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


To: ggersh who wrote (171024)4/26/2021 11:04:23 AM
From: marcher1 Recommendation

Recommended By
ggersh

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 219447
 
since you linked the unsayable...
you have been bumped up a couple positions on the trrrrrreerrrrrst list.
and are more likely to get one of those ssss boarding passes.
of course, it's just a random selection.
freedom and all.

ps. usps now has permission to open all your packages.
-ng-



To: ggersh who wrote (171024)4/26/2021 5:56:13 PM
From: TobagoJack1 Recommendation

Recommended By
ggersh

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 219447
 
am looking at the trend & pace, the eCNY, bitgold, gold, and carbon energy, and reckon that 2026 - 2032 is about correct for TeoTwawKi and Darkest Interregnum, and as in the science fiction "Foundation" series by Asimov, the move forward must include shortening the width of the D.I.

In below example, Russia gets its Euro from sending gas to EU, and gets RMB / USD from sending oil & gas to China, and spends its EU and RMB on stuff from China. The circulation works, apparently. What ever needed to make the equation balance can be gold and bitgold, both generated in situ Russia, at some gold and bitgold pricing per money is memory.

Let's see if folks in charge can figure it out, at bitgold US$ 100,000

bloomberg.com

Russia Ditches the Dollar in More Than Half of Its Exports
Natasha Doff
27 April 2021, 00:11 GMT+8

The dollar share of Russian exports dropped below 50% for the first time on record in the fourth quarter following a multi-year Kremlin campaign to reduce the country’s vulnerability to U.S. assets.

Most of the slump in dollar use came from Russia’s trade with China, more than three-quarters of which is now conducted in euros, according to central bank data published on Monday. The common currency’s share in total exports jumped more than 10 percentage points to 36%, the data show.

Trading PlacesRussia has reduced the dollar's share in its exports since sanctions hit

Source: Bank of Russia

Multiple rounds of sanctions and the constant threat of more to come has pushed Russia to find ways to isolate its economy from U.S. interference. The central bank has also stripped back holdings of Treasuries in its international reserves, loading up on gold and euros instead.

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