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Rioting Breaks Out In Egypt
When we reported three days ago that 59 outbound shipments of gold were intercepted at the Egypt airport, we predicted that the country's oligarchs were proactively preparing precisely for what they knew is coming imminently. It has arrived. From Al-Jazeera: "Hundreds of protesters have begun to take to the streets in Cairo,
the Egyptian capital, chanting slogans against the police, the interior
minister and the government, in scenes that the capital has not seen
since the 1970s, Al Jazeera's correspondent reported. Downtown Cairo has come to a standstill, and protesters are now
marching towards the headquarters of the ruling National Democracy
Party. "It is unprecedented for security forces to let people march like
this without trying to stop them," Al Jazeera's Rawya Rageh reported
from the site of the protest."
And the government is panicking:
The Egyptian government had earlier warned activists hoping to emulate Tunisian pro-democracy protesters that they face arrest if they go ahead with Tuesday's mass demonstrations, which some have labelled as the "Day of wrath".
The protesters are gathering outside Cairo's largest courthouse, and are marching across downtown Cairo.The rallies have been promoted online by groups saying they speak for young Egyptians frustrated by the kind of poverty and oppression which triggered the overthrow of Tunisia's president.
Black-clad riot police, backed by armoured vehicles and fire engines, have been deployed in a massive security operation in Cairo, with the biggest concentrations at likely flashpoints, including: the Cairo University campus, the central Tahrir Square and the courthouse where protesters are said to be gathering.
Coinciding with a national holiday in honour of the police, a key force in keeping president Hosni Mubarak in power for 30 years, the outcome in Egypt on Tuesday is seen as a test of whether vibrant Web activism can translate into street action.
Organisers have called for a "day of revolution against torture, poverty, corruption and unemployment".
"Activists said they wanted to use this particular day to highlight the irony of celebrating Egypt's police at a time when police brutality is making headlines," reported Rawya Rageh, Al Jazeera's correspondent in Cairo.
"In fact, the call originated from a Facebook page initially set up to honour a 28-year-old man from Alexandria who activists say was tortured to death by police.
"Witnesses are telling us that there are hundreds on the streets. This is an indication that the protests seem so far to be larger than the usual protests that have taken place here in Egypt over the past few years."
Turns out that not banning the internet (on time) was not such a good idea.
"Our protest on the 25th is the beginning of the end," wrote organisers of a Facebook group with 87,000 followers.
"It is the end of silence, acquiescence and submission to what is happening in our country. It will be the start of a new page in Egypt's history, one of activism and demanding our rights."
Rights watchdog Amnesty International has urged Egypt's authorities "to allow peaceful protests".
Protests in Egypt, the biggest Arab state and a keystone Western ally in the Middle East, tend to be poorly attended and are often quashed swiftly by the police, who prevent marching.
The banned Muslim Brotherhood, seen as having Egypt's biggest grassroots opposition network, has not called on members to take part but said some would join in a personal capacity.
Organisers have called for protesters to not display political or religious affiliations at demonstrations. The Facebook page says: "Today is for all Egyptians."
Commenting on the wave of public unrest in Tunisia, Adli, the interior minister, said talk that the "Tunisian model" could work in other Arab countries was "propaganda" and had been dismissed by politicians as "intellectual immaturity".
"Young people are very excited, and this time there will be much more than any other time," Ahmed Maher, one of the founders of the opposition youth movement said.
"This is going to be a real test of whether online activism in Egypt can translate into real action," Al Jazeera's Rageh reported.
"Anger has been on the rise in Egypt for the past couple of years, but we have seen similar calls fizzle out. The main difference now is that these calls are coming after what happened in Tunisia, which seems to have not only inspired activists, but actually ordinary Egyptians, a dozen of whom we have seen set themselves on fire in copycat self-immolations similar to the one that had sparked the uprising in Tunisia."
Elsewhere, it is not at all surprising that the UNWFR just released a program promoting food subisidies to eliminate the risk of rioting:
Risks of global instability are rising as governments cut subsidies that help the poor cope with surging food and fuel costs to ease budget crunches, the head of the United Nations’ World Food Program said.
“We’re in an era where the world and nations ignore the food issue at their peril,” Josette Sheeran said in an interview yesterday at the agency’s Rome headquarters.
The global recession has eroded government aid that helped people in poorer countries afford bread, cooking oils and other staples. The trend raises the odds of unrest even though prices have improved in many nations from 2007-2009, Sheeran said. During that period, more than 60 food riots occurred worldwide, according to the U.S. State Department.
And so the central planning that brought to us the inflation-driven rioting, which Zero Hedge first predicted in 2011, is about to lead to even more central planning, as governments everywhere jump to provide food subsidies and price caps, as was just announced in Russia overnight.
Below are two videos of events transpiring right now in Egypt which is what will soon move out of Africa and into Asia (remember: rice bubble) unless central planning2 promptly becomes the next major paradigm.
h/t Scrataliano and Nour Hammoury
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Funny that almost no one gives this question any thought, as if it could never happen here.
Not in "our" World.
Lately, I've come to believe the world would still hate the US if we bought everyone a car, gave them food stamps and let them screw out daughters.
Sounds like the damn ingrates brought it on themselves then.
I'm just tired of being the world's whipping boy. We don't run Egypt.
The world has not yet managed to give us even a taste of a real whipping. I understand the fatigue with all the blame, but we've played the role of puppet master of the world since WWII. Take all the foreign aid given to maintain the Egyptian regime as just one tiny example in the present case.
I don't think we've ever meaningfully acknowledged, much less come to terms with, the damage we have caused. Consider the "preemptive" War in Iraq that has killed hundreds of thousands of people. Even the rationale for launching the war was a lie. Yet our Government has never formally admitted that it was a mistake, much less apologized.
Apparently being American means never having to say you're sorry.
I don't know that a simple apology would satisfy the rest of the world, but how much consideration can people who won't even offer that small consolation honestly deserve?
Foreign aid is bad? Who knew?
Let's end it, then. All of it. De-fund the UN while we are at it.
Are not all of these nations rioting, lately, former European colonies? Wasn't it Britain that drew the map of the current middle east, and set the oligarchs in power?
Why does Russia, the former Soviet Union, get a pass?
They don't (Russia). The people who lived in the Russian sphere of influence hate them, ergo airport bombings...
As for the UN, it only exists because it is highly useful to the US...
Foreign aid is, 9 times out of 10, political bribery that allows US corporations access to raw materials or labor in those areas.
I find it funny that you think the US is the whipping boy of the world... In fact the opposite is true, the world is the whipping boy of the US.
Does anyone like the UN?
Everyone I know wants to turn it into a parking lot.
Rich elites make mondo dollars with the graft.
Russia gets a "pass" in the sense that they've had their comeuppance. And because they had far less impact on the world, Cold War saber-rattling nothwithstanding. They were a tin-horn facimile of an empire, which is why we "won." The US has ruled since WWII.
To go back to previous imperial empires to ration responsibility might lead to Adam and Eve, but I think it dodges the real issue.
Now we're exporting hunger and starvation to a large proportion of the world's people--in order to cover the criminal losses of our bankster overlords. That's US.
It's easy enough to say "Hey, that's our government, we have no moral burden for that." Yet we don't accept that excuse from other nations. It made sense to hold the Taliban responsible for harboring al qaeda . . . much as we might have regretted the injury it brought upon innocent Afghani people.
I suspect that other nations are viewing our situation similarly. Just as we would.
I get it. When we are poor and miseable, they will love us.
When is the UK going to give back the loot it stole from India?
Right after they return the Elgin Marbles?
The Brits sure stole a lot stuff over the years.
Same time the Italians give back the loot they stole from UK, I guess.
It just never ends, does it?
Everyone has an axe to grind.
Who stole our conscience?
The Trans-national progressive socialists.
And the ones who told me not to legislate my morality. Their is no conscience running the world anymore, but "What's in it for me?"
Gee Bob, I don't want a comeuppance I just want to win, is that bad?
Maybe not ALL foreign aid... but from where I sit... most. Money is fungible. Any aide we provide a government ultimately provides them the means to "control" their population. And I agree... de-fund the UN and stop trying to draw maps.
Hey Bob, Nations act in their own self interest. That's their job. They all do it. The US is nothing special in this regard except that maybe they erred a little in the direction of helping other nations - despite the bashing.
Only the US gets judged against a Utopian standard. That is a hard standard to meet.
Times really do change. Where I grew up a fundamental measure of a man's character was his ability and willingness to take responsibility for his mistakes. We were drilled with the myth of George Washington and the cherry tree for guidance.
Unfortunately, pointing fingers at the other kid/nation has become the norm and, even more perverse, somehow gotten mixed up with self-respect and love of country.
Honestly, if we would take responsibility for our mistakes I don't think blame would be so odious. It might even allow us to learn from them.
That is so weird. From my perspective we are guilty for not using our might to take down more evil dictators around the world.
Seems we've been busy doing other things.
Like putting up dictators around the world?
Which ones?
The guy in Iran? The guys in South America?
The question should have quckly answered itself to its presenter. That's sad.
Clueless solider is clueless. You know all those shitty buildings that fucking fall down all over afghanistan built by fucktards who don't care about them lasting simply overcharging to build them and then trying enforce payment from the government they install.
You are just one giant clueless fuck who simply shoots who he's told. You need to jump up maslows pyramid and make a whole hell of a lot of things you're need to know. Being violent and uninformed is no way to go through life man.
Real politik Bob, it is never going away. Amazonion tribes have interests not friends, just ratchet that up and you will get it. Utopia does not exist.
But honor does exist.
I remember a time when we aspired to it and strove to embody it as a people. Now it's just cynicism and smart-assed dismissals of the kind of difficulties it requires.
Doesn't honor require you judge people fairly, and their actions in context with events as they happened at the time.
Hindsight is not always a fair judge.
Honor means taking responsibility for your fuck-ups, which are never visable to us except through hindsight. And a respectable conscience is not a convenient memory hole.
That is a standard the US set for them.
A useful standard as it gives opportunities to stick a nose in domestic issues of foreign nations on ground on humanity and stuff.
A less useful standard when it comes to be tested against it.
Whats all this "us" stuff? I didn't vote for Bernake or his policies. I am sorry that a small group of financial oligarchs are exporting inflation to paper over thier sorry-ass mistakes through their puppet but I am powerless to stop it.
Do we even know the names or locations of the puppet masters?
au contraire mon capitan;
Read this small quick one about the IMF's 4 part plan as told by a former insider.
The Globalizer Who Came In From the Cold
the Bank hands every minister the same exact four-step program. http://www.gregpalast.com/the-globalizer-who-came-in-from-the-cold/ You will see that Tunisia for example was by the book.Apart from the car they already got two out of three.
See what happens to states that take the UN government cheese?
Nobody wants your crappy gas guzzling SUVs, genetically modified food or fat daughters. Just try leaving the rest of the world alone for once, let us sort out our own problems.
LOL. I bet you'll still cash the checks and call for help when you need it tough guy.
break out of your trance. You subscribe to narrative that is not fully based in reality.
When you have a few minutes to think, ask yourself, "why did I call him a tough guy"? What is it about what he wrote that sounded like bravado to you? Here are his words... "Nobody wants your crappy gas guzzling SUVs, genetically modified food or fat daughters. Just try leaving the rest of the world alone for once, let us sort out our own problems".
He wants the US to leave whatever his country is alone. He wasn't itching for a fight, he wasn't claiming perfection... he wants to be left alone. Somewhere along the line you have allowed yourself to be conditioned to see this as some sort of threat.
I'll make you a deal. When Europe is willing to guarantee open sea lanes and the free flow of oil at market prices, I will vote for an isolationist foreign policy.
The Pax Americana will end. Good luck with that.
It is interesting. Whenever someone asks for a little transparancy around our foreign policy, we are called "isolationists". Let's call a spade a spade, shall we? If the purpose of our foreign policy (wars and foreign aide) is to keep oil flowing to America, let's just say so. We're all grown ups... we can make decisions on whether or not to support our elected leaders as they send troops to invade countries and prop up dictators based on our need to get their oil, no? Or maybe it isn't our need to get their oil, but our need for that oil to be sold in dollars.
But instead of the truth, we are provided a narrative that is not based in reality. Is that not terribly distasteful to you? So instead of recognizing that there are legit reasons for some countries to show legit contempt for the US, we extend the narrative to include, "they hate us for our freedom". How can people live with this lie?
Wait, what? I thought we invaded to take down a dictator, and we have sacrificed much blood trying to give Iraqis a democratic governement. It would have been a hell of a lot cheaper in lives and money to install a dictator, or better yet, a Governor to rule for us.
If we were imperialistic we would just take the oil.
Look up Saddam, France's oil company, Total and Marsh Arabs if you want to see what a true douchebag nation does.
We took down a dictator to whom we once provided support... even with the knowledge of what his brutal regime was doing. Why? Meanwhile, there are tons of dictators around the globe... why this one? Personally, I subscribe to the notion that Saddam only crossed the line when he decided to sell oil in Euro's... that move required regime change. We need to keep demand for dollars high to support our Ponzi scheme. don't fock with oil denominated in dollars. FWIW... that was the first thing that changed in an overthrown Iraq... oil sold in dollars immediately.
Our imperialism is different from the traditional definition. Dollar hegomony is a better terminology, but it is similar to traditional imperialism with the stick of our military. What we call it and how it works can be debated... BUT... I feel strongly that the "story" that we believe in isn't true.
We gave him intel support in his war with Iran. An, arguably equally evil regime. Evens out.
He is gone, now. We took him down. Best we could do.
I don't see a Hegemony of the Dollar. I see trust in a currency that allows shaky nations to trade.
Maybe (trust in a currency that allows shaky nations to trade). But when the US dropped the gold standard, that currency become much less credible. So how do you keep demand high? Make sure the globe purchases oil in dollars... that should do it for spell. The walls are closing in.
What percentage of dollars out there are needed for the oil trade?
I don't know... and to be sure... I did not junk you. I have appreciated our exchange. I don't have any answers... only a near certainty that the things we are told simply don't add up. I dont' think everything is a lie... and I do think that a lot of the "bad guys" are really bad guys... i.e. I'm no fan of Saddam.
This is stupid. In an extortion game, people who are the easiest to extort are kept in the extorted position.
US citizens owning the oil would mean they would get US laws protection.
Etc...
When an extorter is out to grow the herd of the extorted, it is not to put himself in the position of the extorted but in the position of the extorter.
If you don't have a closed mind then have a read of
"Overthrow: America's Century of Regime Change from Hawaii to Iraq" by Stephen Kinzer
What are you talking about? Haven't you heard that the world is funding the US. All you guys do nowadays is borrow money from everyone, eat BigMacs and watch American Idol.
I take fat daughters.
They could be useful for home made soap and explosives - Tyler should know something about this.
Wait, I thought it was because there is more cushion for the pushin?
Misallocation of resources if I ever heard of one. He must be a socialist.
that is exactly correct. but you need to add the screwing of wives as well.
Conscience? I doubt he's familiar with that word.
That course is not taught at Harvard
Oh, that's easy. He just thinks of all the poor people of the world that can't afford a decent meal now thanks to his antics, and thinks 'Let them eat bonds'. And then he cackles!
Given the speed of advance from west to east we should see riots in Tabuk by March and Ar Riyad by the end of August. I cannot imagine how The Chairbeast will use his fifteen minutes.
Ben Bernanke: #1 Terrorist.
Exactly. Adolf Hitler should have done a better job. Instead of putting innocent people into the gas chamber, he should have put this monster in it.
They were not innocent, they were guilty of refusing orders from self nominated Zionist masters from New York.
They have told, they will wait until God sends the Messiah who restores great Israel. Shooting to Palestinians was not exactly their intention. So somebody had to be hired to clean opposition.
Ben's politic is in some way a continuation. He has no problem with people-like creatures dying of hunger. Limited resources must be preserved for the choosen ones.
I'm no supporter of Ben B. but I don't think he's the only one to blame for 3 decades of financial missmanagement by the US.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
This has clearly been stage managed a little. Elbareri (Sp!), the major opposition leader tweeted his support for todays action.
Looks like the banksters are spoiling for a fight. And the pincer again points towards......guesses? It's going to be Spain that sets things off this time.... watch spain...
ORI
http://aadivaahan.wordpress.com/2010/06/18/of-tipping-points-and-shape-s...
I'm waiting for the CEOs up at Davos to start overturning phone booths and throwing the Louis 14th furnishings through the leaded plate glass windows to demonstate thier antipathy toward the heavy burden of global regulation and the rising cost of Maseratis and office bedroom equipped 747s.
LOL. Thanks, I needed that.
Damn, now that is funny.
4:41 PM local time, Twitter service is down in Egypt.
It's ok everyone I got this...
...Ahem...ok now I understand you're upset. Yes prices are high and you might be hungry, but this is actually a good thing, allow me to explain. You see high food prices are a side effect of the wonderful process of inflation at work...ah I see you are aware of the terminology, excellent, well you know the alternative is the end of the...well if yes if you put it that way it is the end of the world for you if you're hungry, but you mustn't be so selfish sir, its either you or the world! I hope you understand... but anyways, yes we broke the back of deflation with a silver mallet!.. and now the end of the world has been avoided. It was a miracle we avoided the deathtrap of the peasant's I mean workers, erm, I mean fixed income earners' money being worth more, because if we and our other central bank buddies had not loosed monetary policy...whats that?...yes loose money...umm made it easy to borrow...ah I see...well the most important thing is for the banks to borrow and the consumer will get the passed along money. yes I assure you it will happen eventually...nonono sir actually we don't actually print the money, we use computers, its as easy as pressing a button to adjust the...well I see you just aren't listening to logic. Maybe the riot police will be convincing.
'growth'
No, they just need a Keynesian macroidiot economist to go explain that CPI is running at 2.3%, and in fact the food inflation they experience is non-existant, and it in fact is cancelled out by the deflation experienced in consumer electronics. That will change their opinions, as they will immediately realize economists, who have studied the sustainability of a 30-year ever-increasing debt bubble, without once realizing it isn't, are infallible.
In the U.S. it will be more like...."What do you mean we aren't in a recovery? The DOW is at 36,000. Afford food? What are you talking about? Everything is A-OK! The new I-Pad comes out next week! The trading computers are buying, buying, buying. Please stay at home and watch American Idol, we will provide everything you need." The idea that what is happening in Egypt and across the world can never happen in the U.S. foolish. Will it happen soon? Probably not. But there is only so much distraction that will work before people start to realise that their money is worth less and less and their options become fewer and fewer. I don't hope for those kinds of results here (in the U.S.), but the problems that beget those results have already begun.
They sure know how to capitalize on visitors with their pyramid schemes...
Got oil?!
who benefits the most from the mid east being distablized?
russia.. who had a bomb yesterday? russia...
why?
Got Oil?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petroleum_industry_in_Russia
everyone knows who #1 is... OPEC...
so, if you could.. get your shit together like the KGB can... fucking up the middle east could be very profitable... not that Putin is that smart.
BP/Russia oil deal touted by Putin, doubted by US Congress Friday, January 14th, 2011 By Thomas HartA BP/Russia oil deal was announced Friday that is being billed as a “global strategic alliance.” The $ 7.8 billion Russia/BP oil deal is a stock swap between BP and Rosneft, which is owned by the Russian Government. Facing up to $21 billion in fines for causing the worst oil spill in U.S. history, BP is shifting its focus to the Russian arctic.
BP in bed with Russian oligarchsThe BP/Russia oil deal was announced in London by BP chief executive officer Bob Dudley and a brace of prominent Russian politicians. The BP/Russia oil deal with Rosneft is an arrangement between two of the largest oil companies in the world. Dudley called it “an entirely new strategic alliance of these two great countries.” The deal was announced a day after Dudley met with Russian prime minister Vladimir Putin in Moscow. BP already owns 50 percent of an oil company venture with a group of Russia’s billionaire oligarchs called TNK-BP. The Kremlin has been looking for ways to reduce its stake in Rosneft.
http://personalmoneystore.com/moneyblog/2011/01/14/bp-russia-oil-deal/
FIREINCAIRO
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oEkG3raANtU
As CHICAGO said, Only the beginning...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fbMq1WWUXc8
some more videos..
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OmCBACGFN1U
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o-wZpF6P7sQ
..and pictures
http://yfrog.com/evbv4z
http://yfrog.com/gyohdtkj
Al-Jazeera said there were "hundreds" protesters. That looks more like a few thousand to me.
..quite possible,,, watch (with some luck) on ustream live:
http://www.ustream.tv/channel/egyelections2
http://www.ustream.tv/channel/righter#utm_campaign=unknown
20,000 reported in Alexandria.
Noise! Bitchez!!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6SNqwjdhY_Y&feature=
SHTF and the "market" up, up and up...?
Revolutions are very often staged from behind.
Arabs are very easily duped, otherwise they would understand that the word Islam=serf.
Smells like somebody has a plan here.
Also vast energy areas involved all over former, but not so former, colonies of Northern Africa.
I am not on the ground there... but thats a LOT of movement in a very short time...
SNAP cards bitchez!
When we take to the streets here, all the signs must read "Save the Police Pension Fund" or Put the power back into the hands of the Police". Hey.....what's wrong with a little reverse psychology? The more MSM tries confusing us, the more we will confuse those who are boot jacketed!
I think that guy stole that policeman's Ipad.
I WOULD KICK THE SHIT OUT OF HIM TO!
THIS is the true value of gold. It's not a "currency" for us dirt-farming peasants. But it is indeed a currency for oligarchs: whenever they get into trouble, they load up the (country's) gold and get outta Dodge, a few tons heavier but several million dollars richer.
If more governments collapse, I think that'll be the catalyst to end the slide in gold prices. It could even hit $2000 if a major country like Pakistan or Saudi Arabia sees its government overthrown.
THERE IS NO INFLATION:
http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-0125-mcdonalds-20110124,0,874800.s...
Be prepared to pay more for burgers. McDonald's Corp. is looking to increase the price of some menu items as it tries to deal with the rising cost of beef and other ingredients.
McDonald's is not alone. The restaurant industry is expected to raise prices in the face of rising commodity costs, and grocery stores began raising prices last year.
I see the price increases all the time. Went to buy a bell pepper for dinner last night and it was $2.29 for just one stupid bell pepper. I really hope other people are noticing this.
That's a biggie there -- for Egypt to go bonkers. This is going to be interesting in the ME.
I wouldn't be sorry if Iran had another uprising. It might work this time. Methinks I better tank up on gas.
When the Green Revolution was going on, I actually found myself rooting for Iranians for the first time in my life.
Watching it, I had that "Berlin Wall coming down" feeling. Sucks how it turned out.
Qaddaffi was singing "Clowns to the left of me, jokers to the right" at the karaoke bar last night.
Well played, sir...very well played.
+1
Whenever something crucial like this happens, I always go to CNN to see whether they consider it to be news. As usual, nowhere to be seen. But amongst their top headlines is this critical bit of information: "Flavor Flav: 'My chicken ain't no joke'". No, that ain't no joke.
Of course, CNN never covers in realtime when petty US puppet dictators get deposed. They have to apply the proper spin, then run it through multiple vetting procedures before it makes it to their front page.
I am Chumbawamba.
'Day of rage' as Hezbollah gains power in Lebanonhttp://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/41247842/ns/world_news-mideastn_africa/
TRIPOLI, Lebanon — Hundreds of angry protesters burned tires and blocked roads across Lebanon on Tuesday after Iranian-backed Hezbollah secured the appointment of its candidate to lead the next government.
The nomination of Najib Mikati as prime minister, endorsed by President Michel Suleiman, is seen a victory for Hezbollah, which secured the parliamentary votes needed to wrest control of the Lebanese government.
KNEEL BEFORE ZOD! (you corrupt govt. mother fuckers!)
And yet again thanks to facebook :)
I think I shouldn't have told those jokes in the Egyptian discussion board on Facebooks ....
Uh....not to be pedantic or anything like that but the first videos sure didn't look like a riot.
More like a protest.
This will probably get spammed in a few threads cuz I'm so pissed about it.
My family ranches in Montana. They have a small operating loan backed by cattle and equipment. The loan is worth approx 50% of the materials backing it at 8%.
The small, community bank is trying to pressure them out of the loan by selling their herd. Get the sheeple to sell the factory. No fucking way.
“If it were me, I’d sell now while cattle prices are high.” says the douchebag banker, threatening with a story of some poor schmuck with $3 mil of land that the bank put in default over $3k. He lost his land, blah, blah....
Assholes must be really hurting for cash. Ladies and Gentlemen, I give you the reason why America is fucked. No one is thinking past saving their own ass today. Fortunately my family has adequate capital and counsel, but what about the poor bastards that don’t? They think food prices will go DOWN and the bank will take their land.
Mother fucker.....
Don't ranchers keep lots of guns?
Varmints are found both on and off the ranch. Gotta keep the herds and flocks safe. Predators abound on all fronts.
I am Chumbawamba.
http://www.barnesbullets.com/information/high-speed-video/?PHPSESSID=0c20d1dec3eeeaced6535f3feca905fc
gettum Chumb!
People in third world countries can figure out they are being screwed, they have just not figured out that the RESERVE CURRENCY is the root of their problems.
It's time to loot the Apple Store!
I WANT THE Itunes CREDIT CARDS! YOU CAN HAVE THE REST!!
ha ha Sudden Debt, no Apple love? What if you get hungry? An Ipad might come in handy to fight off hunger sometime...
Ha! I knew this was next, and now the UN is involved.
"Hundreds of protesters have begun to take to the streets in Cairo...."
In a city of over 7 million? I had a bigger movement this morning (relatively speaking of course).
How many Courics was it?
http://www.southparkstudios.com/clips/155640/crap-verification
How many of you guys speak Arabic? I'm pretty sure this is video of a Founders Day Parage.
Send in the Pope, he'll come them evil doers down.
People of the wold,watch out for looting
criminals stealing your national gold.
This will deprive you and your fellow
countrymen of rebuilding your country
after they leave with the loot.Gold has
a very important role after currency collapse
to reset and restart a new financial system.
This will not be the last attempt of the elite
to rob national treasuries and no country is
immune of this.To be continued:( ..........
Shadow government commander #1 to shadow government commander #2: Looks like the SHTF over there. Better prepare for when our people figure out that whats being going on here since 1913 is a scam. Put more of the top secret stupid making drug into the water system and make sure the TV networks churn out more reality show non-think programs. How about the "Real housewives of Tel Aviv?"
Disney Cruises had a port of call in Tunis, Tunisia...did they stop in Eqypt next? I thought deposed leaders went to embassies, not Disney for protection......ahahhhaa
Never trust a mouse. You can fit a lot more gold on a cruise ship than in pillowcases.
Epcot to soon anounce Eqypt pavillion...
most Americans aren't Americans. Especially the government. It's of the people and by the people of Tel Aviv. And then there are the American sheeple. Half are functional illiterates.
United States isn't. It will have to be reborn, because it's dead as hell now.
You know, The Bernank has got a raging woody watching all this muslim discontent unfold.
Odds are that if Egypt's oligarchy is toppled the Muslim Brotherhood will create a Sunni version of Iran's Islamic Republic. Jihad is still on the rise. Only when it is defeated will Muslim countries give the Anglosphere model of representative republics a chance.