Anonymous ID: d75699 Feb. 14, 2023, 2:02 a.m. No.18344335   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>4342

>>18344328

I am not spinning anything one post fag.

I am questioning the validity of this image.

It seems to me it is the same image as turkey. Re used to create more panic in Argentina. Prove me wrong I dont give a fuck if you googled what a cloud does. That is not my arguement.

Anonymous ID: d75699 Feb. 14, 2023, 2:19 a.m. No.18344365   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>4373 >>4549 >>4648 >>4705 >>4842

>>18344356

Perhaps

Argentina and Brazil recently floated the idea of creating a new currency for trade.

The idea was met with skeptism from many economists.

The currency, officials said, could help boost trade and reduce reliance on the US dollar.

 

Last month, the leaders of Argentina and Brazil announced plans to discuss the introduction of a new common currency for trading in South America—a move that could advance economic integration in the region and the potential creation of the world’s second-largest currency bloc.

 

In a jointly penned article published in Perfil, an Argentine newspaper, Argentine President Alberto Fernández and Brazilian President Luiz Inacio “Lula” da Silva stated they have “decided to advance discussions on a common South American currency that can be used for both financial and trade flows, reducing operating costs and our external vulnerability.”

 

The announcement, however, was met with skepticism by economists, with many arguing that the economies and currencies of Argentina and Brazil are far too disparate for such integration.

 

“The two economies share almost none of the requirements for a currency bloc to work, making the 'sur' not only irrelevant but also unfeasible,” Oxford Economics, a global economics advisory firm, stated in a research briefing that refers to the floated name for the potential common currency, the "sur."

 

Meanwhile, Olivier Blanchard, the former chief economist of the International Monetary Fund, tweeted in response to news of the talks, “This is insane.” Harvard professor and former US Treasury Secretary Larry Summers also took to Twitter to question the idea.

 

https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2023/02/economists-dismissed-common-currency-south-america-brazil-argentina/

Anonymous ID: d75699 Feb. 14, 2023, 2:39 a.m. No.18344414   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>4419 >>4551

>>18344407

Sept. 4, 2016

Dr. Eliav Barr and Paul Matthew Koulogeorge are to be married Sept. 4 at the Calistoga Ranch in Calistoga, Calif., by Dr. Brian Keith, a friend of the couple who was ordained by the American Marriage Ministries to officiate.

 

Dr. Barr (left), 52, works in Upper Gwynedd, Pa., for Merck. He is the vice president for the infectious-diseases global clinical development division. From 1998 to 2008, he led the company’s clinical research program for Gardasil, a vaccine for the human papilloma virus. He graduated with highest distinction from Penn State and earned his medical degree, summa cum laude, from Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia. He is the son of Miriam Barr and Dr. Isaac Barr of Bloomfield Hills, Mich.

 

Mr. Koulogeorge, 49, works in King of Prussia, Pa., as the vice president for marketing, advertising and public relations for the Goddard Schools, a national chain of early-childhood development centers. He graduated cum laude from Washington University in St. Louis, and received a M.B.A. from Northwestern. He is a son of Mary T. Koulogeorge of Northbrook, Ill., and the late James A. Koulogeorge.

 

The couple met in 1994, in what they described as “preinternet era” Chicago, after Mr. Koulogeorge answered Dr. Barr’s ad in The Chicago Reader, a weekly newspaper, for a man with whom to “settle down and enjoy the world.”

 

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