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The Right Plane But The Wrong Airport

It’s Friday desk clearing time for this blogger. “To sweeten a recent offer on a small house with a few acres here in Texas, near Austin, I pledged to keep Jenny and Jeremy—two aging donkeys the seller no longer had use for. Caught up in the adrenaline of the deal, I didn’t take into account just how expensive it could be to care for two large animals—a cost I later learned can easily top several thousand dollars, per donkey, per year, especially as their health deteriorates. That same real estate frenzy led me astray in other ways, too.”

“Worst-case scenario, I could be on the hook for about $55,000 in additional costs with all those problems, including the care of the donkeys—a figure that could go far higher ‘if other issues emerged after purchasing the 50-year-old house and property,’ my agent told me. But I was undeterred, raising the question: Who, exactly, was the jackass here?”

“Downtown Los Angeles office towers are eerily vacant. Graffiti-splattered boards cover shuttered restaurants. Darkened shops with ‘For Lease’ postings outnumber ‘Open’ signs on some streets. Yet most of the apartments that emptied in 2020 are filled again. ‘Downtown is coming back,’ said Ryan Patap, a market analyst for CoStar Group. ‘It’s not a complete ghost town. There’s hope.'”

“A bloated Bel Air, Calif., mansion that began life as a $500 million whisper listing in 2017 is now sinking under a $180 million mountain of debt. It officially hits the market for $295 million on Jan. 10 and will be on the auction block a month later — the latest example of a hyped Los Angeles megamansion that failed to perform. ‘It’s one of the ugliest homes I’ve ever seen,’ a broker who toured the property said. ‘Only someone with terrible taste who wants to scream to the world that they’re rich [would buy it], and even then, I’m not so sure.'”

“As Niami’s homes and dreams got bigger, so did his losses. One home he marketed for $100 million, dubbed ‘Opus,’ ended up valued at $38 million and sold for an unknown price. ‘LA was a cheeseball place and then it got sophistication like New York, and cheeseball finishes no longer fly off the shelves,’ a broker said. ‘[Niami’s] stuff looks like Las Vegas casinos back in the day.'”

“The Columbus on Fifth apartment complex in Miami’s Little Havana neighborhood has been targeted in a $9.7 million foreclosure lawsuit. Columbus Apartments LLC constructed the eight-story, 107,506-square-foot building in 2019 and is the borrower. However, the company is no longer the owner of the property as the result of a different lawsuit. Ocean Bank sold the loan to COF Investment, the company that filed the foreclosure complaint, in December. According to the complaint, the new owner of the loan is entitled to seize the property because its mortgage holds priority to the construction lien used to foreclose on it, and the original borrower has stopped making payments.”

“Oregon’s foreclosure moratorium was put in place to prevent foreclosures for people who couldn’t pay their mortgages as a result of the pandemic. The moratorium expired at the end of the year. Since it expired, people are no longer able to defer their mortgage payments. Latest numbers show more than 8,600 homes in Oregon are already at risk of foreclosure.”

“The Treasury selloff that started the year is rippling across the globe as investors scramble to price in the risk that the Federal Reserve raises interest rates faster than currently anticipated to contain inflation. ‘Gone are the days investors bought bonds with their eyes closed, confident in central banks’ eventual support for the market,’ wrote Padhraic Garvey, head of global debt and rates strategy at ING Groep NV.”

“‘The Fed set the cat among the pigeons as the minutes made it clear an acceleration in Fed tapering will give them more options,’ Prashant Newnaha, an Asia-Pacific rates strategist at TD Securities in Singapore told Bloomberg.”

“Opinions are mixed over whether the recent deceleration in housing price increases marks the beginning of what the government has identified as the ‘much-awaited inflection point,’ or just a short period of respite before resuming the years-long uptrend. Some say the market has peaked, as evidenced by a sustained, steep fall in trading volume over the past month amid a significant drop in housing value in key areas of Seoul.”

“While authorities are taking steps to bolster the property industry and stabilize markets, they’re unlikely to go too far with stimulus measures. Beijing won’t want to risk inflating asset prices after spending much of the last year popping speculative bubbles. The People’s Bank of China in December said it wouldn’t flood the financial system with cash, and the only state-backed rescue of a struggling developer was tough on the company.”

“‘We do not believe in the large ‘policy bazooka’ intervention, nor direct bailouts, as likely scenarios,’ Citigroup Inc. strategists including Dirk Willer wrote in a note.”

“In 2000, James Glassman and Kevin Hassett ‘correctly’ predicted in ‘Dow 36,000, The New Strategy for Profiting in the Coming Rise of the Stock Market’ that the Dow Jones Industrial Average would hit 36,000. So yes, the Dow reached 36,000 in 2021, however not in 2008 as forecasted. They got the right plane but the wrong airport.”

“In 2005, as chief economist for the National Association of Realtors, David Lereah warned, ‘Are You Missing the Real Estate Boom?’ Of course, real estate can be profitable. Still, Lereah’s subtitle, ‘Why Property Values Will Continue to Climb Through the End of the Decade,’ was way off base. Using our home as an example, its appreciation over the last two decades is less than the S&P 500’s, even with South Walton’s soaring prices.”

This Post Has 107 Comments
  1. Here’s something odd:

    ‘The Fed set the cat among the pigeons’

    This was actually in the link before, but globalist scum bloomberg scrubbed it. I was able to find it on the site that had already published it. I wonder what the globalist scum didn’t like about those words?

    1. Wiki …

      “Throwing (also putting and setting) the cat among the pigeons (also amongst the pigeons) is a British idiom used to describe a disturbance caused by an undesirable person from the perspective of a group.

      “Another use of the term is to ’cause an enormous fight or flap, usually by revealing a controversial fact or secret’, or in other words: to do something suddenly or unexpectedly which leaves the people worried or angry.[1][2]”

  2. But I was undeterred, raising the question: Who, exactly, was the jackass here?”

    There was never any question about the matter, FB Boy.

  3. FYI wordpress updated some software on it’s own last night. Aren’t they just fab? I remember when wp was free and easy and hands off.

    1. wordpress updated some software on it’s own last night

      They will tell you that’s a feature, and not a bug. It’s the very core of Software as a Service (SaaS)

  4. ‘Downtown is coming back,’ said Ryan Patap, a market analyst for CoStar Group. ‘It’s not a complete ghost town. There’s hope.’”>/em>

    Hope was the last & most dangerous thing in Pandora’s box, Ryan.

  5. ‘LA was a cheeseball place and then it got sophistication like New York, and cheeseball finishes no longer fly off the shelves’

    LA and NYC are sh$tholes.

  6. ‘It’s one of the ugliest homes I’ve ever seen,’ a broker who toured the property said. ‘Only someone with terrible taste who wants to scream to the world that they’re rich [would buy it], and even then, I’m not so sure.’”

    Such grandiose monstrosities were only possible in a world awash in Yellen Bux.

  7. ‘constructed the eight-story, 107,506-square-foot building in 2019’

    To hear the REIC tell it, Miami apartments are red hotcakes! These guys walked away over 100 grand.

  8. Feel-good story of the day as West Coast elites get a first-hand taste of the bountiful blessings of multiculturalism they’ve been promoting for flyover country.

    Two women house-sitting for LA entrepreneur and ex-girlfriend of Grammy-winning producer are zip-tied by armed burglars at her $5M mansion: Victims use Ring doorbell camera to alert homeowner after thieves stole their phones

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10377617/Wealthy-LA-entrepreneur-latest-victim-citys-terrifying-home-invasion-robberies.html

    A wealthy and well-connected LA entrepreneur has become the latest target of the city’s home invader burglars, with both her house sitters bound with zip ties by the armed intruders.

    The terrifying incident took place at a an estimated $5 million home on Sherwood Place, in the affluent suburb of Sherman Oaks, in San Fernando Valley at around 2a.m. this morning.

    It is owned by Florence Mirsky, 40, a social media influencer and the co-founder of Koko Nuggz, which is a California-based confectionery company.

    1. When I read “$5 million home” I figured it was maybe in Westwood or some other tony neighborhood. But no, it’s in the stinkin’ valley.

      1. Barely. It’s still “south of the boulevard” (Ventura) so it’s still considered desirable. We’re not talking Van Nuys or Pacoima here… LOL

  9. The Treasury selloff that started the year is rippling across the globe as investors scramble to price in the risk that the Federal Reserve raises interest rates faster than currently anticipated to contain inflation.

    What kind of moron is going to “invest” in US debt when the rate of return is so far below the rate of real inflation (as opposed to our fake Soviet-style CPI data)?

    1. You could ask the same question about shack loans. Why are you loaning for 30 years at 3% with inflation at 6?

      1. “You could ask the same question about shack loans. Why are you loaning for 30 years at 3% with inflation at 6?”

        That’s what happens when the 7 most populous states in the US force minimum wage increases by 40%-60%.

  10. Anyone with one brain synapse talking to another can see that our current system is doomed to collapse under the weight of its own debt, fraud, parasitism, and lies. Prepare accordingly.

    Doomer Optimism: What I See Coming, & How I’m Preparing

    https://www.tuckermax.com/doomer-optimism-what-i-see-coming-how-im-preparing/

    Part 1: What is Doomer Optimism?

    “My life has changed substantially over the last 2 years, and the biggest change has been where I live, and how I use my time.

    I moved out of Austin to a ranch 45 minutes away, and now spend most of my time with my family, working on the ranch and building my immediate community.

    The easiest way to describe it would be to call me a “Doomer Optimist.”

    What is Doomer Optimism? My favorite way to describe it:

    The sh*t’s gonna hit the fan, but if I do my work, it’ll be OK.”

    1. Dude, I just came back to this site after a few years and you are still posting the “real estate is crashing” nonsense. You have been at it since RE was 40% cheaper. I kind of admire the persistence. Real estate can crash, real estate has crashed. Right now $$ are flooding into the system ( see inflation) and interest rates are going to go up. RE exists somewhere in that balance. Which direction it will go? Hard to say

    1. its been up and down many times – so,

      1. Is it this sort of a channel trading, pump and dump scenario?
      2. Are people starting to worry about this asset?

      Given the amount of money laundering / tax avoidance in the world, there is a floor i think – maybe $20K

      who the heck knows

      1. b –
        Technical analysts, stock traders who look only at the charts and not the news, are predicting that the bottom support of BTC is ~$17K based on the patterns alone. After that it’s supposed to take off To The Moon at $100K+.

        The link that IPFreely posted says that when BTC falls to $15-20K, that’s some kind of death zone for Tether. Unfortunately, I didn’t understand that part. Here’s the link if anyone wants to try to figure it out: https://www.singlelunch.com/2021/05/19/the-tether-ponzi-scheme/

        Are people worried? Yes, anyone who knows about the tether is worried about Bitcoin. And everyone else is worried because, even if they don’t know about the tether issue, they see that the price of BTC is clearly struggling.

      2. “Is it this sort of a channel trading, pump and dump scenario?”

        Quote: You can shear a sheep many times but skin it only once.

    2. Thanks to poster IPFreely, I was able to dig down the Bitcoin/Tether hole a little deeper. I don’t understand all of it, but IIUC, tether isn’t connected to Bitcoin or blockchain in any technical way. Tether is just a made-up currency which is buying Bitcoin, which is driving up the price of Bitcoin. In fact, the rise in the price of Bitcoin since 2018 corresponds exactly to an explosion in the creation of tether.

      AFAICT, it appears that the “merit” behind Bitcoin — Big Ideas such as its anticipated adoption as a nationless currency, its “backing” by a blockchain of mutual agreement, and its supposed digital similarity to precious metals 🙄, — are not enough for investors to believe in. That’s likely why Bitcoin crashed the first time in spring 2018. The only reason Bitcoin rose again was because tether started buying it, using invented tether. That is, Bitcoin is a zombiecoin which is “backed” by tether the same way that zombie companies are backed by the Federal Reserve. Not enough merit to stand on their own two feet. And as of last summer, tether was 45% of the Bitcoin market (not sure how that works).

      Problem is, the tether folks don’t have enough dollars or legitimate “reserves,” such as Evergrande bonds, to back up their existing tether, much less to create more of it. There are lots of financial hijinks to hide this. However, at some point, investors will figure this out and tether will collapse, taking half of the bitcoin support with it. The question is whether Bitcoin can increase or even maintain its price on its own merit without tether. I would say, unless there’s some swift uptick in the Big Ideas, such as widespread adoption, the answer is no, not at these prices.

      But that’s not stopping the heavy hitters — Saylor among them — from talking up the merits. In reality, I think he knows he’s had to shift into Ponzi mode. Ditto for Max Keiser.* Not sure about Musk. Tom Brady and other celebrities are likely clueless. But no matter; it seems to be working on the starry-eyed Millenials and GenZ, including the new President of El Salvador. Can’t wait to see how all this ends. I’m in the stadium, spectating.

      ————–
      *Max Keiser used to be a gold bug, or at least a “sound money” advocate. Now he’s calling Bitcoin “the hardest money in the world, 100% non-confiscatable.” I am hoping that someone will ask him that since he’s such a bitcoin bug, did he sell his physical gold to buy bitcoin.

      1. musk will probably get the spanking he deserves for investing in something he doesn’t understand (bitcoin). of course when you’re as rich as he is, losing his speculation in bitcoin won’t matter much to him.

        too bad he’s setting a bad example though.

        1. Heh, I’m still looking up tether articles. Guess what the representative image for Tether is? Yup, a gold 🥇 coin with a T on it.

  11. More extend-and-pretend from China’s central planners as they frantically try to forestall the inevitable financial reckoning day.

    China’s easing of ‘three red lines’ loan rules for property sector won’t have immediate impact on struggling developers, analysts say

    https://www.scmp.com/business/china-business/article/3162592/chinas-easing-three-red-lines-loan-rules-property-sector

    Beijing’s loan limit for real estate companies, widely known as the “three red lines”, which has pushed many developers to the brink, has been partially relaxed, according to a report by a state-backed media outlet. Shares of property firms rose in Hong Kong.

    Analysts, however, said they do not expect an immediate impact on the market.

  12. “Only someone with terrible taste who wants to scream to the world that they’re rich [would buy it]”

    So, bidding war between multiple Saudi princes confirmed?

  13. by Steve Watson
    January 7th 2022, 4:10 am

    After encountering a huge backlash from conservatives for describing the events of January 6th 2021 as a “violent terrorist attack,” Senator Ted Cruz apologized and admitted that his language was “dumb” and “sloppy”.

    Cruz appeared on Tucker Carlson’s evening show Thursday, apparently at his own request, and attempted to back track on what he said, claiming that he’d been referring to attacks on police

    Tucker Carlson tells Cruz he’s “not buying it”

    Ted Cruz
    @tedcruz
    ·
    Jan 6, 2022
    Yesterday, I used a dumb choice of words and unfortunately a lot of people are misunderstanding what I meant.

    https://twitter.com/tedcruz/status/1479272140625092614?s=20

    1. ‘Capitol protesters were hunting Jews on Jan 6, according to New York Senator Chuck Schumer (D).’

      “I was within 30 feet of these nasty, racist, bigoted insurrectionists,” Schumer recalled Thursday on floor of the Senate. “I was told later that one of them reportedly said, ‘There’s the big Jew, let’s get him!'”

      ‘The Recount shared video of Schumer walking down a hallway and then turning around without a single “insurrectionist” in view.’

      http://www.informationliberation.com/?id=62790

    1. “The townhouse, at 230 W. 11th St., is on the West Village’s gold coast, which has become downtown’s Billionaires’ Row, as The Post previously reported. It was an off-market deal.”

      …aka a hip picket listing.

    2. Fox News says that the new DA in Manhattan is pretty soft on crime. The voters are going to get what they voted for, good and hard.

      1. DA in Manhattan is pretty soft on crime.
        Article I saw said Armed robbery, if no one was injured or potentially injured (of course they were potential injured if someone points a gun at you but I digress) it would be classified a misdemeanor. I find that real hard to believe but that’s what I understood it to say. Grand theft would also be a misdemeanor.

        1. Grand theft would also be a misdemeanor.

          As I’ve said before, the objective here is to demoralize decent people. Sure, some will leave pack their bags and leave; but most will remain, and once they are utterly demoralized by Anarchotyranny the expectation is that they will give up and do as they are told.

          This reminds me of an anecdote from some years ago. My mother was visiting an aunt who lived in metro LA. My mother heard someone screaming in fear outside and walked to a window in the house to look. Her aunt grabbed her, telling her “Don’t look, we don’t want to get involved.” My mother was stunned that anyone could live in such anarchy.

  14. LMFAO@ somebody “swatted” Tim Pool at his studio during the live Timcast broadcast last night.

    The police showed up after getting a call that there was an active shooter incident in the studio.

  15. “…I pledged to keep Jenny and Jeremy—two aging donkeys the seller no longer had use for. Caught up in the adrenaline of the deal, I didn’t take into account just how expensive it could be to care for two large animals…”

    Gotta’ look at the bright side. This buyer shrewdly avoided a ‘feed the squirrels’ clause in his purchase contract.

    Buyer is now pitching his story to Hollywood. Is a remake of ‘Green Acres’ in the works? Even Arnold Ziffel would be embarrassed.

  16. France’s President Macron promises to make life miserable for France’s unvaxxed.

    I doubt Kazakhstan will be the only nation to revolt this year.

    1. Intense frustration – check;
      Inflamed by the pandemic – check;
      A regime detached from ordinary people and devoid of opposition [the worthless GOPe doesn’t count as opposition] in a nation where a parasitical elite has feasted on the wealth – check.
      Oligarchs buying opulent mansions while ordinary people sank deeper into debt & saw their standard of living erode more with each passing year – check

      Downfall of the gangster dictator: IAN BIRRELL reveals why former Kazakhstan leader Nursultan Nazarbayev ‘fled the capital in panic’ after fury at his long rule erupted into violence on the streets

      https://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/article-10376839/IAN-BIRRELL-examines-downfall-former-Kazakhstan-leader-Nursultan-Nazarbayev.html

      The demonstrations, reportedly starting with a few dozen people in a struggling town called Zhanaozen, spread rapidly as they snowballed into wider protests by a population fed up with corruption, inequality, low wages, surging prices and unemployment.

      Behind them lies intense frustration, inflamed by the pandemic, over promises of change in a regime detached from ordinary people and devoid of opposition in a nation where a parasitical elite has feasted on the mineral wealth.

      Last year, British police lost a High Court bid to force Nazarbayev’s daughter and grandson to detail how they found the cash to buy three properties worth £80million in London (his son-in-law also paid a strangely high price of £15million for Sunninghill Park, Prince Andrew’s former marital home, in 2007 – which was £3million over the asking price despite five years languishing on the market).

      1. Back in 1994, the U.S. purchased roughly 1,300-lbs of highly-enriched uranium from Kazakhstan in a secret airlift operation. The deal certainly left a few cronies like Nazarbayev filthy rich with U.S. greenbacks in Cayman and Swiss bank accounts!

        1. I suppose that was justified by keeping old soviet era uranium out of terrorists’ hands. Who knows if it worked?

  17. Ok, heard just a little bit of oral arguments from the vaccine mandate side of the High Courts hearings on vaccine mandates.

    Sure enough they are playing up the current case count of the omicron testing fraud to justify mandates.

    So, no doubt the current testing scam by fake tests is being used to assert mandates, so that explains why the fraudsters did it to scam the High Court. .

    When the very premise of arguments are based on fake tests, fake vaccines, fake numbers of Covid deaths, than its a ridicules argument to begin with because its based on fraud. Disgusting

    1. I am not expecting the Surpremes to do the right thing, even though the jab is ineffective at stopping Omicron.

    2. heard just a little bit of oral arguments

      I’m HORRIFIED and screaming at the computer.

  18. Is the High Court so incompetent that they are going to discard the Constitution by allowing mandating of expiermental fake vaccines that have proven to not even stop Covid, with unacceptable death and injury from the fake vaccines.
    This would mean that the High Court was selling out to the criminal product maker called Big Pharmacy with their lie that the vaccines are safe and effective, when the evidence proves otherwise.
    Fake, tests, fake Pandemic, faked Covid deaths, fake vaccines, fake treatment to hospital patients.

    If they are just going to keep the argument to the new fake testing to justify endorsing mandates than that’s not even a valid argument. I’m so pissed.

    1. I’m going make a prediction and say that it will be compromise decision. e.g. “The President retains his right to enforce vaccine mandates per emergency declarations in the interest of slowing or stopping a threat to public health; however, these specific vaccines in particular do not meet the threshold for slowing or stopping a threat to public health; therefore, the stays from the lower court stand. Future vaccines may be subject to mandates if they meet the threshold kthanx.”

        1. Vaccines don’t lose significant effect after only a couple of months. The Covid-19 “vaccine” was flying on a Wing and a Prayer. And it has already crashed and burned.

          1. I’m starting to hear from more and more people who thought they were “safe” because the were jabbed and boosted, who now say with great bewilderment: “I have covid!”

            I don’t have the heart to tell them that their immune systems are starting to collapse. There are plenty of numbers out there, which are being consigned to the memory hole, that show you are MORE likely to get Omicron if you are vaxxed.

            It has begun.

          2. Ask them how they know. Were they told they have CCP virus? BTW, the red bulls and my calculator have recovered.

          3. Ask them how they know.

            They tested positive (yeah, a possible false positive) and they have the classic symptoms.

            Having had the Delta for over a week, I found the loss of smell and taste to be interesting. I have experienced this with flus and colds, but nasal congestion was involved. I had no nasal congestion. The loss lasted a couple of days, and when it came back everything tasted super salty for a couple of days, then it was back to normal,

          4. There are plenty of numbers out there, which are being consigned to the memory hole, that show you are MORE likely to get Omicron if you are vaxxed.

            And I have already said that vaxxed* people are more likely to get TESTED, which is why they are showing more Omicron. Nothing to do with immune systems collapsing.

            ————-
            *and if you can think of a better word than “vaxxed” which we aren’t allowed to say, then please enlighten us.

        2. I know you don’t like my calling it a vaccine, and I sort of agree with you. The problem is that I can’t think of another word to use. “Shot” means too many other things. “The shot that Pfizer put out to supposedly prevent COVID but actually doesn’t” or “the shot that actually was a vaccine against Alpha but doesn’t work on Delta and fails after 6 months anyway” are too long. Maybe I can say “symptom reducer”? The data is pretty definitive that these shots are preventing death.

          What do you think the Supreme Court is going to rule?

          1. The data is pretty definitive that these shots are preventing death.

            Well, maybe. The data is not reliable or accurate. I’ve already demonstrated where and how the WHO corrupted the definition of deaths CAUSED by Covid-19.

            It is almost 100% certain that this Covid-19 “vaccine” has CAUSED the deaths of many people, people who were perfectly healthy. It has also caused serious illness in countless others. So while it might be the case that this “vaccine” prevented deaths from Covid-19, it is certain that it also killed a lot of people who would not have otherwise died.

            This is absolutely unprecedented in the history of modern medicine. What the proponents of this “vaccine” are saying is that “We have to kill a bunch of healthy people in order to save the lives of a another group of people.”

            This is not ethical or acceptable in any way shape or form. You can predict that the Mother of All Lawsuits is barreling down the tracks.

          2. The data is pretty definitive that these shots are preventing death.

            Not when you look at all-cause mortality.

        3. The experimental biological agent is ineffective. My 95 year old boostered mother was on her death bed Tuesday when my brother and sister started her on Ivermectin. This morning she was out shoveling snow. No joke.

          1. “Thank god you were able to get Ivermectin!”

            How so… it doesn’t take much effort to get it.

          2. Depends on where you are. There are stories of doctors being afraid to prescribe Ivermectin for fear of losing their license. Never mind that ivermectin is safe as can be… and doctors prescribe stuff off-label all the time “hmmm, let’s see if this works.” But they’re not allowed to do that with Ivermectin.

            Someone needs to hang.

          3. Dr. Tyson has a clinic here in San Diego. Via Steve Kirsch’s Substack (no link)

            How Dr. Brian Tyson “persuaded” CVS to fill his ivermectin prescriptions
            Tyson retained an attorney, Matthew P. Tyson (no relation), to draft a letter that was hand-delivered to the pharmacy. He’s not had any trouble since then.

            I asked Brian if he was getting any love from the Medical Boards. He said they are trying to take away his license to practice medicine.

            Then I asked him about whether he’s having any trouble having his prescriptions filled. He said recently he had some problems, but retained a lawyer (with the same last name) who drafted a nice letter to the pharmacy who then wisely decided to cooperate.

      1. these specific vaccines in particular do not meet the threshold for slowing or stopping a threat to public health

        Kagan, Sotomayor and Breyer don’t understand this.

      2. compromise decision

        A compromise decision would be upholding the CMS mandate but not the OSHA mandate.

      1. “….swing from a rope.”

        Judges don’t even have to take the vaccine because of Biden’s exclusions from mandates.

        If the high Court approves Mandates, it will lead to a shot in every arm as many times as these criminal fraudsters want.

        Than no doubt I will end up in a Covid prison camp for refusing to take any shots .

        All this started with two weeks to flatten the curve to the greatest insanity ever fostered on the Globe , by a fraud used as a weapon of mass destruction under the illusion of Public Health Policy of saving lives, when they are killing and creating injuries in the millions by now .

        Ok, if the Judicial branch doesn’t stop these psychopaths, than the people have to have a revolution against a Government that’s trying to kill them , destroy their finances, and put any survivors under enslavement.

        1. Judges don’t even have to take the vaccine because of Biden’s exclusions from mandates.

          According to NPR, all of the justices are jabbed and boosted.

          1. I know they are jabbed, one got a case of breakthrough Covid.
            They should all recuse themself for being prejudicial because the spike is getting to their brain. Who knows what shots they got because some got fake shots.
            Actually its looking like Edwards want to pass it back to State decisions, or a matter for Congress.

        2. Biden’s exclusions from mandates.

          It’s not an “exemption.” 🙄 Biden is in charge of the EXECUTIVE branch, and his Executive order apply ONLY to the executive branch. Saying that the judicial branch was exempt from the Executive Order is like saying that, say, Poland, is exempt from the Executive Order.

    2. Is the High Court so incompetent

      I think the word you meant to use is ‘corrupt’, or maybe ‘bought’ or ‘compromised’.

  19. Copied this . Have fun at tax time . I expect a computer will just send you a bill if you blow off reporting the 1099 but who knows ?

    “ANYONE recieveing $600 or more from a 3rd party payment processor (ebay, paypal, cash app, venmo, zelle, etc) will get a 1099. It will now be the TAXPAYERS responsibility to explain the income! And if you cant explain it, its income.”

    1. IIRC, don’t Millenials and GenZ used venmo to sort of trade with each other, like when they share the bill at a restaurant? Are they going to have to keep every restaurant receipt to prove that the money was a reimbursement and not income? Good luck with that.

      1. don’t Millenials and GenZ used venmo to sort of trade with each other, like when they share the bill at a restaurant?

        Yup, they don’t have checkbooks. I’ve met a few who have never written a check.

    1. I saw the “recommendations” on how to live with COVID. I notice that they are STILL talking about Testing and Quarantine! They are still in the mode for isolating the virus to extinction, as if it were MERS.

      I’m in the camp to let Omicron rip. A less virulent disease which acts as its own vaccine against the other variants, and makes people less sick than (non cardiac) side effects from the vaccine? That’s a gift from God.

      1. Are you saying the High Court is going to rule 6 to 3 against mandates? If this is true it would be so fantastic .

        1. Maybe 5-4 against. Roberts is a wild card (compromised). Sotomayor is the scariest diversity hire ever!

          1. This is Jill Biden’s assistant for something or other.
            https://www.pdsoros.org/meet-the-fellows/julissa-reynoso

            After graduating from a bottom tier HS in the Bronx, her higher education costs were covered by George Soros’ older brother.

            The reason I looked her up is I happened to hear a speech she gave and her command of the English language is tenuous at best. I couldn’t believe the mispronunciation or outright misuse of some words in her speech. I don’t remember what is was about because I couldn’t believe what I was hearing 🙄

  20. is = it GD it, I said to myself make sure there’s no typos when you’re criticizing someone’s speech 😂

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