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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Snowshoe who wrote (164870)11/7/2020 7:33:07 PM
From: Cogito Ergo Sum  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 217801
 
Geez.. he actually looks sad

Was listening to Rush Limbaugh for fun.. he's pushing CBD products now.. but states 0 THC.. Actually a good codicil..

He's being hard on the GOP.. Comparing Mr. Trump to a magic wand.



To: Snowshoe who wrote (164870)11/8/2020 1:28:20 AM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217801
 
If what Rudy says is true Message 33028142 , noting that he might be hoping to avoid jail time and get a preemptive pardoners from Trump, I reckon should Team USA wish to conduct its affairs in the current alleged and presumably heretofore-always, then best to engage with Team China China China as the USA DoD / Airforce has deemed okay, to buy buy buy drones from China Inc

Below is the latest generation ballot-counting machine, that functionally can be switched on / off ballot vs garbage mode via Huawei 5G (maybe I mean Team China 6G) network

zerohedge.com

China Deploys Trash-Collecting Robots Amid Automation Wave

A "smart garbage sorting robot" was recently launched on the streets in eastern China, able to pick up and sort trash for an entire workday.



China's national newspaper, the People's Daily, published a video this week showing the robot cruising down the sidewalk in the city of Hangzhou in Zhejiang Province on Oct. 28, identifying trash, then using its robotic arm to pick up the debris. It was reported the robot could operate for eight hours before the next charge, with the ability to pick up a total of 38.5 pounds of trash.

Trash picking robots in China is just more evidence of how automation and artificial intelligence will displace millions of jobs, not only in China but worldwide by the end of the decade.

The World Economic Forum (WEF) released a report in October warning that robots could displace an estimated 85 million jobs by 2025.

"Automation, in tandem with the COVID-19 recession, is creating a 'double disruption' scenario for workers," WEF wrote.

"In addition to the current disruption from the pandemic-induced lockdowns and economic contraction, technological adoption by companies will transform tasks, jobs, and skills by 2025."

A future ruled by robots would likely result in policymakers worldwide enacting some form of People's QE.



To: Snowshoe who wrote (164870)11/8/2020 1:52:09 AM
From: TobagoJack1 Recommendation

Recommended By
marcher

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217801
 
I spoke too soon , I mean Team China 6G as opposed to Huawei 5G Message 33028167

after Team China's launch of quantum communication satellite in 2016, I understand Team USA tee-ed up Space Force albeit did not detect boots on the ground or satellites spinning around, as perhaps the budget allocation was veered to either Afghanistan or Iraq or some other forsaken but needy place

and as Team USA does not wish to buy Team China Huawei 5G and encouraging others to do likewise, China China China moving ahead w/ 6G instead of focusing on the 5G work-arounds that at best are flim-flams and at worst suicidal economic / technology dead-ends

zerohedge.com

China Leapfrogs US With World's First 6G Satellite Amid Raging Tech War

As the US' tech war with China continues to rage, China has leapfrogged the US in satellite telecommunication technology with the successful launch of the world's first sixth-generation satellite into space.

The experimental satellite containing advanced telecommunications technology was launched Friday into low Earth orbit from the Taiyuan Satellite Launch Center in China's northern Shanxi Province, reported Asia Times.



A Long March-6 carrier rocket's payload consisted of the 6G satellite and 13 other satellites. A video of the launch was published on Twiter via the University of Electronic Science and Technology of China.

The satellite, developed jointly by Chengdu Guoxing Aerospace Technology and Beijing MinoSpace Technology, will be used in a pilot testing program to trial 6G technology in space.

According to Yicai Media Group, 6G is more than 100 times faster than 5G - enables seamless transmission, longer distances, faster speeds, and smaller power output from space to land-based communication devices.

6G technology is still in the beginning stages, but Friday's launch appears to show China has moved ahead of the US in space-based testing. Many hurdles are still expected with the technology as testing will start near term.

The launch comes as the US and China are locked in a heated tech war. In 2019, President Trump tweeted the obvious: America must step up its efforts to develop and deploy cutting edge tech or face getting "left behind."

"I want 5G, and even 6G, technology in the United States as soon as possible. It is far more powerful, faster, and smarter than the current standard. American companies must step up their efforts, or get left behind. There is no reason that we should be lagging behind on........."



To: Snowshoe who wrote (164870)11/9/2020 6:29:45 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217801
 
fascinating to watch, and let's see whether Team Brazil can make up its mind, for risking other people's lives in order to get handouts, or just watch Netflix and get handouts. or risking other people's lives, get handouts and watch Netflix.

In any case too late to not risk lives, refrain from handouts, keep working, and not incentivising Netflix-ing.

bloomberg.com

How Covid Cash Boosts Bolsonaro Allies in Brazil Vote

Simone Preissler Iglesias
President Jair Bolsonaro, Brazil’s far-right leader, isn’t on any ballots this November but is the central figure in municipal elections that many expect to be a referendum on the first half of his four-year term. His disdain for pandemic-related restrictions has helped make the country one of the world’s worst Covid-19 hotspots. Yet the fact that more businesses stayed open helped lessen the virus’s economic blow, and a robust program of cash handouts to informal workers has boosted his popularity while weakening leftist opposition parties. Most candidates on the ballot are lining up to support either the president or the mayors who defied his virus policies, many of whom are up for re-election.



Photographer: Andressa Anholete/Getty Images

1. What could the elections tell us about Brazil’s future?
Bolsonaro’s election in 2018 was part of a conservative wave that shifted the electorate to the right after more than a decade of leftist rule. The Nov. 15 vote (with possible runoffs scheduled for Nov. 29) may measure how strong that trend is two years on. Initial signals suggest that conservatives still have plenty of appeal among voters: More candidates come from the ranks of the police, the priesthood or the military than ever before.

2. How hard has Brazil been hit by Covid?
With more than 160,000 deaths, it has one of the world’s highest mortality rates, and its 5.6 million recorded cases put it third after the U.S. and India. Bolsonaro has complicated things: he belittled local leaders for their quarantine measures and promoted hydroxychloroquine, a drug unproven for treating Covid-19, while urging Brazilians to get back to work.

3. How bad is the economy?
The number of unemployed Brazilians has jumped to 14 million, up from 9 million in May, and GDP is expected to fall 5% for the year. But the country is suffering less than its Latin American neighbors, thanks in part to Bolsonaro’s $57 billion worth of cash handouts. Yet this program has left markets on edge. Investors fear a budget crisis if the government breaches a spending cap rule to make temporary pandemic benefits permanent. It has also put the president at odds with Economy Minister Paulo Guedes, who favors austerity. Public debt is close to 100% of the country’s GDP.



Commuters wear protective masks inside the Luz train station in Sao Paulo, Brazil, as the country surpasses 5.5. million infections.

Photographer: Jonne Roriz/Bloomberg

4. Who’s up for election?
More than 5,500 mayors and 57,000 city council members will be elected, in races covering every Brazilian region and major urban hubs like Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo. It’s expected that 148 million people will participate: Voting is mandatory in Brazil, so everyone except for children and the elderly must cast a ballot.

5. What’s the field like?
There are more women and Black candidates than ever before, thanks in part to the boost in campaign funding parties receive for diversifying their rosters. Both groups have historically been under-represented in office. Women now comprise one third of the candidates while Black Brazilians represent 51% of those running, a flip from the 2016 municipal vote when 51.5% were White, versus 48% now. Still, White men stand to retain control of Brazil’s centers of power: In the 95 largest cities, where 40% of Brazil’s population is concentrated, eight out of 10 candidates for mayor are men and 70% are white.

6. How could these elections help Bolsonaro?
Bolsonaro has never polled better, with 39% of Brazilians rating his government as great or good. Many candidates are framing themselves as the president’s acolytes -- even without his blessing -- and appropriating his 2018 campaign slogan “God, country, and family.” The president, who left the political party he was elected with and is now independent, said he would not support any candidates. But encouraged by his jump in polls, he has endorsed candidates in Rio and Sao Paulo (both white men).

7. What about Brazil’s left wing?
The once-dominant Workers’ Party is in the midst of an identity crisis. At this time last year, the face of the party, ex-President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, was promising a roaring return of the left. That doesn’t seem likely to happen soon. The Workers’ Party candidates have slim chances of winning in the biggest cities. For example, in Sao Paulo, the country’s largest urban center, the party’s representative is only polling at 6%. Meanwhile other leftist parties are trying to move in with competitive candidates in some cities in the south and northeast regions of the country.

8. How does coronavirus impact the elections?
They were postponed from October to November and the campaigning period was cut in half. And the virus is the dominant issue, as many people will be pushing for more government assistance and opposing measures that close businesses. At the same time, Brazilians are politically divided, and just as many see Bolsonaro’s refusal to acknowledge the seriousness of the virus as exacerbating the crisis.

The Reference Shelf Could Mounting Crises Sink Brazil’s Bolsonaro? Brazil Hands Out So Much Covid Cash That Poverty Nears a Low Brazil Cases Top 5 Million as Debate Shifts From Virus to Fiscal Latin America’s Populists Are Overwhelmed by Covid-19— With assistance by Martha Viotti Beck

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