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Post by Entendance on Nov 9, 2017 11:50:47 GMT -5
EVERY WORKING AMERICAN OWES $ 1.5 MILLION "The facts just don’t add up. US wages are falling, trade deficit is at 10 year high, debt is surging so are stocks and the US Government has again managed to publish a number of contradicting employment figures that make no sense whatsoever..."
***ELEPHANTS WILL FLY***
***The elite ranks of our billionaire class continue to pull apart from the rest of us H/T Tom from Florida
"...Many Americans have borrowed far more money than they will ever be able to pay back...
...the Potemkin village of inflated stock and real estate prices cannot continue indefinitely. When asset prices crack, and pension funds are exposed as being in terminal arrears, exacting clarity will prevail. Federal, state, and local governments are flat broke. So, too, are corporations and consumers. Thus you should enjoy the harvest season while it lasts. You may want to pickle a few eggs***to survive the winter"
In case you missed it...***ONLY CONTRARIANS WILL SURVIVE***
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Post by Entendance on Apr 18, 2018 0:56:11 GMT -5
Geopolitical and financial analyst Warren Pollock says Syria is a diversion at best. Pollock explains, “I think Syria is entertainment. It’s Kabuki Theater. Certainly, at the local level, it could be a skirmish. They have this fellow Assad, who was the poster boy on 60 Minutes two decades ago when they said what a wonderful guy he was, and now he is the arch enemy of evil along with Vladimir Putin. He is running a Kleptocracy, obviously, but at least it’s more honest than we are because our Kleptocracy doesn’t have the integrity to tell us what it is. We also know what Vladimir Putin is, and if he wasn’t a strongman, it would be a total disaster in Russia. It is what is necessary to keep that place controlled. Unlike our form of governance, at least Russia has a 25 year horizon into their future, where the U.S. has nothing but competing interests and competing bureaucracy. So, we (USA) are a Kleptocracy just like Russia, but the organs of our state are narrowed and are basically failing. The press is failing. It is a failed organ of our society. Our governance has failed. It is a failed organ of our society. . . . What we have is a veneer of governance. It’s not the real governance that is in this country. Our government has some of the elements of the Soviet system, and it has some of the elements of what Chris Hedges calls inverted totalitarianism. It’s really hard to define our system of government.”
Pollock goes on to say, “What we think of as our government, the voting booth that is just a veneer, that is just to keep people placated. This bureaucracy, I think, is a major vector of theft. When we look at the actual function of our system, it is actually atrophied.”
So, how do you navigate a bureaucratic system that is out to rob its citizens? Pollock says, “How do you get small? Not having a website is one way. Staying out of debt is one way. Not applying for federal programs is another way along with state programs, Medicaid, Medicare, any large debt acquisition. . . . Getting smaller houses and not getting credit for a new car. There are lots of ways for you to get small, and you will be happier as a result.”
Join Greg Hunter as he goes One-on-One with financial expert and former Wall Street analyst Warren Pollock.
***Entendance on twitter
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Post by Entendance on Jun 9, 2018 4:58:41 GMT -5
"...large segments of the American populace – many involuntarily – have been reduced to abject debt servitude. On the flip-side, the entire structure of Social Security and Medicare entitlement programs is on the brink of collapse. These signature social achievements of FDR and LBJ, and the tens of millions of dependents that have put their faith and trust in them, stand to be wiped out faster than you can say lickety-split. This week the Social Security and Medicare Boards of Trustees released their 2018 Annual Report. Inside they revealed that the Medicare trust fund will be depleted in 2026 and the Social Security trust funds – both for old-age benefits and disability insurance – are likely to be depleted in 2034. So what happens when these milestones are reached? ..." ***America Goes Full Imbecile
"...You'll be told what you want to hear: the problems will all be fixed within the existing Status Quo. But the existing Status Quo is the source of the problems. Pretense feeds delusion which guarantees collapse..." ***The Politics of Pretense: The Status Quo Is the Problem, But It Can't Be Touched
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Post by Entendance on Sept 5, 2018 3:47:04 GMT -5
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Post by Entendance on Sept 8, 2018 4:29:37 GMT -5
Congressmen Introduce Bill To End Taxation Of Gold And Silver
"Most people are willful idiots, who forgive themselves everything, and others nothing. I am an unwillful idiot. I am not sure that this is better, or even a marked improvement. But at least I try to have compassion for others because of this small kernel of self-awareness. Self-awareness is in very short supply these days. The Non-Farm Payrolls report came in 'better-than-expected' with a headline number of 201,000. Most ignored the significant revisions lower from the last report in this one. Rolling jobs over from one month to the next is a time honored gimmick in putting a little nicer shade of lipstick on the pig. The 'household report', as opposed to the well named establishment report, is the one in which actual people are interviewed in what one hopes is a statistically significant manner. And in informational terms it was not very good, at all. The big tickle was that this 'great' jobs report was going to allow the Fed to raise interest rates later this month at the next FOMC meeting. Here is a news flash. The Fed is going to raise rates at this next meeting unless the Yellowstone caldera blows its top. So the dollar rallied and gold was hit. What a surprise. And gold recovered a bit and actually finished marginally unchanged with a .32% decline or thereabouts. Gold inventories continue to look tight. Silver not so much, although the Banks seem to be hoovering up contracts for their own accounts at these prices. Let's see what new and amazing lows that our ruling elite may strike for our viewing pleasure next week, and the many ways in which they may seek to baffle the world. Have a pleasant weekend." -Jesse
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Post by Entendance on Sept 11, 2018 1:31:53 GMT -5
The status of the World Trade Center complex, 17 years later
Larry Kummer: Where we can find the inspiration to fix America?
"The genius of the United States is not best or most in its executives or legislatures, nor in its ambassadors or authors or colleges, or churches, or parlors, nor even in its newspapers or inventors, but always most in the common people." - Walt Whitman
"The fear of the LORD is the beginning of knowledge, but fools despise wisdom and instruction." -Proverbs 1:7
Out of respect for the sanctity of the day no new tweets/posts. E.
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Post by Entendance on Sept 18, 2018 15:40:48 GMT -5
Search Results for "amazon story" here
"Why do you follow the law again when the "big guys" don't have to and can -- and do -- screw you blind?" Did Bezos Lie? That's What Monopolists Do!
2014!! Tell Jeff: NO He's imposing his narcissistic corporate order in the name of consumers--so this is a time when we should speak out as consumers. Tell Jeff: NOT IN MY NAME Here
There was a time not so long ago when 'competition' was a healthy thing, not a synonym for corporate 'murder.' -Bryce Milligan, owner of Wings Press, an independent publisher, describing Amazon's monopoly tactics.
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Post by Entendance on Oct 3, 2018 7:35:35 GMT -5
The fiscal year of the federal government goes from October 1st to September 30th. During the fiscal year that just ended, the U.S. national debt increased by 1.271 trillion dollars
The federal debt increased by $1,271,158,167,126.72 in fiscal 2018, according to data released by the Treasury. The total federal debt started the fiscal year at $20,244,900,016,053.51 according to the Treasury, and finished the fiscal year at $21,516,058,183,180.23. America Is Committing Suicide
Here’s why the two have risen together since the 1970s and why the correlation is likely to continue The National Debt and Gold
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Post by Entendance on Jan 4, 2019 13:01:42 GMT -5
"The current government shutdown (the longest in history) comes with a hidden revelation: Millions of Americans are financially unprepared for the next economic downturn. Worse, they are highly vulnerable with few protections. 10 years after the financial crisis the economic recovery has left millions behind with little to no savings and the government shutdown serves as a preview for what will happen once unemployment rises..." The Hidden Revelation
January 16, 2019 U.S. Government Debt Bomb Much Higher Than Americans Realize
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Post by Entendance on Jan 23, 2019 5:17:13 GMT -5
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Post by Entendance on Feb 12, 2019 11:17:21 GMT -5
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Post by Entendance on Feb 24, 2019 18:31:47 GMT -5
TISFU/TISFUS
The “Permanent War State” Aims to Plunder Venezuela - Wilkerson and Jay February 26, 2019 The Entendance Beach & Venezuela: 2 pages H/T Tom from Florida
Senator Marco Rubio tweets picture of slain Gaddafi in an apparent threat to Venezuela's Maduro: HERE Rubio wants to bring Libya-style regime change to Caracas...
"December’s market instability and resulting Fed capitulation to the marketplace continue to reverberate. At this point, markets basically assume the Fed is well into the process of terminating policy normalization. Only a couple of months since completing its almost $3.0 TN stimulus program, markets now expect the ECB to move forward with some type of additional stimulus measures (likely akin to its long-term refinancing operations/LTRO). There’s even talk that the Bank of Japan could, once again, ramp up its interminable “money printing” operations (BOJ balance sheet $5.0 TN… and counting). Manic global markets have briskly moved way beyond a simple Fed “pause.”
There was the Thursday Reuters article (Howard Schneider and Jonathan Spicer): “A Fed Pivot, Born of Volatility, Missteps, and New Economic Reality: The Federal Reserve’s promise in January to be ‘patient’ about further interest rate hikes, putting a three-year-old process of policy tightening on hold, calmed markets after weeks of turmoil that wiped out trillions of dollars of household wealth. But interviews with more than half a dozen policymakers and others close to the process suggest it also marked a more fundamental shift that could define Chairman Jerome Powell’s tenure as the point where the Fed first fully embraced a world of stubbornly weak inflation, perennially slower growth and permanently lower interest rates.”
And then Friday from the Financial Times (Sam Fleming): “Slow-inflation Conundrum Prompts Rethink at the Federal Reserve: Ten years into the recovery and with unemployment near half-century lows, the Federal Reserve’s traditional models suggest inflation should be surging. Instead, officials are grappling with unexpectedly tepid price growth, prompting some to rethink their strategy for steering the US economy. John Williams, the New York Fed president, said on Friday that persistently soft inflation readings over recent years could damage the Fed’s ability to convince the general public it will hit its 2% goal. Central banks in other major economies are likely to face similar problems, he warned… Persistent shortfalls relative to the Fed’s 2% target have already helped prompt officials to shelve plans for further rate rises. But they are also thinking more broadly about the US central bank’s inflation mandate… Officials are debating new approaches which could sometimes lead them to deliberately aim for above-target inflation. Richard Clarida, the Fed’s vice-chairman, said on Friday the central bank will be open-minded about these new ideas…”
Markets are raging and crazy talk is proliferating – and it’s already time to commence another momentous election cycle. Bill Dudley must have felt compelled to opine: “People from across the political spectrum are challenging a bit of long-held conventional wisdom: that if the U.S. government runs big, sustained budget deficits, its mounting debts will eventually cause grievous harm to the economy. They have a point — but it is important not to push that point too far. The arguments come in different forms. Some mainstream economists — such as Olivier Blanchard, former chief economist at the International Monetary Fund –- note that sovereign debt is more manageable in a world where economic growth exceeds governments’ very low borrowing costs. On the more extreme end, proponents of Modern Monetary Theory argue that because the U.S. borrows in its own currency, it can always just print more dollars to cover its obligations.” Bill Dudley, former President of the New York Federal Reserve Bank, Bloomberg Opinion, February 19, 2019
Mr. Dudley surely appreciates the precarious state of things. “Deficits don’t matter.” Rebuild infrastructure; universal healthcare; universal basic income; reverse climate change; free college tuition; strong military; and low taxes. Where’s all the money to come from? Borrow a ton of it for sure. And, depending on your political affiliation, soak the rich.
Dudley: “Turning first to Blanchard, I agree that deficit spending looks less problematic than in the past. The government’s debt burden, measured as a percentage of gross domestic product, remains stable as long as debt and GDP grow at the same rate. This is easier to do now because the long-run nominal growth rate (around 3.5-4.0%) is well above the U.S. government’s borrowing cost (around 2.5%). So the government has some leeway: The debt can grow at nearly 4% per year, or 1.0% to 1.5% net of interest expense, without increasing the debt-to-GDP ratio. The low level of interest rates might help explain why markets have proven more tolerant of large, persistent budget deficits around the world, with Japan the most notable example.”
Could it be that markets are “more tolerant of large, persistent deficits around the world” specifically because of historic and far-reaching changes in central bank doctrine and policies? A decade ago, no one contemplated central banks purchasing more than $16 TN of government debt securities. Only a nutcase would have pondered ten years of near zero – or even negative – interest rates (and $10 TN of negative-yielding bonds). “Whatever it takes” central banking? Crazy talk.
These days, markets believe that central banks will be willing and able to purchase unlimited quantities of government bonds to ensure that yields remain low and markets highly liquid. No crisis necessary. Indeed, markets have been convinced without a doubt that central bankers will do whatever it takes to ensure no crises, bear markets or recessions.
The reality is that global central banks have fundamentally inflated the price of government debt, while systematically altering market risk perceptions. And, yes, it has made deficit spending appear much less problematic. As illustrated most starkly in Japan, on an ongoing basis governments issue enormous quantities of debt instruments without markets demanding one iota of risk premium. Heck, the bigger the deficit (and heightened systemic risk) the lower risk premiums. It’s all astonishing, entertaining - and has turned almost comical. But it has seriously become the greatest market distortion in history – today viewed as “business as usual.” And, importantly, with “risk free” sovereign debt the foundation of global finance, distortions in prices and risk perceptions encompass securities markets (and asset markets more generally) around the globe.
“The government’s debt burden, measured as a percentage of gross domestic product, remains stable as long as debt and GDP grow at the same rate.” Okay, except that for a decade now debt has been expanding more rapidly than GDP - for what is now among the longest expansions on record. And I strongly caution against extrapolating 3.5-4.0% economic growth into the future. A scenario of 5% to 7% debt growth, with zero to 2% real GDP expansion, is not only not unreasonable, it’s realistic. And let’s not disregard demographics and the projected surge in entitlement spending. Truth be told, we’re now a mere garden-variety bear market and recession away from Fiscal Armageddon. At some point, markets may even place a risk premium on Treasury debt. Interest payments on federal borrowings are projected at $364 billion in fiscal 2019. Factoring only a small increase in market yields, debt service is projected to more than double by 2018. In the event of a deep recession and another round of bailouts, annual deficits approaching $2.0 TN are not crazy talk.
Dudley: “How and when the government spends the money also matters. Infrastructure investment, for example, can actually pay for itself by boosting the economy’s productive capacity. This is particularly relevant in the U.S., where dilapidated roads, ports and other public works desperately need an upgrade. (Imagine the benefits of a second rail tunnel between New York City and New Jersey.) Deficit spending in recessions can also be self-funding, because it engages unused resources — for example, by employing people whose abilities and skills would otherwise be wasted.”
The past decade has seen an incredible expansion of federal debt. To come out of such a period with “dilapidated roads, ports and other public works” does not instill confidence that funds have been – or ever will be – spent wisely.
Dudley: “Yet Modern Monetary Theory goes one big step further. It suggests that a government like the U.S. needn’t worry about debt at all. As long as it borrows in its own currency, there is no risk of default or bankruptcy. It can spend as much as it wants on any projects, such as education and health care, and just create additional IOUs to cover the cost.”
Like Dudley, I have few kind words for Modern Monetary Theory (MMT). I basically liken it to crackpot theories that have haunted monetary stability throughout history. Every great monetary inflation is replete with deeply flawed notions, justifications and rationalizations. But that MMT seems even remotely reasonable these days is owed directly to “activist” central banking - and the perception that central bank rate manipulation and the unlimited purchase of securities ensure forever low market yields and endless demand for government obligations.
It’s now been almost a decade since I began warning of the incipient “global government finance Bubble.” In true Epic Bubble form, after a decade of unprecedented expansion of government and central bank Credit, there’s a deeply embedded market perception that basically no amount of supply will impact the price of so-called “risk free” debt. And it’s precisely this perilous delusion that ensures an eventual crisis of confidence.
Today’s crackpot theories hold that central banks can continue to suppress interest rates and stimulate financial markets so long as consumer price inflation remains muted. It’s the old “money” as a “medium of exchange” focus that has led to scores of fantastic booms followed certainly by devastating collapses. The infamous monetary theorist John Law and his experiment in paper money were celebrated in France – that is until the spectacular 1720 collapse of his scheme and the attendant Mississippi Bubble. It literally took generations for trust in banking to return. Contemporary central banking is both the architect and enabler of crackpot theories. The celebration, today seemingly everlasting, will prove tragically transitory.
“Money” as a “Store of Value.” It is delusional to believe that endless issuance of non-productive Credit will not at some point significantly impact the value of these instruments. And the more central bankers manipulate the debt markets, the greater the issuance. Arguably, one of the greatest costs associated with the ongoing experiment in “activist” monetary management is the bevy of market distortions that promote the rapid expansion of government and other non-productive debt.
Moreover, central banks injecting “money” directly into – and furthermore supporting – securities markets is an allocation of Credit predominantly benefitting the wealthy. Sure, there’s some “trickle down.” The unemployment rate is historically low and jobs are more plentiful. By now, however, it should be abundantly clear that employment gains do not abrogate a system that has evolved to distribute wealth so inequitably – or the perception that the system is rigged for the benefit of the wealthy.
Even with gainful employment, many see the system as hopelessly unfair. The Fed can now feign trepidation for CPI missing its 2% inflation objective. Yet tens of millions struggle making ends meet against constantly inflating costs (including housing, healthcare and tuition). We’re now clearly on a trajectory for risking a crisis of confidence in financial assets and our institutions more generally.
Dudley: “Alas, there is no free lunch. For one, the economy might not have enough resources — in the form of workers and industrial capacity — to meet the combined demand from the government and the private sector. The result would be inflation, as too much money chased too few goods and services.”
That it has the appearance of a “free lunch” is at the heart of the quandary. And it’s not that “the result would be inflation.” Indeed, the result is and has been inflation, just not the typical variety. The prevailing source of monetary inflation is central banks injecting new “money” into the securities markets, while essentially promising liquid and levitated markets. The upshot is too much “money” chasing financial market returns. Monetary Disorder. Booms and Busts. Unmanageable Speculation. Intractable Resources Misallocation. Economic Maladjustment and Global Imbalances
The dilemma today - as it’s been with great inflationary episodes throughout history – is that inflation becomes deeply ingrained and halting it too painful. Policymakers refuse to accept mistakes and change directions. Instead, there is denial and the irresistibility of rationalization and justification. Throughout the devastating Weimar hyperinflation, Germany’s central bank refused to accept that they were the party of primary responsibility – but instead rationalized the bank was being forced to respond to outside forces. Today’s great global inflation is characterized by contrasting dynamics, but some of the devastating consequences of failing to recognize the essence of the problem are all too similar. Markets. Social. Political. Economic. Geopolitical." Weekly Commentary: Dudley on Debt and MMT H/T Tom from Florida
The Entendance Beach: Catch Up The Best Reads From the Past Week!
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Post by Entendance on Mar 4, 2019 20:25:53 GMT -5
“Had America stuck with real, gold-backed money… and/or had the Fed not supported Wall Street with ultra-low interest rates and $4 trillion of new money… the situation would be much different. There would be no trade deficit with China. There would be no $250 trillion in debt. An F-150 would probably cost less than it did in 1971, not more. The working class would have nothing to grumble about… And Donald Trump would not be president. The Fed would not be ‘normalizing,’ because it never would have un-normalized. The rich would not be so rich. The Dow would not be over 25,000. The government would not have $22 trillion of debt itself. And we wouldn’t be up at 6 a.m. writing this Diary.” -Bill Bonner
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Post by Entendance on Mar 25, 2019 14:05:41 GMT -5
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Post by Entendance on Mar 29, 2019 5:15:24 GMT -5
"...It is a common misconception that IRAs are limited to holding a narrow range of precious metals such as US Mint Eagles. Under IRS rules, a wide range of investment grade precious metals can actually be held within these IRAs. This includes investment grade gold, silver, platinum and palladium bullion coins, and investment grade gold, silver, platinum and palladium bullion bars. An IRA also does not have to store its precious metals holdings in a depository in the US. The IRA can easily and legally hold its precious metals abroad in a safe and secure jurisdiction such as Singapore..." Holding Precious Metals in your Individual Retirement Account (IRA)
"The American dream has morphed into the American grift. And we normal people are the marks. Let’s stop pretending. Let’s stop accepting the ruling class’s lies. And let’s stop lying to ourselves. America has changed. There used to be one standard, one set of laws, one set of rules. Now, there are two. The one set of rules for normal people is designed to jam us up, to keep us down, to ensure that the power of the powerful never gets challenged....Our elite is not elite. Instead, it’s a bunch of bums who somehow got a little money and took the reins of power and are now shaking-down our great nation for every penny they can wring out of it. We owe them nothing – not respect, not gratitude and certainly not obedience...."
You’re A Sucker For Not Believing That The System Is Rigged
What if we threw a Cold War and nobody came?
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Post by Entendance on Apr 28, 2019 2:24:26 GMT -5
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Post by Entendance on Jun 7, 2019 0:51:44 GMT -5
"All over America, large portions of our major cities are being transformed into stomach-churning cesspools of squalor..." The Worst Is Yet To Come
"...The America I grew up in was an opportunity society. There were ladders of upward mobility that could be climbed on merit alone without requiring family status or social and political connections. Instate college tuition was low. Most families could manage it, and the students of those families that could not afford the cost worked their way through university with part time jobs. Student loans were unknown. That America is gone..." Here
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Post by Entendance on Jun 17, 2019 0:25:35 GMT -5
There is a father absence crisis in America. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, 19.7 million children, more than 1 in 4, live without a father in the home. Consequently, there is a father factor in nearly all social ills facing America today.
Father Absence + Involvement | Statistics
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Post by Entendance on Jun 22, 2019 0:34:52 GMT -5
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Post by Entendance on Sept 11, 2019 1:41:53 GMT -5
"Not one thing has changed.
Except that greed and gullibility are enhancing the conscious mispricing of risk, again.
Roll out the smoke and mirrors, get everyone all excited about nonsense, rewind the narratives and slogans, and let's do it all over again.
All is well in the United States of Amnesia." -Jesse
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Post by Entendance on Jan 4, 2020 4:13:01 GMT -5
"...For Americans who want freedom, a necessary prerequisite is the restoration of a limited-government republic and a noninterventionist foreign policy, which necessarily entails the dismantling, not the reform, of the Pentagon, the military-industrial complex, the CIA, and the NSA." A Limited-Government Republic versus a National-Security State
"...In order to determine how long an empire will last, one has to take into account the agenda of the elites that control its institutions. As long as they are in key positions of power within the system and as long as they can inject their own puppet politicians, they will have the ability to influence the collapse timeline of that system.
Can they prolong and stave off crisis? Yes, for a short while. However, once the machine of a crash has been set in motion the best they can do is slow down the Titanic; they cannot change its path towards the iceberg. And frankly, at this point why would they? I hear it argued often that the elites are going to “keep the plates spinning” on the economy and that they don't want to lose their “golden goose” in the US economy. This reveals an naivety among skeptics of the true agenda.
Firstly, the elites have a highly useful political puppet in the form of Donald Trump; he is useful in that he inspires sharp national division, and, he is a self proclaimed conservative champion and nationalist. If the elites did not trigger a crash under Trump, then this would give the public the impression that conservative ideals and national sovereignty works. This is the opposite of what they want. Why would globalists that want the erasure of nation states and the creation of a centralized socialist “Utopia” seek to make conservatives and nationalists look good? Well, they wouldn't.
The only concern of the banks is that they do not take the blame as their engineered collapse of the old world order hits the public with increasingly painful consequences. These consequences are already becoming visible.
The next major crash has begun in the form of plunging fundamentals, and far too many conservatives are placing their heads in the sand for the selfish sake of proving the political left wrong. Declines in US manufacturing, US freight, global exports and imports, mass closures in US retail, as well as all time highs in consumer debt, corporate debt and national debt are being shrugged off and rationalized as nothing more than “hiccups” in an otherwise booming economy. The Fed's repo market purchases, barely keeping up with demand from liquidity starved corporations are also not being taken seriously..." The outcome of collapse depends on us and our reactions
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Post by Entendance on Jan 25, 2020 5:02:25 GMT -5
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Post by Entendance on Feb 5, 2020 8:36:52 GMT -5
"The Iowa caucus disaster is a function of a broken economic structure that rewards con artistry over competence."
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Post by Entendance on Feb 8, 2020 4:56:29 GMT -5
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Post by Entendance on Feb 18, 2020 2:58:58 GMT -5
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Post by Entendance on Mar 3, 2020 16:18:41 GMT -5
If the Department of Defense is warning that we’re facing a pandemic within 30 days, we can safely say the pandemic has already arrived.
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Post by Entendance on Mar 8, 2020 6:44:50 GMT -5
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Post by Entendance on Mar 15, 2020 6:10:28 GMT -5
Trump’s response has been inadequate but the system is rigged anyway. As always, the poor will be hit hardest
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Post by Entendance on Mar 20, 2020 6:46:09 GMT -5
Republican Jim Inhofe dumped up to $450,000 in stock — the fourth GOP senator implicated in scandal: report
Georgia senator dumped stocks after private meeting on coronavirus: report
A Private Message On The Entendance Beach: "Ciao E. Do not know how much longer XYZ and I can stay shut in together before one of us kills the other. She wants to start playing board games. I'm not there yet. I have been following your posts here on Entendance Beach. You have posted good messages there.The rest of this message is pretty much me venting. It is O.K. to skip it if you are tired of hearing people complaining.
Testing here in the U.S. is starting to become available to those who are already sick. Earlier this week some of the hospital, police, and political staffs were able to be tested. These are the people who don't show symptoms and are still on the job. 10-11% of them are testing positive. CDC test here still take 2-5 days for the results to come back. The first fatality here by me had entered the hospital over a week ago with pneumonia. The health department refused to test him for the virus because he had not traveled to any of the restricted countries and had not had "close" contact with anyone the CDC had confirmed to have had Covid-19. It was announced yesterday morning that he had tested positive. The only problem is that they didn't test him until he died on Sunday. The Health Department has told his widow to self isolate, but wouldn't test her for the virus yet because there aren't enough test kits. I'm hearing the same type of story from all kinds of people. I sincerely hope that my fellow Americans have learned that they can't just put in an order for something like test kits to China and expect Amazon to delivered it the next day. Now hospitals are making face mask out of cut up bed sheets because we have lost the ability (or the will) to make things for ourselves. Construction companies have been asked to donate their construction mask to hospitals. I see where England as asked vacuum manufacturer, Dyson, if they could start making respirator machines instead of cordless hand held vacuums. Meanwhile, farmers are complaining that with out border to Mexico closed, they won't have the farm laborers needed to get in all the crops this Spring. The US has a long way to go before we reach a peak in cases and fatalities from this virus. There is no hope of isolating the carriers if they aren't being tested, even if the individual wants to be tested. So right now, with a population of 330,000,000 and 10% positive test results, points to a number of cases that even if the fatality rate really is only 1% still shows that over 300,000 are going to take the big sleep. The other 90% that don't test positive yet, will continue to go around infecting each other until everyone has had a chance to experience Covid-19 over the next couple of years before it burns out. What a cluster fuck our government has made of handling this."
Coronavirus Covid-19 Updates here
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Post by Entendance on Mar 23, 2020 6:37:00 GMT -5
The richer suffer more, they’ll have you know. What pricks this dick’s balloon, though, is suggesting that prior to corona, there was a “normal chain of revenue generation etc.” and “solid economic fundamentals”. There haven’t been any normal markets, and that includes commercial mortgages, since Alan Greenspan. You may like to disagree, but just wait till the Fed folds.
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