Did the Bank of England Admit Financial Markets Aren’t “Real”?

On a day witnessing such tremendous financial market volatility, this seems like the perfect story. The Bank of England has announced an “Open Forum” to be held on November 11, with the title: Building Real Markets for the Good of the People. No, I’m not making this up.

Here’s a screenshot from the BOE website:

Screen Shot 2015-08-24 at 10.19.41 AM

We have to “build real markets?”

Sure sounds like an admission of guilt to me.

For related articles, see:

Banks Squirm as Congress Moves to Cut the 6% Dividend Paid to Them by the Federal Reserve

The Federal Reserve Refuses to Provide Names Requested by Congress in Probe

New Survey: Federal Reserve Employees are “Demoralized,” “Distrustful” and “Afraid to Speak Out”

In Liberty,
Michael Krieger

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3 thoughts on “Did the Bank of England Admit Financial Markets Aren’t “Real”?”

  1. I do not believe financial markets have been real since Stalin took control of science after successfully capturing:

    1. Japan’s successful atomic bomb plant at Konan, Korea in Aug 1945, and
    2. The American crew of a B29 bomber held for negotiations in Aug-Sept 1945 . . .
    to unite nations and national academies of sciences (NAS) on 24 Oct 1945, as George Orwell realized when he moved
    from London to the Scottish Isle of Jura in 1946 to start writing our future in Nineteen Eighty-Four!

    https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/10640850/STALINS_SCIENCE.pdf

    Reply
  2. this post takes a silly little pr blurb from the boe website and turns it into a ‘story’. this is like the ny post.

    maybe posts like this can be saved for the max keiser show, where its more about comedy than substance?

    Reply

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