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peter schiffer

Bob Chapman on The Dow stock market meltdown - Alex Jones show 07 May 2010 - 0 views

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    Bob Chapman on The Dow stock market meltdown - Alex Jones show 07 May 2010
peter schiffer

America on the brink of a financial meltdown - 0 views

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    America on the brink of a financial meltdown
peter schiffer

Worldwide Riots and Markets Meltdown - 0 views

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    Worldwide Riots and Markets Meltdown
peter schiffer

Bob Chapman on G20 Internet Control Police State and The Financial Meltdown - Alex Jone... - 0 views

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    Bob Chapman on G20 Internet Control Police State and The Financial Meltdown - Alex Jones Show 25 June 2010
peter schiffer

Max Keiser Discusses Goldman Sachs Market Meltdown Con on Alex Jones - 0 views

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    Max Keiser Discusses Goldman Sachs Market Meltdown Con on Alex Jones
peter schiffer

Gerald Celente on The Dow stock market meltdown - Alex Jones Show 07 May 2010 - 0 views

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    Gerald Celente on The Dow stock market meltdown - Alex Jones Show 07 May 2010
Joe La Fleur

John Stossel on 2020 Explains The Mortgage Meltdown. - YouTube - 0 views

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    DEMOCRATS CAUSED THE FINANCIAL MELT DOWN COMMUNITY REINVESTMENT ACT
ruth miller

Liquidity Crunch - 0 views

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    The meltdown of the US sub-prime mortgage market and the growing global credit crunch led to a great economic slump,as it dominated all the financial markets.Maintaining liquidity is really a tough job in the current scenario.Instantmortgageusa provide all information about liquidity crunch.
Skeptical Debunker

Switzerland Keeping the Secrets of Alleged Tax Evaders - Yahoo! News - 0 views

  • Pick a dictator, almost any dictator - Cuba's Fulgencio Batista, the Philippines' Ferdinand Marcos, Haiti's Papa and Baby Doc Duvalier, the Shah of Iran, Central African Republic Emperor Jean-BÉdel Bokassa - and they all have this in common: they allegedly stashed their loot in secret, numbered accounts in Swiss banks, safely guarded by the so-called Gnomes of Zurich. This association - of bank secrecy and crime - has been fed into the public's imagination by dozens of books and movies. It's a reputation that rankles the Swiss, who have a more benevolent view of their commitment to privacy - one that happens to extend to tax privacy. Don't ask, because we won't tell. But the dramatic federal investigation of Switzerland's UBS has blown the lid off bank secrecy - and revealed how Swiss banks abet tax evasion on a far more widespread, if more banal, level. Over the past two decades, these secret banking services have been peddled progressively downmarket - first to the lesser-known fabulously wealthy, then to just the wealthy; more recently, private bankers have been tripping over themselves soliciting business from doctors, lawyers and other folks who are what the biz generally calls "high net worth" individuals. "The IRS has been concerned for decades that a combination of a global economy, the Internet, offshore banking, was really going to take offshore tax evasion from the old so-called 'gentlemen's sport' to tax evasion for the masses," says Mark Matthews, a former deputy IRS commissioner and now a tax attorney with Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP.
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    The federal investigation into UBS, which led to a $780 million fine and an agreement to turn over the names of more than 4,450 suspected tax cheats, is now in tatters after Swiss courts ruled against the executive-branch deal. To get around it, a special law has been proposed to accomplish the handoff, but that may not get anywhere in the legislature either. One outcome is already known: tax evasion had become a key service of the Swiss economy, not some isolated event. "They have been outed completely because a very large chunk of their business has been shown to include people cheating on taxes," says Jack Blum, a tax-haven expert. Being "reasonably conservative," he estimates 30% of Swiss banking is related to tax evasion, a figure that jibes with recently released bank data. These revelations come as the financial meltdown has punched a huge hole in projected revenues for governments, which are suddenly a whole lot less tolerant of tax cheats. That's particularly true in Germany, whose wealthy account for a significant portion (at least 10%) of the $1.8 trillion in Swiss banking assets. That translates into hundreds of millions in lost revenue and is the reason the German Finance Minister recently thundered, "There's no future for bank secrecy. It's finished. Its time has run out." The Swiss are not going to be so easily convinced. The Swiss government has already warned that it will not cooperate with German authorities if they go ahead with plans to purchase purloined data about Germans with Swiss bank accounts.
Anshul Singh

SharePoint - Technology Solution with least investments - 0 views

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    In today's uncertain dealings, every business is under more than ever pressure to deliver worth. Part of problem is that these organizations have no option of compromising with productivity or efficiency. Organizations, investing smartly in demanding times always come across as leaders, all the way from economic meltdowns.
Jun Bumanlag

Top 10 Fortune 500 Biggest Losers | Investors Money Journal - 0 views

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    The "Big Guys" of Fortune 500 loose big money.
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    The latest news in the world has ever seen. Recent and into atoms. Now present with us. Actual and reliable....NEWS TODAY www.killdo.de.gg
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