The Doc: The sudden rash of banksters expiring in mysterious ways has been well documented. Jim Willie revealed that we are seeing bankers removed who are on the verge of revealing big data details on FOREX bank fraud. News of the latest JPM banker to be found dead (Ryan Crane, the Executive Director of JPM’s Global Equities Group) went viral after
European banking source V claimed that Crane & the JPM London
banker who fell from the top of JPM’s London HQ last week “knew each other & had uncovered something“.
If the bombshell news the investigative journalists at Infowars have just released is accurate, it appears that the number of bankers found dead in the past several weeks has now swelled to over 20, and includes a slew of mid-level bankers as well as the top level execs.
Gerald Celente & Alex Jones discuss the news that the number of dead bankers has now reached 20 below:
Telling the truth has become a revolutionary act, so let us salute those who disclose the necessary facts.
16 Feb 2014
Marx Was Right: Five Ways Karl Marx Predicted 2014 - Rebutted!
John Nazarian Speaks
The Fate Of A Good Bankster In Spain’s Financial Bloodbath
By Don Quijones: Given the sheer scale of their recent betrayal, it is tempting to tar
all banksters with the same brush. Indeed, in today’s vernacular the
words good and banker seem like impossible bedfellows.
But as hard as it may seem, there are still a few good apples out there (though their numbers are falling precipitously). They include people who actually honour their fiduciary responsibilities and care about providing their customers with a good service. One of them is a middle-aged Spanish man called Antonio Gómez Ortega.
Until not too long ago Gómez Ortega was the manager of a branch of Caja Madrid in Linares, a small city nestled in the upper reaches of Spain’s Southern province of Andalusia. In many respects he was a branch manager of the vieja escuela (old school) — dedicated, hard-working, and well regarded both by head office in Madrid and many of his local customers.
However, in the latter of years of Spain’s construction bubble his relations with head office and his customers began to sour. The reason was a financial product called preferentes (preferred bonds) which Caja Madrid’s head office was pressuring all its local branches to aggressively sell to their customers.
But as hard as it may seem, there are still a few good apples out there (though their numbers are falling precipitously). They include people who actually honour their fiduciary responsibilities and care about providing their customers with a good service. One of them is a middle-aged Spanish man called Antonio Gómez Ortega.
Until not too long ago Gómez Ortega was the manager of a branch of Caja Madrid in Linares, a small city nestled in the upper reaches of Spain’s Southern province of Andalusia. In many respects he was a branch manager of the vieja escuela (old school) — dedicated, hard-working, and well regarded both by head office in Madrid and many of his local customers.
However, in the latter of years of Spain’s construction bubble his relations with head office and his customers began to sour. The reason was a financial product called preferentes (preferred bonds) which Caja Madrid’s head office was pressuring all its local branches to aggressively sell to their customers.
Lectured by a Mumbai Feminist
By Amit Deshpande: It was through the mail that I received notification about a prestigious event, the 21st Smt. Bansari Sheth endowment lecture to be delivered by the famous feminist, Flavia Agnes from Mumbai.
This was the invite:
This was the invite:
The Asiatic Society of Mumbai
takes pleasure in inviting you and your friends to
the 21st Smt. Bansari Sheth Endowment Lecture
by
Flavia Agnes
Legal scholar and Director, Legal Centre of Majlis
on
‘The making of a modern nation through the Hindu code bill:
The Nehruvian agenda’
on
Wednesday, 12th February, 2014, at 6.00 p.m.
in the Durbar Hall of the Society.
Dr. Kamala Ganesh
Former Professor of Sociology, University of Mumbai,
will preside.
Needless to say, I was keen for the chance to interact with a
feminist of her stature. I enquired with the Asiatic Society about the
event, whether it was open to the general public as well as whether or
not there would be a Q&A session – although I almost smiled at my
naiveté in expecting feminists to debate their beliefs or even being
allowed to question them.ZoNation: Observing Black History Month
How The German Legal System Failed Horst Arnold
By Jon Gunnarsson: Imagine
you are accused of a terrible crime against a woman you didn’t commit.
One of your co-workers claims you raped her. And not just any rape, but a
brutal anal rape that left her bleeding from her rectum. You are
arrested by the police and questioned. You are put on trial where your
accuser produces not a single shred of evidence. Rape kit? DNA evidence?
Examination of physical injuries? No, none of that. Not even any
bloodstains on the supposed victim’s clothing. She claims she burned her
bloody underwear because she was so ashamed of what had happened. The
trial doesn’t last long. It’s your word against hers. She’s seems like a
charming woman who could never make up a horrible story like that. The
judge believes her.
You are sentenced to five years in prison. Most people don’t have to serve their entire sentence. They are released earlier for good behaviour. But a requirement for that is to show remorse for what you did. You don’t feel remorse. You aren’t guilty and you cannot regret what you didn’t do. You could fake a confession to get out earlier, but you know you are not a rapist. You insist on your innocence. After the full five years, you are finally released. But much more than just five years of your life have been stolen from you. You’ve lost your partner, your friends, your job. Only your family still believes in you. You send out hundreds of applications for new jobs, but no one is willing to hire a convicted rapist. You’re in your late forties and you have two children of your own, but you have to move back in with your parents. The world has betrayed you and you become depressed.
You are sentenced to five years in prison. Most people don’t have to serve their entire sentence. They are released earlier for good behaviour. But a requirement for that is to show remorse for what you did. You don’t feel remorse. You aren’t guilty and you cannot regret what you didn’t do. You could fake a confession to get out earlier, but you know you are not a rapist. You insist on your innocence. After the full five years, you are finally released. But much more than just five years of your life have been stolen from you. You’ve lost your partner, your friends, your job. Only your family still believes in you. You send out hundreds of applications for new jobs, but no one is willing to hire a convicted rapist. You’re in your late forties and you have two children of your own, but you have to move back in with your parents. The world has betrayed you and you become depressed.