"We all know that central banks and governments have been actively intervening in
markets since the 2007 subprime mortgage meltdown destabilized the
leveraged-debt-dependent global economy. We also know that unprecedented
intervention is now the de facto institutionalized policy of central banks and
governments. In some cases, the financial authorities have explicitly stated
their intention to “stabilize markets” (translation: reinflate credit-driven
speculative bubbles) by whatever means are necessary, while in others the
interventions are performed by proxies so the policy remains implicit. All
through the waning months of 2007 and the first two quarters of 2008, the market
gyrated as the Federal Reserve and other central banks issued reassurances that
the subprime mortgage meltdown was “contained” and posed no threat to the global
economy. The equity market turned to its standard-issue reassurance: “Don’t
fight the Fed,” a maxim that elevated the Federal Reserve’s power to goose
markets to godlike status. But alas, the global financial meltdown of late 2008
showed that hubris should not be confused with godlike power. Despite the
“impossibility” of the market disobeying the Fed’s commands (“Away with thee, oh
tides, for we are the Federal Reserve!”) and the “sure-fire” cycle of stocks
always rising in an election year, global markets imploded as the usual bag of
central bank and Sovereign State tricks failed in spectacular fashion..."
at http://www.zerohedge.com/news/chris-martenson-are-we-heading-another-2008
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