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Politics : A Real American President: Donald Trump -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: James Seagrove who wrote (99449)10/21/2018 11:34:22 PM
From: FJB4 Recommendations

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To: James Seagrove who wrote (99449)10/21/2018 11:34:55 PM
From: FJB2 Recommendations

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To: James Seagrove who wrote (99449)10/21/2018 11:36:32 PM
From: FJB4 Recommendations

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PRESIDENT TRUMP SAYS THERE ARE ONLY TWO GENDERS. LIBTARD SNOWFLAKES GO NUTS AGAIN... LOL

Trump admin considering narrowing legal
definition of ‘gender,’ and there are
only two. Meltdown begins.
BizPac Review, by Vivek Saxena Original Article

In what some describe as a sensible return to common-sense policies, the Trump administration has reportedly proposed redefining gender/sex as an immutable condition that cannot be altered by whim. In a memo obtained by The New York Times, the Department of Health and Human Services argues that federal agencies should adopt a definition of gender that’s based “on a biological basis that is clear, grounded in science, objective and administrable.” Though biological science makes it clear that only two distinct genders exist, the administration of former President Barack Hussein Obama muddied the definition of gender for political purposes.



To: James Seagrove who wrote (99449)10/22/2018 12:22:29 AM
From: FJB  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 456095
 
HOMOSEXUALS LIKE OBONZO AND BOOKER ARE NOT ALL SUGAR AND SPICE AS PORTRAYED BY THE MEDIA.
---------------------------------------------------------
Hitler spent time at a gay hostel in Vienna and was both ‘homosexual and heterosexual’ with a ‘sadomasochistic nature’, 1943 US intelligence report claims
  • U.S. intelligence report claims Hitler was 'both homosexual and heterosexual'
  • Report from 1943 mentions Vienna hostel where Hitler lived from 1910 to 1913
  • It claims it had a reputation as a place where men met for 'homosexual pleasures'
  • The report also claims Hitler was sexually attracted to his deputy Rudolf Hess
By SARA MALM FOR MAILONLINE

PUBLISHED: 07:20 EDT, 9 October 2018


dailymail.co.uk



To: James Seagrove who wrote (99449)10/22/2018 12:44:26 AM
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REJECTED MUSLIM asylum seekers and terrorists are sneaking back into the US from Canada

OCTOBER 21, 2018 BY BARENAKEDISLAM LEAVE A COMMENT

As one smart commenter said: “In the good old USA they have Border Agents. In ‘Canuckistan’ we have Royal Canadian Mounted Police who serve as Bell Hops for the Muslim illegal aliens sneaking into Canada from the US. Vlad Tepesblog



To: James Seagrove who wrote (99449)10/22/2018 12:45:16 AM
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CHICAGO: MUSLIM OFF-DUTY COP shoots innocent autistic black teen from his vehicle in a drive-by shooting

OCTOBER 21, 2018 BY BARENAKEDISLAM 4 COMMENTS

The Civilian Office of Police Accountability has released video of a 2017 incident in which an off-duty Muslim sergeant, Khalil Muhammad, is shown shooting an unarmed black teen with developmental disabilities from an unmarked vehicle after chasing him through the neighborhood for looking ‘suspicious. ABC7Chicago (h/t Larry H) Ricardo Hayes (below), then 18, had wandered away from […]



To: James Seagrove who wrote (99449)10/22/2018 12:47:54 AM
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DRAMA QUEEN Justin Trudeau tap dances around the question about why he has invited a British jihadi who fought with ISIS to Canada - WTF IS WRONG WITH HIM. IT'S LIKE HE WANTS TO KILL CANADIANS. EVIL HOMO LIKE HITLER... LOL

OCTOBER 21, 2018 BY BARENAKEDISLAM 9 COMMENTS

The Canadian government is pro-actively reaching out to ISIS fighters held in prison by the Kurds. That includes British born and raised Jack Letts aka ‘Jihadi Jack.’ But no matter how many times Andrew Scheer of the opposition party repeats the question, we get the same ‘Justin Trudeau shuck and jive’ – never giving a […]



To: James Seagrove who wrote (99449)10/22/2018 12:48:42 AM
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SWITZERLAND: 19-year-old Muslim beheads his own grandmother

OCTOBER 21, 2018 BY BARENAKEDISLAM 10 COMMENTS

A neighbor to the elderly victim (photo below) found the decapitated body. Police staged a massive search for the killer and located him at the airport in Kloten, where he was trying to flee the country. The suspect has been identified as Fatmir T. BLICK It is also reported that Fatmir, an apprentice electrician brought […]



To: James Seagrove who wrote (99449)10/22/2018 1:06:18 AM
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Backlash Against War on Cash Reaches the Bank of Canada

blacklistednews.com

  • The ECB warned that a phase-out of cash could pose a serious risk to the financial system. Depending too heavily on electronic payment systems could expose financial systems to catastrophic failures in the event of power outages or cyber attacks. The European Commission has also backed off is war on cash.
  • The People’s Bank of China announced that all businesses in China that are not e-commerce must resume accepting cash or risk being investigated, and cautioned businesses against hyping the “cashless” idea when promoting non-cash payments.
  • In Sweden, one of the most cashless societies, the central bank and parliament have spoken out in support of cash.
  • Cities too have spoken out, including Washington D.C., whose City Council introduced a bill that sought to ban restaurants and retailers from not accepting cash or charging a different price to customers depending on the method of payment they use.
  • Now, it’s the Bank of Canada’s turn to sound the alarm. In a paper — “Is a Cashless Society Problematic?” — it outlines a number of risks that could arise if the country went fully cashless.


The premise underpinning the analysis is that at some point in the future individuals and firms decide, of their own volition, to cease using cash altogether. In response, the central bank stops printing physical money because of the large fixed costs inherent in supplying bank notes.

In such a scenario, even though most individuals and firms freely choose to abandon cash, there could be “adverse collective outcomes,” the study warns. For example, “a small segment of the population” may still prefer to go on using physical money rather than electronic payments, whether out of “a continuous desire for anonymous transactions” or because of “the self-imposed spending constraints afforded by cash.”

In a cashless economy, this “minority of people” would be worse off since “their choice set would be smaller without cash”. Plus, they would have zero anonymity and less control over their finances.

Meanwhile, retail payment services would be provided entirely by private sector networks. In other words, banks and credit card companies would have even greater monopoly control over the payments system. In Canada, there is already only one domestic debit card scheme, provided by Interac, and three major credit card networks, operated by Visa, MasterCard and American Express.

For people with no choice but to use cash, such as those living in geographically remote areas or who do not have bank accounts, this would be a huge problem. In Canada the number of “unbanked” is relatively small, representing just 2% of the population, but in many other countries it is much larger. In a cashless society those people would struggle to participate in the economy at all.

The problem is not just one of economic exclusion. There’s also the heightened security risk to consider. Cash, as a transaction medium, “is robust to electronic network failures, cyber attacks and power outages”. In a cashless economy, there would be even greater dependence on the operational reliability of electronic retail payment networks and associated power systems, both of which are prone to go down. A massive outage of visa services in Western Europe this June gave a foretaste of the sort of chaos that could ensue.

Cash also serves as a vital store of value in economic crises. For example, during the worst period of Iceland’s economic crisis, between 2008-09, when all three of its major banks collapsed, cash in circulation more than doubled. The increase in demand for banknotes was concentrated in the largest denominations, suggesting that it was driven largely by store-of-value motivations.

Even for central banks themselves, an entirely cashless economy could cause headaches:

  1. Loss of Seigniorage. This is the profit a government earns by issuing currency, as represented by the difference between the face value of coins and notes and their production costs. As the report points out, the disappearance of cash would lead to a severe contraction of the central bank’s balance sheet, since bank notes represent around three-quarters of the Bank of Canada’s liabilities.
  2. Reduced Interventionary Powers. One of the ways central banks have to provide liquidity in a financial crisis is to sell their holdings of government securities and purchase other (illiquid) assets with the proceeds. An unmitigated contraction of the central bank’s balance sheet could compromise its ability to use this tool.
The authors suggest this problem could be offset if the central bank chose to charge more for the services it provides to the financial industry. It could also expand its balance sheet “by buying government bills and bonds with reserves,” much as certain central banks have done through their quantitative easing programs.

The BoC concludes the report by stating that while a cashless society would not “generally” cause material system-wide problems, there are clearly concerns “with regard to the maintenance of operational reliability.” It may also be necessary to provide a safe store of value in an (extreme) financial crisis as well as an alternative to private-owned payment networks, it says.

The report proposes three possible policy responses:

  • Retain the obligation to make cash available, and consider preemptive measures to mitigate the potential erosion of cash demand over time.
  • Regulate critical payment networks to support operational reliability and to mitigate anti-competitive outcomes.
  • Issue a central bank “digital currency” — a digital version of the Canadian dollar and not a “cryptocurrency” — to compete with private payment networks.
The authors do not indicate which option is preferable, but they clearly have misgivings about getting rid of cash altogether, without at least having viable alternatives in place. And for the moment, there is no viable alternative. By Don Quijones.

Home-equity-loan balances in Canada per capita are now 3.3 times what they were in the US during HELOC peak before it all collapsed. Read… HELOCs in the US & Canada: As “Scarred” Americans Learned Bitter Lesson, Canadians Went Nuts


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