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Interview: Local Investing with Michael H. Shuman

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  1. Wonderful I am playing catch up as I watch you every week as well as Financial Rebellion. Feeds my mind and I am promoting the “USE CASH” not only Fridays but daily. It really seems most people are snoozing. Interestingly I am studying clinical hypnosis and have an exam for it in August. It is known that 1/3 of people can not be hypnotised,15 % are highly hypnotisable and the rest are in the middle.

    1. Penelope:

      Thanks, would love to get a reference on this.
      It is known that 1/3 of people can not be hypnotised,15 % are highly hypnotisable and the rest are in the middle.

  2. regarding covid19, it was more than an experiment, if we link the fact it was a planned military operation (fauci labs, vaks production) and the vaks was the end goal. what is in these vaks that they wanted to inject every single one of us? ID?

  3. A ‘newbie’ here (joined tonight) and just wanted to say hello and THANK YOU. Your knowledge, faith, strength and truth is so refreshing and a blessing in this upside down world. When you showed the chart on A.I. (in the Money & Markets video) I couldn’t help but notice that the top countries are largely non Christian, which I thought was very interesting considering what our Lord Jesus Christ said. May GOD bless you & yours. I will keep you in my prayers for protection.

  4. Hi, Catherine. I wanted to point out that the comment you made about there being an over-supply of oil tankers (if I heard you correctly) is not accurate. There was an oversupply several years ago, but that is no longer the case. Oil tanker companies have not been devoting any CapEx for years into the building new ships. Older ships are starting to now be retired, and many ships that went into storage will not be coming back online because the cost is prohibitive. There is lack of supply of tankers in spite of growing demand; thus, we’re seeing high rates that should go much higher.

  5. I would like to know if there is a link between Sullivan and Cromwell’s role as lead law firm over seeing the FTX bankruptcy and the run on Silicon Valley Bank.

        1. Does not look to me like a bank run so much as a document grab and destruction – firewalls against the inevitable lawsuits. With the Jan 6th cover story unwinding on the fiscal side of the hous https://theconservativetreehouse.com/blog/2023/03/12/the-parliamentary-motive-behind-the-j6-fedsurrection/ looks to me like the monetary side of the house needs to shut down the documents and train on the Ukraine-FTX money laundering trail. If JPM is causing a bank run on SVB, is it because they can not afford for the story on their US government bank depository involvement on the Ukraine and its relationship to funding the election steal to come out? Note Powell had to cancel his meetings in Switzerland.
          Note MS and GS both said contagion was unlikely – this would fit with it being a launder clean up operation like the FTX takedown. Will be interesting to get the real story on how the uninsured depositors got the Treasury and Fed to cover them – deal to keep them shut up? The dirt on this one goes all the way to the moon. I am wondering if the grabbed Signature to help fund their clean up – like Bear Stearns back in the day.

  6. I live in the UK and my energy bills have gone up by about 75% almost double it was in dec. Catherine is right about the UK being the worst hit!

  7. Imagine a World Without Smartphones reminded me of this passage from Carl Sagan’s 1995 book, the Demon-Haunted World: Science as a Candle in the Dark:

    I have a foreboding of an America in my children’s or grandchildren’s time – when the United States is a service and information economy; when nearly all the key manufacturing industries have slipped away to other countries; when awesome technological powers are in the hands of a very few, and no one representing the the public interest can even grasp the issues; when the people have lost the ability to set their own agendas or knowledgeably question those in authority; when, clutching our crystals and nervously consulting our horoscopes, our critical faculties in decline, unable to distinguish between what feels good and what’s true, we slide, almost without noticing, back into superstition and darkness. The dumbing down of America is most evident in the slow decay of substantive content in the enormously influential media, the 30-second sound bites (now down to 10 seconds or less), lowest common denominator programming, credulous presentations on pseudoscience and superstition, but especially a kind of celebration of ignorance. As I write, the number one video cassette rental in America is the movie Dumb and Dumber. Beavis and Butthead remains popular (and influential) with young TV viewers. The plain lesson is that study and learning – not just of science, but of anything – are avoidable, even undesirable.

    We’ve arranged a global civilization in which most crucial elements – transportation, communications, and all other industries; agriculture, medicine, education, entertainment, protecting the environment; and even the key democratic institution of voting – profoundly depend on science and technology. We have also arranged things so that almost no one understands science and technology. This is the prescription for disaster. We might get away with it for a while, but sooner or later this combustible mixture of ignorance and power is going to blow up in our faces.

    1. This battle has been ongoing for centuries. Cross-discipline teaching techniques, based on geometry, were revived by 1800 France’s precursor of modern-day MIT and will remain valuable in 2200.
      https://web.archive.org/web/20220506150152/http://r.schillerinstitute.org/educ/hist/1997/bourbons_pbeaudry.html

      It is as a result of the destruction of the Ecole Polytechnique’s national education system, that France lost its soul as a nation-state … From 1794 to 1814, the Ecole Polytechnique had become without any doubt the leading scientific institution in the world … The education program of the Ecole Polytechnique was based on universal principles which subsumed and linked together methods applicable to both Arts and Sciences. 

      Its principal mission was to give the new Republic, as efficiently and as rapidly as humanly possible, scientists, and engineers to serve in public works, as well as in the military. Also required were architects, manufacturers, artists, physicists, chemists, etc.; and the polytechnique method of descriptive geometry, instituted by Monge, served as the theoretical and practical epistemological basis for that purpose … 

      … the method of discovery was made accessible to every citizen, especially the poor and the orphans, in order to enlarge the pool of contributions that would be put at the service of the nation-state. Carnot made clear that this principle of education was not just for France, but for the whole world. “Elevate to the dignity of man every individual of the human species,” he wrote.

  8. The paid vacation day discussion was awesome. Why do we put up with it? Tavistock subliminal programming to be compliant, and morbid fear of termination by our employers with no job to go to and no savings to fall back on.

    Our unions got corrupted. Those that remain accomplish a fraction of what is needed. A visit to their websites and all you find is an uninformative limited hang out.

  9. This is a follow up to the A.G.’s information on the HB 1193.
    I called a local precinct chair for the on the ground information and later that night she forwarded me these links of the signed veto. This success was a very active and focused effort by the citizens of the state using the daily phone calls, emails and letters to the governor’s office.

    I also learned that there is a strong effort to collect petition signatures for allowing full term abortions in the state. As I understand this next issue it isn’t a bill as of yet but these out of state petition gathers are canvassing the state. There is a S.D. state law requiring petition gatherers to be state residents otherwise the signatures are void. However when residents ask and learn that these are non-resident paid petition gathers they have to call the police or sheriff who aren’t always able to respond quickly to confiscate the petitions. It seems higher crime has also been imported to the state along with Amazon warehouses and deliveries.

    https://news.sd.gov/news?id=news_kb_article_view&sys_id=1d1a38781b21a15031b1ebdbac4bcbbf

    file:///var/mobile/Library/SMS/Attachments/3f/15/0B433EC9-FE67-4B78-8A9F-C9A542C9D3EE/Image-1.heic

    1. Thanks. Her letter includes this procedural note:

      The UCC provides uniform model provisions for commercial and banking law. The Uniform Law Commission, which drafts the UCC, suggests changes and modernizations to the Code, which states then adopt as those states see fit.

      There are some who argue we must rush to adopt these provisions. To the contrary, the UCC’s first iteration took twenty years to be adopted by each state. There is no reason South Dakota must adopt the changes made by HB 1193 under this purported deadline.

      The uniform provisions may adjust as needed after other states experiment with this legislation.

        1. Thanks for posting Catherine. (Would have missed this, with no TV :)…….she hit a home run for sure. Will share far & wide!

  10. The fall of SVB Bank this week is case in point for John Titus’ most recent video…catch the last paragraph:
    “SVB’s institutional challenges reflect a larger and more widespread systemic issue: The banking industry is sitting on a ton of low-yielding assets that, thanks to the last year of rate increases, are now far underwater — and sinking,” wrote Konrad Alt, co-founder of Klaros Group.”… You nailed it JT!

    https://www.cnn.com/2023/03/10/investing/svb-bank/index.html

    1. Cathleen- About a year ago before the Fed stopped QE and addition of MBS to its balance sheet, et al, Dr. Alex Pollack made the same point about the Fed itself. It too does not have to “mark to market” (and banks were relieved of this requirement due to GFC in 2008). The “difference” between the regulator (Fed/OCC) and the regulated (banks, credit union) is that the latter has to adjust its balance sheet and shed low-rate debt in a rising rate market to remain profitable at the new cost of funds. Anyway, the Fed does NOT have to deal with its own quandary of being the modern day equivalent of late-80’s S & L’s that led to FIIREA & the RTC liquidation. They can carry the losses forward indefinitely? Let losers roll off at maturity decades away (or?).
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bbptwRjLat0&t=1353s

      1. Thanks for the video Scott and moreover for the clarification on the technicality which allows the Fed to propagate its own quandary.

    1. 10-minute comment led off by Republican Congressman Majority Whip Tom Emmer representing Minnesota’s 6th District. Joined Congress Jan 15, 2023. Member of House Financial Services Committee and serving on Digital Assets & Capitol Markets Subcommittees.

  11.  
    Thanks Catherine and John. The first penny dropping and previous reference to a Military Grade SyOps are consistent with my awaking into what the hell is going on?
     

    • We have Slavic people (Russian and Ukrainian) fighting each other in the Ukraine. What the hell is wrong with them?
    • Muslims fighting each other. I don’t care if they are Sunni and Shia, they are both Muslim. What the hell is wrong with you people?
    • The push for Mainland Chinese to fight Taiwan Chinese?
    • The push in the US for Blacks to fight Whites?
    • Hasn’t this been going on a long time? In the American Civil War, brother fought with brother.
    • North and South Korea fought each other.
    • North and South Vietnam fought each other.
    • In WWI, the Monarchs ruled the World and they ended up fighting with each other and destroying themselves. Is a picture developing?

     

    • Who else destroyed themselves? Let’s look at a short list;

     

    • Governments.
    • Politicians.
    • Media.
    • Corporations.
    • Educators.
    • Entertainers.
    • Churches.
    • Hollywood.
    • Sport Teams and Club Owners.
    • And the big surprise, Medical Professionals.

     

    • What about individuals destroying themselves? This can be accomplished with;

     

    • Purchasing. Buying stuff they don’t need with money they don’t have. Filling the garage with stuff and selling for pennies on the dollar.
    • Credit Cards.
    • Big Houses.
    • New Big Cars.
    • iphones.
    • Cable Internet Systems.
    • Pets, why not more children, they last longer than 20 years?
    • Food.
    • Drugs.
    • And the big one, poison injections.

     
    The list can be increased and more detail provided. How do they get people to do that? Break their knee caps, intimidation, threats, murder, control files, bags of money, lying (Attila the Hun didn’t lie; he thought it was a sign of weakness. Truly powerful people don’t need to lie.), and Military Grade SyOps, a powerful control tool, or just an accident??? 

      1. Catherine,
        Following up on my original thought, how do they implement takeovers? They have been very successful at putting the full force of their power and money on one government, one corporation, one company, one organization, or one individual at a time. These attacks are very difficult or even impossible for one entity to resist. However, if people stand united, the evil can be defeated. Remember they are weak and not that powerful, if they have to lie and deceive.
        I agree with Emanuel Pastreich (Imagine a world without smartphones) on iphones. I never had an iphone or smartphone. I have a flip phone that cost less than $100 to purchase and less than $30 per month for service. The reasons for not owning a smartphone are:

        •  The SyOps as per Emanuel Pastreich.
        • The cost.
        • Privacy of movements and purchases.
        • Free Time (a lot of free time) for more beneficial activities.

         Catherine thanks for what you do.

  12. 33:25) Do you think the naked shorts are driving down the prices so the Fed can buy the market?

  13. Hi Catherine and John,

    Since you referred in passing to the Steven Koonin Climate book “Unsettled – What climate science tells us, what it doesn’t, and why it matters”, here’s a quick review from my heavily marked-up tome. I read the book a couple of months ago, having seen it recommended by William Happer, (who produced some scientific papers / physics calculations showing that the warming effect of C02 was already virtually saturated. I.e. putting ten more layers of black paint on a house that’s already covered in 4 layers of black paint …) The book is certainly quite engaging and readable, and could well be useful to start to wake up certain types of person. However, I do have some issues with it.

    The first issue is that straight up, whilst spouting stuff about scientists having to be impartial, he repeatedly trumpets Democratic Party allegiances. Announcing experience as a former undersecretary on the front cover is all good, but already on page 6 he has a quote about doing right and fair things – in the context of how it was right to impeach Trump! This goes right through the book to his final sentence: “As President Biden exhorted in his inaugural speech, “We must reject the culture in which facts are manipulated, or even manufactured””. So, I assume this is not a book which can be recommended to anyone with Republican Party alignments, (and Covid19 deniers and even Hiroshima deniers will also have to turn a blind eye ;-)). Why would an author want to unnecessarily alienate half their potential audience? By the end of chapter 1, my guess was that this is not a tome wedded to honestly confronting all truths, and would be some sort of limited hangout. I made a quick checklist of anomalies in the “generally agreed climate science”, to see how many he would dare to touch upon.

    Despite my initial reservations, he certainly does make some strong points. e.g. “Anyone referring to a scientist with the pejoratives “denier” or “alarmist” is engaging in politics or propaganda. And using the term “climate change” without distinguishing between natural and human causes, signals a (perhaps deliberate) sloppiness in thinking”. (Well, that’s the UN + IPCC pretty much written off !!! Although he doesn’t then say that.) Similarly “An appeal to the alleged “97 percent consensus” among scientists is another red flag”. Perhaps the best quote he offers up is from H.L.Menecken’s 1918 book In Defence of Women: “The whole aim of practical politics is to keep the populace alarmed (and hence clamorous to be led to safety) by menacing it with and endless series of hobgoblins, most of them imaginary”. So, it seems that Koonin is a guy who “knows”, and assuming he’s not suffering cognitive dissonance, it’s just a question of how much he’s going to tell us.

    On the “hard science” side of things he elucidates many technical terms, which is really useful for someone getting into the subject. He debunks sea-level scares, shows that rainfall, floods, fires droughts are NOT indicators of climate catastrophe, shows that CO2 levels were vastly higher in the past, etc. John will be glad to know he explicitly takes down one of Mark Carney’s utterances. He also addresses in some detail the abject failure of climate models, and the fact that the UN have defined climate change as being that change “which is attributed directly or indirectly to human activity…”, (so from the outset one should be suspicious, since the sun is ignored) Best of all, he does actually talk about equilibrium climate sensitivity. To quote: “In other words, the researchers tuned their model to make its sensitivity to greenhouse gasses what they thought it should be. Talk about cooking the books.” 

    What I don’t think he addresses is the how the IPCC was set up (to fail), how its reports are actually compiled and massaged. Perhaps the fundamental flaw with the whole book is that it doesn’t mention that fundamental (temperature) data has been tampered with (which was exposed in the “climate gate” scandal). Is this the climate equivalent of “look-out, there’s a deadly virus about”? i.e. Control of the official, approved temperature record is the key to controlling the narrative in the future. More honest sources would seem to be James Corbett and/or Tony Heller, (although I’d be happy to know if there are problems with these). By halfway through the book, I was guessing that Koonin has been sent out in front of the pack to control the narrative, because the fundamental story (CO2 bad, humans must stop breathing) is gradually falling to pieces.

    Despite my gripes, by chapter 4, Koonin’s done a pretty good job of exploding the alarmist narrative, but then he segues to talking about how we could meet COP climate targets!

    Towards the end of the book, he writes: “… I’ve been dismayed … first by the willingness of some climate scientists – abetted by the media and politicians – to misrepresent what the science says, and then by the many other scientist who are silent complicit in their misrepresentations. The public deserves better. By demonstrably misinforming non-experts about what we know and don’t know about the changing climate, they deny government, industry and individuals the right to make fully informed decisions about how to respond”.

    So, yeah, he sort of addresses the problems, but damn those pesky scientists for tricking the poor government people. Echos of Desmet/Malone?

    Hope this is useful, Nick

  14. A few short notes on misstatements in the last two AC about Goldbacks. Goldbacks are considered coins, thought they are shaped as bills. They are not documents. There is no way to digitize them.

    They contain actual easily-recoverable gold. The 50 Goldback contains 1/20th oz of gold, and each lower denomination contains gold in proportion to that, so the 1 Goldback is 1/1000 oz of gold. I don’t know of any other gold-containing medium of exchange that has very small quantities of gold in reliable measures. goldback.com

    1. Kevin – I have also wondered about the possible “recovery” of the gold in the goldbacks. I’ve looked at them, they are beautiful and sturdy, very creative idea but ultimately I have to agree that there usefulness is limited if the gold could never be recovered. Has that question been addressed?

      1. The recovery process is mentioned on the manufacturer’s website: https://valaurum.com/aurum-homepage/aurum-recovery/
        However, if you have Goldbacks and just want the gold, you would not want to recover it from these small-quantity items by destroying them. Rather you would sell them into the ready market (getting a good premium) and buy a larger piece with a low premium. For example, if you want an oz of pure 24k gold, you would not buy 20 1/20 oz Maple Leafs and melt them, but rather a 1 oz Maple Leaf or Buffalo.
        Because the fractional amount of gold in these is minimal compared to other coins, the premium per oz is quite high (just like it’s high on other 1/20 oz items, for example).

    2. Having looked at one, I just don’t see how it will be practical to maintain a recoverable amount. So I am a skeptic.

  15. Let me say that I thoroughly and categorically disagree with a judicial principle that debtors of student loans have been fraudulently induced to take the loans. The banks lent the money, the students consumed it, and the institutions of colleges and universities benefited from it. It is not the public responsibility for caveat emptor. Furthermore, for people who play by the rules, like me, the students either achieved scholarships due to merit, or they were funded by their sugar daddy, either way, they have no student debt. How can you possibly give money back to those who borrowed for fancy diplomae while punishing those by comparison who funded their own educations?

    All those big university endowments should be disbursed to students making valid claims of having been defrauded. If instead, forgiveness is enacted, two things ensue: lawyers get rich, fraudulent left-wing education stays rich, and taxpayers get hosed.

    1. I wish you were right John. However, we are going to have to disagree on this. Until the financial crisis, the students and their parents believed that the education would buy much more income – based on history. They did not see what was coming and the leadership of media and the financial system actively suppressed it. If you look at the origination process for a young person, it was not the financial equivalent of informed consent. Failure to disclose, changes in the law not clearlyl disclosed, material omissions, and on and on. If you did not wisen up by 2010, I am with you. You are failing to take responsibility.

      1. I just don’t see the abdication of due diligence responsibility by parents and students as being my expense.

        I think what we have here is prodigal sons wanting birthrights restored, which can be done, but they shouldn’t get a double dip of loan forgiveness and then social security. You take the one and forego the other. In fact, this might be a way to balance the books of Social Security.

        1. I will not argue against personal responsibility. It is the only way out.

  16. Technological suggestion: since WWIII includes constant attacks on the US internet, perhaps saving videos at a lower quality would improve their ability to be received on an uninterrupted basis. There really isn’t much activity going on in interviews that can’t be absorbed fully at lower resolution.

  17. My son bought what he thought was bulk sausage in Poland. He can’t read their language. When he cooked it it was quite gray and fell apart like grit. That’s also what it tasted like. It was inedible – insects.

  18. Michael Shuman’s information and workshops are very good. It is a boots on the ground approach to reclaiming financial and investment control in neighborhoods and communities. There are many small communities in the heartland using this information to invest locally and bring like-minded people together. In my humble opinion, this is one powerful way to rebuild America the Beautiful.

    Thank you for shining a light on his work!

  19. It seems to me that making energy cheaper via Russian oil sold to India and China, and more expensive in EU/USA is deflationary in two ways. First, tt makes production of “stuff” cheaper, and also helps to make the shift of production capacities from China to India and other countries cheaper. Second, higher energy costs dampen demand from consumers, keeping people from buying too much and driving up prices. Inevitably demand for products will be eaten up by higher livong costs.So allowing this trade to go on is necessary.

    Although the sanctions may not have affected the oil trade, exchange rate or macro indicators in a disasterous way, I imagine the sanctions are devastating for average people and businesses in Russia not affiliated with the energy sector.

  20. I’m an unvaccinated RN. I have not been able to find steady work in over a year, and so I apply and interview quite a lot. And my role is administrative- I’m not at the bedside. I usually work remotely from home. But the vaccination question still comes up during job interviews- every single one of them. Large health systems don’t even want to talk to the unvaccinated. The only way I’ve been able to keep working is through small, subcontractor employers. The vaccine mandates are career destroyers for some – nurses, doctors, maybe teachers too. I’m thinking that those who profited off these mandates, such as Bill Gates, owe us back the cost of our education in these professions. We didn’t know, when we and our parents worked so hard to pay for this education, that the vaccines mandates were coming. We paid for my education. I really think that anyone who got destroyed by the vaccine con ought to be made whole by those who profited (not by the taxpayer). My parents are gone, but when I remember how hard they worked to support me through nursing school, how hard I worked at two jobs and full time in school, I get really angry watching Biden, Gates, CDC and pharma reps touting these vaccines to their own profit- everyone else be damned

    1. Hey- I totally get where you’re coming from as I was fired from my position at MGH for the vaccine mandates. I was already working per diem at another job which allowed a religious exemption, however I do not believe HR extends the same kindness to new hires.

      In hindsight, I wish I would have chosen a different career too, like engineering, which is less subject to the whims of the government. I had no idea bodily autonomy would be terminated by my employer.

      If it gets much worse, it might be worthwhile to invest in a quality replica vaccine card.

      Morals aside – I do know of one guy who hired a homeless man to get the shots and boosters under his name as they do not check licenses at most of the clinics, nor would they bother to ask a homeless man. Once things go digital it will be much harder to get away with anything.

      1. Grace- Well I never thought of that one, of hiring someone to go in my place! What I’m getting now, in job interviews is “you can apply for exemption”. I ask, “before or after I’m hired?”. Things get really chilly when I ask that. There’s a lot of problems with the apply for exemption after hire. What if they don’t grant the exemption? Not only has a person left a prior job to take the new one, I also cannot get any answers on what the unemployment compensation office does to to people let go for vaccination refusal with exemption denied. I’m thinking UC looks at this as fired for cause, UC denied. Anyway, since I work remotely, these vaccination issues aren’t about protecting anyone, and they can’t pretend that they are. Its a screening tool for blind obedience, and willingness to pretend the Nuremberg code never existed (or never knew about it in the first place). That they still do this to health care people signals me that, just because Biill Gates sold his Pfizer shares, doesn’t mean they’re done. I think Covid was just a rehearsal.

    2. check with some of the doctor groups, or attend their conferences and find like minded souls. We need you in healthcare and to build a parallel and better medical system. Stay strong & healthy while you network to find your dream job.

      1. I think back a lot, to being 17-18 years old when I started out as a nurse’s aide in a local nursing home. Then many years as a home visiting nurse in West Philadelphia. We really took care of people back then. When my dad was at the end of his life I sure did wish we could find just an old time sort of nurse to come and help him out because he hated hospitals so much. I couldn’t do it 24/7. Good home nurses working alongside a doctor can do a lot to keep people out of hospitals, emergency rooms, nursing homes and office waiting rooms that they hate so much. Couldn’t find anything like that. Visiting nursing is all about data collection now, and doing as little as possible. The visiting nurse agencies get a lump sum payment from Medicare for a sixty day episode so that it becomes profitable for the home care agencies to have the nurse do very few visits, and provide very few services to the profit of the agency. Grab the data, get out and cash in. Anyway, I’m getting the idea, watching what my own and other families are going through with the sad state of hospitals and nursing homes, that there’s a real need for cost effective home private duty nursing care and I’m thinking a lot about making the change and returning to nursing roots. Its just that with a mortgage payment due each month and tuition payments for the kids its rough to make the leap into uncertain income when I’ve been salaried employee so long

    3. You might want to check out Red Balloon if you haven’t already. It’s a freedom focused job platform that is growing fast. Children’s Health Defense has moved all their job listings to that platform recently.

  21. Hi Catherine,
    FYI, Professor Zharkova’s modelling of solar activity forecast a Grand Solar Minimum beginning 2028 and lasting until 2042. The dates are a bit hazy, because the taper into GSM begins around 2020. Part of the forecast is colder spring weather with delays to crop planting, and reduced yields.
    Yesterday my local supermarket had a notice apologising for problems with the supply of bell peppers because of cold weather in Spain.

    1. Indeed. Not afraid to stand up in front of an audience and say “well, we’ll know relatively soon if I’m right or wrong”. Could well be why there is so much push to “reduce CO2 emissions” now, so when the planet turns colder they can point to that being that being the cause, and not the fact that Prof. Zharkova knew where the dimmer switch was.

      1. Next time you are putting petrol into your car, run these numbers through your head (just rough calculations). To fill 50 Litres, pay, and drive off takes around 5 minutes. That is 600 litres per hour per pump. Each litre is close to 10KWh, hence 6 MWh delivered by each pump at peak times.
        660MW is a common size for a large, steam driven, electrical generating set.
        My local politicians have signed up to the climate emergency. Presumably they want to replace those petrol cars with Teslas, and do away with a number of petrol filling stations. How many? To some extent, that’s a different question, but on a like for like basis, that would be 110 pumps replaced by one 660MW set in a new power station!
        If there are plans for new power stations, I must have missed that news. And, it takes ~100,000 miles to get to breakeven for an EV and that’s after they have been on the road for quite a while.
        Just sayin’

  22. Hi:

    What was the book reference to the Federal Reserve, Income tax and Drugs?

    Thanks

  23. hI Cate, I just viewed your exchange with Viviane Fischer and Wolgang Wodarg of the Corona Investigative Committee. Good stuff. I am beginning to understand the depth of shit that we’re in: deep!

    Any insight into the schism that developed between them and Reiner Fuellmich?

  24. Catherine, news from Alberta.

    The federal government has quietly begun the creation of Personal Information Banks (PIB) to collect and store data on Canadians. Categories of information include biometrics (DNA, blood type, eye/facial scan, fingerprints, etc), personal biography, medical history, financial history, credit information, etc…

    The Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) has added it to their Privacy Terms so that in order to submit an application for benefits you must click that you agree to terms including “…being described in Personal Information Bank (under development)” in order to submit your application. It is also a term in the Canada Pension Plan (CPP) application and will likely will be a term of condition for submitting your income tax return.

    In other words, Premiers Moe and Smith will agree to digital IDs while deceiving the public.

    1. Hi Elisabeth, thanks for posting this. Do you know where I would find the details from the CRA? Was looking around on the website and didn’t see it.

    2. You can just mail in your form for benefits, you do not have to do online. The website states that it will take 4 months by paper to get approved…but you can backdate your request date to start. I sent in my CPP by paper and it was approved in 5 days. I did not see any of the PIB stuff posted that you refer to so it must of came in after November 2022. I was going to apply online through Service Canada and authentication was done in the past using my banking information…that changed in November. It goes to your bank but there is a new agreement that you must agree to with Interac and it basically says you have to agree to anything they want to do in the future. Then I learned that Interac signed an agreement with the federal in October 2022 to be the purveyors of digital ID in Canada.
      https://www.interac.ca/en/content/news/interac-acquires-securekey-digital-id-services-for-canada-five-things-you-need-to-know/
      more scary stuff with Interac:
      https://www.interac.ca/en/content/ideas/collaborating-with-interac-get-to-know-the-innovation-partnerships-team/

  25. Question: The train derailments in Ohio. Could it be related to the fact that Cleveland is slated as the first Smart City in the States?

    1. Or is it Columbus that won the Smart City Competition back in 2016? Also have seen Lima, Ohio slated as a smart city?

    2. After having lived through Hurricane Katrina and witnessing first hand the aftermath of it which included a huge and hotly contested eminent domain land grab, my vote is that this is likely a land grab a la Agenda 21 aka Agenda 2030. I hope I’m wrong.

      1. stacked-function: land-grab + decimation of food chain (farmland, meat processing factories, heirloom seed growers) + implementation of digital ID / health tracking / mandatory (future) mRNA vaccination for chemical poisoning.

  26. South Dakota HB 1193, will end up on Gov. Noem’s desk soon. Will she veto? There is contention regarding the fact that it will eliminate the use of Bitcoin et all, but not CBDC’s! So, it looks very suspicious…and many people are getting riled up about it. Noem has indicated she’s getting lots of pressure from the left.
    https://cointelegraph.com/news/proposed-south-dakota-amendment-to-ucc-would-prohibit-cryptocurrencies-but-not-cbdc
    BTW – South Dakota Bankers Association is supporting this bill….

      1. Guess what Catherine? Good news…..Noem vetoed 1193, yesterday March 9th. (Will post the article in Subs. Input.)

    1. And “foreign governments” would include El Salvador, at least for now.
      And how are these “controllable electronic records” any different from, say, bank accounts, or even title deeds held in an electronic database?

      1. According to the revised UCC, they are based on possession of the private key. It appears that even in the case of theft of the private key, possession of the key means control of the electronic record. Unclear what happens when two parties have the private key, i.e. original owner + thief.

    2. please don’t refer to people as from the left or right. this segregation has never made any sense to me, and during the recent 2 or 3 years has become even more pointless.

  27. CDC Gets Put on Notice With a Grand Jury Request for Criminal Data Fraud

    I haven’t heard of this before and it is interesting in terms of grand Push Back in US: https://www.beyondthecon.com/

    Here is the interview I listened to: https://www.redvoicemedia.com/video/2022/09/cdc-gets-put-on-notice-with-a-grand-jury-request-for-criminal-data-fraud-video/ref/8/

    It shows up the US Constitution quite well about which I thought Jon Rappoport will be happy and I wondered what John Titus’s reaction is to their efforts.

  28. 1922 Revision of the International Sanitary Convention of 1912
    Do you see anything interesting in this 100-yr-old article?

    Sasha Latypova

    Mar 3

    This post is related to my previous post on the topic of “pandemics”:

    International sanitary conventions started in 1851. pdf available at link

    There were 14 of these conventions every few years, attended by representatives of several countries. The purpose of these conventions was to negotiate rules and procedures for prevention of spread of these illnesses via shipping and trade. For this reason what is currently called “infectious diseases” subject to these conventions (like plague, cholera, typhus, yellow fever, etc.) were called “conventional diseases”. They were not referred to as infectious diseases at the time, and at least one source that I have – a book published on this topic by the Russian (Soviet Union) Academy of Science in 1970 stated that there was no known mechanism of cholera transmission at the time.

    The International Sanitary Conventions were the predecessor to the WHO which was founded in 1948.

    Here is the article describing the proceedings of the 1922 Convention published by the British Medical Journal on July 8, 1922. Please post your observations in comments.

    https://sashalatypova.substack.com/p/1922-revision-of-the-international

    In an interview Dr. Cowan did of Howdie Mikowski he reffered to the medical cons that originated in the mid 19th century. That would be the germ theory etc.
    It seems the real push was prior to 1913. We all know what happened then.

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