LATIN AMERICA PLANS US DOLLAR REPLACEMENT
Leftist Latin American leaders have agreed on using a new intra-regional trading currency, dubbed as Sucre, instead of the US dollar.
Bolivian President Evo Morales, who hosted leaders of the Bolivarian Alternative for Latin America and the Caribbean (ALBA), said that the “document is approved.” The currency, Sucre, is named after Jose Antonio de Sucre who fought for Spain’s [sic] independence alongside Venezuelan hero Simon Bolivar in the early 19th century.
Sucre is scheduled to be rolled out in 2010 in a non-paper form. [You mean it's a gold coin? Nah. That, after all, would really be a replacement of the dollar.]
Let’s not kid ourselves. This is a subtle step to bring about a global fiat currency by the people who are planning to create a One World Government. The “retaliation” for the Sucre will be a push for the ‘Amero.’ (That’s the US/Canada/Mexico single fiat currency that has been in the planning stages for decades.) By gradually having fewer and fewer fiat currencies in the world, eventually our One World Government planners will claim that we might as well have a global fiat currency to really “facilitate” global trade.
Of course, the best thing to facilitate trade in a truly free global market actually is to have one global medium of exchange. But that medium of exchange has to be something that cannot be easily produced (so that it will hold its value over time) nor be controlled by a government-created monopoly granted to a few privileged banksters. We already have this global medium of exchange. We’ve had it for centuries. It’s called ‘gold.’
