Anonymous ID: fa6674 Nov. 19, 2023, 3:19 p.m. No.19944889   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5160 >>5191

>>19944240 lb

TWY16 N711SW Global 7000 landed at PBI about an hour ago from McAllen,TX depart

 

>>19944299 pb

>Also the 757 mebby getting some maintenance done because of where it’s parked currently.

The 757 was still moving at 9kts towards maintenance facility on Nov 8th so that why the smaller ACs used recently

Anonymous ID: fa6674 Nov. 19, 2023, 3:46 p.m. No.19945027   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5034

>>19944881

It wouldn’t have made a difference imo

Sad to have to say that but none of them get to that point w/o being controlled.

Argentina already signed the IMF bailout so even if he won he’d have to be able to remove them from that.

They were one of the richest and most prosperous countries in the world at one point (all the Zionist Nazi money certainly helped-set up by Martin Bormann cap 1but couldn’t control themselves, fiscally speaking, so if ever there was a country that is unfixable from a monetary standpoint it is Argentina.

 

Argentina’s history with default

1930

The Great Depression hit Argentina especially hard, as demand in Europe and United States for its farm exports suddenly dried up. As customs revenues plunged, the government had trouble paying public workers, causing unrest to grow. Fed up with the crisis, the military staged a coup in 1930 against democratically elected President Hipolito Yrigoyen, setting a precedent for throwing out governments in times of economic trouble.

1955

President Juan Peron, cap 2 a populist who drew his support from Argentina's poor and working class, oversaw a period of relative prosperity following World War Two. Factory workers received paid vacations and unions gained unprecedented power as the economy grew at an annual pace of nearly 6 percent. However, by the early 1950s, the good times came to an end as commodity prices fell once again. Peron's nationalizations of British-owned railroads and other property antagonized business leaders and caused investment to dry up. Inflation soared to 40 percent, and real wages plunged. The death in 1952 of Peron's wildly popular first lady, Eva, known as "Evita," weakened him further.

1976

Argentina's economy failed to stabilize under a succession of military and democratic governments that implemented wildly different policies. Between 1930 and 1983, presidents averaged only two years in office, while the lead minister for economic affairs was replaced at a pace of once a year. By the 1970s, many Argentines with warm memories of postwar prosperity were clamoring for the military to allow Peron to return home. The generals relented, and Peron assumed the presidency once again. But he was unable to heal either the economy or the increasingly violent fissures in Argentine society, and Peron died of heart failure just a year later. Various armed factions struggled for control under Peron's successor: his third wife, a former nightclub dancer he had met in Panama. In early 1976, as annual inflation surpassed 600 percent, the generals staged yet another coup. Ensuing years would see rising inequality and an explosion in Argentina's foreign debt, as well as the deaths of up to 30,000 suspected leftists as the military tried to snuff out dissent in the so-called "Dirty War." In 1982, the military launched an invasion of the Falkland Islands.

 

1989

“Democracy” returned to Argentina in 1983 - this time to stay. With the armed forces disgraced by widespread human rights abuses, the loss of the Falklands War and poor economic management, a vast majority of Argentines deemed the armed forces unfit for power, an opinion that still prevails today. However, that did not mean stability. Under President Raul Alfonsin, public payrolls swelled while government revenues remained stagnant. In 1989, only 30,000 out of 30 million Argentines paid any income taxes.That year, inflation reached an unprecedented 5,000 percentrising so fast that some supermarkets read prices out over intercoms rather than bothering to update price tags. As strikes swept the country and rioters looted supermarkets for food, Alfonsin decided to hand over power five months early to his elected successor, Carlos Menem.

 

2001

Menem spent the 1990s cultivating foreign investment, slashing import tariffs, and privatizing money-losing state enterprises. Inflation fell to single digits, and Argentina was for a time hailed as a poster child for free-market reforms by the International Monetary Fund By the time Menem left office in 1999, however, rampant corruption was scaring off many investors. Contagion from financial crises in East Asia and Russia caused capital to rush out of Argentina almost as quickly as it had come in.The currency peg that Menem used to tame inflation became untenable as the government, unable to print money, borrowed it instead.. In 2001, unemployment soared beyond 20 percent, and reports surfaced of widespread hunger and malnutrition in a country that had long prided itself as being one of the world's breadbaskets. When another wave of riots and looting reached the capital, Menem's successor, Fernando de la Rua, resigned. The government also stopped payment on more than $100 billion in debt, the world's biggest-ever sovereign default

Moar

https://www.businessinsider.com/a-timeline-of-argentinas-sordid-history-with-default-2014-7?op=1

Anonymous ID: fa6674 Nov. 19, 2023, 3:50 p.m. No.19945038   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>19944881

It wouldn’t have made a difference imo

Sad to have to say that but none of them get to that point w/o being controlled.

Argentina already signed the IMF bailout so even if he won he’d have to be able to remove them from that.

They were one of the richest and most prosperous countries in the world at one point (all the Zionist Nazi money certainly helped-set up by Martin Bormann cap 1but couldn’t control themselves, fiscally speaking, so if ever there was a country that is unfixable from a monetary standpoint it is Argentina.

 

Argentina’s history with default

1930

The Great Depression hit Argentina especially hard, as demand in Europe and United States for its farm exports suddenly dried up. As customs revenues plunged, the government had trouble paying public workers, causing unrest to grow. Fed up with the crisis, the military staged a coup in 1930 against democratically elected President Hipolito Yrigoyen, setting a precedent for throwing out governments in times of economic trouble.

1955

President Juan Peron, cap 2 a populist who drew his support from Argentina's poor and working class, oversaw a period of relative prosperity following World War Two. Factory workers received paid vacations and unions gained unprecedented power as the economy grew at an annual pace of nearly 6 percent. However, by the early 1950s, the good times came to an end as commodity prices fell once again. Peron's nationalizations of British-owned railroads and other property antagonized business leaders and caused investment to dry up. Inflation soared to 40 percent, and real wages plunged. The death in 1952 of Peron's wildly popular first lady, Eva, known as "Evita," weakened him further.

1976

Argentina's economy failed to stabilize under a succession of military and democratic governments that implemented wildly different policies. Between 1930 and 1983, presidents averaged only two years in office, while the lead minister for economic affairs was replaced at a pace of once a year. By the 1970s, many Argentines with warm memories of postwar prosperity were clamoring for the military to allow Peron to return home. The generals relented, and Peron assumed the presidency once again. But he was unable to heal either the economy or the increasingly violent fissures in Argentine society, and Peron died of heart failure just a year later. Various armed factions struggled for control under Peron's successor: his third wife, a former nightclub dancer he had met in Panama. In early 1976, as annual inflation surpassed 600 percent, the generals staged yet another coup. Ensuing years would see rising inequality and an explosion in Argentina's foreign debt, as well as the deaths of up to 30,000 suspected leftists as the military tried to snuff out dissent in the so-called "Dirty War." In 1982, the military launched an invasion of the Falkland Islands.

 

1989

“Democracy” returned to Argentina in 1983 - this time to stay. With the armed forces disgraced by widespread human rights abuses, the loss of the Falklands War and poor economic management, a vast majority of Argentines deemed the armed forces unfit for power, an opinion that still prevails today. However, that did not mean stability. Under President Raul Alfonsin, public payrolls swelled while government revenues remained stagnant. In 1989, only 30,000 out of 30 million Argentines paid any income taxes.That year, inflation reached an unprecedented 5,000 percentrising so fast that some supermarkets read prices out over intercoms rather than bothering to update price tags. As strikes swept the country and rioters looted supermarkets for food, Alfonsin decided to hand over power five months early to his elected successor, Carlos Menem.

 

2001

Menem spent the 1990s cultivating foreign investment, slashing import tariffs, and privatizing money-losing state enterprises. Inflation fell to single digits, and Argentina was for a time hailed as a poster child for free-market reforms by the International Monetary Fund By the time Menem left office in 1999, however, rampant corruption was scaring off many investors. Contagion from financial crises in East Asia and Russia caused capital to rush out of Argentina almost as quickly as it had come in.The currency peg that Menem used to tame inflation became untenable as the government, unable to print money, borrowed it instead.. In 2001, unemployment soared beyond 20 percent, and reports surfaced of widespread hunger and malnutrition in a country that had long prided itself as being one of the world's breadbaskets. When another wave of riots and looting reached the capital, Menem's successor, Fernando de la Rua, resigned. The government also stopped payment on more than $100 billion in debt, the world's biggest-ever sovereign default

Moar

https://www.businessinsider.com/a-timeline-of-argentinas-sordid-history-with-default-2014-7?op=1

Anonymous ID: fa6674 Nov. 19, 2023, 4 p.m. No.19945087   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5126

>>19945037

That one (tail 73-1676) recently used by Austin to go to India-Delhi, SOKO-Seoul, and Indonesia-Jakarta as TITAN25

Also had Chair of the JCOS along with him

 

This it returning to JBA after a fill up off OR/Wa coast after crossing Pacific on Friday

Anonymous ID: fa6674 Nov. 19, 2023, 4:26 p.m. No.19945228   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>19945166

Reagan administration which means Poppy Bush

Since he had Reagan killed about 80 days into first term

Reagan had zero power as most POTUS’ do

Big difference