I am proceeding cautiously because of what @charliekirk11 describes here.
The Israel-Gaza border is one of the most secure borders on the planet, Israel/US have some of the best intelligence on the planet, Iron Dome went down, and Israel were warned an attack might happen.
Combine this with how quickly Israel escalated and seemingly eager to remove not just Hamas, but the entire Palestinian population from Gaza.
Israeli intelligence also seem to be back working all the sudden after ignoring warnings from Egypt and failing to stop the Hamas attacks. They went from not having any idea what’s going on, to dropping air strikes all over supposed Hamas positions, taking out over 1,900 Palestinian civilians along the way (according to UN).
Cui bono? Who stands to gain from this? Certainly not Hamas or Palestine. But Israel now have the unwavering support to bomb Palestine, Syria, Lebanon, civilians, whatever the hell they want. If Israel wanted an excuse to take control of Palestinian land, it would behoove them to let an attack like this happen.
Same concept as 9/11.
Then you take into account the already massive amounts of atrocity propaganda. The beheading babies hoax significantly influenced the emotions of the world, and helped Israel convince the public that their coming response is justified, no matter how many civilians they killed with collateral damage. They have convinced much of the American public that all Palestinians are subhuman savages that deserve to be exterminated, even the children. All based on WILDLY exaggerated claims that have since been debunked. But the damage is already done.
All of these happenings are the textbook precursors to genocide, and it appears that it has already begun, and many Americans are cheering it on.
Yes, Hamas terrorists killed civilians, but if you think the story stops there, you haven’t been paying attention.
JUST IN: Biden appears to not be happy with Elon Musk’s acquisition of Twitter because now people have “no notion” of what information is true.
What he meant to say is how upset he is that the government can no longer control what you see on X.
“They, they, they, they, they go online, they go, and you have no notion whether it's true or not,” he said after he was asked about X under Musk’s ownership.
This is exactly why “investigations” into Elon keep popping up.
They no longer have control…
Current situation:
1. Stocks are falling like a recession is coming
2. Oil prices are rising like there's no recession in sight
3. Interest rates are rising like we have 10% inflation
4. Gold is falling like inflation is gone
5. Housing prices are rising like rates are falling
6. Commercial real estate is falling like its 2008
Nothing adds up here.
The debt-to-income ratio for all homebuyers in the US just hit 40% for the first time in history.
Even in the 2008 financial crisis, this ratio peaked at ~39%.
This comes as total household debt just hit a record $17.1 trillion and credit card debt crossed $1 trillion for the first time ever.
Consumers are borrowing at a record pace all while savings are declining and rates are rising.
What's the long-term plan here?
En 2008 los banks hacían esto; los famosos Mortgage Backed Securities (MBS). Estos package estaban repletos de hipotecas que sabían ya que básicamente no se iban a pagar y las vendían a otros bancos.
Billions of dollars worth of student loans are packed and sold as assets known as SLABS to some of the biggest investors in America. Watch the full video: https://t.co/PUTGr7FrES
JPMorgan Asset Management in favor of bond markets positive trend as they expect the FED to start rate cuts soon.
Hedge funds think bond markets have reached the peak of the bull markets that started in the 1980s.
In case you're wondering how mortgage companies are doing:
Better․com, a major mortgage company, went public today via SPAC.
Their stock crashed a massive 93% in ONE DAY.
The company went from being worth $4 billion yesterday to $400 million today.
How can this end well?
Disney $DIS is currently on pace to close trading today at its lowest level in almost 9 years
Disney shares haven’t closed lower than $84 since Oct. 17, 2014