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Crystallex International Corporation is a Canadian-based gold company with a successful record of developing and operating gold mines in Venezuela and elsewhere in South America

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Message: I'd post more but you get the picture...

I'd post more but you get the picture...

posted on May 03, 2008 07:49AM

...and Hugo gets the pictue as well. IMO...Hugo views gold as a strategic asset to be used as a tool to fight the imperialists to the north and help bolster his oil based economy...



Jim Sinclair’s Commentary

Wake up.

The Fed is now guaranteeing any kind of debt from any financial entity, rescuing any primary dealer in treasuries, any issuer of a significant amount of OTC derivatives like Bear, holders of derivatives written on car loans and consumer loans, and now for economic and political reasons, busted student loans going forward and backward.

The US dollar is going to .5200 and in truth the US sees that as a benefit

Gold is going to $1650 because just those you blame for lower gold will make the greatest profit on gold's rise.

As far as I am concerned about that there is NO question.

Fed `Rogue Operation' Spurs Further Bailout Calls (Update1)
By Craig Torres

May 2 (Bloomberg) -- A month after the Federal Reserve rescued Bear Stearns Cos. from bankruptcy, Chairman Ben S. Bernanke got an S.O.S. from Congress.

There is ``a potential crisis in the student-loan market'' requiring ``similar bold action,'' Chairman Christopher Dodd of Connecticut and six other Democrats wrote Bernanke. They want the Fed to swap Treasury notes for bonds backed by student loans. In a separate letter, Pennsylvania Democratic Representative Paul Kanjorski and 31 House members said they want Bernanke to channel money directly to education-finance firms.

Student loans are just the start. Former Fed officials and other Fed-watchers say that Bernanke's actions in saving Bear Stearns will expose the central bank to continuing pressure to use its $889 billion balance sheet to prop up companies or entire industries deemed important by politicians. The Fed satisfied Dodd's request today, expanding the swaps to include securities backed by student debt.

``It is appalling where we are right now,'' former St. Louis Fed President William Poole, who retired in March, said in an interview. The Fed has introduced ``a backstop for the entire financial system.''

Critics argue that the result will be to foster greater risk-taking among investors emboldened by the belief that the government will bail them out of bad decisions.

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