Tag Archives: federal reserve

Episode-50- How to Survive – An Overview of Modern Survivalist Philosophy

Last night I was asked a simple question, “well if you run the survival podcast, then tell me, how do you survive”.  This inspired todays show on Modern Survivalist Philosophy.

Tune in today to hear…

  • How the creation of the Federal Reserve has led to volentary enslavement of the American People
  • Why debt freedom creates individual freedom
  • Why debt was the only way to take over the America of the 1800s and how it took generations for it to occur
  • The freedom of producing your own food
  • How Tax is theft and how a bloodless revolution could reclaim America
  • The “investment value” of stored food
  • The logical way to use and view alternative energy
  • The true wealth of land ownership
  • Using “the system” in modern survivalism with down to earth things like insurance and investing
  • The lesson of the immigrants that built our rail roads and mined our coal – use the system to get out of it
  • Why our personal survival philosophy is more important to you then anyone elses
  • The fundmental truths of survivalism, liberty and knowledge

Remember to comment, chime in and tell us your thoughts, this podcast is one man’s opinion, not a lecture or sermon. Also please enter our listener appreciation contest and help spread the word about our show.

Episode-12- What is the M3 Money Supply and What Does it Mean to You?

So just what is the M3 Money Supply? It is the value of all U.S. Dollars in Circulation. The M Factors of US currency are broken down as follows,

  • M0: M0 (M-zero) is the most liquid measure of the money supply. It only includes cash or assets that could quickly be converted into currency. This measure is known as narrow money because it is the smallest measure of the money supply.
  • M1: M1 is M0 + checking accounts. This is used as a measurement for economists trying to quantify the amount of money in circulation.
  • M2: M2 is M1 + small time deposits (less than $100,000), savings deposits, and non-institutional money-market funds.
  • M3: M3 is M2 + all large scale deposits (over $100,000), institutional money-market funds, short-term repurchase agreements, along with other larger liquid assets. The broadest measure of money; it is used by economists to estimate the entire supply of money within an economy.

Now it just so happens that the Federal Reserve stopped publishing the U.S. M3 numbers back in 2006, to, “save money and because the M3 number doesn’t really tell you anything that the M2 number doesn’t.”

I am sorry but this is a huge cop out.

  1. You can bet that the Fed knows the M3 number, publishing it is releasing a number, not much can be saved by not publishing it, the work to calculate the M3 Supply is still being done.
  2. Large scale deposits (over $100,000) and institutional money-market funds are exactly where money pumped into the system by the Federal Reserve actually go! Not publishing this number has freed the Fed to pump in money at will and keep the average person ignorant to what is going on.

Listen to this edition of The Survival Podcast and learn

  1. How pumping in money to our economy is like splitting a stock with out giving new shares to those who own it. Effectively cutting the value of the dollar by 32% in the last 27 months that M3 has not been published.
  2. How the consumer price index has been replaced with “core inflation” so that our current inflation rates ignore two of your biggest expenses, ENERGY and FOOD!
  3. How the Fed’s Solution to loan and print even more money is sending us on a road to disaster most people can’t even fathom.
  4. Why the cost of everything that people need to survive and work in the U.S. is going up but we are being told that inflation is “flat”.

In short the rate of inflation is ignoring the decline of the dollar, the increase in the cost of food and the increase in the cost of gas and other energy products to falsely and temporally prop up the declining U.S. and Global Economies.

Here are some of the resources I used for data for this podcast