Wednesday, April 12, 2023

FASB 56 turns 56 lunar months old on 4/13/2023 the 103rd day of the year

 Counting the end date. Not counting it it's Friday 4/14 

"Bond Market" = 103 (Ordinal) 

On 10/3/2018 Trump had a Presidential Alert and that night the bond yield jumped up to 3.222 the media freaked and it sold off the next day on 10/4/2018. But something else happened on 10/4 that the alert was for they took the books black. On 10/4/2018 FASAB announted that they had changed the accounting standard. They took the books black. Catherine Austin Fitts talks about this alot she calls it FASB 56. 

On 10/3/2023 FASB 56 turns 56 lunar months old.
From and including: Wednesday, October 3, 2018
To and including: Thursday, April 13, 2023
Result: 1654 days
1654 / 29.531 = 56.008 

"FASAB 56" = 185 (English Sumerian)
"US dollar collapse" = 185 (English Ordinal)
"stock market crash" = 185 (English Ordinal)
"Donald John Trump" = 185 (English Ordinal)
"October fourth" = 185 (Reverse Ordinal)

From 1929 stock market crash to FASAB 56 .... 

From and including: Thursday, October 24, 1929
To, but not including Thursday, October 4, 2018
Or 88 years
"Trump" = 88 (English Ordinal)
Or 11 months, 10 days 
"Donald John Trump" = 1110 (English Sumerian)
"stock market crash" = 1110 (English Sumerian)
"October fourth" = 1110 (Reverse English Sumerian)
"US dollar collapse" = 1110 (English Sumerian)

"The only thing that did not make the news was an announcement by a little-known government body called the Federal Accounting Standards Advisory Board — FASAB — that essentially legalized secret national security spending. The new guidance, “SFFAS 56 – CLASSIFIED ACTIVITIES” permits government agencies to “modify” public financial statements and move expenditures from one line item to another. It also expressly allows federal agencies to refrain from telling taxpayers if and when public financial statements have been altered.

“From this point forward,” he says, “the federal government will keep two sets of books, one modified book for the public and one true book that is hidden.”

Steven Aftergood of the Federation of American Scientists’ Project on Government Secrecy was one of the few people across the country to pay attention to the FASAB news release. He was alarmed.

“It diminishes the credibility of all public budget documents,” he says.

I spent weeks trying to find a more harmless explanation for SFFAS 56, or at least one that did not amount to a rule that allows federal officials to fake public financial reports.

I couldn’t find one. This new accounting guideline really does mean what it appears to mean, and the details are more bizarre than the broad strokes."




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