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2011-06-06

Is the IMF Chair take down due to missing gold in Fort Knox?

Vatic Note: This is up because I received an email that I am trying to confirm as true. I ran across this article from last year that indicates there was some question as to the condition of the fort knox gold was in question by Ron Paul. Here is the rumor I received that sent me on this journey. I also remembered the Hong Kong episode where we shipped gold to hong kong to meet an obligation and it was discovered to be tungsten bars painted with gold leaf and passed off a gold bars. Here is the rumor I summarized for someone else.  If all is true including the tungsten replacement, then that is out and out grand theft big time.  Jail time for whoever did it. 


"The IMF chair got taken down because he discovered when in NY that there is NO MORE GOLD OF ANY KIND IN FORT KNOX. THAT IS MASSIVE CRIMINAL THEFT AND THE POWERS THAT BE TOOK THE CHAIR DOWN FOR FINDING OUT AND HE WAS GOING TO SQUEAL ON THE BAD GUYS." Read this below and see if this makes a possibility out of the rumor. I am still trying to confirm, so take this with that in mind. Right now this  is one of the confirmations, but the source is suspect.

Rep. Paul Calls for Gold Audit, Questions Whether Fort Knox Is Empty
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2010/08/31/rep-paul-calls-fort-knox-audit-suggests-gold-gone/#ixzz1OUUwQ6dg
Published September 01, 2010, FoxNews.com

There's gold in them thar hills. Or is there?

Texas Rep. Ron Paul, suggesting America's reserves may not be as robust as officials claim, is calling for an independent audit of the U.S. gold held at Fort Knox and other facilities.

The Republican congressman known for his fierce opposition to virtually everything the Federal Reserve does says the public deserves to know what's behind the fortified walls of America's gold vaults -- particularly in case gold is ever reintroduced as a basis for U.S. currency.

"It'd be nice for the American people to know whether or not the gold is there," Paul told Fox Business Network. And if it is all there, he said, the public should know whether any of it has been obligated.

A spokeswoman told FoxNews.com the congressman wants to introduce the bill in September when Congress returns from recess.

Fort Knox claims billions of dollars worth of gold are stored away in its secret vault. The Fort Knox facility, a hyper-secure fortress in Kentucky that is part of quintessential American lore, is encased in 750 tons of reinforced steel, as well as thousands of cubic feet of concrete and granite. No visitors are allowed.

Though Paul no doubt wants a more thorough inspection, the U.S. Mint is subjected to regular audits, including at Fort Knox. The Mint claims gold is removed in "very small quantities" for this purpose alone, and that no other gold has been transferred in or out of the facility for a long time.

The latest audit, conducted by KPMG, did not appear to detail U.S. gold holdings -- dealing more with gold and silver sales, coin circulation, workplace environment and other issues -- but did state that gold and silver continue to be held at Fort Knox.

Scrutinizing U.S. monetary policy, though, is nothing new for Paul. Last year, he pushed on Capitol Hill a bill to audit the Federal Reserve, an effort that ended with a Fed audit provision tucked inside the financial regulation package.

Paul, in an interview last week with industry publication Kitco News, first outlined his next campaign.

He said there is "reason to be suspicious" about U.S. gold holdings and suggested officials were manipulating the price of gold to prop up the perceived value of paper money. Paul said "it is a possibility" that neither Fort Knox nor the New York Federal Reserve vaults have any gold. He also said he will call for the U.S. government to legalize the use of gold and silver as "legal tender" alongside the U.S. dollar. Let them compete, he says.

"If people get tired of using the paper standard, they can deal in gold or silver," he told Kitco News.

Representatives from the Treasury Department and U.S. Mint did not respond to requests for comment on Paul's proposal.

Gold and silver investment has drawn renewed attention amid concerns about the stability of the U.S. dollar. The United States moved away from the gold standard in the early 1970s, but Paul said it's good to know what the United States holds just in case. He warned the U.S. government is setting the stage for a depression by trying to print, spend and regulate its way out of the last recession.

"Who knows, someday we might want to have a gold standard again and quit all this printing-press money, so it would be nice to know how much we have," Paul said in the interview with Fox Business Network.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2010/08/31/rep-paul-calls-fort-knox-audit-suggests-gold-gone/#ixzz1OUW3PZJW



The article is reproduced in accordance with Section 107 of title 17 of the Copyright Law of the United States relating to fair-use and is for the purposes of criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research.

4 comments:

  1. This originated from Sorcha Faal, whatdoesitmean.com. Clearly disinformation.

    ReplyDelete
  2. No its not, its from Fox News.... the only thing from David Boothe of CIA fame is the part about the gold that "Market Oracle" confirmed was part tungsten and thus the gold was not there. So in that sense David told the truth, but expanded a bit.

    Part of disinformation is telling part of the truth and then what you do is ferret out that which is true from that which they make up and that is what I have done and confirmed it. Check out the links I provided to the readers and see for yourself, but then you have to have some ability to "think" about how to do that.

    Well, now your lucky, I saved you from the daunting task of thinking and told you how to confirm but unfortunately I can't do the deductive reasoning for you, that is something you learn in school and have to practice in order to get good at it, then you could put 2+2 together yourself and comeup with 4.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Just saying eutimes got that story from Sorcha Faal.

    ReplyDelete
  4. The story that the IMF Chair was taken down due to the missing gold, was NOT from Socha Faal, who by the way, is David Boothe of CIA fame.

    My mentioning and giving the link to the "Tungsten" story was Socha Faal, but it was confirmed independantly by "Market Oracle" and I gave you the link to that story as well. Its ok sometimes to use EU or Sorcha Faal IF THE INFO IS TRUE and with confirmation, I found it was, so not everything is disinfo IF ITS CONFIRMED BY AN INDEPENDANT RELIABLE SOURCE. See???

    ReplyDelete

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