by Dave Hodges, The Common Sense Show:
Trump should win the election hands down. However, he won’t and it is going to be close.
Last night, my wife asked me “Who in their right mind could vote for Hillary Clinton, she is pure evil?” The answer to that question is nobody, unless that nobody can’t or won’t support themselves and they need your money and the power of the government to keep supporting them. Basically, there are six groups that will vote for Hillary. Some are rich, but more are poor beyond poor.
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Last night, my wife asked me “Who in their right mind could vote for Hillary Clinton, she is pure evil?” The answer to that question is nobody, unless that nobody can’t or won’t support themselves and they need your money and the power of the government to keep supporting them. Basically, there are six groups that will vote for Hillary. Some are rich, but more are poor beyond poor.
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from The Alex Jones Channel:
from Zero Hedge:
The state department’s release of Hillary emails may be over, but that of Wikileaks is just starting.
ulian Assange’s whistleblower organization just released over 19,000 emails and more than 8,000 attachments from the Democratic National Committee. This is part one of their new Hillary Leaks series, Wikileaks said in press release. To wit:
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ulian Assange’s whistleblower organization just released over 19,000 emails and more than 8,000 attachments from the Democratic National Committee. This is part one of their new Hillary Leaks series, Wikileaks said in press release. To wit:
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The Speech Bounce: Trump "Nearly Even" With Clinton In Latest Reuters Poll
A Fully Automated Stock Market Blow-Off?
America Needs A Good, Old-Fashioned Economic Depression
RELATED STORY FROM FOX NEWS: The Wall Street Journal reported
Thursday that the Russian strike on the CIA-linked site was part of a
campaign by Russia to pressure the White House to agree to closer
cooperation in the Syrian skies, U.S. military and intelligence
officials said.
from The Moscow Times:
Russian jets last month attacked a base in Syria used by U.S. and
British forces, the Interfax news agency reported Friday, citing an
unidentified military-diplomatic source in Moscow.
The Wall Street Journal also reported on Friday that Russia’s air force had attacked the garrison of At-Tanf near the Jordanian border, which has been used by U.S. and British special forces as well as the Syrian opposition. A contingency of around 20 British troops had left less than 24 hours before the attack, the newspaper claimed.
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from The Moscow Times:
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The Wall Street Journal also reported on Friday that Russia’s air force had attacked the garrison of At-Tanf near the Jordanian border, which has been used by U.S. and British special forces as well as the Syrian opposition. A contingency of around 20 British troops had left less than 24 hours before the attack, the newspaper claimed.
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by Dave Kranzler, Investment Research Dynamics:
To
begin with, this statement by the Bank of Japan’s Kuroda validates my
blog post yesterday about Japan’s monetary pivot to gold and to the
east: “no need and no possibility for helicopter money.”
My best guess is that the only productive activity for Bernanke on his last trip to Japan was eating blowfish sushi and hitting the teenage stripper establishments.
The manipulators are making it easier for us to accumulate gold at a cheap price. I moved money from my fiat checking account into Bitgold every day this week and twice yesterday. I managed to catch what looks like the low of this latest manipulated pullback. Every time they hit gold I buy.
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My best guess is that the only productive activity for Bernanke on his last trip to Japan was eating blowfish sushi and hitting the teenage stripper establishments.
The manipulators are making it easier for us to accumulate gold at a cheap price. I moved money from my fiat checking account into Bitgold every day this week and twice yesterday. I managed to catch what looks like the low of this latest manipulated pullback. Every time they hit gold I buy.
Read More
by Doug Casey, International Man:
Like the Romans, we’re supposedly ruled by laws, not by men. In Rome,
the law started with the 12 Tablets in 451 BCE, with few dictates and
simple enough to be inscribed on bronze for all to see. A separate body
of common law developed from trials, held sometimes in the Forum,
sometimes in the Senate.
When the law was short and simple, the saying “Ignorantia juris non excusat” (ignorance of the law is no excuse) made sense. But as the government and its legislation became more ponderous, the saying became increasingly ridiculous. Eventually, under Diocletian, law became completely arbitrary, with everything done by the emperor’s decrees—we call them Executive Orders today.
I’ve mentioned Diocletian several times already. It’s true that his draconian measures held the Empire together, but it was a matter of destroying Rome in order to save it. As in the U.S., in Rome statute and common law gradually devolved into a maze of bureaucratic rules.
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When the law was short and simple, the saying “Ignorantia juris non excusat” (ignorance of the law is no excuse) made sense. But as the government and its legislation became more ponderous, the saying became increasingly ridiculous. Eventually, under Diocletian, law became completely arbitrary, with everything done by the emperor’s decrees—we call them Executive Orders today.
I’ve mentioned Diocletian several times already. It’s true that his draconian measures held the Empire together, but it was a matter of destroying Rome in order to save it. As in the U.S., in Rome statute and common law gradually devolved into a maze of bureaucratic rules.
Read More
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I would like to share with you a short excerpt from the email that was sent to me. Names and locations have been removed to protect the identity of the individual and his church…
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