Anonymous ID: 8c9271 June 24, 2020, 12:44 p.m. No.9733363   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3424 >>3474

>>9733161 lb

>>9733200 lb

Q's last post: 4415:

[ing] error.

On the move.

Q

 

Folks, this may be about the company named ING. Read here from an article written several years ago, but one that explains the entire DS and financial systems that have prevailed worldwide.

 

"The top 50 companies on the list of the “super-entity” included (as of 2007): Barclays Plc (1), Capital Group Companies Inc (2), FMR Corporation (3), AXA (4), State Street Corporation (5), JP Morgan Chase & Co. (6), UBS AG (9), Merrill Lynch & Co Inc (10), Deutsche Bank (12), Credit Suisse Group (14), Bank of New York Mellon Corp (16), Goldman Sachs Group (18), Morgan Stanley (21), Société Générale (24), Bank of America Corporation (25), Lloyds TSB Group (26), Lehman Brothers Holdings (34), Sun Life Financial (35), ING Groep (41), BNP Paribas (46), and several others.[3]

In the United States, five banks control half the economy: JP Morgan Chase, Bank of America, Citigroup, Wells Fargo, and Goldman Sachs Group collectively held $8.5 trillion in assets at the end of 2011, which equals roughly 56% of the U.S. economy. This data was according to central bankers at the Federal Reserve. In 2007, the assets of the largest banks amounted to 43% of the U.S. economy. Thus, the crisis has made the banks bigger and more powerful than ever. Because the government invoked “too big to fail,” meaning that the big banks will be saved because they are very important, the big banks have incentive to make continued and bigger risks, because they will be bailed out in the end. Essentially, it’s an insurance policy for criminal risk-taking behaviour. The former president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis stated, “Market participants believe that nothing has changed, that too-big-to-fail is fully intact.” Remember, “market” means the banking cartel (or “super-entity” if you prefer). Thus, they build new bubbles and buy government bonds (sovereign debt), making the global financial system increasingly insecure and at risk of a larger collapse than took place in 2008."

 

This is the best article I've ever found for basics. Here's the link:

https://dandelionsalad.wordpress.com/2012/11/04/the-global-banking-super-entity-drug-cartel-the-free-market-of-finance-capital-by-andrew-gavin-marshall/

Anonymous ID: 8c9271 June 24, 2020, 12:54 p.m. No.9733474   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>9733351

Good connect. Check out my post on this bread >>9733363.

All the major banks worldwide are involved in money laundering - that means trafficking. I've been getting a lot on this lately, just trying to track it down to share here.

Q has rather surreptitiously pointed to Asia/China, the Philippines, as well as the Koreas, in terms of RedRed also. Mucho trafficking in the Philippines all along. Have to dig out notes from way back - my files are a mess. But China is the enemy, so everything does connect with that. And Red Cross is intimately a part of that.