Anonymous ID: ad7f38 June 29, 2025, 6:35 a.m. No.23252853   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2875 >>3161

America's Future Is we Let it

 

These women are chained together.

 

Please show this to your “liberal” sons and daughters who think “Palestinians” are being persecuted “from the river to the sea” … such bullsh!t.

 

One day, as this radicalized cultural infiltration progresses further into Christian society, they too will see this type behavior.

 

During the period of the Ottoman Empire you had 3 choices, 1) Convert, 2) become a slave [see below] or 3) be killed.

 

Name call all you want, it’s the hard truth and we need to be honest with each other.

Anonymous ID: ad7f38 June 29, 2025, 7:04 a.m. No.23252939   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2956 >>2965 >>3338

4 great years won't change this much

 

1 In 3 Americans Are Cutting Insurance Costs Just To Afford Food

 

Across the country, Americans are being forced to rethink major financial decisions in the face of rising costs, high interest rates, and ongoing economic uncertainty, according to Guardian Service.

 

In a recent survey of 1,000 people, 35% said they’ve delayed or canceled a big purchase this year—most commonly a home (22%) or a car (8%). Millennials (40%) and Gen Z (32%) were especially likely to put plans on hold. The leading causes? Widespread anxiety about the economy (63%), high interest rates (57%), and unaffordable prices (55%).Some are shifting expectations entirely—12% have scaled back their “dream home” goals, and nearly 1 in 4 now see renting as a better financial move than buying in 2025.

These shifting priorities extend beyond big-ticket items to everyday protections like insurance. When budgets are stretched, even essential coverage can feel expendable. Nearly 1 in 4 Americans (24%) said they’ve reduced coverage for a home or car to save money, and 29% reported downgrading or canceling at least one type of insurance over the past year.

 

Car insurance saw the largest cuts, with 15% scaling back and 8% switching from full coverage to liability only—moves that reduce costs but also increase financial risk.

 

The decisions behind these changes often stem from a desire to create short-term financial relief, even at the expense of long-term security. “A third of Americans said they would temporarily go without insurance to cover essential expenses,” and 1 in 5 would consider dropping coverage entirely if premiums continue to rise.

Guardian Service writes that at the same time, insurance is still widely valued—77% said car insurance is essential, and 57% said the same for renters or homeowners insurance. Trust, however, remains an issue, with only 37% saying they fully trust insurers to come through when something goes wrong.

 

The study is clear: as Americans adjust their budgets and weigh tough trade-offs, they’re showing a clear willingness to prioritize immediate needs over long-term plans.

 

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/1-3-americans-cutting-insurance-just-be-able-afford-ford

Anonymous ID: ad7f38 June 29, 2025, 7:10 a.m. No.23252950   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3338

An Israeli court agreed to postpone Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s ongoing petty corruption trial for a week Sunday after U.S. President Donald Trump repeated demands, though it was unclear if there was a link.

 

As Breitbart News reported last week, Trump demanded on Truth Social that Israeli prosecutors drop charges against his Israeli counterpart — many of which have begun to fall apart anyway — in the aftermath of their joint success in the 12 Day War against Iran. Trump repeated that demand Saturday on Truth Social

 

Trump also demanded a deal to end the war in Gaza and to bring the remaining 50 Israeli hostages (20 living) home, leading to speculation in Israel that Netanyahu was exchanging a peace deal for immunity.

 

https://x.com/dotconnectinga/status/1939325168880345460?s=61&t=BdBkJAWYzheOiIIylkbO1g

Anonymous ID: ad7f38 June 29, 2025, 7:43 a.m. No.23253089   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3100 >>3124 >>3197 >>3264 >>3338 >>3478

Eric Trump signaled he may run for president in 2028, telling the Financial Times the political path “would be an easy one” if he follows his father’s lead.

 

As co-executive vice-president of the Trump Organization, Eric said family considerations would guide his decision. “The real question is: ‘Do you want to drag other members of your family into it?… Would I want my kids to live the same experience over the last decade that I’ve lived?’” he stated.

 

“You know, if the answer was yes, I think the political path would be an easy one, meaning, I think I could do it,” he added. “And by the way, I think other members of our family could do it too.”

 

Asked if 2024 was the last election with a Trump on the ballot, Eric said, “I don’t know … Time will tell. But there’s more people than just me.

 

https://x.com/dotconnectinga/status/1939331179074703726?s=61&t=BdBkJAWYzheOiIIylkbO1g

Anonymous ID: ad7f38 June 29, 2025, 8:38 a.m. No.23253296   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3338

The Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) is negotiating with Texas businessman Gentry Beach’s consortium for control of the Rubaya coltan mine, a major source of conflict minerals, as part of a U.S.-backed effort to stabilize the region and counter Chinese dominance over DRC’s mineral wealth, including 70% of global cobalt reserves.

 

Beach, chairman of Dallas-based America First Global and a 2016 Trump campaign finance co-chair, leads a group including Swiss commodities firm Mercuria and Congolese state miner Sakima. The consortium aims to invest over $500 million to transform Rubaya, which produces half of DRC’s coltan—critical for tantalum and niobium in electronics—into a “world-class example of how to do mining,” a member said. A separate venture with Mercuria, Beach’s firm, and Rwanda’s Ngali Holdings plans to build a smelter in Kigali to process coltan legally, bypassing smuggling networks.

 

https://x.com/dotconnectinga/status/1939344747614687698?s=61&t=BdBkJAWYzheOiIIylkbO1g

Anonymous ID: ad7f38 June 29, 2025, 9:04 a.m. No.23253379   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3410

The Overton window in economics has a long way to go.

 

Cattle Herd Rebuild Begins Just As Consumers Get Slaughtered By Record Beef Prices

 

Foreign-owned globalist meatpacking giant JBS—labeled a "modern-day monopoly" by Republican Senator Josh Hawley—has acknowledged that the U.S. cattle industry is in the beginning stages of rebuilding its decimated herd from seven-decade lows. While the move to rebuild is underway, the company warns that meaningful increases in beef supply—and any relief for consumers facing record-high retail prices—aren't expected until at least 2027.

 

"We are into herd rebuild right now," said Wesley Batista Filho, CEO of JBS North America, in an interview quoted by Bloomberg. He added, "The economic incentives are there, the weather is helping."

 

Which means ground beef prices at the supermarket will remain high through this year and into 2026. Batista's comments come days after Goldman Sachs analysts Leah Jordan and Eli Thompson told clients that beef cycle indicators suggest a rebuilding cycle has begun:

 

Beef cycles typically last about twelve years on average, looking at trough-to-trough in the cattle herd. The prior trough in the herd occurred in 2014, while the prior trough in beef packer margins occurred in 2015. The current herd liquidation cycle began in 2019, with the herd tracking at ~86.7mm as of January 1, 2025, the lowest level since the 1950s. Herd rebuilding may already be underway, or is likely soon, noting supportive industry conditions (high calf prices and low feed costs), which should further constrain supply in the near-term, partially offset by record weights for cattle on feed.

 

Analysts posed the question: "When will the beef cycle turn?" — a question we've been asking at ZeroHedge as well.

 

Here's a visual breakdown of the beef industry's turning point…The rebuilding phase will be rocky for the four mega-corporations (JBS, Tyson Foods, Cargill, and National Beef) that control 80% of beef processing in America because, as Senator Hawley warned on Wednesday at an antitrust hearing on Capitol Hill, scrutiny on the meatpacker "monopoly" has begun, calling for the urgent need of more competition.The path to rebuilding starts with reviving regional microprocessing plants across the country—creating a more resilient, decentralized food supply chain that's less vulnerable to disruptions.

 

Just as important, Americans need to rethink how they buy beef: skip the globalist mega-supermarkets and instead support local ranchers directly.

 

What the Globalists Don't Want You to Have…

 

 

Batista pointed out that a decline in female cattle slaughter suggests that ranchers are retaining more cows for breeding, signaling herd rebuilding has commenced. However, he warned that recovery time will be slow, with no significant increase in beef supply expected until 2027.

 

Batista's analogy to the rebuilding cycle is this: "It's more like taking the stairs than the elevator."

 

That keeps dollars in the hands of mom-and-pop ranchers, not globalist Wall Street, which has stripped the Heartland of wealth for decades. Now, the pendulum swings the other way as MAHA begins.

 

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/major-turning-point-american-ranchers-herd-rebuild-underway