26 Jul 2022

14 Signs That The US Economy Is Poised To Crash Really Hard During H2 2022

... if you think that things are bad now, just wait, because they will soon be a whole lot more painful...

Authored by Michael Snyder: It looks like we are going to get official confirmation that a recession has already begun when the GDP number for the second quarter comes out later this week.  But that isn’t what we should be focusing on.  Yes, things weren’t great during the first half of 2022, but they are going to be significantly worse during the second half.  Small businesses are starting to fail all over the country, a housing crash of potentially epic proportions has started, layoffs are on the rise from coast to coast and economic activity is really slowing down all around us.  So if you think that things are bad now, just wait, because they will soon be a whole lot more painful.

In recent days we have gotten more new numbers which seem to confirm that a major economic slowdown is upon us. 

The following are 14 signs that the U.S. economy is poised to crash really hard during the second half of 2022…

#1 One survey that was just released discovered that 35 percent of all small business owners in the U.S. “could not pay their rent in full or on time in June”.

#2 A different survey found that 51 percent of all small businesses owners in the U.S. believe that rising prices could “force them to close their businesses within the next six months”.

At Last Russia Will Now Help Ukrainians "Get Rid Of [Jews' Ukraine = Big Israel] Regime," Lavrov Says

First time a top Russian official has openly called for "Ukraine = Big Israel" Jew Zelensky's overthrow...

By Tyler Durden: Russia has for the first time stated as among its ultimate war aims achieving regime change in Ukraine. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said in Sunday remarks which were publicized Monday that Moscow will help the Ukrainian people "get rid of the regime" in Kiev.

Going into early summer, the Russian military had focused its battlefield goals on "liberating" the Donbas, but this latest Lavrov comment on removing Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky represents the most expansive war aim yet.

"We are determined to help the people of eastern Ukraine to liberate themselves from the burden of this absolutely unacceptable regime," Lavrov said while meeting with Arab League officials in Egypt.

He added for emphasis, "We will certainly help the Ukrainian people to get rid of the regime, which is absolutely anti-people and anti-historical," according to The Associated Press.

US Lies About RIMPAC War Games Exposed + Abby Martin At RIMPAC War Games: The Inside Story

RIMPAC War Games

Empire Files: Abby Martin was in Hawaii covering the 2022 RIMPAC war games, with 26 nations participating under direction of the US military.

'Great Resignation'? Here's Why People Are Quitting Their Jobs

"Lack of career development/advancement" and "inadequate compensation"...

By Tyler Durden: With employees in the United States quitting their jobs voluntarily at a rate 25 percent higher from December 2019-May 2022 compared to pre-pandemic levels, employers and some entire industries are scrambling to fill the substantial gaps being left behind.

Research in Australia, Canada, India, Singapore, the United Kingdom and the United States by McKinsey & Company reveals that of employees that chose to quit their jobs from April 2020 to April 2022, 65 percent did not so far return to the same industry.

As Statista's Martin Armstring details in the infographic below, the survey also revealed the most common reasons cited by those handing in their notice.

At the top of the list are the classics: "Lack of career development/advancement" and "inadequate compensation".

The importance of a good boss is also highlighted, however, with the third most common response being uncaring or uninspiring leaders.

What Hath God Wrought - The Media Matrix Part 2

"Knowledge is power"

Corbett: It's difficult for us to appreciate just how incredible it was for those who first witnessed communication from a distance with a disembodied electric ghost. In fact, it was almost impossible for people to understand this type of communication in anything but spiritual terms. Even the word "medium" evokes the specter of contact with the spirit world.

The Night Of The Broken Clubs

'The Jewish Green Shirts carried out the orders theyd been given: To break both arms and both legs by clubbing the Gentiles; To avoid clubbing them on the heads; To remove their bonds after breaking their arms & legs, to leave them at the site; & To leave one local with broken arms but without broken legs so he could make it back to the village…'

By Yossi Safid: …I am withholding the names and a few other identifying details, but the rest is presented in full and accurately. It could happen to almost anyone.

In the second month of the intifada, at the end of January 1988, Captain A., a support-company commander in a well-known battalion, was summoned to his commander, a lieutenant colonel. The lieutenant colonel gave the captain clear instructions to carry out arrests in the village of Hawara outside of Nablus. Captain A. told his commander that, in his view, the instructions were neither morally defensible nor would they contribute to calming the area. The lieutenant colonel responded by saying that it was a new policy, and it must be implemented.

Davos Shill Trudeau Plans To Slash Canadian Fertilizer Use In Similar Move To Netherlands & Sri Lanka

Eat the bugs when?

Authored by Jarryd Jaeger: Over the past few weeks, farmers across the Netherlands have vehemently turned up in droves to protest the government's plan to reduce nitrous oxide emissions, arguing it would have disastrous consequences for their business, and eventually, consumers.

The source of their anger is a policy that is not unlike one which Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is seeking to implement in Canada.

In 2020, the Trudeau Liberals announced that their goal was to reduce emissions from fertilizer, a major producer of nitrous oxide, by 50 percent over the next eight years.

Fertilizer Canada slammed the government's "short-sighted approach," arguing that reducing nitrogen fertilizer use "will have considerable impact on Canadian farmers' incomes and reduce overall Canadian exports and GDP."

In a report compiled by Meyers Norris Penny (MNP), they suggest that regulated fertilizer reduction could cost Canadian farmers $48 billion by 2030 and reduce crop sizes.