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Non-Tech : Kirk's Market Thoughts -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Kirk © who wrote (11485)6/22/2021 2:05:30 PM
From: w0z1 Recommendation

Recommended By
isopatch

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 26766
 
If you had read a little further, I believe you would see that Dr. Malone agrees with you. I believe it was the FDA which made the false assertion about the protein staying in the injection site.

According to Malone, the FDA knew the COVID spike protein was biologically active and could travel from the injection site and cause adverse events, and that the spike protein, if biologically active, is very dangerous.

In fact, Malone was one of many scientists to warn the FDA about the dangers of the free spike protein



To: Kirk © who wrote (11485)6/22/2021 2:10:57 PM
From: Sun Tzu  Respond to of 26766
 
Let me add a 3rd example, this one very current and directly related to the American empire.

There are costs and benefits to printing the reserve currency. The benefits all happen in early stages while the costs accumulate over time. For example defeating the soviet union was to a good extent possible b/c the US was printing the reserve currency. However, the volume of global trade and the amount of reserve currency needed in the world exceeds the US capacity for printing it. You cannot just indiscremently print money and not get hyperinflation.

While the USD was backed by gold, this problem led to the world redeeming USD for gold. Once gold gave way to petrodollars, it was the US manufacturing base that got eroded and continues to be hampered. Now the US has a choice. We can abandon being the world's reserve currency and rebuild the US competitiveness. Or we can kick the can down the road and die by a thousand papercuts.

Guess which option the US political structure makes most likely?

PS Google petrodollar and Lyn Alden for a detailed history and analysis of the above.