His posts and content aren't bad and he contributes a lot to this site but his spelling choices want me to gouge my eyes out. "Aye" can't deal with it anymore. Apparently he has some strange reason for writing the way he does. It doesn't matter. Anyway, if you want to block his nonsense too. Go to https://conspiracies.win/blocks and put in pkvi and click save.
In 2018 the US very rapidly went very "anti straw". In a short amount of time, restaurants across the country either wouldn't carry straws at, would offer crappy biodegradable paper straws, or reusable straws. It was hard to say where the directive came from or why all of a sudden after decades of use. Strangely everyone agreed in unison and without question that straws were all of a sudden the worst thing for the environment. The ban didn't last long. Less than a year, and then we sort of forgot how bad straws were and they made a quiet return. İt just makes me wonder if it was a trial to see how willing we as country were to conform, what kind of pushback we'd see, and how compliant business and individuals were.
https://twitter.com/SuperNipsy/status/1490850913979826177 This is not complete evidence that there's HIV in the covid vaccine, but it sure raises some questions.
Also not related but maybe related: https://twitter.com/ChaChaC87311797/status/1489135829021003776
"[Missing Malaysian Air flight] MH370 was apparently carrying the entire NIH HIV research team when it went down. Leaving only Anthony Fauci as the lone HIV voice. 6 years pre Pandemic."
Correction: The last tweet is incorrect. The flight that carried the HIV researchers was Malaysian Air MH17. It was shot down over Ukraine in July of 2014.
I'm not sure what kind of arrangement Joe Rogan has with Spotify but my understanding is he owns his podcasts and Spotify is paying him for the exclusive right to distribute them. So what does that mean for episodes they refuse to host?
https://jremissing.com has the full list of removed episodes. Joe can fight back and just have them hosted elsewhere.
Recently the US has reached a milestone of 30 trillion dollars of outstanding debt. As part of servicing that debt, the US pays interest payments at about 500-600 billion a year. (https://www.treasurydirect.gov/govt/reports/ir/ir_expense.htm)
Since much of the debt is held in treasury bills and bonds, the repayment rate is subject to the federal interest rate. As rates go up, so do things like new mortgages and car loans but also the amount of interest the US has to pay its debt holders.
The yield on a 10 year treasury as of today is 1.91%. If we see significant rate increases by the fed, the $500B in yearly interest payments could balloon to trillions per year. It could print money to pay the interest, but increased monetary supply could result in a vicious inflationary cycle which could mean even higher interest rates.
So in summary: The fed wants to raise rates to fight inflation, but it will have trouble doing so. The US is stuck between the prospect of continued unchecked inflation and the possibility of default by raising rates and increasing repayment obligations.
Here's some more reading on the topic: https://www.cnbc.com/2022/01/27/opinion-the-interest-rate-comet-is-about-to-slam-into-the-us-economy.html