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Interview: 2nd Quarter 2023 Wrap Up: News Trends & Stories, Part II with Dr. Joseph P. Farrell

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126 Comments

  1. Dear Catherine
    Time 1.24.00: I’m definitely looking forward to the timeline you and Carolyn will put together on from when the Fed went into the BIS in 1994 to when the missing money stared in 97. In order to fully understand where we are now it helps to know how we got here.
    Also, anything Carolyn does is great and a pleasure to read. She writes so well.

  2. AI does not exhibit common sense, (most) people do! Pence seemed to respond like a bad AI programmed cyborg. Love the Sagan piece! Both Sagan and Orwell had great insight to the pitfalls of Science gone awry.

  3. At the end Miss Catherine I think you nailed it. Enjoy your summer, this fall is going to be wild or worse. John did not see how the dollar could lose reserve status quickly? That to me is easy. It is only supported by Confidence……period. If there are xxxxx many bonds that are made up out of thin air, you just have to expose that and poof, all head to the exit door. More and more it seems mr global and the fed want to crash it all to put us all in the cattle pen. Keep shining your light Miss Catherine. The Dark of Human Winter is coming.

    1. I agree with John. Too many people owe money in dollars – too much debt and no place to go. I don’t see the dollar being anything other than dangerous and dominant except in the scenarios where they people who control it decide to take it down.

      1. Yes Miss Catherine, they could crash it on purpose, for the cattle pen. I can not rule that out either. They want a global system by 2030.

  4. re US Army Reserves: CAF you are spot on about needing to know the MOS (military occupational specialty) of the reservists being called up in order to understand why they are being called up. The reserves and national guard get a bad wrap, but they are filled with lots of specialty professionals, and lots of people who juggle two careers (military and civilian) and can think outside the box, solving problems quicker than active duty counterparts (speaking from experience). I deployed with two guys who were called out of retirement, a logistics professional and an engineering professional, both true experts in their fields, and it was quickly evident why they were called upon given our mission. Thanks to you and John for another great M&M!

    1. How do we find out what their MOS’s are? Hmm. My late husband, a Colonel ( Vietnam era) in the Army Medical Service Corps, was active reserve & was called to Active Duty for Desert Shield/Desert Storm with a 3 day notice left on home message machine. It was terrible experience on many levels; he managed with great difficulty to be transferred into Inactive Reserves after a 91/2 months on Active Duty. His MOS was Internal Medicine ; was also Board Certified in Cardiovascular Diseases. The young Captain who facilitated his transfer had blowback for assisting him ( was all above board). Army wanted him in Active Reserves. He loved his country and the military. They don’t make them like him anymore.

  5. Carl Sagan died in December 1996 of a rare disease, same year that he gave that interview. An interesting year indeed!

  6. Yes, Catherine, vending machines at community colleges are cash cows for them. After 35 years as a Chemical Engineer in industry, I got tired of the rat race and taught for 4 years at a community college / vo-tech, teaching Industrial Operations, Maintenance, and Automation. The local high schools would send 11th and 12th grade students to there to learn Automotive Maintenance, Welding, Nursing, Criminal Justice, Cosmetology, and my industrial program, where they got college credit. We had students from the city high school for a 2 hour morning class and students from 4 county high schools for a 2 hour afternoon class. Midway through each class, we had a 15 minute break, and students would line up at the 6 vending machines in the common area for snacks and drinks because they did not have them at their high schools. I had to monitor them 1 day a week. I saw some students spend $5 per day there. I complained to the higher ups in committee meetings about what message were we sending our children about nutrition by having these there. It fell on deaf ears. When the school built a new building a block away for my program and welding, I was able to forestall the installation of vending machines for 6 months. But, magically, after the start of one Spring semester, 4 were installed in my new building. I delved into this further, going to the comptroller of the college, and found out that on my campus alone, their kickbacks from the vending machines amounted to $1000 / month considering we had 200 high school students enrolled for morning, 200 h.s. students enrolled for afternoon, and 100 adults for evening classes. With that much income being generated for a small college of 3000 students, including the academic campus, that was too much income to turn down.

  7. You assume his performance was for us! Mike Pence was not talking to the American people. He was talking deliberately over us, and to the Globalist!

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