Anonymous ID: c84d1f June 1, 2021, 12:24 a.m. No.13804961   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4967 >>4970 >>4982 >>4999 >>5008 >>5018

Our beliefs is what's keeping these "supernatural forces" alive

 

They aren't any more or less real than we are. Everything is just consciousness interacting with itself.

 

Imagine the consequences it's had on society for many people believing that a god or savior is going to take care of everything in the end instead of taking bigger problems of the world more seriously.

 

The recent rise of popularity in talking about Gnosticism being the oldest religion and that they believed god is evil. Or believing there are demonic evil forces working against us, and that our "governments" have the same intentions as them.

 

The government and mainstream news is talking about fucking aliens possibly being real now. How much more obvious can they make it. but that's exactly what they need, to make it obvious, because they need us to manifest the narrative for them.

 

Stop putting your own power and fate in the hands of something that's outside of you. There is nothing more powerful than us with good or bad intentions towards humanity unless you want to believe there is.

 

Old religions, false belief structures that don't serve us, all these bullshit narratives being played now demons, UFOs, pedo elites, seeing conspiracy everywhere, we need to stop paying attention to what isn't helping us.

Anonymous ID: c84d1f June 1, 2021, 12:54 a.m. No.13805042   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5047 >>5279

QUESTION

 

The debt costs of many companies are rising and the number of zombie companies is rising.

 

What happens if the capital markets dry up and do not allow refinancing or debt repayment? How do they roll it over or even afford interest costs?

Anonymous ID: c84d1f June 1, 2021, 1:08 a.m. No.13805081   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5088 >>5238 >>5279

>>13805047

 

US 'Zombie Companies' Are Now $2.6 Trillion in Debt. What Does That Mean for Investors?

 

So-called zombie companies, firms that are in debt to the point of needing bailouts to survive, have been rising steadily in number since the '90s – steadily that is until coronavirus pandemic-induced lockdowns took place. Those events caused the number of zombies to skyrocket, creating more than 600 zombie corporations (out of 3,000 large companies) with $2.6 trillion in debt. These firms are just limping along, harming the American economy as they go.

 

What keeps these zombies (semi) alive?

In two words: The Fed. Without the Federal Reserve purchasing corporate bonds and allowing these failing companies access to credit, these faltering firms would likely have failed. The Fed, by keeping unproductive and ailing corporations alive and not allowing a natural death to take place, has created a dangerous and gruesome mess – one so pervasive that U.S. economic growth could be delayed for years.

 

Zombie companies, you see, aren't earning the capital needed to invest in and build their businesses, which helps the country; rather they're a huge drain on America. Note that the United States has fostered zombie companies for the past decade, but the pandemic and the lockdowns greatly worsened the problem.

 

Which companies are we talking about?

More than 600 U.S. companies are zombies, defined as not making enough money to pay the interest on the debt they've accumulated. You've heard of all of them: Macy's, the four major airlines (Delta, United, American, and Southwest), Carnival, Exxon Mobil, and Marriott International, to name a few.

 

https://www.fool.com/millionacres/real-estate-investing/articles/us-zombie-companies-are-now-26-trillion-in-debt-what-does-that-mean-for-investors/

 

=How many Trillions did just Biden signed?==