What's new

Is it spilling over?

Indianness was always there.... bidding its time.... and when the Gora sahib went.... it started imagining itself as the great empire.

Annexed South Tibet.
Annexed IoJK.
Annexed Sikkim.
Annexed Goa.
Annexed Hyerabad
.... and thought itself to be a major power in global affairs....

The Rise of TheGreatPaaJeetEmpire is not new.... this would be a mistake to think...only now AsocialMedia has given the Bob n Vagene Legions of TheGreatPajeetEmpire a global reach and sense of certainty that comes from lynching, rapping and burning alive of helpless, weak ones...

I doubt it that the sudden realisation of The Rise of TheGreatPaajeetEmpire in Arabia is spur of the moment... as @Ace of Spades correctly indentified.....

This new activism and care for the Muslims of MaqboozaHindustan is novel....but sadly no mention of PakKashmiris in IoJK... perhpas later they will add this too...but for now it is absent.

UAE or GCC is also going to face sooner or later the MightOfIndia one way or the other....

It is not new that the GCC knows about RSS/Hindutva Activism on their soil
.... or the activities of RAW .... but now there is slight change.... the reason is still unknown...certainly NOT because of Pakistan...that for sure...


Perservation of the State is the Highest Virtue. It is the Only Virtue!
 
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Indianness was always there.... bidding its time.... and when the Gora sahib went.... it started imagining itself as the great empire.

Annexed South Tibet.
Annexed IoJK.
Annexed Sikkim.
Annexed Goa.
Annexed Hyerabad
.... and thought itself to be a major power in global affairs....

The Rise of TheGreatPaaJeetEmpire is not new.... this would be a mistake to think...only now AsocialMedia has given the Bob n Vagene Legions of TheGreatPajeetEmpire a global reach and sense of certainty that comes from lynching, rapping and burning alive of helpless, weak ones...

I doubt it that the sudden realisation of The Rise of TheGreatPaajeetEmpire in Arabia is spur of the moment... as @Ace of Spades correctly indentified.....

This new activism and care for the Muslims of MaqboozaHindustan is novel....but sadly no mention of PakKashmiris in IoJK... perhpas later they will add this too...but for now it is absent.

UAE or GCC is also going to face sooner or later the MightOfIndia one way or the other....

It is not new that the GCC knows about RSS/Hindutva Activism on their soil
.... or the activities of RAW .... but now there is slight change.... the reason is still unknown...certainly NOT because of Pakistan...that for sure...


Perservation of the State is the Highest Virtue. It is the Only Virtue!

Timing brother timing.... Hint: dawn of post covid-19 era
 
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Timing brother timing.... Hint: dawn of post covid-19 era


Yes, it is a build up of a narrative for sure.... but to what end?

Whats the Game is unclear.....

Post KhoniVirus ...many things will change... and moving of BigCapital from one sphere to another is not that easy...if possible at all...
 
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Yes, it is a build up of a narrative for sure.... but to what end?

Whats the Game is unclear.....

Post KhoniVirus ...many things will change... and moving of BigCapital from one sphere to another is not that easy...if possible at all...

Cheewala met prejident dolaan trump recently, nothing came out even after hiding the slums and those hugs and stadium full of sanghis... It's an arm twist to subjugate. For what? indeed it's unclear but they are being asked to kneel...
 
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Cheewala met prejident dolaan trump recently, nothing came out even after hiding the slums and those hugs and stadium full of sanghis... It's an arm twist to subjugate. For what? indeed it's unclear but they are being asked to kneel...


I did write about it in my own thread.... TeaLeavesMeditations....

$500Bln annual trade between US India.... but then CheeWala has to deliver practical goods and not soundbites... have you seen INS running around asking for docking/basing rights in AfroAsianOcean?

It is also not like Soviets.... China is fully integerated into golbal economy and is a second biggest economy i.e. market for the rest of the world....

So it is not the old cold war style arms race type bankrucpcy.... and China did study the fall/collapse of the Soviets...

$1.2Quardillion in Driviates... and total global GDP is mere $86 or so Trillion....

What do you think about SDR?
 
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What do you think about SDR

Biggest basket correlates to Dollar and euro, both interlinked. And with interweaving economics, of yuan and yen with aforementioned currencies i don't see that being of any use incase of economic meltdown this time around, especially if dollar goes down.
 
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Biggest basket correlates to Dollar and euro, both interlinked. And with interweaving economics, of yuan and yen with aforementioned currencies i don't see that being of any use incase of economic meltdown this time around, especially if dollar goes down.


Now think again... about $13 odd Trillion that the emerging markets hold in T-bill in some shape or form....

How to bring down the Derivates back into actual asset class...in the system I mean.... it is all numbers really.... most hard dolllars are outside of the US....and Euro was/is an American Project....

Why not convert all T-bill holders paper into SDR with fixed value...everyone agrees..then it has value too... otherwise, just entry in computer....

But then the Valuation of the majory currencies needs to be adjusted...otherwise, we will enter the most crushing thrid phase of colonial bondage... yup Pakistan is NOT a Sovereign country...yet!!!
 
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Now think again... about $13 odd Trillion that the emerging markets hold in T-bill in some shape or form....

How to bring down the Derivates back into actual asset class...in the system I mean.... it is all numbers really.... most hard dolllars are outside of the US....and Euro was/is an American Project....

Why not convert all T-bill holders paper into SDR with fixed value...everyone agrees..then it has value too... otherwise, just entry in computer....

But then the Valuation of the majory currencies needs to be adjusted...otherwise, we will enter the most crushing thrid phase of colonial bondage... yup Pakistan is NOT a Sovereign country...yet!!!

Interesting.... but it will give largest stake in SDR to Japan, China and UK, and though US dollar liquidity will increase but will it not further decrease the valuation with the leverage mainly going these three countries.
upload_2020-4-20_22-46-31.png
 
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As politicians and parliaments struggle with the economic catastrophe brought on by the coronavirus pandemic, central banks have reached for the playbook of the 2008 global financial crisis. They are pumping liquidity into the banking system and trying to prop up key asset markets with large-scale purchases. This is helping to staunch the panic, but the shock is a global one — and it needs a global response.

For the second time this century, the world is facing an acute shortage of dollar funding. This is a big problem: An enormous amount of global financial activity depends on the use of the dollar. If we are to contain the fallout from the crisis, America’s central bank must act as a lender of last resort not just to America’s financial system but also to the entire world’s.

The good news is that the Federal Reserve is taking its responsibility seriously: It is funneling dollars to central banks around the world. But is the Fed fighting the last war?

The question turns on what we mean by global finance. In 2008 the dollar shortage was confined largely to the banks of Europe and America. That is the Fed’s historic comfort zone, the cradle within which it was born a century ago. The coronavirus crisis explodes that 20th-century framework and poses the question: How does America’s central bank supply dollar liquidity to a polycentric world economy?

“Liquidity swap lines” are the main way to pipe dollars into the global financial system. These were first deployed in the 1960s, when they were used to circulate funds between central banks struggling to uphold the fixed exchange rates of the Bretton Woods system. Essentially, central banks credited each other with matching amounts of currency: A Deutschmark credit for the Fed at the German Bundesbank was offset by a dollar credit for the Germans in the United States.


In 2007, a new type of dollar shortage emerged — not a shortage of official reserves, but a shortage on bank balance sheets. Europe’s banks had taken on huge amounts of American subprime debt. They had made hundreds of billions of dollars of loans without having a depositor base in the United States to match. To fund the loans, they borrowed dollars in wholesale money markets or swapped euros, Swiss francs and British pounds for dollars. As the markets panicked, those sources of dollar funding dried up. This risked unleashing a chain reaction in which the European banks would sell off their American investments, further accelerating the panic in American markets.

The Fed responded first by lending money directly to the European banks in New York and then by using the swap lines to funnel dollars to them indirectly by way of their local central banks. For a brief moment in early December 2008, the swap lines to foreign central banks were the largest single item on the Fed’s balance sheet. Altogether 14 banks were attached to the Fed, including major emerging markets like South Korea, Brazil and Mexico, whose banks, like the Europeans’, had joined the dollar-based global financial system.

In 2013, the agreement to swap was made permanent. A privileged group of central banks — those of Canada, Britain, Switzerland and Japan, as well as the European Central Bank — were granted what amounted to unlimited drawing rights on dollars, in exchange for which they would give their own currency as collateral.

The swap lines reflect the geography of the dollar-based financial system. But they are also a tool of geopolitics: The dollar network provides a financial safety net for the banks of America’s major allies. It is not by accident that no swap was ever considered for Russia or China.


What does all this have to do with the coronavirus? As panic has swept through financial markets in the last two weeks, investors have begun seeking safety in cash — and above all in dollars. The American economy itself may look weak, but the dollar is still the most universally acceptable means of payment and store of value.

The pressure of the coronavirus crisis was such that on Thursday the Fed widened the swap network to include all 14 of the central banks it supported in 2008. The news had an immediate calming effect. Pressure on the exchange rates of Brazil and South Korea eased; the dollar has slipped back from the highs it touched earlier in the week. But as the pandemic’s impact on the world economy deepens, will the swap line system of 2008, with its echoes of the Cold War era, still do the job?

Three things have changed since 2008. First, dollars are being used on a new scale by new financial actors. Second, the balance of the world economy has further shifted from the European Union-United States-Japan axis toward emerging markets. And third, the politics of the world economy have become far more antagonistic. Let’s take each in turn.

In 2008, European megabanks were the problem. Today the pressure is on Japanese and Taiwanese life insurers, pension funds and postal banks, which have made huge purchases of American corporate bonds that are now collapsing in value because of the shutdown of global economic activity. These financial institutions are not umbilically connected to the swap lines in the way that banks in London or Paris were. As the Fed struggles to calm the markets, the last thing it needs is for these institutions to unload their portfolios of American assets.

Corporate borrowers — for example Pemex, Mexico’s state-backed oil company — are also under immense financial pressure, as are the suppliers of complex manufactured goods. They borrow short-term in dollars to pay for raw materials and components moving along their complex supply chains. As the dollar soars and interest rates tighten, they face acute financial difficulties, adding further pressure to the physical disruption of the shutdown.

As for the growing power of emerging markets, China leads the way. But the growth of economies like Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand and Turkey has also been spectacular. Once a relatively marginal part of the world economy, the emerging economies are now key drivers of global growth. American investors, and indeed the world economy, have a deep interest in their prosperity.

Finally, there is the question of China. In 2008, China was already the main driver of global growth, so much so that some feared that it might cause a crippling global crisis by selling off its portfolio of U.S. Treasuries. That did not happen. Instead, China powered through the recession with a gigantic domestic stimulus package. Today, the country’s economy is larger than ever, as are its holdings of American assets. All told, the foreign debts of China’s businesses come to $1.3 trillion. As the global scramble for dollars begins and the American currency rises in value, those debts become less sustainable. That risks unleashing a chain reaction.

We had a taste of this scenario in a few years ago, when a huge run on the renminbi and the threat of a Chinese devaluation shook the world economy. As China’s stock market and currency plunged, the impact on the American markets was so severe that the Fed, under Janet Yellen, pulled back from raising interest rates.

That was in 2015, when the market for U.S. Treasuries was rock solid. Relations between the United States and China were tense, but not yet hostile. Now the U.S. Treasury market is shaking, and the relationship between the two counties — in an era of viral conspiracy theories and trade wars — has sharply deteriorated. How can the Fed manage relations with China’s central bank in these circumstances?

It will need to, somehow. The last thing the world economy needs is for Beijing to liquidate any of its portfolio. It would be a huge, perhaps politically impossible step to extend a swap line from the Fed to the People’s Bank of China. In its absence, as Brad Setser of the Council on Foreign Relations has suggested, the Fed may need to consider allowing China to borrow against the collateral of its huge Treasury holdings.!!!!!!

The crisis is still unfolding. The outflow from the emerging markets in recent weeks has been more rapid than ever before in history. To stop further losses, it may be necessary to adjust the swap line system. That will require imagination — and if not political cover from the White House and Congress, then at least forbearance. Doing so is crucial: The faltering effort to respond to the pandemic must not be hampered by a crisis of the dollar-based financial system.

What’s at stake is not just economic stability and the credibility of American financial leadership. It’s truly a matter of life and death

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/20/opinion/coronavirus-economy-currency.html


@Mangus Ortus Novem
 
Last edited:
.
As politicians and parliaments struggle with the economic catastrophe brought on by the coronavirus pandemic, central banks have reached for the playbook of the 2008 global financial crisis. They are pumping liquidity into the banking system and trying to prop up key asset markets with large-scale purchases. This is helping to staunch the panic, but the shock is a global one — and it needs a global response.

For the second time this century, the world is facing an acute shortage of dollar funding. This is a big problem: An enormous amount of global financial activity depends on the use of the dollar. If we are to contain the fallout from the crisis, America’s central bank must act as a lender of last resort not just to America’s financial system but also to the entire world’s.

The good news is that the Federal Reserve is taking its responsibility seriously: It is funneling dollars to central banks around the world. But is the Fed fighting the last war?

The question turns on what we mean by global finance. In 2008 the dollar shortage was confined largely to the banks of Europe and America. That is the Fed’s historic comfort zone, the cradle within which it was born a century ago. The coronavirus crisis explodes that 20th-century framework and poses the question: How does America’s central bank supply dollar liquidity to a polycentric world economy?

“Liquidity swap lines” are the main way to pipe dollars into the global financial system. These were first deployed in the 1960s, when they were used to circulate funds between central banks struggling to uphold the fixed exchange rates of the Bretton Woods system. Essentially, central banks credited each other with matching amounts of currency: A Deutschmark credit for the Fed at the German Bundesbank was offset by a dollar credit for the Germans in the United States.


In 2007, a new type of dollar shortage emerged — not a shortage of official reserves, but a shortage on bank balance sheets. Europe’s banks had taken on huge amounts of American subprime debt. They had made hundreds of billions of dollars of loans without having a depositor base in the United States to match. To fund the loans, they borrowed dollars in wholesale money markets or swapped euros, Swiss francs and British pounds for dollars. As the markets panicked, those sources of dollar funding dried up. This risked unleashing a chain reaction in which the European banks would sell off their American investments, further accelerating the panic in American markets.

The Fed responded first by lending money directly to the European banks in New York and then by using the swap lines to funnel dollars to them indirectly by way of their local central banks. For a brief moment in early December 2008, the swap lines to foreign central banks were the largest single item on the Fed’s balance sheet. Altogether 14 banks were attached to the Fed, including major emerging markets like South Korea, Brazil and Mexico, whose banks, like the Europeans’, had joined the dollar-based global financial system.

In 2013, the agreement to swap was made permanent. A privileged group of central banks — those of Canada, Britain, Switzerland and Japan, as well as the European Central Bank — were granted what amounted to unlimited drawing rights on dollars, in exchange for which they would give their own currency as collateral.

The swap lines reflect the geography of the dollar-based financial system. But they are also a tool of geopolitics: The dollar network provides a financial safety net for the banks of America’s major allies. It is not by accident that no swap was ever considered for Russia or China.


What does all this have to do with the coronavirus? As panic has swept through financial markets in the last two weeks, investors have begun seeking safety in cash — and above all in dollars. The American economy itself may look weak, but the dollar is still the most universally acceptable means of payment and store of value.

The pressure of the coronavirus crisis was such that on Thursday the Fed widened the swap network to include all 14 of the central banks it supported in 2008. The news had an immediate calming effect. Pressure on the exchange rates of Brazil and South Korea eased; the dollar has slipped back from the highs it touched earlier in the week. But as the pandemic’s impact on the world economy deepens, will the swap line system of 2008, with its echoes of the Cold War era, still do the job?

Three things have changed since 2008. First, dollars are being used on a new scale by new financial actors. Second, the balance of the world economy has further shifted from the European Union-United States-Japan axis toward emerging markets. And third, the politics of the world economy have become far more antagonistic. Let’s take each in turn.

In 2008, European megabanks were the problem. Today the pressure is on Japanese and Taiwanese life insurers, pension funds and postal banks, which have made huge purchases of American corporate bonds that are now collapsing in value because of the shutdown of global economic activity. These financial institutions are not umbilically connected to the swap lines in the way that banks in London or Paris were. As the Fed struggles to calm the markets, the last thing it needs is for these institutions to unload their portfolios of American assets.

Corporate borrowers — for example Pemex, Mexico’s state-backed oil company — are also under immense financial pressure, as are the suppliers of complex manufactured goods. They borrow short-term in dollars to pay for raw materials and components moving along their complex supply chains. As the dollar soars and interest rates tighten, they face acute financial difficulties, adding further pressure to the physical disruption of the shutdown.

As for the growing power of emerging markets, China leads the way. But the growth of economies like Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand and Turkey has also been spectacular. Once a relatively marginal part of the world economy, the emerging economies are now key drivers of global growth. American investors, and indeed the world economy, have a deep interest in their prosperity.

Finally, there is the question of China. In 2008, China was already the main driver of global growth, so much so that some feared that it might cause a crippling global crisis by selling off its portfolio of U.S. Treasuries. That did not happen. Instead, China powered through the recession with a gigantic domestic stimulus package. Today, the country’s economy is larger than ever, as are its holdings of American assets. All told, the foreign debts of China’s businesses come to $1.3 trillion. As the global scramble for dollars begins and the American currency rises in value, those debts become less sustainable. That risks unleashing a chain reaction.

We had a taste of this scenario in a few years ago, when a huge run on the renminbi and the threat of a Chinese devaluation shook the world economy. As China’s stock market and currency plunged, the impact on the American markets was so severe that the Fed, under Janet Yellen, pulled back from raising interest rates.

That was in 2015, when the market for U.S. Treasuries was rock solid. Relations between the United States and China were tense, but not yet hostile. Now the U.S. Treasury market is shaking, and the relationship between the two counties — in an era of viral conspiracy theories and trade wars — has sharply deteriorated. How can the Fed manage relations with China’s central bank in these circumstances?

It will need to, somehow. The last thing the world economy needs is for Beijing to liquidate any of its portfolio. It would be a huge, perhaps politically impossible step to extend a swap line from the Fed to the People’s Bank of China. In its absence, as Brad Setser of the Council on Foreign Relations has suggested, the Fed may need to consider allowing China to borrow against the collateral of its huge Treasury holdings.!!!!!!

The crisis is still unfolding. The outflow from the emerging markets in recent weeks has been more rapid than ever before in history. To stop further losses, it may be necessary to adjust the swap line system. That will require imagination — and if not political cover from the White House and Congress, then at least forbearance. Doing so is crucial: The faltering effort to respond to the pandemic must not be hampered by a crisis of the dollar-based financial system.

What’s at stake is not just economic stability and the credibility of American financial leadership. It’s truly a matter of life and death

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/20/opinion/coronavirus-economy-currency.html


@Mangus Ortus Novem


YoungPakBrother mine,

DollarSystem and the US actual economy are two very different things.... rather independent of each other..if you look closely.

The actual American purchasing power has gone down... the US is, no doubt, the biggest economy.... but the CombinedWest has benefited from the US DollarSystem as well....

The DollarSystem can be called the GlobalEmpire where the US/Nato are mere enforcers... the USN its flagship!

Did you notice that the article also besieges that the AsianEconomies need to develop for the DollarSystem to sustain itself.

FON sailings by the USN in SouthChinaSea were rather public negotiation tactic to make China hold on to the DollarSystem..... and not liquidate its holdings... which it was doing through Luxemberg slowly.

The Feds cann't buy back all the T-Bills... Simple!

It needs the EmergingMarkets to remains weldded to the DollarSystem...otherwise, the DollarEmpire collapses with catastrophic consequence for the entire world..

All the shinny buildings become ghost towns then..

That there needs to be accomodation of China led EmergingMarkets ...as the article concludes... is a given...

I hope this happens without DirectConflict ...otherwise, the misery that will come to visit us all is unimaginable!

Take example of Pakistan... Hybridwar... TTP...DebtOverload...WeaponisedFinance to wean us away from ChinaBlock...

The poverty in Pakistan is CREATED poverty... it is not natural as there is NO foundational reason for it..but then our own people ...EconomicTerrorists and imported EconomicHitmen.... did us in.

The world is at edge of Change...

I wrote two pieces... one about TechnoFeudalismHierarchy and the other about OngoingThirdWorldWar...in MangusonianDialectics....

The Empire has shaped the world for past 500+years...and it is not going to go away into the wilderness without a fight...

BRI needs to be seen through longterm lens.. and not mere ChinaDebtTrap ...which is mix of rhetoric and reality...

What can Pakistan do? Can we do anything?

Why should PKR be so devalued whence we are what we are?

We are now in the Age of Nine Vectored War.... even if there is some understanding between TheEmpire and ChinaBlock ...it would be just borrowing time... kinda put the Struggle for Supremecy in the Freezer... but unfreeze it will nevertheless....

It is simple... As SystemDynamics will tell you..

On top of that The Momentum of History has mind of its own...and its now too complex for me to model...hence, the resignation to be BemusedObserver....

What if the KhooniVirus has relatives?


Mangus
 
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@Ace of Spades

Let us have dialouge here....

The Chinese will be offered FED window for swap..they have too.... either this or forcing the Chinese to liquidate their T holdings...

It does offer China short term relief... and that is about it. It doesn't solve the key problem for China... the pervailant Global Financial Architecture.

Without Change in this FinancialArchitecture China will remain a middle income country and not be able to do its own YuanSystem a la DollarSystem .... this the Key!

Now SDR has support from the EmergingMarkets/G20 which is rather understandable because this will raise their valuta worth...hence, purchasing power/wealth....

IMF has for sometime now advocated or advanced the idea of SDR...with vocal support from GCC some while back as well...because all those Holding the T Bills are infact hostage to DollarSystem...thus forced to PetroDollarRecycling...

By the looks of things we are moving slowly towards a new Global Financial Order ..hopefully, without much conflict.

And this is only way for the US to let its Debt be parked within SDR regime... quite cleverun if you look closely...

IMF takes over the T Bills as colateral and SDR get the underwritting it needs to float..after that a GlobalValuta is born underwritten by Debt and major countries's currencies... a WereldMunt ....

BIS can then become the Global Central Bank ...which defacto it already is...but more open...

For now we cann't expect a sudden shift..but gradual one.... with China getting more Voting rights... a for now these are primarily held by the US and EU....

The US has no colletral but T-Bills .... and off shore Dollars... too much... infact the US cann't afford all the Dollars to come back home otherwise, inflaction/deflation will make Zimbawe a cool breeze...

For Pakistan ...we for now are enjoy WeaponisedFinance of the present Financial Architecture....

It will be stupidity of highest order to sell of our resources to pay off debt which we can redeem in many other ways...

Mangus
 
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IMF has for sometime now advocated or advanced the idea of SDR...with vocal support from GCC some while back as well...because all those Holding the T Bills are infact hostage to DollarSystem...thus forced to PetroDollarRecycling...

And this is only way for the US to let its Debt be parked within SDR regime... quite cleverun if you look closely...

On point. And GCC is pegging their currency with USD as well, smart ain't it, in a bigger picture


The US has no colletral but T-Bills .... and off shore Dollars... too much... infact the US cann't afford all the Dollars to come back home otherwise, inflaction/deflation will make Zimbawe a cool breeze...

Agree, but i don't think that it will go as per their plan only. Though brilliant but the more the players are, more complications. US pushed UK out of EU not without any financial reason. And have started to stood against european project openly. After China, their second rivals. After covid-19 keep an eye on italy, spain and eu relations and how all this will make EU's posturing vis a vis China. It's not gonna be that easy for US this time around.
 
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On point. And GCC is pegging their currency with USD as well, smart ain't it, in a bigger picture




Agree, but i don't think that it will go as per their plan only. Though brilliant but the more the players are, more complications. US pushed UK out of EU not without any financial reason. And have started to stood against european project openly. After China, their second rivals. After covid-19 keep an eye on italy, spain and eu relations and how all this will make EU's posturing vis a vis China. It's not gonna be that easy for US this time around.


But it is going to be EASY for the Empire!

SingleWorldCurrency underwritten by Debt to issue More Debt!
 
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