background preloader

Banks.....

Facebook Twitter

US TREASURY DEPARTMENT. Canada Moves Closer to Cashless Society With Digital MintChip Currency. Yet again U.S. Department of Defense can’t account for billions in Iraq. By End the Lie Stuart Bowen, the Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction (SIGIR) Two new audits conducted by the Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction (SIGIR) have discovered that the United States Department of Defense (DOD) cannot account for a whopping $2 billion it was given to fund the reconstruction of Iraq.

To make matters even worse, the DOD is not even providing Iraq with a complete record of the construction projects funded by the United States, making the accounting even more difficult, if not impossible. Back in 2004, Iraq provided $3 billion to the DOD to fund selected construction projects, but only about one third of those funds have been tracked according to the inspector general’s “January Quarterly Report and Semiannual Report” which was released recently and can be located here (along with other reports released by the inspector general).

According to CNN, in a letter separate from the report sent by the inspector general’s office to the U.S. Bank Secrecy Act. North American currency union. The North American monetary union is a theoretical economic and monetary union of three North American countries: Canada, the United States and Mexico. Implementation would involve the three countries giving up their current currency units (U.S. dollar, Canadian dollar, and Mexican peso) and adopting a new one, created specifically for this purpose (some versions of the theory, particularly those circulating in Canada, assume only the United States and Canada would be included). The hypothetical currency for the union is most often referred to as the amero.[1][2] The concept is modeled on the common European Union currency (the euro), and it is argued to be a natural extension of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and the Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America (SPP).

Support[edit] Canada[edit] Mexico[edit] Support in other regions[edit] Lower levels of currency cooperation have been practiced in the Americas before. Criticisms and problems[edit] Trade-offs[edit]

Money Matters