Bill’s commentary:
“You do understand just how significant this is …right?”
China is threatening an export ban on rare earth metals in response to Washington’s recent decision to impose restrictions on exports of high-end semiconductors to Beijing. This is not the first time that China has mooted such a ban, with rumours circulating since at least 2019 as well as formal threats in 2021.
Bill’s commentary:
“Inventor of Completely Untraceable Communication – Tanner Haas”
These days, privacy with your smart phone is virtually non-existent. Everybody knows Big Tech spies on us, but did you know virtually every piece of information about you is sucked up and sold off? “Even your address book and full contact list” is taken off your phone by some social media sites. Tanner Haas invented a new app that he calls “the future of privacy,” and it cuts the spying and data harvesting off completely. It’s called Converso, and as the slogan says, it is “Completely Untraceable Communication.” Haas says, “It gives you the piece of mind that everything you say is between you and the intended recipient. . . . If we are talking, the conversation is only on your phone and my phone. I can also ‘Unsend a Message.’ This means if I ‘Unsend a Message,’ it is off your phone, it was never on a server and it is gone forever.”
Bill’s commentary:
“This what true journalism “was” back in 1977. Have you seen his latest writings and positions? It has been a long and ugly slide, unfortunately straight toward hell!”
In 1953, Joseph Alsop, then one of America’s leading syndicated columnists, went to the Philippines to cover an election. He did not go because he was asked to do so by his syndicate. He did not go because he was asked to do so by the newspapers that printed his column. He went at the request of the CIA.
Bill’s commentary:
““Global Monetary Experiment Ends in a Bloodbath.”
Analyst and financial writer John Rubino said in February, “We are in a debt and death spiral” that will force dramatic changes on the world. It was a direct hit because in March, Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) tanked, and the FDIC and the U.S. Treasury were forced to basically back-stop the entire banking system.