I have repeated my angst/disgust and thoughts on this matter often, including my prediction that when this scandal breaks it will dwarf Watergate. Not only will the US financial and real estate market be in shambles, but it will make a mockery of US foreign policy as far as Africa and the poor in other continents are concerned.
This now takes us full circle to the proposed IMF gold sale plan to be presented next month. As you well know this plan is championed by Gold Cartel sycophant Gordon Brown of England and tolerated by South African traitor Trevor Manuel. As recently brought to your attention, even talk of these sales is affecting the price of gold and South Africa’s WORKERS. The devious Brown and Manuel continue to proceed even though today’s gold prices ARE NOT GOOD ENOUGH OR HIGH ENOUGH to seriously help the economy and the poor of South Africa:
Bill,
Here is an excerpt regarding job losses in South Africa’s gold mining industry from January 2003 to June 2004 during which time the Rand price of gold lost 25%.
In a couple of years we will have a benchmark for how many jobs have been missing from the African Gold mining industry for decades as Central Banks leased out their gold to contain the price rise.
Regards,
Dave
" South Africa's fabled gold-mining industry lost 11,000 jobs from January 2003 to June 2004, in part because income from its dollar-denominated exports fell sharply. Botswana's budget tipped from a surplus to a $325 million deficit last year as its dollar income from diamond sales was diluted by a 10 percent rise in its currency, the pula.
All these nations, and nearby Namibia, share a common problem: their currencies are pegged one-to-one to South Africa's rand, which has recorded a big rise against the dollar (Botswana's pula is pegged to a basket of currencies dominated by the rand.) The euro has risen 52 percent against the dollar since February 2002, but the rand, driven by a boom in commodities like gold, has nearly doubled in value.
"The weak dollar is bad economic news for countries that are not on a dollar-parity system," said Anthony Twine, a senior economist at Econometrix, a Johannesburg consultant. "
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/03…ldbusiness/12africa.html?
-END-
Each miner supports 10 to 12 others according to Bheki Sibiya, the chairman of South African Airways in 2001. This does not include the MANY thousands of black miners who cannot get work because of the low gold price.
GATA is fighting the good fight to make things right. We need your help and we need it now. Please respond to Ed Steer’s CALL TO ARMS. This is your opportunity to be a part of history. BE THERE to tell your kids and grandkids you knew what was going on and did something about it.
GATA BE IN IT TO WIN IT!
MIDAS