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  by Eric Blair
 
			March 18, 2015from 
			TheDailySheeple Website
 
 
 
 
			  
			
			 
			  
			  
			  
			How do you know a dollar collapse is 
			coming? Because the rest of the world is preparing for it.
 Western allies are flocking to join the new China-led Asian 
			Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB), while the United 
			States and
			
			World Bank sit on the sidelines and 
			lecture them about "appropriate" financial governance.
 
 Reuters
			
			reports:
 
				
				The United States has urged 
				countries to think twice before signing up to a new China-led 
				Asian development bank that Washington sees as a rival to the 
				World Bank, after Germany, France and Italy followed Britain in 
				saying they would join.  
				
				The concerted move by U.S. allies to 
				participate in Beijing's flagship economic outreach project is a 
				diplomatic blow to the United States and its efforts to counter 
				the fast-growing economic and diplomatic influence of China.
 Europe's participation reflects the eagerness to partner with 
				China's economy, the world's second largest, and comes amid 
				prickly trade negotiations between Brussels and Washington.
 
				
					
					"I hope before the final 
					commitments are made anyone who lends their name to this 
					organization will make sure that the governance is 
					appropriate," Treasury Secretary Jack Lew told U.S. 
					lawmakers. 
			It seems many countries are growing 
			tired of the U.S.'s arbitrary economic sanctions, playing politics 
			with the SWIFT system, dollar manipulation of commodities, 
			strangling IMF and World Bank debt with unequal representation in 
			those institutions.    
			Not to mention the ruthless violence 
			used to protect this racket.
 China is tired of waiting to be granted more power in international 
			banks so they're creating their own opportunities around the world. 
			They're involved in creating the
			
			BRICS development bank, an
			
			alternative to SWIFT, building a
			
			canal in Nicaragua to rival the 
			Panama Canal, and now this new Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank 
			(AIIB).
   
			In other words, it's on. 
				
				"If you try to fight the rising 
				power's peaceful ascent you sow big problems in the future," 
				Fred Bergsten, a former official at the U.S. Treasury and 
				currently a fellow at the Peterson Institute in Washington told 
				Reuters. 
			Over the last few years US-imposed 
			sanctions have had less and less effect as nations find ways around 
			them.    
			These new systems will make sanctions 
			essentially worthless, and the biggest losers of sanctions may end 
			up being US companies who're prohibited from trading in certain 
			parts of the world.
 Despite the corporate media's best efforts to drum up conflict with 
			Russia, sanctions haven't worked, leading some Western hawks to 
			promote cutting off Russian banks from SWIFT.
   
			This was met by
			
			Russia threatening retaliation which 
			resulted in Russia being awarded 
			a seat on SWIFT's board for the first time.
 Can you smell the desperation? American dominance in the world 
			economy is clearly waning. The US dollar is also slowly being 
			diluted as the world reserve currency and all the key players know 
			it. In fact, it's now happening by design.
 
 The dollar is currently enjoying record spending strength in the 
			global economy for no fundamental reason except that oil 
			is measured in dollars.
   
			The oil price crash feels like a 
			last-ditch effort to boost demand for dollars. Yet national debt 
			levels, endless wars, and the fake paper economy ensures that this 
			facade will eventually collapse, probably as fast as it was created.
 This new alternative system may limit the contagion of a dollar 
			collapse. It's basically a good thing that the world will have more 
			choice in how it moves money.
   
			But, be warned, it is no different than 
			the current fractional-reserve debt-based parasite that currently 
			leeches off most of the planet, save for slightly different board 
			members.
 Nevertheless, I bet the establishment will hail them as saviors when 
			the US economy can no longer bail itself out.
   
			Tick tock... 
			  
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