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Thorough Commentary on the DINAR . . .


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Thorough Commentary on the DINAR . . .The dinar was created for the sole purpose of transferring wealth and to create a windfall tax for the US government. It was planned from the beginning. It will not be decided by the Iraqi government and it will not depend on some law to be passed. Those are all distractions. This will take place when the timing is right those who are blocking it are out of the way.

Now that is funny...10 years ago it was determined that we would be in the middle of a great recession and would need a windfall to get us out....so they invaded Iraq....replaced their currency and are now ready to make millionaires out of everyone that invested...so the government could get an increase in revenue....what a plan

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This article is about the police organization. Interpol (disambiguation).

International Criminal Police Organization – INTERPOL

Common name Interpol

Abbreviation ICPO

Logo of the International Criminal Police Organization – INTERPOL.

Agency overview

Formed 7 September 1923

Annual budget €59 million

Legal personality Governmental: Government agency

Jurisdictional structure

International agency

Countries 190 member states

Governing body Interpol General Assembly

Constituting instrument ICPO-INTERPOL Constitution and General Regulations

General nature

Law enforcement

Civilian agency

Operational structure

Headquarters 200, quai Charles de Gaulle, Lyon, France

Agency executives

Khoo Boon Hui, President

Ronald Noble, Secretary General

Facilities

National Central Bureaus 187

Website

interpol.int

Footnotes

languages (4)[show]

Interpol headquarters in Lyon.

Coordinates: 45.78219°N 4.84838°E Interpol, whose full name is the International Criminal Police Organization – INTERPOL,[1] is an organization facilitating international police cooperation. It was established as the International Criminal Police Commission in 1923 and adopted its telegraphic address as its common name in 1956.

Its membership of 190 countries provides finance of around €59 million through annual contributions. The organization's headquarters is in Lyon, France. It is the second largest intergovernmental organization after the United Nations, in terms of number of member states.

Its current Secretary-General is Ronald Noble, a former United States Under Secretary of the Treasury for Enforcement. Its current President is Singapore's Senior Deputy Secretary of the Ministry of Home Affairs and former Commissioner of Police Khoo Boon Hui; the President before that, Jackie Selebi, National Commissioner of the South African Police Service, held his term from 2004 till his resignation on 13 January 2008, after which he was charged in South Africa on three counts of corruption and one of defeating the course of justice, and replaced by Arturo Herrera Verdugo, current National Commissioner of Investigations Police of Chile and former vice president for the American Zone, who remained acting president until the organization meeting in October 2008.[2]

In order to maintain as politically neutral a role as possible, Interpol's constitution forbids it to undertake any interventions or activities of a political, military, religious, or racial nature.[3] Its work focuses primarily on public safety, terrorism, organized crime, crimes against humanity, environmental crime, genocide, war crimes, piracy, illicit drug production, drug trafficking, weapons smuggling, human trafficking, money laundering, child pornography, white-collar crime, computer crime, intellectual property crime and corruption.

In 2008, the Interpol General Secretariat employed a staff of 588, representing 84 member countries. The Interpol public website[4] received an average of 2.2 million page visits every month. Interpol issued 3,126 red notices for the year 2008 which led to the arrest of 718 people.[5]

Contents [hide]

1 History

2 Constitution

3 Methodology

4 Finances

5 Emblem

6 Member states and sub-bureaus

6.1 Non-member countries

7 Secretaries-general and presidents

8 See also

9 References

10 External links

[edit]History

The first significant move towards creating INTERPOL was in 1914 at the First International Criminal Police Congress. Police officers, lawyers and magistrates from 14 countries gathered in Monaco to discuss arrest procedures, identification techniques, centralized international criminal records and extradition proceedings.[6] However World War I delayed this initiative and it was not until 1923 that Interpol was founded at the Second International Police Congress in Vienna as the International Criminal Police (ICP). Founding members were Poland, Austria, Belgium, China, Egypt, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Italy, the Netherlands, Romania, Sweden, Switzerland, and Yugoslavia.[7] The United States joined INTERPOL in 1923.[8]

Following the Anschluss (Austria's annexation by Germany) in 1938, the organization fell under the control of Nazi Germany, and the Commission's headquarters were eventually moved to Berlin in 1942. From 1938 to 1945, the presidents of Interpol included Otto Steinhäusl, Reinhard Heydrich, Arthur Nebe, and Ernst Kaltenbrunner. All were generals in the SS, and Kaltenbrunner was the highest ranking SS officer executed after the Nuremberg Trial.

After the end of World War II in 1945, the organization was revived as the International Criminal Police Organization by European Allies of World War II officials from Belgium, France, Scandinavia and the United Kingdom. Its new headquarters were established in Saint-Cloud, a town on the outskirts of Paris. They remained there until 1989, when they were moved to their present location, Lyon.

Until the 1980s Interpol did not intervene in the prosecution of Nazi war criminals in accordance with Article 3 of its Constitution forbidding intervention in 'political' matters.[9] However, it has issued arrest warrants for former country leaders like Zine El Abidine Ben Ali and Hosni Mubarak despite Article 3, on the grounds that they were accused of corruption (particularly embezzlement).

On 2 July 2010, former Interpol President Jackie Selebi was found guilty of corruption by the South African High Court in Johannesburg for accepting bribes worth €156,000 from a drug trafficker.[10] After being charged in January 2008, Selebi resigned as president of Interpol and was put on extended leave as National Police Commissioner of South Africa.[citation needed]

[edit]Constitution

The role of Interpol is defined by the general provisions of its constitution.

In article 2

To ensure and promote the widest possible mutual assistance between all criminal police authorities within the limits of the laws existing in the different countries and in the spirit of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

To establish and develop all institutions likely to contribute effectively to the prevention and suppression of ordinary law crimes.

In article 3

It is strictly forbidden for the Organization to undertake any intervention or activities of a political, military, religious or racial character.[11]

[edit]Methodology

I­nterpol differs from most law-enforcement agencies—agents do not make arrests themselves, and there is no single Interpol jail where criminals are taken. The agency functions as an administrative liaison between the law-enforcement agencies of the member countries, providing communications and database assistance. This is vital when fighting international crime because language, cultural and bureaucratic differences can make it difficult for officers of different nations to work together. For example, if ICE and FBI special agents track a terrorist to Italy, they may not know whom to contact in the Polizia di Stato, if the Carabinieri have jurisdiction over some aspect of the case, or who in the Italian government needs to be notified of the ICE/FBI's involvement. ICE and FBI can contact the Interpol National Central Bureau in Italy, which will act as a liaison between the United States and Italian law-enforcement agencies.

Interpol's databases help law enforcement see the big picture of international crime. While other agencies have their own extensive crime databases, the information rarely extends beyond one nation's borders. Interpol can track criminals and crime trends around the world. They maintain collections of fingerprints and mug shots, lists of wanted persons, DNA samples and travel documents. Their lost and stolen travel document database alone contains more than 12 million records. They also analyze all this data and release information on crime trends to the member countries.

A secure worldwide communications network allows Interpol agents and member countries to contact each other at any time. Known as I-24/7, the network offers constant access to Interpol's databases. While the National Central Bureaus are the primary access sites to the network, some member countries have expanded it to key areas such as airports and border access points. Member countries can also access each other's criminal databases via the I-24/7 system.

In the event of an international disaster, terrorist attack or assassination, Interpol can send an incident response team. This team can offer a range of expertise and database access to assist with victim identification, suspect identification and the dissemination of information to other nations' law enforcement agencies. In addition, at the request of local authorities, they can act as a central command and logistics operation to coordinate other law enforcement agencies involved in a case. Such teams were deployed 12 times in 2005.[citation needed] Interpol began issuing its own passport in 2009 with hopes that member states would remove visa requirements for individuals traveling for Interpol business, thereby improving response times.[12]

[edit]Finances

In 2009 Interpol's income was €59 million, of which 82% comprised statutory contributions by member countries and 14% income from projects, private foundations and commercial enterprises.[13] From 2004 to 2010 Interpol's external auditors have been the Cour des comptes.[14][15]

[edit]Emblem

The current emblem of Interpol was adopted in 1950 and according to their website has the following symbolism:[16]

the globe indicates worldwide activity

the olive branches represent peace

the sword represents police action

the scales signify justice

[edit] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interpol

IMO Mr. O has announce cuts in Military Spending, just last week at the Pentagon. Months ago he preached if you don't past this bill, Local Police, Firemen will lose their job, if this Bill not past. Yes Local Police do receive grants from the Federal Government, but in Reality these service's are paid Local an State. My point is preach lets save the locals, but lets drop our guard Globally. This doesn't make any sense, everyday goes by the choices that are made by the elected takes us farther away from the Gains, Freedom's of what represent the USA.

Edited by yota691
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It is close now, keep watch..Interpol is about to make some moves behind the scenes. You will see these come out as scandals and offenses of the crazy kind. Don’t get tangled up in any of it. The agency has a dossier on everyone in Washington. It is simply a matter of time.

Geez with that last paragraph I thought Randalln was loose again!

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This is an awesome post! If I had ten plus's I'd give them to you. You are right on the money. I hope many here will really read what you are putting out. All of your stats are correct. Thanks 20 million, high five!

I feel he hit the Nail with the Hammer!!

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The thing about a currency that is based on oil that is in the ground is that it will always be declining in value. Sure, they might (and probably will) make some oil discoveries which will cause a short term increase in value (if they don't just print more of it to offset the oil discovery), but the trend will be, and has to be, always declining in value.

So, if you hold a currency that you KNOW has nowhere to go but down, what do you do with it? You get rid of it. You trade it, sell it, do anything you can do to get rid of it, because you know it has no long term upside.

What happens when everyone, understanding and realizing this, goes to cash in their dinar? What is Iraq going to give them? An IOU for some oil that may not see the light of day for 50 years?

It just doesn't work. Iraq could, tomorrow, say the dinar was worth 1 to 1 and it wouldn't help any of the currency speculators one bit, because no financial institution would recognize it, because no financial institution would be stupid enough to think that Iraq has any easily convertible commodities that are worth 30 trillion dollars.

It'd be just like when Saddam said it was worth 3 bucks, but no one on the planet (except for Saddam and his buddies) could get that rate.

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The thing about a currency that is based on oil that is in the ground is that it will always be declining in value. Sure, they might (and probably will) make some oil discoveries which will cause a short term increase in value (if they don't just print more of it to offset the oil discovery), but the trend will be, and has to be, always declining in value.

So, if you hold a currency that you KNOW has nowhere to go but down, what do you do with it? You get rid of it. You trade it, sell it, do anything you can do to get rid of it, because you know it has no long term upside.

What happens when everyone, understanding and realizing this, goes to cash in their dinar? What is Iraq going to give them? An IOU for some oil that may not see the light of day for 50 years?

It just doesn't work. Iraq could, tomorrow, say the dinar was worth 1 to 1 and it wouldn't help any of the currency speculators one bit, because no financial institution would recognize it, because no financial institution would be stupid enough to think that Iraq has any easily convertible commodities that are worth 30 trillion dollars.

It'd be just like when Saddam said it was worth 3 bucks, but no one on the planet (except for Saddam and his buddies) could get that rate.

I'm pretty sure your paragraph relates to when the original article mentioned "Asset Based" currency. You also need to keep in mind that "asset based" could mean more than just oil alone. Infrastructure, GDP, Gold, Oil, etc... It could be a combination of all of the previous mentioned items. Therefore it wouldn't always be declining, in fact, if the economy was consistently growing then the currency would follow.

Do you see what I'm getting at?

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The thing about a currency that is based on oil that is in the ground is that it will always be declining in value. Sure, they might (and probably will) make some oil discoveries which will cause a short term increase in value (if they don't just print more of it to offset the oil discovery), but the trend will be, and has to be, always declining in value.

So, if you hold a currency that you KNOW has nowhere to go but down, what do you do with it? You get rid of it. You trade it, sell it, do anything you can do to get rid of it, because you know it has no long term upside.

What happens when everyone, understanding and realizing this, goes to cash in their dinar? What is Iraq going to give them? An IOU for some oil that may not see the light of day for 50 years?

It just doesn't work. Iraq could, tomorrow, say the dinar was worth 1 to 1 and it wouldn't help any of the currency speculators one bit, because no financial institution would recognize it, because no financial institution would be stupid enough to think that Iraq has any easily convertible commodities that are worth 30 trillion dollars.

It'd be just like when Saddam said it was worth 3 bucks, but no one on the planet (except for Saddam and his buddies) could get that rate.

Please explain the currency value of other neighboring ME nations including border sharing nations to Iraq. They are all oil producing as well. Half of them have stronger currency values than the US. I don't know of any that has more US backed influence and economic growth expectations for 2012. That is turn will raise their assets even further, therefore changing the outcome of your statement. Maybe I'm wrong, but maybe, just maybe, if we are right, would you stand back and not take a risk?

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The thing about a currency that is based on oil that is in the ground is that it will always be declining in value. Sure, they might (and probably will) make some oil discoveries which will cause a short term increase in value (if they don't just print more of it to offset the oil discovery), but the trend will be, and has to be, always declining in value.

I don't accept this premise. How will oil trend down in price? If you accept the body of thought of Peak Oil and that oil is NOT abiotic, then it is a dwindling resource that is being consumed at an ever increasing rate. Law of supply and demand will only increase the price, NEVER reduce it.

I read a similar piece in Dec. and had an "Ah Ha" moment where this all came together in my head. I agree that this is what's going on. The dinar is an effort by the "bankers" (for lack of a better term) to recapitalize the markets and monetize the resources in the ground in Iraq. It's a crazy scheme that most of us common folk have no concept of. But the Ivy Leaguer's and the hoyty toyty's in Europe seem to have put this together and I don't think anyone knows exactly how it will play out. I am still buying Dinar until it revalues. IMHO, lopping won't occur immediately if at all. That's just a smoke/mirrors deal to ward off big fish who could easily become billionaires with a $1M purchase of dinar. My humble TwoCents.gif

Mak63

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I don't accept this premise. How will oil trend down in price? If you accept the body of thought of Peak Oil and that oil is NOT abiotic, then it is a dwindling resource that is being consumed at an ever increasing rate. Law of supply and demand will only increase the price, NEVER reduce it.

I read a similar piece in Dec. and had an "Ah Ha" moment where this all came together in my head. I agree that this is what's going on. The dinar is an effort by the "bankers" (for lack of a better term) to recapitalize the markets and monetize the resources in the ground in Iraq. It's a crazy scheme that most of us common folk have no concept of. But the Ivy Leaguer's and the hoyty toyty's in Europe seem to have put this together and I don't think anyone knows exactly how it will play out. I am still buying Dinar until it revalues. IMHO, lopping won't occur immediately if at all. That's just a smoke/mirrors deal to ward off big fish who could easily become billionaires with a $1M purchase of dinar. My humble TwoCents.gif

Mak63

There is gathering evidence that oil is abiotic. It is one in a series of misconceptions that we are duped into believing. Things that are scarce we are told are abundant and have their prices suppressed so we will believe the lie (eg- dwindling silver reserves and fresh water) and things that are abundant we are told are scarce, (e.g oil and diamonds). The list is actually quite extensive but here are some examples of this black is white scenario: Sodium fluoride (the main ingredient in rat poison), GMOs, aspartame, corn syrup, MSG, mercury in vaccines etc, we are told is safe and good for us, and supplements, vitamins, raw milk and organic produce are all being slowly but surely being cast as the bad guys.

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This all ties in to the World Settlement Fund & the hold up of the release of funds. If & when the Settlement Fund is approved, many heads are going to roll & mass arrests will be made. This is why the powers that be want the World Settlement Fund to stay unresolved. This is why Obama refuses to sign off.

The World Settlement fund will be signed off & the funds will be released after many high ranking officials make deals to include immunity from procecution behind the scenes. It will start with Obama on down to the Administration, banking & the Bilderbergs including Soros if he don't drop dead by then.

The Bilderberg days are numbered & Soros will run out of countries to flee to.

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I'm pretty sure your paragraph relates to when the original article mentioned "Asset Based" currency. You also need to keep in mind that "asset based" could mean more than just oil alone. Infrastructure, GDP, Gold, Oil, etc... It could be a combination of all of the previous mentioned items. Therefore it wouldn't always be declining, in fact, if the economy was consistently growing then the currency would follow.

Do you see what I'm getting at?

Oil = 95% of Iraqis GDP and assets. Infrastructure, gold and GDP? Iraq doesn't even have enough of any of that for a one cent reval, let alone the three bucks this guy says.

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Oil = 95% of Iraqis GDP and assets. Infrastructure, gold and GDP? Iraq doesn't even have enough of any of that for a one cent reval, let alone the three bucks this guy says.

The Kurds are stack up with Gold might want to research it, they have tons of it. Edited by yota691
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