Because this (confiscation) has happened in other parts of the world prepare to move your life savings moved , protected or confiscated.
Here a few real world stories that have already come to pass and why If you do not hold or own your money it very well will be out of your control what happens to your money because it lies in the hands of someone else you thought would take care of it
Especially those of you at or near retirement age in the USA beware get control of your finances NOW
there's no better time to educate yourself than now it's never ever too late :)
GnS+Research
http://dollarvigilante.com/blog/2014/3/6/8-real-world-events-that-prove-your-money-isnt-safe-in-europ.html
2. In December, 2010, Hungary told its citizens that they could either remit their private pension money to the state or lose their state pension funds (but still have to pay for it nonetheless)
3. In November, 2010, the French parliament decided to earmark €33bn from the national reserve pension fund FRR to reduce the short-term pension scheme deficit.4. In early January 2011, $60 million in private retirement funds were transferred to the state's pension scheme in Bulgaria. They wanted to transfer $300 million, but were denied on their first attempt
5. In the Spring of 2013 Cyprus took it a step further and outright confiscated up to 50% of the funds from bank account holders in that country.
6. In the Fall of 2013 the Polish government announced it would transfer to the state (aka. confiscate) the bulk of assets owned by the country's private pension funds (many of them owned by such foreign firms as PIMCO parent Allianz, AXA, Generali, ING and Aviva), without offering any compensation.
7. In February 2014, Italian banks were ordered by the Italian government to withhold a 20% tax on all inbound wire transfers. Il Sole reported, "the deductions will be automatic (unless prior request for exclusion), and then it will be up to the taxpayer to prove that the money is not in the nature of compensation "income.'"
8. The savings of all 500 million Europeans can be stolen by the European Union. Why? Because the financial crisis is not over, according to an EU document. The Commission is looking to ask the bloc's insurance watchdog in the second half of 2014 for advice on how to draft a law "to mobilize more personal pension savings for long-term financing," the documenthttp://dollarvigilante.com/blog/2014/3/6/8-real-world-events-that-prove-your-money-isnt-safe-in-europ.html
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