Anonymous ID: 6e9479 Jan. 21, 2024, 11:01 p.m. No.20281603   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>1607 >>1618 >>1627 >>1630 >>1646 >>1674 >>1720 >>1817 >>1851 >>1865 >>1939 >>2123 >>2324

>>20281592

the atlantic is Ghislaine maxwells fren.

https://dailypopulous.com/2021-12-12-morning/ghislane-maxwell-enjoying-some-summer-time-with-laurene-powell-owner-of-journal-the-atlantic.html

Ghislane Maxwell enjoying some summer time with Laurene Powell, owner of journal The Atlantic

THEY ARE FREAKING OUT - SOROS AND ANTIFA INCLUDING THE ELITE PEDO'S

Anonymous ID: 6e9479 Jan. 21, 2024, 11:06 p.m. No.20281618   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>1624 >>1627 >>1638 >>1646 >>1674 >>1720 >>1817 >>1851 >>1939 >>1987 >>2123 >>2324 >>2404

>>20281603

>>20281592

the full article quoted in the soros twat.

The Great Normalization

Last year, the crime and inflation crises largely evaporated. So did the leading theories about what had caused them.

By Rogé Karma

Updated at 1:15 p.m. ET on January 19, 2024.

America entered 2023 with two big problems and two leading theories about what was causing them. Over the preceding three years, the murder rate had reached levels not seen since the mid-1990s, which was widely attributed to reductions in policing following the protests over the murder of George Floyd. The inflation rate was even worse, by historical standards, peaking in 2022 at 9 percent, the highest number since 1981. This, in turn, was believed to be the result of Congress and the Biden administration pumping too much money into the economy. Each theory implied a solution to its respective crisis. To bring crime back down, America’s cities would have to empower their depleted and demoralized police forces. To tame inflation, the Federal Reserve would have to crush consumer spending by triggering a recession.

Both theories now appear to have been wrong. Over the course of 2023, police forces kept shrinking, yet overall violent-crime rates plummeted to their lowest levels since the 1960s, according to preliminary FBI data. And the economy boomed even as inflation came just about all the way down to the Fed’s 2 percent target. In surveys, most Americans say that crime and inflation are still rising, but they’re wrong. Call it the Great Normalization: The twin crises largely evaporated, and no one is totally sure why.

The year 2020 was a bloody one. Murder spiked by 30 percent that year and continued to rise in 2021, abruptly reversing decades of progress on violence in America. One of the most common explanations was that the protests against police brutality in the summer of 2020 had created a hostile environment for police officers, many of whom responded by pulling back from their duties or leaving the force altogether. Officer resignations jumped 35 percent in 2020 and 9 percent in 2021.

Then the unexpected happened. Even as police forces across the country continued to shrink, violence began falling fast. According to the crime researcher Jeff Asher, murders fell by 13 percent and violent crime overall by 8 percent in 2023, some of the largest single-year decreases on record—a shift that my colleague David Graham recently called “America’s peace wave.” The improvement, though not universal, was particularly striking in some of the cities that needed it most. Baltimore and Philadelphia each experienced a roughly 25 percent decrease in homicides despite being down about 700 and 1,000 officers, respectively. Detroit experienced its fewest murders since 1966, even though it lost an average of nearly an officer a day for much of 2022. New York City lost more than 2,500 officers in 2023 alone. The murder rate fell there too.

Jeff Asher: The murder rate is suddenly falling

Policing matters for public safety, and the complicated reaction to the 2020 protests almost certainly made that year’s homicide spike even worse. But the roots of America’s violence wave now appear to have had much more to do with the pandemic itself than pandemic-era policing. Murder peaked in the summer of 2020, but homicide rates had already begun rising sharply in March, shortly after lockdowns began. For those who study violence most closely, that wasn’t surprising. A large body of research has shown that community institutions play an essential role in preventing crime. Schools and workplaces keep people off the streets. Local government connects them with social services. Nonprofits provide mental-health and after-school programs.

continue

Anonymous ID: 6e9479 Jan. 21, 2024, 11:10 p.m. No.20281627   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>1628 >>1646 >>1674 >>1720 >>1817 >>1851 >>1939 >>1995 >>2123 >>2324

>>20281592

>>20281603

>>20281618

continued soros and whitehouse. memes.

antifa.com still goes to the whitehouse.

—

“Think about it from the perspective of a young person living in one of these neighborhoods with a history of violence,” John Roman, the director of the Center on Public Safety and Justice at NORC at the University of Chicago, told me. “Suddenly you’re stuck at home all day without access to social supports or a sense of purpose or something to occupy you. And the guy you have a beef with is just down the road. It’s a recipe for violence.” Roman pointed out that the beginning of the decline in violence coincided almost perfectly with the beginning of the 2022–23 school year. “That’s really the first time when everything finally went back to normal,” he said. According to the most recent data, murder rates are just a notch above where they were in 2019, and violent crime overall is even lower.

A strikingly similar story can be told about the post-pandemic economy. After several decades of stable prices, inflation went wild in late 2021, peaking at 9 percent in the summer of 2022. By then, the prevailing explanation was that the Biden administration’s $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan had given people too much money to spend. Former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers called the bill the “least responsible macroeconomic policy we’ve had in the last 40 years.” All that stimulus, he and other experts argued, had led to too much money chasing after not enough stuff. The only way to tame inflation, according to this view, would be to crush the excess demand by engineering a painful economic slowdown. Heading into 2023, nearly every economist, forecaster, and CEO predicted that a recession was right around the corner. A Bloomberg Economics model put the odds of a recession by October 2023 at 100 percent.

Instead, inflation fell steadily while the stock market boomed, unemployment remained below 4 percent, and wages rose faster than prices. Meanwhile, Europe—which did not have nearly the same level of fiscal stimulus—experienced even higher inflation than the U.S. in 2022 while experiencing far less growth and more unemployment.

Many economists now believe that the pandemic played a more central role in the inflation story than they previously realized. An analysis by the Brookings Institution concluded that inflation was mostly a story of pandemic-shutdown ripple effects. (Other studies have come to the same conclusion.) Consumers, stuck at home, shifted their spending from entertainment and services toward physical goods at precisely the moment that the supply chains that were supposed to provide those goods were being catastrophically disrupted. The sudden firing and rehiring of tens of millions of workers produced a chaotic labor market that forced employers to quickly raise wages. Together, those forces created the perfect recipe for rising prices. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which sent fuel prices soaring, only made things worse.

As with crime, the shock took a long time to work its way through the economy. But when it finally did, the change was dramatic. By the end of 2023, America’s unemployment rate, inflation rate, and economic-growth trajectory looked almost identical to what they had been just before the pandemic. (One measure of inflation did tick up slightly in December, but many experts believe that was caused by a temporary lag in the data.) Prices remain higher, of course, even though the inflation rate has returned to normal. But inflation-adjusted wages are rising rapidly and recently surpassed their pre-pandemic levels. Some indicators, such as household wealth, income equality, and women’s labor-force participation, look much better than they did in 2019.

continued

Anonymous ID: 6e9479 Jan. 21, 2024, 11:22 p.m. No.20281646   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>1674 >>1720 >>1817 >>1821 >>1851 >>1939 >>2000 >>2090 >>2123 >>2324

>>20281603

>>20281592

>>20281618

>>20281627

ot everything is back to normal. Pandemic learning loss has erased two decades of student progress in math and reading. The abrupt rise of remote work continues to wreak havoc on both commercial real estate and the housing market. Even so, when it comes to crime and inflation, the Great Normalization was remarkable. Huge problems rarely improve so much, so fast, in such defiance of conventional wisdom.

Rogé Karma: Is economic pessimism the media’s fault?

More remarkable still is the fact that hardly anyone seems to have noticed. According to Gallup, 77 percent of Americans believe there is more crime in the U.S. than there was a year ago. Economic sentiment has begun to tick up, but it is still near the lowest levels on record. This may help explain Donald Trump’s strength in electoral polls. A recent Wall Street Journal survey found that U.S. voters overwhelmingly believe that Trump will do a better job than Joe Biden when it comes to the economy (52 percent to 35 percent), inflation (51 percent to 30 percent), and crime (47 percent to 30 percent). Voters seem to be yearning for a return to the normalcy of pre-pandemic times, and Trump is promising to give it to them.

The absurdity of Trump as the normalcy candidate is almost too much to bear—especially because the normalcy that voters are desperately craving is, in many ways, already here, and Biden helped deliver it. Many economists now believe that the pandemic stimulus was key to the U.S. economy performing so much better than those of other advanced countries. The stimulus also might have played an underappreciated role in reducing crime by keeping local governments and the community organizations they support afloat. “The only reason cities did not completely fall apart during the pandemic was because of a huge boost in federal funding,” Patrick Sharkey, a sociologist at Princeton University who studies urban crime, told me. “I’m very convinced that is a central part of the explanation for why violence fell in ’22 and ’23.”

Even as the pandemic has released its grip on our economy and civil society, it has yet to fully work its way through our politics. Before voters will credit Biden for making things better, they’ll have to be convinced that things are, in fact, better. In the meantime, the sitting president will almost inevitably take the blame for whatever America is unhappy about. That’s about as normal as it gets.

Support for this project was provided by the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation.

Rogé Karma is a staff writer at The Atlantic.

end

sorry for delay. just went and made tea and toast and fed the cats and let them out for morning run.

o7 corp

Anonymous ID: 6e9479 Jan. 21, 2024, 11:37 p.m. No.20281674   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>1713 >>1720 >>1755 >>1817 >>1851 >>1939 >>2123 >>2324

>>20281646

>>20281627

>>20281618

>>20281603

>>20281592

The journalist who wrote this is Rogé Karma

his whole argument about crime can be summoned up in this short statement.

If everything is legal than nothing is illegal.

George soros d.a and controlled judges are freeing criminals and not prosecuting crimes cos muh diversity and victimhood.

-

Rogé Karma Verified

Staff Writer, The Atlantic

Washington

U.S. Regional

As seen in: The Atlantic, The New York Times, MSN (US), The Ezra Klein Show, Vox, Flipboard, RealClear Politics, The New Republic, The American Prospect, Current Affairs, Energy Central, Reader Supported News, RealClear Policy, Portside, RealClear Education

https://muckrack.com/roge-karma

--—

the current editor of the atlantic is jeffery goldberg

Summariser

Jeffrey Goldberg is the current editor-in-chief of The Atlantic magazine.012 He joined the magazine in 2007 as a national correspondent and was named the magazine's 15th editor-in-chief in 2016. During his editorship, The Atlantic has set new audience and subscription records, and won its first-ever Pulitzer Prizes. Goldberg is also the moderator of Washington Week with The Atlantic.0 He has won several awards, including the National Magazine Award for Reporting, the Daniel Pearl Prize for Reporting, and the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists Prize for best investigative reporting.1

Anonymous ID: 6e9479 Jan. 21, 2024, 11:55 p.m. No.20281713   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>1720 >>1817 >>1851 >>1939 >>2123 >>2324

>>20281674

>The absurdity of Trump as the normalcy candidate is almost too much to bear—especially because the normalcy that voters are desperately craving is, in many ways, already here, and Biden helped deliver it.

ANON SUMMARY OF THIS ARTICLE

The writer has only covered two topics.

1) Crime and figures.

summary: If everything is legal than nothing is illegal. George soros d.a and controlled judges are freeing criminals and not prosecuting crimes cos muh diversity and victimhood.

2) Economy and inflation.

Summary: The Great reset, B.I.S agenda and I.M.F loans with conditions.

Explained in this video anon put together with sources. basically Destroy, Deconstruct, Reconstruct using Supply Side Reforms.

What that means is they will no longer be using interest rates to control inflation, scarcity and rationing.

This is all being sold by Klaus Schwab the ceo for the marketing department for the Banksters and the Elites such as the Rothschilds.

These people think we are stupid. but they are dumber than a airhead blonde female.

--–

B.I.S - THE FINANCIAL CAPTURE OF PLANET EARTH !!!

https://rumble.com/embed/v3hd5v4/?pub=4

Anonymous ID: 6e9479 Jan. 22, 2024, 12:21 a.m. No.20281766   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>1772 >>1786

>>20281755

well we have lurkers here

if they want to find that roge karma on twitter and let him know about his article or on social media.

maybe they can use their free speech and use anons summary to him about the article and tell alex soros that he is a stupid cunt to think he can put out threats like this by linking this article thus having plausible deniability.

do some digging anons, find out and let him know this is not appreciated..

let them know, anons are watching

Anonymous ID: 6e9479 Jan. 22, 2024, 1:03 a.m. No.20281821   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>1851 >>1939

>>20281646

>Support for this project was provided by the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation.

The article was funded by above. see source.

-—-

https://hewlett.org/

--

The Hewlett Family and Foundation History

“Never stifle a generous impulse.” —William R. Hewlett

https://hewlett.org/about-us/hewlett-family-and-history/

William and Flora Hewlett shared a deep, persistent, and personal belief in a life of charity and philanthropy.

When they established the foundation in their Palo Alto home, they captured their many charitable impulses with a loose charter mandating only a “perpetual existence … as a charitable, religious, scientific, literary or educational foundation for the purpose of promoting the wellbeing of mankind.”

The Hewletts were modest people; they often gave anonymously because they believed attention should be focused on the people doing the work, not the people funding it. For the same reason, they seldom made announcements about their giving, and the best way to understand their philanthropic vision is to look at what they did. And they did a great deal. Flora was a board member and involved with the foundation for its first decade, until her untimely death in 1977. Bill was actively engaged with the foundation until shortly before his death nearly 25 years later. The couple’s gifts, donations, and grants left a well-blazed trail.

Alongside the issues and institutions they supported, Bill and Flora also cared about the culture of their foundation and about the field of philanthropy itself. They wanted the foundation to reflect values they believed in and practiced — frugality, humility, collaboration, and humanism. They wanted a workplace that was intimate rather than bureaucratic, and they deemed it essential to always work with partners. They not only wanted the foundation to work on pressing problems in the broader world, but to also pay attention to where they could make a difference in the Bay Area.

continued in link above.

Anonymous ID: 6e9479 Jan. 22, 2024, 1:25 a.m. No.20281855   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>1882 >>1939 >>2123 >>2324

KEVIN ROBERTS STATEMENTS TO THE W.E.F ABOUT THE COMING TRUMP PRESIDENCY, NO WONDER THEY ARE PANICKING !!!

Note: Schedule 47, taking on the elites and america first. well worth watching. this is still edited, would like to find the whole sections, will try to find and post later

this video is 8 mins 20 seconds long.

p.s unable to link bitchute link so rumble link provided.

===

PRESIDENT OF HERITAGE FOUNDATION TELLS WEF ATTENDEES: YOU ARE PART OF THE PROBLEM

First published at 21:37 UTC on January 21st, 2024.

https://rumble.com/embed/v45ts3i/?pub=4

https://www.bitchute.com/video/5OXl-ierx-g/

---—-

Kevin Roberts, President of the Heritage Foundation, delivered some hard truths to attendees of the World Economic Forum (WEF)'s annual meeting in Davos, Switzerland last week. Speaking about American politics and the potential for Donald Trump to be reelected for a second term as president, Roberts said the goal of the next conservative presidency should be to diminish the role of unelected technocrats in our society. "The kind of person who will come into the next conservative administration is going to be governed by one principle, and that is destroying the grasp that political elites and unelected technocrats have over the average person," said Roberts.

Anonymous ID: 6e9479 Jan. 22, 2024, 2:11 a.m. No.20281970   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>1979

>>20281956

well it is definitely a bullet

fired by a assassin.

there was a dig recently about the brotherhood of the snake recently who are also known as the assassins according to william cooper.

assassins

The money is the contract and Q and 47 Trump are both targets.

the article is plausible deniability.

it is from the Atlantic, owned by maxwell fren, the journalist is roge karma or roger karma

meaning roger (confirmed) karma (bring the revenge). it is funded by the hewitt family foundation, ngo.. elites again.

Alex soros posted.

Ron desantis drops out and endorses trump.

how many moar comms do you want.

Anonymous ID: 6e9479 Jan. 22, 2024, 2:26 a.m. No.20281992   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>20281980

nothing on the image file that anon can find.

see below.

—-

https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/4MjlGvIZO5-KtvjZHYfbpILt99E=/0x0:4800x2700/976x549/media/img/mt/2024/01/Untitled_2/original.jpg

https://www.metadata2go.com/result#j=df8105aa-f2db-4aea-aecc-4af11498a3c3

Anonymous ID: 6e9479 Jan. 22, 2024, 2:49 a.m. No.20282027   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>2039 >>2078

>>20282020

WITH Q COMMS

Plot

In Mexico City, MI6 agent James Bond foils a bombing attempt on a stadium during a Day of the Dead festival. Bond obtains a ring stylized with an octopus from the deceased[failed verification] attacker, Marco Sciarra, uncovering his connection to a secret organization.

 

In London, Gareth Mallory, the current M, suspends Bond for his unauthorized action. M is engaged in a power struggle with Max Denbigh (whom Bond dubs "C"), the Director-General of the new, privately backed Joint Intelligence Service formed by the merger of MI5 and MI6. C campaigns for Britain to join the global surveillance and intelligence initiative "Nine Eyes" and shut down the '00' section. Bond, who was operating on a mission posthumously assigned by the previous M to eliminate Sciarra and track down his employers, goes rogue from MI6, with Eve Moneypenny and Q agreeing to aid Bond covertly.

 

Following the previous M's instructions, Bond attends Sciarra's funeral in Rome and rescues his widow Lucia from assassins. Lucia reveals Sciarra's association with a terrorist network run by Franz Oberhauser, who has been presumed dead for twenty years. Using Sciarra's ring, Bond infiltrates a meeting where Oberhauser targets the "Pale King" for assassination. Oberhauser recognizes Bond, who flees across the city in a modified Aston Martin DB10, pursued by the network's top assassin, Hinx. Moneypenny identifies the Pale King as Mr. White, a former member of the organization's subsidiary, Quantum.

 

Bond tracks White down to Altaussee, where he is dying of thallium poisoning. Bond offers to protect his daughter, psychiatrist Madeleine Swann, who possesses knowledge about "L'Américain". White commits suicide. Bond finds Swann, who is reluctant to trust him until Hinx and his forces abduct her. Bond rescues Swann, earning him her trust. Q reveals Le Chiffre, Dominic Greene and Raoul Silva as agents of Oberhauser's organization, which Swann reveals is named Spectre. Swann takes Bond to L'Américain, a hotel in Tangier, where a secret room directs them to Oberhauser's base in the Sahara. Hinx ambushes them en route to the base, but they fight him off and defeat him.

 

Arriving at the base, Bond and Swann confront Oberhauser, who reveals Spectre's involvement in the Joint Intelligence Service and the Nine Eyes programme. C, complicit in Spectre's scheme, plans to give Spectre unrestricted access to intelligence gathered by Nine Eyes. After showing Swann a distressing recording of her father's suicide, Oberhauser subjects Bond to neurosurgical torture. He discusses his shared past with Bond to Swann, revealing that they became adoptive brothers after Bond's parents died. Believing that his father loved Bond more than him, Oberhauser killed him and staged his death as well. Since then, he founded Spectre intending to target Bond and adopted the name Ernst Stavro Blofeld. Bond and Swann break free, stun Blofeld with an explosive wristwatch, and destroy the base before fleeing to London to prevent Nine Eyes from going online.

 

In London, Bond, Swann, M, Q, Bill Tanner and Moneypenny gather to arrest C. However, Swann and Bond are separately abducted by Spectre operatives while the others proceed with the plan. After Q stops Nine Eyes from going online, a fatal struggle between M and C results in C's death. Bond is taken to the ruins of the old MI6 building, scheduled for demolition after Silva's bombing,[N 2] where Swann is held captive. Blofeld, who survived the base's destruction with heavy scarring to his face, gives Bond a three-minute ultimatum to abandon Swann or attempt a rescue and risk death. Bond finds Swann and they escape as the building collapses. Bond shoots down Blofeld's helicopter, which crashes onto Westminster Bridge. Blofeld survives and is arrested by M.

 

Later, Bond receives his restored Aston Martin DB5 from Q and drives off with Swann.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spectre_(2015_film)