ID: b4730b June 29, 2020, 7:56 a.m. No.9786843   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6861

>9786815

Newfags…

 

We love you, but -

 

Do NOT reply to shills

Do NOT demolish their intentionally flawed arguments

Do NOT debate their idiotic "concerns"

Do NOT engage shills.

Do NOT participate in shill KAYFABE

 

In professional wrestling, kayfabe /?ke?fe?b/ is the portrayal of staged events within the industry as "real" or "true", specifically the portrayal of competition, rivalries, and relationships between participants as being genuine and not of a staged or predetermined nature of any kind.

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kayfabe

 

Do NOT perpetuate shill SLIDES.

Do NOT reply to shills.

Do NOT pick up spit

If you are NOT sure, LEARN to ID shills

shills = hate

shills = labels

shills = repetition

shills = envy, greed, etc.

 

Do NOT correct intentional shill mistakes

Do NOT be triggered by shill taunts

do NOT eat bats off the street

Do NOT bark back at dogs

 

Spot a clown

Dealing with ye Clowns & ye Shills

>>2322789 Spot a shill

>>2323031 Spot A Clown

 

shills have no agency, no will independent of their masters. Shills are passed gas of history. The slave of the slaves, their words are writ upon water.

 

DIG MEME PRAY

ID: b4730b June 29, 2020, 8:12 a.m. No.9786999   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>9786875

Payday Lenders = Meyer Lansky's old loan shark network

 

A series of federal banking-law developments in the 1970s and 1980s eased regulations on federally insured depositories, mortgage lenders, credit card lenders, and other financial companies, giving them broad rights to disregard state usury interest laws.[v] As this deregulation proceeded, some state legislatures sought to act in kind for state-based lenders by authorizing deferred presentment transactions (loans made against a post-dated check) and triple-digit APRs.[vi] These developments set the stage for state-licensed payday lending stores to flourish. From the early 1990s through the first part of the 21st century, the payday lending industry grew exponentially.

 

https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/articles/2012/07/a-short-history-of-payday-lending-law

 

The specter of the loan shark is often conjured by advocates of

price deregulation in the market for payday loans. If binding price

caps are imposed, the argument goes, loan sharks will be

spawned. This is the loan-shark thesis. This Article tests that

thesis against the historical record of payday lending in the

United States since the origins of the quick-cash business around

the Civil War. Two different types of creditors have been derided

as “loan sharks” since the epithet was first coined. One used

threats of violence to collect its debts but the other did not. The

former has been less common than the latter. In the United States,

the violent loan sharks proliferated in the small-loan market after

state usury caps were raised considerably and these loan sharks

dwindled away as a source of credit for working people before

interest-rate deregulation began to be adopted at the end of the

1970s. The other type of loan shark thrived both when usury

ceilings were very low and when they were very high or even

removed. Deregulation does not starve the nonviolent species of

loan shark into extinction but instead feeds it. Hence the loanshark thesis is seriously flawed. It does not accord well with the

historical record of the market for payday loans.

 

https://scholarlycommons.law.wlu.edu/wlulr/vol69/iss2/10/

ID: b4730b June 29, 2020, 8:15 a.m. No.9787040   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7056 >>7066

>>9787009

the images is from a commercial S&M porn site in SF. No connection with Epstein is evident.

He worked higher ground. The website itself is worth a dig, as it was/is extremely well funded. which is not usual in mob businesses like porn.