Forwarded from Disclose.tv
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NOW - WHO's Tedros: "I have decided that the global #monkeypox outbreak represents a public health emergency of international concern."
@disclosetv
@disclosetv
Forwarded from Peter Madden
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Forwarded from The Irish Git (Michael Brazil)
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Safe and effective my ****
Forwarded from Satirical Soldier
Odysee
An honest Conversation with john waters and james conway
john waters speaks with james conway a farmer and activist about the current state of ireland and where it all could be going between the wef agenda 2030 and 2040 and the take over of our once beautif...
Forwarded from Late Stage Ireland
Thomas with the tiocfaidh ár lá avatar is going to be monitoring the reaction of Kinnegad locals to make sure they are equally distressed about the Ukrainians arriving to prove they weren't just motivated by racism all along.
Like a little EuroStore KGB agent.
🔗 facebook.com
Like a little EuroStore KGB agent.
🔗 facebook.com
Forwarded from Late Stage Ireland
Some details in the London Times about who owns Harry's Hotel in Kinnegad.
>Coldec Investments 2, which is controlled by Rickie Rogers, agreed in late June to acquire Sicuro Holdings, the owner of the hotel. Sicuro is owned by Ann and Niamh Collins.
>Accounts for Sicuro show that Coldec acquired an option to buy the company in January this year.
>The proposed transaction is being funded with loans from Rinawade Investments, also controlled by Rogers. In total, the businessman seems to be committing €3 million to the proposed deal.
>Rogers is part of the management team that acquired Mercury Engineering from the O’Kane family in a deal that valued the business at €50 million.
>Mercury Engineering Holdings posted revenues of just over €1 billion in 2020, and operating profits of €62 million.
>Rogers is Mercury’s chief operating officer.
If he's getting the full €6,000 per room per month, there are 45 rooms so that's €3,240,000 for the year, just over what he paid.
🔗 archive.ph
>Coldec Investments 2, which is controlled by Rickie Rogers, agreed in late June to acquire Sicuro Holdings, the owner of the hotel. Sicuro is owned by Ann and Niamh Collins.
>Accounts for Sicuro show that Coldec acquired an option to buy the company in January this year.
>The proposed transaction is being funded with loans from Rinawade Investments, also controlled by Rogers. In total, the businessman seems to be committing €3 million to the proposed deal.
>Rogers is part of the management team that acquired Mercury Engineering from the O’Kane family in a deal that valued the business at €50 million.
>Mercury Engineering Holdings posted revenues of just over €1 billion in 2020, and operating profits of €62 million.
>Rogers is Mercury’s chief operating officer.
If he's getting the full €6,000 per room per month, there are 45 rooms so that's €3,240,000 for the year, just over what he paid.
🔗 archive.ph
Forwarded from Late Stage Ireland
or a gombeen man.
Rinawade Investments is just a residential address in Leixlip, employs one other person.
Rinawade Investments is just a residential address in Leixlip, employs one other person.
Forwarded from Patri0tsareinContr0l ️️️
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DJT: “…and something’s gonna have to happen, cuz people are not gonna take it much longer.”
IYKYK 😉
IYKYK 😉
Forwarded from Peter Madden
Good man Philip.. the message getting out there .. this time via the lotuseaters.com podcast
Forwarded from Derek Blighe
Sexual criminal asylum seeker Chico Makamba has been sent back to prison for failing to self deport.
So instead of just deporting him, the dep of justice has decided to use tax revenues to put him back into our cushy prisons for 2 years to finish his sentence.
What happens when he gets out of prison? Will he then finally be deported?
Looking doubtful as the Angolan embassy is now claiming that he isn't even from the country after all.
Once again, the government is responsible for the crimes of this scum.
So instead of just deporting him, the dep of justice has decided to use tax revenues to put him back into our cushy prisons for 2 years to finish his sentence.
What happens when he gets out of prison? Will he then finally be deported?
Looking doubtful as the Angolan embassy is now claiming that he isn't even from the country after all.
Once again, the government is responsible for the crimes of this scum.
👍3
Forwarded from The Irish Git (Michael Brazil)
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A lipid nano reply
Forwarded from Justin Barrett
Am I the only one, I often am, discomfited by the term “cost of living crisis”? It seems to be one of those euphemisms like when we called a World War an emergency. Indeed, it was an emergency but that hardly held the whole thing. And indeed, the ever-developing inflationary spiral is causing a crisis most evidently expressed in the average person’s living as a cost crisis, but that’s hardly the whole thing either. In this case it can be positively misleading. It understates the magnitude of the problem, misdirects as to the cause, and suggests a relatively simple solution which would exacerbate the looming disaster.
The problem is an incoming global scale economic collapse, starting in finance as a result of debt, playing out through exploding money supply in a predoomed effort to monetise the debt, then empty supermarket shelves and hungry people. If it were simply a cost of living crisis then wage and welfare rises, plus some random free money here and there would work. But it’s random free money across the system that created the mess and that can’t be the solution.
Within the term then there is an essential refusal to address reality. At a political level parties of the left can call for more free money placating their base, while parties of the ostensible right can call for fiscal care without either engaging with the facts except superficially. Above all else nothing occurs politically that would resolve, mitigate or even delay the process. Or the end.
Inflation is a form of tax levied by the creators of it against society in general. It occurs when too much money chases too few goods. When it’s supply and demand led it might well be termed extortion, and there is some attempt being made to pretend that the current spiralling inflation is exactly this, and the primary culprit then can be our new geo-political adversaries Russia. Insofar as supply and demand imbalance are inflation led it is not at all as simple as Russia’s fault but that is a topic for a different day. Far more important is that the inflation is not a production, product supply, delivery system or demand issue in any primary way. It is a money supply problem, specifically that over 40% of the world’s money has been issued in the last three years alone. That currency was kept from markets by lock down, it is not anymore. Money quite simply isn’t what it used to be. That form of inflation, by central bank issuance is straightforward theft. We know that if they were issuing counterfeit, there’s no need to see the issuance endless “legal tender” and differently.
Efforts by the same central banks to combat the problem may be described gently as derisory. In fairness having been the problem they cannot be the solution. The currency is in circulation now. Significant attempts to withdraw it will cause economic collapse just as surely as letting inflation burn the world. No one even knows anymore exactly how to calculate it. It’s not a cost of living crisis as it is a “can’t live like this” crisis. Let’s begin at least by calling the cause, inflation; the people, international financiers; the victims, you and I.
The solution will need to be more total and radical than anything that we can even imagine today.
The problem is an incoming global scale economic collapse, starting in finance as a result of debt, playing out through exploding money supply in a predoomed effort to monetise the debt, then empty supermarket shelves and hungry people. If it were simply a cost of living crisis then wage and welfare rises, plus some random free money here and there would work. But it’s random free money across the system that created the mess and that can’t be the solution.
Within the term then there is an essential refusal to address reality. At a political level parties of the left can call for more free money placating their base, while parties of the ostensible right can call for fiscal care without either engaging with the facts except superficially. Above all else nothing occurs politically that would resolve, mitigate or even delay the process. Or the end.
Inflation is a form of tax levied by the creators of it against society in general. It occurs when too much money chases too few goods. When it’s supply and demand led it might well be termed extortion, and there is some attempt being made to pretend that the current spiralling inflation is exactly this, and the primary culprit then can be our new geo-political adversaries Russia. Insofar as supply and demand imbalance are inflation led it is not at all as simple as Russia’s fault but that is a topic for a different day. Far more important is that the inflation is not a production, product supply, delivery system or demand issue in any primary way. It is a money supply problem, specifically that over 40% of the world’s money has been issued in the last three years alone. That currency was kept from markets by lock down, it is not anymore. Money quite simply isn’t what it used to be. That form of inflation, by central bank issuance is straightforward theft. We know that if they were issuing counterfeit, there’s no need to see the issuance endless “legal tender” and differently.
Efforts by the same central banks to combat the problem may be described gently as derisory. In fairness having been the problem they cannot be the solution. The currency is in circulation now. Significant attempts to withdraw it will cause economic collapse just as surely as letting inflation burn the world. No one even knows anymore exactly how to calculate it. It’s not a cost of living crisis as it is a “can’t live like this” crisis. Let’s begin at least by calling the cause, inflation; the people, international financiers; the victims, you and I.
The solution will need to be more total and radical than anything that we can even imagine today.