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Sunday, February 7, 2016

Meet The World Leader Who Stole His Citizens’ Gold

Sovereign Man  Notes From The Field By Simon Black
February 3, 2016   Santiago, Chile 
 
 Meet The World Leader Who Stole His Citizens’ Gold—

Even before his coronation in 1626, King Charles I of England was heavily in debt. 

His predecessors King James and Queen Elizabeth had run the royal treasury down to almost nothing. 

Costly war and military folly had taken its toll. The crown had simply wasted far too much money, and taken in too little. 
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To make matters worse, King Charles was constantly at odds with parliament. 

The English government was completely dysfunctional, with constant bickering, personal attacks, and very little sound decision-making. 

Parliament refused to pass the taxes that Charles needed to make ends meet. But at the same time, the King was legally unable to levy his own taxes without parliamentary approval. 

So, faced with financial desperation, he began to look for alternative ways to raise revenue. 

One way was relying on practically ancient, obscure laws that still existed on the books. 

The Distraint of Knighthood, for example, was based on an act from 1278, roughly three and a half centuries before Charles’ coronation. 

The Act gave him the legal authority to fine all men with a minimum level of income who did not present themselves in person at his coronation. 

Charles also commandeered vast amounts of land, restoring the boundaries of the royal forests to where they had been during the time of King Edward I in the 13th century. 

He then fined anyone who encroached on the land, and resold much of it to industries that were supportive of his reign. 

King Charles even resorted to begging; in July 1626, he requested that his subjects “lovingly, freely, and voluntarily” give him money. 

When that didn’t work, the King levied a Forced Loan in September of that year, effectively confiscating people’s funds under the guise of ‘borrowing’ it. 

He raised about £250,000, the equivalent of about $7.5 billion today. 

Emboldened by his success, Charles eventually began to seize assets directly, including all the gold on deposit being held at the Royal Mint-- money that belonged to the merchants and goldsmiths of England. 

At one point Charles even forced the East India Company to ‘loan’ him their pepper and spice inventory for £63,283. He subsequently sold everything in the market at a steep loss. 

If any of this sounds familiar, it should. 

Today there is no shortage of nations that are facing fiscal desperation. Most of Europe. Japan. The United States. 

In the Land of the Free, the government has spent years… decades… engaged in the most wasteful folly, from multi-trillion dollar wars to a multi-billion dollar website that doesn’t work. 

US debt just hit $19 trillion a few days ago. And it’s only going higher. 

We can already see the depths of the government’s financial desperation. 

Over the years, the government has effectively levied a ‘forced loan’ totaling more than $2.6 trillion on the Social Security Trust Fund, whose ultimate beneficiaries are the taxpayers of the United States. 

Last year the government stole more from Americans through ‘Civil Asset Forfeiture’ than all the thieves in the United States combined. 

On December 31, 2015, the US government confiscated $19.3 billion in capital from the Federal Reserve, which, by the way, was already very thinly capitalized. 

The government published over 80,000 pages of laws, bills, rules, regulations, and executive orders last year. Just this morning they published another 308 pages. 

It’s impossible for anyone to keep up with all of these rules. And yet each of these can carry civil, criminal, and monetary penalties, including a fine now for not having health insurance. 

As Mark Twain used to say, history may not repeat, but it certainly rhymes. 

Financially insolvent governments of major superpowers do not simply go gentle into that good night. 

They don’t suddenly turn over a new leaf and start embracing economic freedom. 

No. They get worse. More desperate. More destructive. 

Should we honestly believe that the government can continue to indebt itself indefinitely without consequence, as if the largest accumulation of debt that has ever existed in the history of the world is somehow consequence-free? 
At some point, fiscal reality always catches up. Maybe not at $19 trillion. Maybe not even at $20 trillion. 

Maybe it takes 3 months. Or 3 years. But somewhere out there is a straw that can break the camel’s back. 

Never forget that if something is predictable, then it’s also preventable. 

And facing such obvious trends, it makes all the sense in the world to take some simple, rational steps to put together your own Plan B.
 
Until tomorrow, 
Simon Black   Founder, SovereignMan.com
  
PS: In the upcoming weeks I will be holding a free webcast discussing the most important tools and tactics that are necessary in creating a Plan B. You can sign up to attend for free 


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