| hi max, 
 you know how it feels when you hear a loud noise above you and you crouch down and cover your head and wince, wondering what is coming down?
 
 in the meantime...we have this...
 
 gold-eagle.com
 
 The Federal Reserve is indeed using QE3 to attack the problem of unemployment - but not through the method stated.
 
 The cover story is that QE3 will be used to increase the money  available for lending and to lower interest rates. It is a credit to Mr.  Bernanke that he was able to read this statement with a straight face,  for the assertion that the economy is being held down by too high of  interest rates and tight money is ludicrous. Interest rates are already  at historic lows, and banks are awash in available cash. Moreover, QE3  is likely to have very little effect when it comes to expanding  corporate lending, just as QE2 had very little effect - because that was  never the intended route to rebooting employment in the United States.
 
 As described in detail in my article "Bullets In The Back: How  Boomers & Retirees Will Become Bailout, Stimulus & Currency War  Casualties" (linked below) the United States has a structural problem  with unemployment that is essentially unsolvable so long as the dollar  remains high in value relative to other global currencies. This problem  was exacerbated by the rise in the US dollar caused by the Euro crisis -  and it is no coincidence that the unemployment crisis in the United  States is now getting rapidly worse even as the dollar soared this past  spring and summer.
 
 The Federal Reserve is, of course, well aware that the  unemployment situation is far, far worse than what is being captured in  the official headline unemployment rate of 8.1%. The government knows  full well that the true unemployment rate, once workforce participation  rate manipulations are netted out, is closer to 19% - and getting worse,  as explored in detail in my article linked below, "Making 9 Million  Jobless "Vanish": How The Government Manipulates Unemployment  Statistics".
 
 This building crisis of a strengthening dollar and rising  unemployment called for emergency action, and that is exactly what  Bernanke is doing. He is effectively calling in a B-52 strike on the US  dollar, monetizing for the world to see, and pledging to monetize for as  long as it takes - until the US dollar is driven down to a level where  American workers can once again be globally competitive.
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