This article is from Doug Casey's daily 
      e-mail  newsletter.  The article focuses on how the monetary system 
       is creating a monetary crisis for United States and the world.
      
        "Observing the global flow of money, it seems  important to consider 
        the implications of a system built around the notion that  debt is 
        considered money. To wit, governments the world over fund their 
         operations largely with money created by issuing debt. Even the 
        payments made on  great piles of debt are made using this “debt-money.” 
        So, more debt begets more  debt-money begetting more debt. Over time the 
        system is  unsupportable. 
        Which brings us to the case of Greece and 
        other  “fringe” countries [ PIIGS ] in the euro-zone. These failing 
        states – and all the  nation-states are failing, just at varying rates – 
        need to sell a lot of debt in  order to generate the debt-money needed 
        to keep the government’s doors open, but  investors, noting just how 
        much debt has piled up, are wary of owning more.  
        And that gives rise to what is one of the 
         thorniest problems resulting from a systematic reliance on debt-money – 
        the  demand for higher interest rates to offset the actual risks of 
        owning the  debt-money of an over-indebted state.  
        But it’s even worse than that. To 
        understand why,  let’s reduce the situation to more human terms. 
        Imagine for a moment, being approached by 
        your  deadbeat cousin for a $1,000 loan. In exchange, he offers you an 
        IOU that says  he will pay you back in specie, with interest, at some 
        point down the road. Now,  consider the same situation, but in a world 
        where debt is treated as money. Now,  instead of lending him the $1,000 
        in exchange for an IOU that promises he’ll pay  you back your $1,000 
        plus interest, he promises to pay you back, but only with  another IOU. 
        
        This is the net result of using debt as 
        money.
        Investors are now looking at the mountain 
        of debt  looming over Greece and balking, causing that country to raise 
        rates to attract  their money – which, in turn, causes losses to 
        existing debt holders and, over  time, ratchets up the interest expense 
        on the existing piles of debt. It doesn’t  take a genius to see the 
        potential for yet higher and higher interest rates  being demanded, and 
        that results in the need to gin up yet more  debt-money.   This all gets quickly circular.
        For the moment, the anxious market 
        believes that  the debt-money that trades under the “dollar” brand is of 
        a superior quality to  that of the euro (among others), and so the money 
        flows back this way. 
        But the irony is that whatever brand of 
        the stuff  you own, it is still just the same thing: debt-money. Which 
        is to say, an IOU  masquerading as money.  
        Money should be a reliable store of 
         wealth. It is hard to use that term when talking about an obligation 
        that  someone else needs to pay up on – especially when that someone 
        else has proven  themselves to be serially unreliable. That makes the 
        debt-money now sloshing  around nothing more, really, than a slip of 
        paper representing an untrustworthy  promise.
        To understand how untrustworthy the 
        issuers are,  you need look no further than the steady decline in 
        purchasing power of all of  the world’s many variations of debt-money. 
        Case in point, in 1939 the average  house cost $3,800.
        Do you think that a shortage in real 
        estate and  improvements in construction quality explain the one 
        hundred-fold increase in  prices over the past 70 years? Not hardly. 
        It’s that the Fed and other central  bankers, in close cahoots with the 
        politicians and their cozy buddies in high  finance, have used the 
        ludicrous and dishonest debt-money system to flood the  nation with more 
        and more of the stuff, debasing the existing stocks of same. 
        As we now know, because we can see it in 
        the  brazen numbers pushed forward by the president and Congress, the 
        debt-money game  is heading for a wall. It was one thing when the size 
        of the debt rose at a  measured pace that left it largely unnoticed as 
        it grew and grew. But in 2009,  the façade fell away, and now the 
        severity of the problem is there for all to  see. 
        While there have been some whiffs of a 
        recovery in  the economy, it is important to recognize that what 
        recovery there is, is based  on yet more debt-money. A lot more.  
        
        In other words, the roots of the 
        recovery, as  tentative as they may be, are exactly the same as the 
        roots of the crisis.
        There are good reasons that gold and 
        silver have  been used as money through the eons. As Doug Casey often 
        points out, it is  because it they are durable, divisible, convenient, 
        consistent, and valuable.
        However, the era  of debt-money is going 
        to pass in the foreseeable future.
        It won’t be a simple or easy transition 
        back to  something tangible. When the average man learns that his 
        debt-money is not worth  much more than the paper it is printed on, we 
        could even see riots in the  streets. 
        For the time being, though, the money 
        flow is  headed back into the U.S., where, unlike the irresponsible 
        Greeks who ran a  budget deficit equal to 12.7% last year, our 
        government’s 2011 budget shows  deficit spending at “just” 10.6% of GDP. 
        For the record, as recently as 2006,  that deficit was only 1.2% of GDP. 
        Even so, for the moment, our debt-money is  considered to be better than 
        the euro and, it appears by looking at their  prices, gold and silver. 
        It’s all a matter of perspective." 
      Since this article was posted on the internet, the world economy has 
      been sputtering like an  erupting volcano. The world is in an economic 
      crisis that is being escaladed  into chaos by the food, water and oil 
      crises.