@Propaganda_24_7 You have to specially ask it to do a deeper analysis and review both the defamation lawsuit I filed in Australia and the evidence from my FOIA lawsuit that can be found on https://t.co/CTUtykJKA0
If you ask AI to objectively review all the publicly available information, including what's been published on https://t.co/BmV7zaxKAr about Euro Pacific Bank—including the evidence from the successful defamation lawsuit against Nick McKenzie and 60 Minutes Australia, the now-unredacted emails obtained through FOIA between the IRS, ATO, and OCIF, and the fact that no criminal charges were ever filed against anyone associated with the bank, including its customers—and offer an opinion as to why the bank was shut down, it will conclude that the bank was shut down purely to allow the J5 to turn its failed Atlantis investigation into a fake success. All the evidence of widespread government corruption, obstruction of justice, and abuse of power is there. All one has to do is ask AI to review it.
America's fiscal problem isn't just in Washington. Many of the largest cities are running deficits too. The article argues that incentives, local accountability, and sound principles—not bigger budgets—are the real solution.
https://t.co/t2MT59Thfx
Last year, 63 tankers crossed the Strait of Hormuz on July 17.
This year, thanks to Trump's escalation and recent strikes on Iran, 0 tankers crossed on July 17.
Kevin Warsh pledged the Fed has "no tolerance" for persistent inflation. With gold holding above $4,000, investors seem to be taking a more cautious view.
https://t.co/3G3xkXirUX
Gold stocks are under pressure today, despite gold itself rising $30 and retaking $4,000. Investors still don’t understand how bullish the fundamentals are for gold or how much they’ve improved due to war, bursting tech bubbles, and rising deficits, inflation, and bond yields.
Despite a 30% drop in oil prices in June, YoY import prices rose 7.1%, and export prices rose 10.2%. This is far more indicative of the price increases U.S. consumers are actually paying than the 3.5% YoY increase in the June CPI and explains why inflation is such a big conern.
$SPCX is coming back down to earth in after-hours trading. It’s down 3.7% to $126.25. That’s 6.5% below its IPO price and 44% below its high. This is happening before any of the lockups expire, which expand the potential tradable float 8X by year-end. Houston, we have a problem!
$SPCX closed at $131.11, nearly $4 below its IPO price and 42% below its high. $NFLX is already down 7% after hours. Rising interest rates, war, inflation, and excessive valuations may finally trump momentum. Bitcoin was the first bubble to pop. Many more will meet the same fate.