Anonymous ID: 0ce391 Jan. 22, 2021, 4:16 p.m. No.12674572   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4636

>>12674524

OWS got comped and rolled over by Soros and Crew. They were not able to steer it towards where we are today no matter how hard they tried. So they took a timeout and got a little practice in Europe. Otpor

Anonymous ID: 0ce391 Jan. 22, 2021, 4:27 p.m. No.12674726   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4778

>>12674636

I was at Portland back then. Less so because of the actual movement and more so over the cops kicking their ass when the red laces showed up. I was about a year out of the Mil and even though I was not ideologically matched with them, other then smashing the fed, I thought it was fucked up they were getting sabotaged. So I went down mask in hand to start dealing with red laces since the cops ignored them. Surprisingly I was not the only vet down there and most I ran into came for the same reason. I find it interesting that you mention Eugene because that is where the red laces hang out and they are for real hard right not this faggot pol shit.

Anonymous ID: 0ce391 Jan. 22, 2021, 4:35 p.m. No.12674820   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>12674778

Weird is an understatement, go to Oregon Country Fair sometime. In my teens almost got caught up in the Rainbow family bs, but I always had a feeling those nigga were not who they said they were.

Anonymous ID: 0ce391 Jan. 22, 2021, 4:45 p.m. No.12674968   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>12674899

The Vampire Squid Strikes Again: The Mega Banks’ Most Devious Scam Yet

Yes this is old but this is what the one anon is talking about

Call it the loophole that destroyed the world. It’s 1999, the tail end of the Clinton years. While the rest of America obsesses over Monica Lewinsky, Columbine and Mark McGwire’s biceps, Congress is feverishly crafting what could yet prove to be one of the most transformative laws in the history of our economy – a law that would make possible a broader concentration of financial and industrial power than we’ve seen in more than a century.

But the crazy thing is, nobody at the time quite knew it. Most observers on the Hill thought the Financial Services Modernization Act of 1999 – also known as the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act – was just the latest and boldest in a long line of deregulatory handouts to Wall Street that had begun in the Reagan years.

 

Wall Street had spent much of that era arguing that America’s banks needed to become bigger and badder, in order to compete globally with the German and Japanese-style financial giants, which were supposedly about to swallow up all the world’s banking business. So through legislative lackeys like red-faced Republican deregulatory enthusiast Phil Gramm, bank lobbyists were pushing a new law designed to wipe out 60-plus years of bedrock financial regulation. The key was repealing – or “modifying,” as bill proponents put it – the famed Glass-Steagall Act separating bankers and brokers, which had been passed in 1933 to prevent conflicts of interest within the finance sector that had led to the Great Depression. Now, commercial banks would be allowed to merge with investment banks and insurance companies, creating financial megafirms potentially far more powerful than had ever existed in America.

 

>https://www.rollingstone.com/politics/politics-news/the-vampire-squid-strikes-again-the-mega-banks-most-devious-scam-yet-101182/