • Buying silver may be the best thing the average investor can do right now.  Given the global financial situation experts advise against waiting for a price dip, they’re saying,”just buy physical silver, it could explode at any time.”  My opinion is to buy only physical silver like $1,000 bags of 90% coins (or $100 bags if you cannot afford larger,) and not ETF’s (SLV.)

Categories // Spirituality, Tips Tags // christian, jesus christ, recession, Spirituality, wisdom

Credit Card Rewards – Rethink Your Returns

10.15.2009 by Matt Jabs //

Would you change your use of credit cards if you discovered the “rewards” are perceived income and not actual income?  What if credit debt was enslaving your nation?  What if both were true… what would you do?

“There is that maketh himself rich, yet hath nothing: there is that maketh himself poor, yet hath great riches.” –Proverbs 13:7

Two Predominately Popular Views

The debate over the use of credit cards seems to be divided into two polar camps – Camp Rewards and Camp Avoid.  The following is a basic description of both camps and a summary of the view held by each.

  • Camp Rewards – These folks use credit cards to take advantage of the rewards programs they offer.  They tend to use their cards for most purchases leaving their own money in the bank to draw interest all month, then pay the cards off each billing cycle thus evading any finance charges.  This group rarely sees credit card use as a moral issue and tends to believe that consumers should use credit cards only if they do not have enough personal responsibility to operate within the guidelines of the rewards rules.
  • Camp Avoid – These campers avoid the use of credit cards like the plague.  They may or may not have been raked over the coals themselves and usually have a moral conviction that the business practices of credit card banks are abhorrent and may even view their abstinence as a form of protest.  They traditionally believe that using credit cards encourages over spending by creating a dangerous disconnect between themselves and their money.

Having recently shredded and closed all my credit card accounts I am firmly entrenched in Camp Avoid, have waged war on credit card banks, and would like to challenge the members of Camp Rewards to jump ship by providing them with a different perspective on the subject of credit card rewards.

Regardless of the camp you’re in… if you need someone to convince you that the business practices of credit card companies are immoral, then you may want to quit reading now – I cannot help you.  With that in mind, this article will not work to convince anyone of the immorality of the industry but will assume readers already aware of an obvious truth.

Instead… I will set out to convince those dancing the dance of credit card rewards to cut ties with the industry and come join Camp Avoid!  I am not setting out to discredit or dishonor those who use credit to get rewards… but rather am imploring you to take a step back and consider the bigger picture.  I do not judge anyone… but I do live to persuade others to choose the BEST option!

If anyone has been able to fend off the strategies of the credit card banks, they can consider themselves lucky.  “Convenience users” – a term used to describe card users who pay off their balance in full each month—is at an all-time low, representing only 37.4% of the credit-card using population.”  *source from 2004, I’m sure this number is much lower now.

A Different Perspective…

What if the rewards were only perceived and not actual?

Credit card companies would have us to believe that their credit card rewards are ultimately a way to increase our bottom line.  In fact, they spend billions of dollars annually on clever marketing campaigns intended to make us believe we need their “rewards.”

Should we trust their marketing campaigns?  Good question.  I’ll let you form your own opinions on their level of trustworthiness.

Let’s break down a few numbers, read a few quotes, and consider what all is involved concerning credit charges and how they effect the pricing of goods and services in our current economy.

Rewards 101 – Interchange Fees

Interchange fees are fees that a merchant’s bank (the “acquiring bank”) pays a customer’s bank (the “issuing bank”) when merchants accept cards using card networks such as Visa and MasterCard for purchases.

Interchange fees are typically a flat fee plus a percentage of the total purchase price (including taxes). In the United States, the fee averages approximately 2% of transaction value.

In recent years, interchange fees have become a controversial issue, the subject of regulatory and antitrust investigations. Only very large merchants such as Wal-Mart might have the leverage to negotiate fee prices, and while many merchants prefer cash or PIN-based debit cards, most cannot realistically refuse to accept the major bankcard association-branded cards. This holds true even when their interchange-driven fees exceed their profit margins.  Some countries have established significantly lower interchange fees. The fees are also the subject of several ongoing lawsuits in the United States.  –Wikipedia

Because merchants have no control over the fees they are charged, and because fees in the U. S. are the highest of any country in the world – high costs must be passed on to the consumer.

Interchange fees affect the market by raising the cost of consumer goods and services by at least enough to cover the 2% they cost merchants.

Those who have been following our Debt Free Adventure no that we also boycott Walmart and choose instead to shop at local businesses whenever possible.

“Credit card companies typically levy more than $2 in fees for every $100 consumers charge at American businesses… but credit card companies rules prohibit merchants telling consumers about these fees at the point of purchase.”  *source

Price increases for all…

Given the information above we see that interchange fees cost users of debit and cash along with the users of credit.

Each year, in addition to interest, late fees, over-the-limit charges and other fees charged by credit card companies and their banks, consumers pay billions of dollars in hidden fees that never appear on their monthly statements. These hidden charges are called credit card “interchange fees” also known as “swipe fees.”

Major organizations like The National Retail Federation (NRF), National Grocers Association, National Restaurant Association, and advocacy groups such as Americans for Financial Reform have come out in favor of reforming credit card interchange fees.

NRF Senior Vice President and General Counsel Mallory Duncan says, “…banks are driving prices of consumer goods higher by charging merchants more and more for credit card usage. The merchants have to pass the cost back to the consumer, so everyone—not just the people who use credit cards but those who pay cash or by check, too—pays more.” *source

It gets worse.

  • Merchants are legally disallowed, per the terms of their merchant agreements, to disclose this fee information to consumers.
  • Merchants are charged a flat fee and a percentage on every credit purchase you make but cannot legally require a certain amount per transaction for use of credit (though some do so anyway.) In other words, per their agreement with the credit card banks, they cannot require a minimum purchase of say $20 for the use of a credit card to make a purchase.
  • Jim of Bargaineering.com recently reported his findings of how credit card rewards points translate into cash.  He discovered how the equation credit card banks use is not: [1 point = 1 unit cash].  Instead, after looking into it a bit further Jim found that a more accurate equation would be: [1 point = 0.65 unit cash].  He also found the equation to be unique to each bank… each using different rates of conversion – some higher, some lower.

Unless you are much smarter than I am, the only conclusion to be made is that by swiping our cards we are essentially supporting the construction the infrastructure and industry that raises our prices.  The same industry that is oppressing the poor and exploiting the vulnerable.

“Home Depot pays more in interchange fees than for employee health care.”  *source

So we don’t really make money from rewards… using credit cards actually costs us more money then we could ever make back.  If it were not so credit card banks would not entice with offers to use rewards.  They make ridiculous amounts of money and use rewards as a way to trick us into thinking we are making money.

Rewards 201 – Personal Responsibility

A common point among those who encourage using credit cards for “rewards” hold that those who cannot “use the cards properly” lack personal responsibility.

While I outlined my strong support of personal responsibility, I am also a HUGE advocate of mercy for the poor and less fortunate.

I challenge you to consider how…

Credit card banks prey upon the weak and vulnerable paying millions of dollars to universities and alumni associations alike who buckle and sell the personal information of their students, faculty, staff, and alumni to this vulture industry.  *source 1 & 2

Concerning people with less income and a “taste for plastic” – rather than refusing to extend credit, or giving lower interest rates to them – as Liz Weston suggests – credit card banks continue to issue cards to these people like candy, and do so at interest rates near 30%!

And who do you suppose is one of the largest target markets of credit card companies right now?  People who have recently been through bankruptcy!

Rewards 301 – Credit CARD Act of 2009

While this legislation was passed in May of this year, it does not go into effect until February of 2010 giving credit card banks nearly 10 months to figure out how they can work their way around any newly imposed restrictions.  If you would like to help push this through faster, check out CreditCardReform.org

How have credit card banks responded?

Simple… they are changing the terms to existing contracts in order to position themselves to make money at the expense of their customers.  Yep – even the good customers like those who pay off their balances in full each month.

Some of the typical changes we are seeing include:

  • increasing interest rates “because of a bad economy”
  • instituting annual fees on existing cards that never carried them before, without clearly informing customers
  • increasing minimum fees by as much as triple, leaving a lot of their debtors unable to pay.

What About Debit Cards?

Unfortunately debit cards are used as credit more than they are used as debit.

You know the drill.  You go to make a purchase and the check out person asks, “debt or credit?”

So what’s the difference?

If you punch in your personal identification number (PIN), it’s an online transaction – it gets completed electronically and it’s done pretty quickly. If you don’t use your PIN and you sign a charge slip instead, it’s an offline transaction. Offline transactions are processed much like plain-vanilla credit card purchases.

Even though you use a debit card, offline transactions are very much like credit card transactions. Your debit card might have a Visa logo on it, for example, so it runs through the Visa network. It’s not a credit transaction, but it uses the same infrastructure.  *source

So who cares whether it is an online or offline transaction?  Merchants. If you use your card as debit, merchants are charged less fees so you can imagine that banks give you heavy incentive to choose credit!  You should care too because as we read earlier… the merchants pass those glorious fees right on down the line.

If you use your debit card as a debit transaction, you are not negating the fees, but you are in effect lowering them.  This is because the cost for debit transactions is less than the cost of credit transactions.

What About Cash?

Unfortunately, because the extreme use of credit has built price hikes into almost all retail pricing situations, even the use of cash will cost you 2% more!

How does that make you feel about rewards? Honestly.

Many merchants would love to give customers a discount for using cash, and some still do!  However, because of the complexity of the issue they cannot typically maintain a system where they charge one price for cash and another price for credit… it’s too cumbersome and costly to maintain.

So why use cash… why not just forget it and continue using credit?

Because it is the right thing to do. I suppose that is the basis of my entire argument summed up nicely in one clear statement.  I am sure I will catch a good amount of flack for this article… but that is fine.  I wanted to present facts to sway your opinion about the use of credit by  showing how it continues to enslave our nation.

Most importantly… do YOU think it is the right thing to do?  If so, then we must ask ourselves if $200 – $400 per month in “credit card rewards” is worth doing what we now think of as wrong.  Maybe you do not see this industry as repressing and destructive.  If that is the case, then I guess I have failed you today.

Like I said above… I do not judge anyone for their use of credit cards – this post has been weighing heavy on my heart and I simply wanted to convey it as honestly and openly as possible with the hopes that I might sway even one existing “rewards” user!

Remember… the more we use our cards as credit, the more we are supporting the existing credit card fee infrastructure.

Consider This A Challenge & Rethink Rewards!

You Have A Vote

Every time we go to make a purchase we can lessen the devastating effect of credit on our nation by simply choosing to boycott the extreme use of credit.  We can use our debit card as debit, or better yet… use cash.  I know it may be a pain, but life isn’t all about money – nor is it about always taking the easy way out.

Whether this credit crisis was our fault or not – doesn’t it feel good to help those who need help?  To have mercy on those who need mercy.  To take a stand for what is right – even if you have to stand alone.  Who cares if you’re the only one standing?  At least you stood!

Switching to cash and debit only transactions will not be an easy change for the wife and I.  But I suppose we will approach it like we do everything else… one baby step at a time.  It will get easier and easier with each passing day – then before you know it making credit purchases will become little more than a bad dream!

Bible wisdom is better than silver and fine gold…

  • “There is a way which seemeth right unto a man, but the end thereof are the ways of death.” –Proverbs 14:12
  • “Do they not err that devise evil? but mercy and truth shall be to them that devise good.” –Proverbs 14:22
  • “He that oppresseth the poor reproacheth his Maker: but he that honoureth him hath mercy on the poor.” –Proverbs 14:31
  • “The eyes of the LORD are in every place, beholding the evil and the good… In the house of the righteous is much treasure: but in the revenues of the wicked is trouble.” –Proverbs 15:3,6
  • “He that refuseth instruction despiseth his own soul: but he that heareth reproof getteth understanding.” –Proverbs 15:32
  • “Righteousness exalteth a nation: but sin is a reproach to any people.” –Proverbs 14:34
Like this article?  Here are 3 free ways to join the community and follow the progress – Sign up for email updates, Subscribe to my RSS feed, And/or follow me on Twitter.

DFA is passionately dedicated to helping people break the bondage of debt and work toward financial freedom using biblical principles.

Categories // Debt, Honesty, Spirituality, Tips Tags // credit cards, rewards, wisdom

Weekly Wisdom in Personal Finance – Fantasy Football Edition – 9/11/2009

09.11.2009 by Matt Jabs //

Like this article?  Here are 3 free ways to join the community and follow the progress – Sign up for email updates, Subscribe to my RSS feed, And/or follow me on Twitter.

This weeks photo was inspired by the beginning of another great year of Fantasy Football.  Wives… ready yourselves for a long winter’s nap!

My History with Fantasy Football

I started playing fantasy football (under the handle “JabsBeCreepin”) back in my college days – we’re talking WAY back in the 1900’s folks.  Since I am already a huge football fan, my transition into fantasy seemed natural and quite bound to happen.  Over the course of the first few years I truly fell in love with the everything fantasy football had to offer and was becoming quite a force to be reckoned with among my fellow fantasy cohorts.   Then it happened…

Somewhere along the way, I became a man possessed – just ask my wife.  For the last two years I have spent WAY too much time picking, arranging, rearranging, and repicking my players – watching the games, tallying the scores, switching from channel to channel, yelling at the television, jumping, yelling some more, celebrating, strategizing, scheming, and trash talking!  Sometimes I would even go as far as to ask my wife for advice on which player to pick.  She did what any woman would do – based her winning picks on how much she liked either their name, their uniform, or both!  This process started on Wednesday and ended the following Tuesday when that weeks final scores were tallied… so as you can see it was a bit of a time suck!

So this year I am limiting myself to 2 simple fantasy teams and only a few hours per week to complete the whole shebang.  Don’t worry… I’m still going to watch the games — what do you think I am, crazy?  But the majority of my time will continue to be delegated toward getting out of debt and writing articles and networking for the cause of passionate Debt Free Adventure!

What about you?  Are you sacrificing by taking a smaller role in Fantasy Football this year to accomplish a more important personal goal?

While you’re mulling that though over… enjoy this list of solid PF articles that caught my eye this week – and don’t forget to hurry up and pick your team before Sunday’s games! He he… I couldn’t resist.

This Weeks Articles of Personal Finance Wisdom…

  1. Top 25 Most Bada$$ Personal Finance Blogs – by Jeremy of Australian Credit Card Finder
    Not necessarily an article of wisdom, but worth mentioning for 2 reasons.  The graphics are awesome, and DFA made the list!
  2. 42 Ways To Radically Simplify Your Financial Life – by Baker of Man Vs. Debt
    I think Adam Baker was genetically engineered to be an elite creator of awesome and unique content… here is yet another example of the power with which he writes and delivers his articles.
  3. Five Lessons I Learned From My Own Frugal Dad – a guest post by Monevator on Frugal Dad
    Valuable nuggets of personal finance information passed down from one Frugal Dad to another.  This guest article is about cherishing family as much or more than it is about wise finances… we can never get too much of either.
  4. Why a Degree From a Fancy College Isn’t Worth It – a guest post by Neal Frankle of Wealth Pilgrim on Five Cent Nickel
    Any regular reader of DFA knows I prefer to think and LIVE outside the box… which is why I love this article by the unmatchable Neal Frankle.  Neal is a great man and a great writer, but not a great surfer… YET!  This article gives the reader solid reasons to rethink the supposed “best option” of enrolling into a 4 year University.
  5. Sweating the Big Stuff – a guest post by Sierra Black of Child Wild on Get Rich Slowly
    A great post that gives a personal account of Big problems, Big decisions, and the Big returns that resulted.  This post is very motivational in nature… which I LOVE!
  6. Why You Need Renters Insurance And How Much It Costs – by David of My Two Dollars
    Do you rent your living quarters?  Do you have renters insurance?  If you aren’t positive then you’re definitely going to want to check out this insightful post on the matter.  The cost is probably less than you think, and could save you a boat load in the long run!
  7. Personal Finance for Couples- How to Start the Finance Discussion With Your Significant Other? – by Ray of Financial Highway
    The second article in a series of great articles touching on the ever-so-delicate subject of personal finance among couples!  My $0.02 is that God needs to be in the middle of this equation or trouble will most assuredly creep in!
  8. Get More Blog Subscribers with my Blog Success Manifesto (Free 62-page ebook!) – by Erica of Erica.Biz
    Looking to start a blog to make some side hustle money?  Check out this thorough and insightful guide from an entrepreneur who has had a great deal of success herself.  It is always a good idea to learn success from successful people!  Oh yeah… did I mention this resource is FREE?  What are you waiting for – go get it.
  9. Thoughts on Laziness and Poverty – by Joe of Personal Finance by the Book
    I love it when Christians address their own fleshly faults, admit their faults, then move to correct their faults and live a more transparent Christ-like life.  These are the exact steps Joe takes in this beautifully personal article.
  10. The ONE Thing You Must Do to Reach Your Financial Goals – by Jason of Redeeming Riches
    Now this is one personal finance staple that I never get tired of reading about!  The bold statement in Jason’s title is true by the way… so get over there & check out what he has figured out!

Thanks to the Personal Finance (PF) community for all of their encouragement, links, advice, & help along the way!

Enjoy your weekend… and don’t spend too much time picking your fantasy football team!

Like this article?  Here are 3 free ways to join the community and follow the progress – Sign up for email updates, Subscribe to my RSS feed, And/or follow me on Twitter.

DFA is passionately dedicated to helping people break the bondage of debt and work toward financial freedom using biblical principles.

Categories // Weekly Wisdom Tags // Finances, wisdom, WW

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