Crime Against Humanity: the Ambiguous Money Cycle – Gold Standard Cycle, 14

There are those who bothered to assess whether any fiat currency in history ever evaded this criminal cycle and survived, and the peremptory answer is, NO. No one, never. They said that even though there were six hundred of them in just the first letter and a half of the alphabet, every single one of them went to zero. This lends some credibility to the conclusion that monetary history just repeats itself: same criminal cycle, same usurpation of monetary sovereignty, same ambiguous money cycle, same plunder by the usurpers, same doom for the people. Not true? This time is different? Definitely vital to be aware something called history does exist. And definitely useful to be aware of what goes on now so as to compare it to the past, particularly in case one is still dubious. So, where are we now?
First, virtually all the moneys under the sun today are fiat currencies; I mean, all of them. Second, here are some rough sample figures of the exponential increases of their money supply:
US Dollar went from 45 billions in 1965 to 850 in 2008, to 2,740 in 2012.
Canadian Dollar went from 23,000 billions in 1968 to 217,000 in 1995, to 890,000 in 2013.
Australian Dollar went from 10 billions in 1975 to 45 in 1991, to 280 in 2012.
South African Rand went from 1 billion in 1975 to 13 in 1992, to 160 in 2012.
Russian Rouble went from 375 billions in 2001 to 6,000 in 2012.
Singaporean Dollar went from 15,000 billions in 1991 to 48,000 in 2006, to 130,000 in 2012.
Indian Rupee went from 7,500 billions in 2006 to 17,300 in 2012.
Chinese Renminbi went from 1,130 billions in 1999 to 6,000 in 2012.

Crime Against Humanity: the Ambiguous Money Cycle – Gold Standard Cycle