Jack Posobiec (T.me) https://www.thedailybeast.com/ron-desantis-spokesman-jeremy-redfern-used-to-love-vaccines-and-anthony-fauci
😂🤣😂
https://t.me/Jack_Posobiec/30947
Jack Posobiec (T.me) Who is Iranian billionaire Pierre Omidyar and why is he bankrolling the ADL-led coalition to censor X?
https://rumble.com/v3fdyqo-human-events-with-jack-posobiec-ep.-555.html
https://t.me/Jack_Posobiec/30948
CIG Counter Intellegence (T.me) What Is Dollarization, and Why Is Argentina Considering It?
Argentina has a long history of printing money to compensate for government overspending. That’s produced long periods of high inflation, even hyper-inflation. Small wonder, then, that the South American nation is once again considering the radical step known as dollarization, which to date has been fully tried only by much smaller economies.
Zimbabwe shifted to the dollar in 2009, after the local currency collapsed and a bout of hyperinflation decimated savings, then reintroduced the Zimbabwean dollar in 2019, to mixed success.
Why is dollarization a topic in Argentina?
It’s been proposed by Javier Milei, a libertarian economist and flamboyant populist who has emerged as the leading candidate in Argentina’s presidential campaign. (The first-round vote is Oct. 22.) Dollarization is one of his campaign pledges aimed at putting a lid on inflation that’s running at more than 110% a year. “The peso melts like ice in the Sahara Desert,” Milei often says of the currency’s rapid depreciation. Argentina pegged the peso to the dollar in the early 1990s as a weapon against inflation, and President Carlos Menem announced his intent to fully dollarize in 1999. But the dollar peg lost support during a deep recession, and President Eduardo Duhalde severed the 1:1 link in early 2002.
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2023-09-06/argentina-considers-dollarization-here-s-what-that-means
https://t.me/CIG_telegram/35215
CIG Counter Intellegence (T.me) Some things are, unfortunately, very replicable.
The Floyd effect—a massive increase in murder and gun violence that accompanied the depolicing that followed George Floyd's death—is one such example.
If you've been paying attention, then by this point you've probably seen several replications of it. Well, another one just came out.
This one used weekly data from Minneapolis, Minnesota, the city where George Floyd died. Their first finding was that weekly firearm assault injuries spiked immediately, without any delay":
🔽 Continued
📎 Crémieux
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S1877584523000394
https://t.me/CIG_telegram/35216?single