Hello, I’m Wayne Allyn Root for Personal Liberty.
Something very big and very bad is happening. Prominent bankers are dying in droves. Have you ever heard of eight bankers committing suicide in a matter of just a few weeks?
A ninth banker was found dead only days ago. What is driving successful bankers with families to kill themselves in droves?
Here’s the tip-off that this is a very big story: The mainstream media are not covering it. There are nine dead bankers (and counting), and the story isn’t even mentioned in the national news. That itself is a major news story.
Bankers are dying so fast, you’d think they were all dentists. You get the joke, right? Dentists have the highest suicide rate of any profession. Sometimes, you need a little humor to brighten up a very dark story. But keep in mind, at no time in history have nine dentists all died under mysterious circumstances in a matter of a few weeks.
Why are so many bankers dying? Are the media asleep at the switch? Afraid to dig deeper? Ordered not to investigate? By whom? The government? Or are the media perhaps afraid for their own lives if they dig deeper? You think that sounds a bit absurd? Well not really. A Wall Street Journal reporter named David Bird, who covers the commodities market, is missing. As in gone. As in never seen again. He left his home on Jan. 11 and never returned.
Was he working on this story?
Something smells rotten in Denmark, because nine dead bankers and a missing reporter should be a huge headline story.
And if anyone has been watching closely, five other major bankers died in either suicides or mysterious circumstances in 2013. That’s 14 dead bankers.
Someone is going to win a major journalist prize for investigating a high-profile story like this. But for some mysterious reason, no one in the mainstream media seems interested. Doesn’t that alone make you nervous?Read all about it here: http://personalliberty.com/2014/02/27/are-9-dead-bankers-a-sign-of-pending-economic-collapse/
This story is real. The dead are:
- William Broeksmit, 58-year-old former senior executive at Deutsche Bank AG.
- Karl Slym, 51-year-old Tata Motors managing director.
- Gabriel Magee, 39-year-old JPMorgan banker.
- Mike Dueker, 50-year-old chief economist of a U.S. investment bank.
- Richard Talley, the 57-year-old founder of American Title Services in Centennial, Colo.
- Tim Dickenson, U.K.-based communications director at Swiss Re AG.
- Ryan Henry Crane, 37-year-old executive at JPMorgan.
- Li Junjie, 33-year-old Hong Kong banker.
- James Stewart Jr., former CEO of the National Bank of Commerce.
Submitted by: 'Roger T.'
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