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View Full Version : The impact of the film Move your money !



Maria Stade
5th November 2011, 14:46
The film that have inspired many and its happening now !


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OnAFXc1E5c8&feature=related

How it all started and here we are now :popcorn:


http://www.youtube.com/watch?NR=1&v=U2fxmW-_Pkc

cheez_2806
5th November 2011, 15:11
Thanks for this post - reminds me again...of what my life is heading towards...

and what a coincidence - Just got back from the cinema watching "in Time". I'm thinking about it now...what can I do? What am I going to do?

The film outlines similar aspects of the system or Our system but instead of money they have TIME.
It determines choices, creates conflict, the system provides the rich to get more, the poor will remain the same and experience more tougher barriers to survive - if you run out of time you die.

58andfixed
6th November 2011, 02:19
Rolfe Winkler December 30, 2009.

http://blogs.reuters.com/rolfe-winkler/2009/12/30/move-your-money/

"Arianna Huffington and Rob Johnson are organizing a big bank boycott."

"They want depositors to take their money out of Too-Big-To-Fail banks and put them in smaller, high quality banks."

"They’ve launched a new website and have teamed up with Chris Whalen to give folks other options. Whalen’s firm, Institutional Risk Analytics, has a proprietary system that grades banks using FDIC data."

"Enter your zip code and Whalen provides a list of high quality banks in your area."

"It’s a potentially powerful combination."

http://us1.institutionalriskanalytics.com/www/index.asp

****

The "Move Your Money" movement has been in existence for some time.

It seems that a broader segment of society is now recognizing the impact and their participation in this idea.

It may take some time, as many people are 'tied' to banks in more ways than most recognize, what with credit cards, various loans & mortgages, and the process of moving requires re-establishing the paperwork & creditability all over again.

'Bare' with the process and a point will eventually be made.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bank_of_North_Dakota

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58andfixed
8th November 2011, 03:19
CUNA - State estimates on switching

http://www.cuna.org/newsnow/11/system110411-7.html

News Now : November 7, 2011

WASHINGTON (11/7/11)
-- State-by-state estimates of member and deposit growth since Sept. 29 were released Friday by the Credit Union National Association (CUNA), whose overall report on national growth had generated much pro-credit union attention in the media last week.

The estimates cover growth at credit unions since Bank of America unveiled its $5 debit card fee, which it rescinded after a nationwide public outcry that culminated in Bank Transfer Day, a day set aside to switch from big banks to credit unions and community banks.

The statistics are based on estimates collected from credit unions by CUNA's Economics and Statistics Department from Sept. 29 through last Wednesday.

They do not include additions from Saturday's Bank Transfer Day.

The 10 states whose credit unions reported the most growth included:

•California, with 90,100 members and $624 million deposits into credit unions;

•Texas, with 47,000 new members and $326 million in deposits;

•New York, with 39,000 members and $270 million in deposits;

•Florida, with 32,900 members and $228 million in deposits;

•Michigan with 27,900 members and $193 million deposited;

•Virginia, with 26,600 members and $184 million in deposits;

•North Carolina, with 25,900 members and $270 million in deposits;

•Pennsylvania, with 25,000 new members and $179 million in deposits;

•Washington, with 23,300 new members and $161 million in deposits; and

•Massachusetts, with 19,700 new members and $136 million in deposits.

Nationwide, more than 650,000 consumers opened new accounts and deposited an aggregate of $4.5 billion into credit unions during the period, said CUNA.

More than 80% of the 5,000 credit unions surveyed said they had added members since the end of September.

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58andfixed
8th November 2011, 20:42
Fast Money and Fraud

http://www.nytimes.com/1989/04/23/magazine/fast-money-and-fraud.html?pagewanted=all&src=pm

Allen Pusey
Staff Reporter at The Dallas Morning News
April 23, 1989 "

... banners of bankrupt real estate ("Now Leasing! No Deposit! Six Weeks Free!")

Gone are the helicopters from the powder-blue helipad on Lake Ray Hubbard and the fleet of Rolls-Royces and Mercedes-Benzes parked outside the nearby Wise Circle Grill.

But it was here - on this I-30 condo corridor between the bedroom communities of Garland and Mesquite - that Federal regulators got their first whiff of the disaster brewing in the nation's thrifts.

According to court records, these condominiums and slabs of condominiums were the end product of a massive land-investment scam engineered by a small network of savings institutions headed by the Empire Savings and Loan Association of Mesquite.

At Empire, a handful of local developers - captained by D. L. (Danny) Faulkner, a former house painter turned condominium developer - relieved the nation's thrift system of more than $500 million in what one Federal regulator called ''one of the most reckless and fraudulent land-investment schemes'' his agency had ever seen.

Danny Faulkner as well as Blain and five other key figures - said by Federal prosecutors to have made a total of $112 million in bogus condominium deals financed by Empire loans - are on trial in Lubbock, Tex., on racketeering and conspiracy charges.

Clifford Sinclair, a Faulkner associate, has been sentenced to 13 years in prison and he plans to testify against Faulkner and the others.

Today, the $279 million Federal deposit insurance payout at Empire pales beside other thrift losses and failures.

In the five years since Empire was shut down, about 500 of the nation's savings institutions have been closed or merged, or are scheduled to be closed or merged, by regulators.

The bailouts have bankrupted F.S.L.I.C., which, in 1984, had $6.1 billion for such emergencies.

Many more thrift insolvencies are expected, and industry experts now estimate that the cost to American taxpayers of all these failures will exceed $100 billion.

*****

Simply noticing how far back fraud, deception and wealth transfer goes back, to help our amnesiac minds.

Small banks might stop the abuse of the concentration of wealth, however other mechanisms of manipulation are not difficult to contrive, if the 95% don't recognize these mechanisms for what they are.

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Maria Stade
12th November 2011, 05:47
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=R4dujufNj_Q

58andfixed
12th November 2011, 07:25
Over 15,000 views in 6 days. Somebody is paying attention.

http://www.greenewave.com/

http://www.greenewave.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/GW_NEWLOGO10.png

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http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=R4dujufNj_Q

Maria Stade
12th November 2011, 07:55
Yes he is doing a great job !
He say it in a clear and easy to understand WAY !
That is true art :paintgirl:
He have earned some :fans: