For many Americans the
country of Mexico conjures up images of a third world nation. The poverty,
lack of basic services, and extreme violence has left the populace so
desperate that thousands of people on a daily basis head to the United States
for a better life.
But according to Future Money
Trends, all that
could change in the near future as key Mexican financial leaders and politicians
have been working to institute sweeping monetary change that, if implemented,
could unleash a global power shift of epic proportions.
“Take just three or four
men out of the ‘anti’ group,” says Hugo Salinas Price, a Mexican
multi-billionaire and the man behind the monetary push, “and we could
practically get a unanimous ‘yes’ vote in both houses.”
Like recent monetary
shifts in Russia, China and the middle east that aim to divest themselves of
US dollar reserve trade requirements, the news of such a move in Mexico has
been downplayed. And though it is being generally ignored as a serious
possibility, a powerful consortium of influential people in Mexico believe it
is a realistic possibility, and one that could be responsible for shifting
the balance of world power.
(Watch at
Future Money Trends)
This could be a major
turn of events that will have global implications. The action’s set to unfold
in Mexico, where many of its most influential and wealthy citizens are
demanding the country abandon its fiat currency, the Peso, and return to a
silver standard.
…
We know that many people
are used to looking at Mexico as the violent, crooked, messed up country over
the border… the one that sends all those illegals over here because even
picking canteloupes for giant U.S. agri-businesses pays better than the job
at home… it’s now time to rethink all that, because a silver standard in Mexico
would unleash the biggest global power shift since Spain raided the Aztecs
600 years ago.
It’s unavoidable. History
repeats itself, especially when its exactly the same economic situation.
Coupled with a continued
silver supply crunch and deteriorating conditions for fiat currencies around
the globe, a new silver-backed currency in Mexico or any other country could
be a boon for precious metals.
The real question is,
will western central bankers allow such a move to happen? We know what
happened in Libya and Iraq when their leaders tried a similar strategy that
would have freed them from their dependence on U.S. dollars. They ended up
under a no-fly zone that carpeted their countries with millions of pounds of
ordnance.
But with Mexico working
closely with China on economic matters and numerous super powers vying for
control of the global economy and geo-political landscape, new systems of
trade are sure to emerge. Those who catch the trends early and invest appropriately in hard assets could see their personal wealth
increase significantly during the financial, economic and monetary upheaval
to come.