Bill Cosby, this is what a soft assassination by the main stream media looks like.
it is possible in part because of this
Bill Cosby, this is what a soft assassination by the main stream media looks like.
it is possible in part because of this
and i see the bbc is also having a go at rb
"Look, Madame, where we live, look how we live ... look at the life we have...The Republic has forgotten us."
So what sort of Cockneys were they? The sort that bought their hovels and improved 'em? their grandkids perhaps selling them for a very tidy sum later on? Or the sort of hereditary serfs that lived in someone else's house generation after generation, owning nothing?
No. Not being a fucking idiot I'd not be blaming every other fucker for my own lack of foresight, effort or luck.
Go soothingly on the grease mud, as there lurks the skid demon
how the hell does one answer that
you know the answer in your own heart
doesnt change the original fact that the bully boys are asking for pocket money
our family were moved from hoxton to west ham when the slum clearances occured we rented then bought and lived in the same houses ever since . . .
"Look, Madame, where we live, look how we live ... look at the life we have...The Republic has forgotten us."
brutha can you spare a dime
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-1...day-money-dies
http://barnabyisright.com/2013/08/08...r-bailin-plan/
Enter the Financial Stability Board. In her blog post "New G20 Rules:Cyprus-Style Bail-Ins to Hit Depositors and Pensioners" http://ellenbrown.com/... Ellen Brown explains:
The Financial Stability Board (FSB) that now regulates banking globally began as a group of G7 finance ministers and central bank governors organized in a merely advisory capacity after the Asian crisis of the late 1990s. Although not official, its mandates effectively acquired the force of law after the 2008 crisis, when the G20 leaders were brought together to endorse its rules. This ritual now happens annually, with the G20 leaders rubberstamping rules aimed at maintaining the stability of the private banking system, usually at public expense.
At the G20 meeting last month in Australia, the FSB presented and received approval for their latest plan for conducting the "resolution proceeding", i.e. bankruptcy, for a troubled TBTF bank. Cutting to the chase, the pertinent part for my dear readers is that instead of their tax money going to bail out the banks, it will potentially be their bank deposit money! The FSB recommended that governments make statutory the confiscation of depositors' money (also known as unsecured debt) if the assets of the bank plus all secured debt is insufficient to keep them afloat. This has come to be known as a bail-in.
At the G20 meeting last month in Australia, the FSB presented and received approval for their latest plan for conducting the "resolution proceeding", i.e. bankruptcy, for a troubled TBTF bank. Cutting to the chase, the pertinent part for my dear readers is that instead of their tax money going to bail out the banks, it will potentially be their bank deposit money! The FSB recommended that governments make statutory the confiscation of depositors' money (also known as unsecured debt) if the assets of the bank plus all secured debt is insufficient to keep them afloat. This has come to be known as a bail-in.
Further, the FSB has put our pension funds at risk as well. They require banks to hold a buffer of securities to be liquidated to prevent insolvency ahead of resorting to deposits. Among other instruments in these buffers are bonds in which pension funds are invested.
Let's suppose you have a good amount of cash in a Wells Fargo savings account. Furthermore, your pension fund is invested in bonds which WF owns in their emergency buffer account. The next financial crash occuor insolvency, bank regulators force WF to liquidate its assets and it's secured debt to raise cash. If that is insufficient the buffer securities will be sold off next. There goes a chunk of your pension fund's money. And if THAT is insufficient the regulators will go after the cash in large deposit accounts first, then, perhaps, get to yours.
rs. The TBTF banks, now with greater risk exposure than ever, start tumbling. Heading for insolvency, bank regulators force WF to liquidate its assets and it's secured debt to raise cash.
The bottom line is, the government is preparing to legitimize the theft of our savings in order to prop up irresponsible and unscrupulous bankers.
ahhh I feel so much better knowing that Dear Leader is a free market, no regulations ever kind a no nonsense currency trader banker type o guy. Imagine what he could/would do if he were a pimko commie purple wearing dirty fucking hippie kind a guy....what would the world come too. We are so lucky to have Dear Leader look after our interests.
also the fact that I have my cash buried underneath the willow tree, that helps too.
squeek squeek
inflation is stealing that cash under the willow tree . .sliver and gold are
cheap
"Look, Madame, where we live, look how we live ... look at the life we have...The Republic has forgotten us."
thing is the boys upstairs want us to go seppo and start lobbin pointy things so the have a reason to bring in the heavys
fergason usa notice they pulled out of the poor areas and let them get on with it
im thinking more of a more refusing to comply type of style now
just do me own thing and if pointy things need to be thrown ,i have that base covered
#ilovemysamicksage45lb
"Look, Madame, where we live, look how we live ... look at the life we have...The Republic has forgotten us."
reckon its only a matter of time before london kicks off again !
Stephen
"Look, Madame, where we live, look how we live ... look at the life we have...The Republic has forgotten us."
Why does the word agenda keep springing to mind ........
Stephen
"Look, Madame, where we live, look how we live ... look at the life we have...The Republic has forgotten us."
I didn't think!!! I experimented!!!
i just fucking lol at how you old white cunts dont get it
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...S-reveals.html
1.4 trillion debt. Few billion in dubdub one 'war bonds' to pay. Rolling defecit of 90 billion.
Nothing to see here folks, carry on.
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