Wake-up sh*t-for-brains morons: "progressivism" is just commie dictatorship, w. star-trek type camo

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Wake-up sh*t-for-brains morons: "progressivism" is just commie dictatorship, w. star-trek type camo

This Is What the Progressives Want To Do to Us

by William L. Anderson | Mises.org
March 9th 2021, 10:02 am

Link: https://www.infowars.com/posts/this-is-what-the-progressives-want-to-do-to-us/

Think of Minneapolis and Portland and then apply that model nationwide. Then you have an idea where progressive radicals want to take us


For all of the campaign and inauguration talk about “unity” and moderation, Joe Biden is governing like a progressive on all fronts, from cultural issues to the armed forces to the economy. Biden’s unprecedented thirty-two executive orders his first week in office provide evidence he and his party intend to expand executive governance well beyond anything this country has seen in its long history.

Furthermore, all his political appointments are people who fall well to the left of any kind of recognizable political center and who share the Biden’s progressive ideology.

So, what do progressives believe, anyway? What do we mean by the term “progressive,” and why is it in the ascendency today? Furthermore, even though its destructive results are well known when we look at its history, progressivism seems to have taken over almost all of our political and social institutions, shutting down all dissent in the process.

In 2014 libertarian attorney and scholar James Ostrowski published a book entitled Progressivism: A Primer on the Idea Destroying America, which is a worthwhile read if you wish to better understand this nebulous ideology. I heartily endorse the book (having read it myself), but will let Ostrowski speak for himself, and in this piece I will attempt to carve out a small niche of my own in writing about progressivism.

While the term “progressivism” sounds like something to describe modern, secular intellectual and political movements, it actually has its roots more than two hundred years ago in the utilitarian philosophy of Jeremy Bentham. Anyone who has taken a course in history of economic thought is well familiar with Bentham, who influenced the English economists from Thomas Malthus to John Stuart Mill and even beyond that.

The specific aspect of Bentham’s thinking (wide-ranging thinking, I should add) that appeals to the progressive mindset is his belief that there is no natural law, natural rights, natural liberty, and natural and naturally harmonic outcomes, especially in the marketplace. This placed him in opposition to Adam Smith and also to Frédéric Bastiat, whose Economic Harmonies stood in contrast to Bentham’s world view that free market exchanges, unless they were guided by wise people in high places, would have socially harmful results over time.

Bentham’s view was that in order to provide what he called “the greatest good for the greatest number,” governing elites were to ensure that they could guide large numbers of people to act in what progressives today would call “the public interest” by setting structures of incentives—positive and negative—depending upon the situation. We can see this as a precursor of what would culminate in the Communist “experiments” that turned vast stretches of Asia and Europe into mass death zones and in the works of American psychologist B.F. Skinner, who saw people as little more than rats in a box to be properly trained by their intellectual betters.

Understand that this is not an attack on incentives; all of us rely on incentives one way or another, be it the entrepreneur’s pursuit of profit or the rewards (and punishments) we give our children to help them find direction in life. One of the most interesting applications of incentives can be seen in how British economist and social reformer Edwin Chadwick saved countless lives by changing the pay structure of delivering British prisoners to the penal colony in Australia.

During the first half of the nineteenth century, ship captains delivering prisoners from England to Australia were paid up front for each prisoner who boarded their vessels. Having already been compensated, captains had no incentives to care for their captive crew, and about half of the prisoners died during the trips. In 1862, Chadwick convinced policymakers to change the compensation to include only those prisoners who survived the long passage. Not surprisingly, the survival rate rose to 98 percent.

While Bentham’s utilitarianism was a precursor to modern progressivism, one safely can say that progressives today are less interested in laying out structures of incentives to guide human behavior than they are in simply being obeyed. To better understand that point, we need go no further than Biden’s recent cancellation of the Keystone Pipeline in the upper Midwest and his administration’s determination to cripple one of this nation’s most productive industries.

Perhaps there is no greater article of faith among American progressives than that the oil and gas industries are creating a “climate crisis” that supposedly will engulf the planet and make life unlivable. Not surprisingly, the Keystone project has been in the cross hairs of American environmentalists for a long time, since much of the oil to be transported comes from Canadian tar sands. Declares the New Yorker in support of the cancellation:

In the spring of 2011, the NASA climate scientist James Hansen helped orient the pipeline as a climate-related fight, pointing to the massive amounts of carbon contained in the Canadian tar-sand deposits and making the case that, if they were fully exploited, it would be “game over” for the climate.

Hansen’s predictions over the past three decades are reminiscent of those of economists who have predicted ten of the last two recessions, but it is the rare journalist who actually goes beyond being a mouthpiece for the climate change cult, so we are supposed to believe that if the Keystone project were to continue and the Canadian tar sands were further exploited, the result would be rising temperatures that would make the planet unlivable. (Whether or not the tar sands are economically viable, given current energy prices, is another matter, but Biden didn’t nix the pipeline because he believed the project to be uneconomical, but rather because the environmentalist constituency that dominates his government hates any fuels that originate in the ground.)

During his campaign, Biden made his displeasure about oil and natural gas known and vowed to “phase out” the industry (read that, cripple one of the most productive industries in our economy and certainly one of the most indispensable industries at that) and replace fuels with electricity that comes primarily through wind power and solar panels. Again, we see the progressive mindset at work.

First, and most important, even if Biden were successful in completely ending all “fossil” fuel use by 2035—a date that seems to be in vogue with progressive politicians and “woke” corporations like General Motors—it is doubtful that such a move would have any significant (or even insignificant) effect upon the world’s climate.

Second, given the realities of so-called renewable energy, one strongly doubts that windmills and solar panels will come even close to meeting the electricity needs of the USA even by 2035—unless those “needs” are scaled well back to current electricity production levels. Understand that progressives want all of the power-generating plants fueled by coal, oil, and natural gas to be shut down in less than fifteen years, and if that is the case, not only will electricity producers have to replace the entire current fueled grid but also add about 40 percent more capacity. That involves a lot more windmills and a lot more solar panels than what currently we see online.

The hard reality of supply and demand here would cause one to pause and ask if it even is possible to replace every natural gas–, oil-, and coal-fueled power plant with windmills and solar panels, but reality does not seem to enter the progressive mind. Progressive politicians speak of goals and what they plan to do, but often lack a coherent and realistic plan for carrying out their directives, other than to say this is what they are going to do.

Whether it involves bullet trains to nowhere in California, freezing windmills in Texas, or the slow and steady destruction of American cities like Minneapolis and Portland, Oregon, one usually can find the fingerprints of progressive governance. Writing about the massive decline of Minneapolis, which now is governed by ultraprogressives, Kevin Williamson says:

Crime, homeless encampments, riots, crime, loopy left-wing government, crime, litter, violent protests, imperious left-wing activists seeing off mainstream liberal Democrats, boarded-up shops downtown, a vicious social-media-driven politics of personal destruction, crime, crime, and crime, to say nothing of the crime—today’s Minneapolis is where Minnesota Nice turns into Minnesota Nasty.

Let’s talk about the crime first. Everybody does.

“We’re moving,” says one longtime resident of downtown Minneapolis. “Prior to COVID, I walked to work every day and walked home. You couldn’t pay me enough to do that now—and it’s only a mile. It’s a changed city.”

That certainly is the experience of the 553 people who were shot in Minneapolis last year, the highest casualty figure in a generation. Robberies, assaults, thefts, carjackings, and the like are up across the city. The city council voted to partly defund the police department—and then promptly hired a private security firm to protect its members.

He adds:

A three-agency task force trying to combat rampant carjackings in the Twin Cities made 46 arrests in three days, producing 69 felony charges. Most of those arrested were released almost immediately—the jails have been emptied out by COVID-19 precautions.

In normal times and in normal municipalities, the prospect of a once thriving city turning into a war zone would ring alarm bells and prompt calls for political and economic changes to turn things around. Progressives, and especially those on the hard left, are not normal people, and they operate in a world that most of us do not comprehend—or want to understand. Where traditional mayors and council members would like to see their cities become livable places, the radicals governing Minneapolis believe that such sentiments are little more than warmed-over racism:

“If you took Hubert Humphrey and plopped him down in Minneapolis today, he wouldn’t recognize the place,” says Annette Meeks, a former Republican Party leader and head of the Freedom Foundation of Minnesota, a conservative think tank. “It’s not the social upheaval—it’s just the rank craziness.” At the top of the hit parade of crazy are efforts, well under way, to completely abolish the city’s police department. The city’s charter commission kept a police-abolition measure off the ballot the last time around, ruling that the city charter has to be amended before such an action is taken, but a petition drive has been launched to make that happen. “They need 12,000 signatures to get it on the ballot,” Meeks says, “but they’re going for 20,000, overachievers that they are.”

Meeks paints a bleak picture of Minneapolis’s political environment: The Republicans moved out and fell into obscurity decades ago; the caucus system and ranked-choice voting create complexities that favor committed full-time political activists over civic-minded volunteer leaders; boutique radicalism has replaced such old-fashioned livability issues as park maintenance and crime; and the new breed of leaders can win by grandstanding on cultural issues rather than concentrating on the difficult work of seeing to it that the city is run well. On top of all this, Meeks says, is a shocking new viciousness as the manners and style of social media move into the real-world political space.

“It’s survival of the fittest,” she says, “and the radicals won.”

Those of us who cut our academic teeth on public choice and Austrian economics are not used to analyzing people who seem to govern with no limits and no flexibility in mind when it comes to imposing an agenda—no matter how disastrous the results. This is the mentality behind the worst days of the Soviet Union under Lenin and Stalin and in China during Mao’s Great Leap Forward, and it is something utterly foreign to people who deem themselves to be practical.

That millions of innocent souls perished in the USSR and China under radical thinking was of no concern to Communist leaders, who lived privileged lives and barely had their lives inconvenienced while their so-called social visions doomed others to death through starvation and mass executions. While the radicals now governing Minneapolis are not yet planning on gunning down their opposition and expanding their rule past the city limits, it also is clear that this kind of radical progressive governance is going to be the future of the Democratic Party, which continues to move further to the hard left.

Modern progressives no longer seem capable of moving from abstract to practical thinking. They pursue what Thomas Sowell has called “cosmic justice,” which demands the imposition of certain standards for life no matter the costs. For example, those governing Minneapolis say that it is important to eliminate all racism from society, and at one level that isn’t a bad thing. Racial prejudice when people act on it has created havoc in the lives of people and has been behind violence against innocents.

However, in the quest to eliminate all racism from Minneapolis, those in charge both widen the definition and then seek to impose draconian punishments upon people accused, not to mention using social media to shame and ostracize them. The result is something akin to Mao’s Cultural Revolution in China, something that created upheaval, set people at each other’s throats, all in an effort to make people conform to ever-changing standards of “revolutionary consciousness.” These actions do not increase harmony between the races and make society better, but further divide people, spreading hatred against people whose supposed transgressions did not warrant the treatment they received.

The result is not the elimination of racism but rather the further destruction of social fabric. In the end, one is left not with social harmony, but rather a morass of false accusations bolstered by social media. This is not a world that most people want for themselves, but it is fertile ground for political radicals who employ that system to create social breakdowns.

Thus, it is not hard to see how, to paraphrase F.A. Hayek, “the worst get on top” in places like Minneapolis and Portland and, increasingly, Washington, DC. The sheer ferocity of the political radicals toward an alleged infraction of their view of “justice” is out of proportion to the actual alleged offense. In this atmosphere, most people just want out, leaving the radicals even more firmly entrenched to impose even more damage to others.

This is where progressivism is headed, and we have to understand why that is important. Take the recent declaration by Joe Biden that he wants 100 percent “clean” energy by 2035, for example. The typical public choice response would be that since we know that it would be technologically impossible for a “renewable” system to produce the electricity needed to keep a civilized economy afloat, we can rest assured that the government will have to permit at least some fuel-powered electricity-generating plants to continue to exist.

A government run by old-line Hubert Humphrey liberals would acquiesce, noting that while goals of 100 percent “clean” energy are laudable, we still need to keep the lights burning. Progressive radicals, however, are more likely to just shut off the lights—as long as they and others who are politically connected are first in line to have access to all the power they need. This is the equivalent of the Minneapolis City Council members reducing police funding but using tax dollars to hire private security groups to guard their own homes. For that matter, it is like the Communist Party members in the old Soviet Union having access to Western goods at the infamous “yellow curtain” shops while everyone else faced stores with empty shelves, long lines, and inferior products. The Soviets and their Western apologists excused this system because the Communists were “building something better,” akin to Biden’s campaign slogan, “Build Back Better.”

Think USA instead of just Minneapolis and Portland, and you have an idea where progressive radicals want to take us. To the radicals, they have improved both cities, making them more sensitive to racial justice and their version of economic justice. That hard-working business owners have their livelihoods destroyed by such radical policies is like the proverbial breaking of eggs to make an omelet, as communists during the years of Lenin and Stalin were fond of saying. Burned-out buildings, boarded-up storefronts, potholes, homeless encampments, and refuse in the streets are nothing more than collateral damage that occurs when radicals seek to create a “truly just society.”
 
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Aggregated Data Hides the Damage Done by Minimum Wage Hikes

by Gary Galles | Mises.org
March 9th 2021, 9:50 am

Link: https://www.infowars.com/posts/aggregated-data-hides-the-damage-done-by-minimum-wage-hikes/

Much of the harm is disguised by focusing on forecasts of higher aggregate income for the poor

Individuals, on the other hand, are another story

Democrats are again pushing to increase the federal minimum wage, this time roughly doubling it to $15 per hour.

And as with every such push, that has involved invoking “rosy scenario” sales pitches about how low-wage workers will be big winners.

However, such “help the poor” claims must confront the fact that, as labor economist Mark Wilson put it, “evidence from a large number of academic studies suggests that minimum wage increases don’t reduce poverty levels.” If higher minimum wages are supposed to help the poor, why don’t poverty rates fall?

One of the reasons is that minimum wage advocates ignore major harms they would impose on the poor, which is hard to justify by the desire to help the poor.

Much of the harm is disguised by focusing on forecasts of higher aggregate income for the poor.

Even if low-income households gain current income as a group in statistical projections, only individuals bear benefits or costs. And minimum wage increases redistribute wealth away from many low-income individuals, so that supposed help for the poor comes in large part at the expense of others who are poor.

How does a requirement to pay low-skilled workers more harm low-income individuals?

Some lose jobs. With a higher minimum wage, some of those low-income workers lucky enough to already have job experience and a work history will keep their jobs, but many others will simply find themselves unemployable after a large wage hike.

And that punishment may well persist into the future (an effect left out of pro–wage hike forecasts), particularly if they are never able to reach the first rung on their employment ladder. For them, asserting that “the poor gain” is little more than a cruel joke.

Of those who don’t lose their jobs, some will lose work hours. Further, for those who keep their jobs and hours, on-the-job training and fringe benefits will fall, and required effort will rise, to offset hiked wages.

That is why higher minimum wages in the past have led to reduced labor force participation rates and increased quit rates among low-skill workers, which is the reverse of what would happen if all low-skill workers who kept their jobs actually benefited from higher mandated wages.

Higher minimum wages will not only disadvantage the least skilled compared to automation and outsourcing possibilities, but they will also force them to compete with more skilled labor by undermining their greatest competitive advantage in the labor market—a lower price.

And those with the fewest skills, least education, and least job experience will face the greatest reduction in demand for their services.

Further, higher current wages are often less valuable than what is given up, that is, they are particularly damaging in the case of reduced on-the-job training, which would have enabled people to more effectively learn, and therefore earn, their way out of poverty.

It slows growth up the ladder of skills, experience, and responsibility, which reduces productivity and income growth over time. But wage hike advocates never include those future losses in their forecasts, either.

We must also remember that the effects will worsen over time as new low-skill workers enter the labor market at the bottom of the experience and training barrel, facing a much higher standard of employability for their entire lives. I haven’t heard any mention of that group by wage hike promoters, either.

Of course, none of this even incorporates the fact that the minimum wage is not really the minimum cost facing employers. That would also have to include the employer half of Social Security and Medicare taxes, which would also rise (by about $1,000), unemployment insurance taxes, worker’s compensation premiums, etc.

The rosy scenario used to promote a higher minimum wage vastly underplays the huge harm to those individuals who will lose their jobs. Advocates of the wage hike go further to ignore the future harm that will also be visited upon them.

They go still further to ignore the harm to the “winners,” who keep their jobs but whose future earnings growth will be retarded. And even with those “cheats,” it is not clear that low-skill winners will really gain more in total than low-skill losers will lose.

And the results will get worse over time as new generations face the far higher hurdles for their entire lives. If advocates traded in their self-imposed blinders that ensure they don’t see such harms for an “honesty is the best policy” approach, they would face these issues. But then how convincing would their case be?
 
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Capital and Labor Both Suffer under Minimum Wage Mandates

by Mihai Macovei | Mises.org
March 9th 2021, 9:38 am

Link: https://www.infowars.com/posts/capital-and-labor-both-suffer-under-minimum-wage-mandates/

Rising unemployment is just one outcome of minimum wage mandates. Capital accumulation and labor productivity will also be hurt

Biden and the Democratic Party have pushed hard to more than double the national minimum wage from $7.25 per hour to $15 per hour over the next four years.

This aggressive intervention in the functioning of labor markets has been heavily criticized, including in two recent Mises Wire articles.

Resorting to both theoretical arguments and results of empirical studies, Robert Murphy and Martin Jones show in a convincing way that such a drastic increase in the minimum wage is bound to have a negative impact on employment and in particular on low-skilled workers.

Yet their case focuses primarily on the short-term job losses stemming from such an ill-suited policy.

One should not overlook that the minimum wage hike is likely to impair capital accumulation, productivity growth, and future wages as well.

It means that this supposedly welfare-increasing measure is actually going to hamper not only employment, but the improvement of standards of living in general.

As Ludwig von Mises wrote in Human Action, wages are set on a free market in accordance with the marginal productivity of the labor services provided.

As the types of labor supplied and their performance are very specific, there is no uniform wage rate throughout the economy.

In that respect, setting a universal wage rate for the whole economy, even if it is a minimum threshold, doesn’t make sense either.

Moreover, once the government or trade unions succeed in imposing a wage level above the marginal productivity of labor, institutional unemployment results.

It is hard to imagine how a mandated national minimum wage of $15 per hour would remain below the marginal productivity of all current employees in the US and would not produce additional unemployment.

As a matter of fact, the proposed increase would make the US minimum wage the highest among OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development) countries and probably in the world, both in absolute terms and relative to the median wage in the economy (graphs 1 and 2).

The closer the minimum wage is to the median one, the larger is the probability that lower-productivity workers cannot be hired at an artificially imposed minimum wage level, and will be swallowed by the ranks of the unemployed.

The risk of a large increase in unemployment is quite high given that a nonnegligible 19 percent of the wage-earning workforce currently makes less than $15/hour.

Graph 1: Minimum Wage in Different Countries (USD/Hour)

macovei

Source: OECD.

Graph 2: Ratio of Minimum Wage to Median Wage in Different Countries

macovei

Source: OECD.

Dozens of empirical studies have shown that hiking minimum wages undermines employment opportunities among low-skilled workers and increases unemployment, in particular when the increase is massive like the one proposed by the Democrats.

A study by the Congressional Budget Office quoted by both Murphy and Jones estimates that employment would be reduced by 1.4 million by the minimum wage increase while the number of people in poverty would decline by a nine hundred thousand.

Yet the negative economic impact would not end with the labor market effects.

According to the same study, a higher minimum wage would also “slightly reduce real GDP, primarily because of reduced employment,” redistribute family income, and increase the budget deficit by a cumulative $54 billion over 2021–31.

Significant income redistribution would take place from wealthier families that suffer a decline in business income estimated at $333 billion over 2021֪–31 or face higher prices for goods and services to the families of workers that either benefit from higher wages or have lost employment because of the minimum wage hike.

Several US states have already imposed higher minimum wages than the national one of $7.25 an hour. Yet none of the state top-ups has reached $15 an hour as of 2021, which means that the negative impact on employment will be felt in the entire country.

Nevertheless, states where average wages are lower and which have not gold-plated the national minimum wage yet will be affected most. A cursory look at wage statistics shows large differences between annual median wages among US states.

An increase of the minimum wage to $15/hour would be equivalent to an annual minimum wage of about $31,200 (OECD data), representing about 90 percent or more of the 2019 annual median wage in about twelve US states: Florida, Oklahoma, Kentucky, New Mexico, Idaho, Alabama, South Dakota, South Carolina, Louisiana, West Virginia, Arkansas, and Mississippi.

This ratio is very high compared to the OECD average of about 55 percent. Seven of the US states have not even gone beyond the mandated national $7.25 per hour minimum wage so far, illustrating how disastrous the effects of this one-size-fits-all measure could be.

It should not be overlooked that, in addition to the direct rise in institutional unemployment, second-round effects in terms of lower output and real national income and a new redistribution thereof to the benefit of households with a lower propensity to save are likely to impact negatively savings and investment.

Although one cannot predict how US families will shape their savings and investment patterns in the future, statistics show that over the last three decades only the two top income quintiles recorded positive saving rates consistently.

The average savings of the two bottom income quintiles have been stubbornly negative while the gap between the top and bottom income groups’ savings has actually widened (graph 3).

Graph 3: US Average Savings by Income Quintile

macovei

If past saving trends continue, the contemplated minimum wage hike is likely to depress further the relatively low savings propensity of US households.

The latter save only about 8 percent of their disposable income, part of a long-term declining trend since the early 1970s (OECD data).

Moreover, this lasting decline has gone hand in hand with a persistent slowdown in private investment, capital accumulation, and labor productivity.

It is obvious that the US economy should be spared another government intervention in the form of a massive minimum wage hike which can only reinforce these trends and undercut the rise in standards of living.

Moreover, if minimum wages actually depress savings and hamper capital accumulation how could businesses respond to a mandated increase in wages by substituting more machinery for labor, as claimed by certain pundits?

With impaired investment and capital stock, this would only be possible in specific cases and not for the overall economy.

As a matter of fact, the causality runs in the opposite direction: capital accumulation and technological improvement support higher wages whereas mandatory minimum wages undermine them.

Conclusion

The lasting negative impact of minimum wages not only on employment, but also on standards of living in general, can only be fully grasped by taking into account also their long-term effects on output, capital accumulation and labor productivity.

Mises1 understood very well this phenomenon when he claimed that “No one has ever succeeded in the effort to demonstrate that unionism could improve the conditions and raise the standard of living of all those eager to earn wages.”

Like in the case of unionism, the alleged benefits of mandated minimum wages are restricted to a minority of workers who see their wages rise in the short term.

For the rest of the society, which must finance this immediate income redistribution and also face lower prospects for higher standards of living in the future, minimum wages are of no benefit at all.
 
Re: Wake-up sh*t-for-brains morons: "progressivism" is just commie dictatorship, w. star-trek type c

Venezuela Issues Million-Bolivar-Bill Worth 50 Cents as Hyperinflation Rages

by Zero Hedge
March 9th 2021, 7:54 am

Link: https://www.infowars.com/posts/vene...-bill-worth-50-cents-as-hyperinflation-rages/

Currency has lost 99.999% of value in six years

Venezuela’s currency has lost 99.999% of its value during the six years of hyperinflation, forcing the country to issue larger banknotes.

On Friday, the nation’s central bank announced new plans to unveil the highest valued banknote of one million bolivars.

The Central Bank of Venezuela tweeted Friday that “three new banknotes will be incorporated into the current Monetary Cone, as part of the expansion of the current family of monetary species.”

As early as this week, it will introduce banknotes worth 200,000, 500,000, and one million bolivars. For those wondering how much one million bolivars is worth in terms of US dollars, well, it’s around 50 cents.

Tres nuevos billetes serán incorporados al Cono Monetario vigente, como parte de la ampliación de la actual familia de especies monetarias.#BCV pic.twitter.com/HdUDbrrZ5F
— Banco Central de Venezuela (@BCV_ORG_VE) March 5, 2021

When the central bank revealed the new bills, Director and Partner at Ecoanalitica, economist Asdrubal Oliveros, said the banknote is good for nothing more than public transport – one of the few services reliant on the paper bolivar.

For example, here is Bloomberg’s Cafe Con Leche Index – which tracks the price of a cup of coffee served piping hot at a cafe in eastern Caracas… it now costs 2.7975 million bollivars (up 3000% from a year ago)…

During hyperinflation, the country has imported greater and greater amounts of paper to issue more banknotes. Venezuela imported 71 tons of paper from Italian money printer Fedrigioni (majority-owned by US Private Equity giant Bain Capital) to print new bolivars in late 2020.

The need for ever-larger bills and constant devaluations in Venezuela is a direct result of an ever-weakening currency, and interannual inflation was running at 2,665% as of January.

“These new bills will complement and optimize the current denominations, to meet the requirements of the national economy,” the central bank said in a statement.

As the Venezuelan currency rapidly depreciates, Venezuela’s government is preparing to move to a fully digital economy – whatever that means for the country which a couple years ago adopted some weird cryptocurrency as the de facto Petro currency of the state to… perplexing consequences, as hyperinflation in this South American socialist paradise (coming soon to every socialist paradise nears you) continues to rage on.


The radical left is now openly promoting eugenics.
 
Re: Wake-up sh*t-for-brains morons: "progressivism" is just commie dictatorship, w. star-trek type c

Sean Penn says Americans should be FORCED to have a COVID vaccine and those who don't are like reckless drivers: Star refused to return to set of his show until every cast and crew member had been jabbed

Link: http://www.yourdestinationnow.com/2021/08/sean-penn-says-americans-should-be.html

August 12, 2021
  
Actor Sean Penn has said he believes that Americans should be forced to have a COVID vaccine by law.

He compared vaccine mandates to setting speed limits in an effort to prevent reckless driving, and insisted a law compelling people to be jabbed was reasonable.

'This is one of those things that should be mandatory,' Penn told Yahoo Entertainment. 'My deep belief, personally, is that it's no different having everybody being able to drive 100 miles an hour in a car.'

He argues that all Americans should get the shot, with the exception being for those with medical conditions that prohibit them from doing so.

Sean Penn is arguing in favor of mandated COVID vaccines for all Americans. He said: 'This is one of those things that should be mandatory. It's no different having everybody being able to drive 100 miles an hour in a car'

'I think that vaccines need to be mandatory and that businesses -- the movie business and all businesses -- need to take the lead and not be so timid when dealing with their collective bargaining partners,' he continued.

Penn also expressed his frustration with Americans who are eligible to get the shot but remain hesitant to do so.

'There's different kinds of hesitancies, and so I don't think that there's much excuse to not know the informational available anymore,' he said. 'That's part of why I think it should be mandatory.'

'A resistance that's just based on a certain kind of... lack of imagination and understanding of anything that's helpful to the human race, I've become very frustrated by that. But I can only work within my own bounds and say that, for me, it should be mandatory.'

Throughout the pandemic, Penn has been vocal about wanting people to take precautions against coronavirus.

Penn believes that all Americans should get the shot, with the exception being for those with medical conditions that prohibit them from doing so

He reportedly offered free COVID tests at the Black Lives Matter protests last summer, as well as insisted on following guidelines from health experts at his own wedding.

Penn also refused to the set of Gaslit, a Starz limited series about the Watergate scandal, unless the entire cast and crew were vaccinated.

Meanwhile, the U.S. vaccination rollout has picked up the pace with the country now averaging more than 700,000 vaccinations a day - the highest rate in over a month.

The daily average for Americans getting their first doses is more 500,000, the highest in over two months, according to the White House COVID-19 data director.

More than 195 million Americans have now received at least one dose of a COVID vaccine, representing just over half of the population.
 

NY County Announces Travel Bans For ‘Catastrophes’, Introduces ‘Movement Passes’ For ‘Essential Workers’​

by Jamie White
December 19th 2023, 12:50 pm

Link: https://www.infowars.com/posts/ny-c...oduces-movement-passes-for-essential-workers/

Governments expanding powers to restrict the movement of citizens, a key tenet of the WEF's Great Reset.

A New York county announced the launch of a travel ban initiative where “essential workers” can apply for an exemption in the event of a state of emergency or other “catastrophe.”

Erie County officials claimed exemptions from their new online portal will be used by employers during winter storms and other emergencies when a driving ban has been declared.

The county said the essential employee exemption portal is to be used by employers during winter storm events and other emergencies when a driving ban has been declared. https://t.co/sWIlOt5BRJ
— 7 News WKBW (@WKBW) December 15, 2023

“The travel exemption portal will define specific categories of workers using a tiered concept to identify who would be exempt from a travel ban in order to commute to and from their place of employment,” the news release said.

“The list of essential employees will be reviewed annually and employers will be asked to provide updates when an essential employee’s work status changes for any reason that warrants removal from the exemption list.”
https://www.infowarsstore.com/catal...=banner&utm_content=VasobeetBlackFridaybanned
WKBW TV disabled their video report‘s embed, but you can still view it on YouTube:

The county defines essential workers as law enforcement, first responders, healthcare workers, civil servants, farmers, and construction workers.

Erie County first imposed a travel ban in 2022 following a winter storm that killed several stranded motorists.

Erie County Executive Mark Poloncarz vowed to punish citizens who defied the county’s impending travel bans, which he said could be used not just for a “major weather event,” but also “some other type of catastrophe.”

“Under the New York Public Officers Law, no one may travel except personnel deemed essential during the emergency,” he declared Friday on X. promising to sic law enforcement on those caught driving without a movement pass.

Important thread: During a snow emergency, a driving/travel ban emergency order may be instituted to protect lives and get our community open as soon as possible. Under the New York Public Officers Law, no one may travel except personnel deemed essential during the emergency. 1/7
— Mark Poloncarz (@markpoloncarz) December 15, 2023

Poloncarz, a vehement anti-Trumper, also mocked those concerned about the government overreach.

“I’m enjoying the replies from out-of-state trolls to my posts about who are essential personnel authorized to drive during a snowstorm travel ban. Here’s the deal, since you hate government so much, don’t call 911 after getting stuck and demand we save your sorry patriot butts,” he wrote.

I’m enjoying the replies from out-of-state trolls to my posts about who are essential personnel authorized to drive during a snowstorm travel ban. Here’s the deal, since you hate government so much, don’t call 911 after getting stuck and demand we save your sorry patriot butts.
— Mark Poloncarz (@markpoloncarz) December 16, 2023

Notably, Poloncarz was also a COVID tyrant, imposing mask mandates until well into 2022 and creating a hotline for residents to snitch on their neighbors if they didn’t adhere to COVID protocols.

Travel bans like these will likely be much easier to enforce in the coming years after the Biden regime and Congress passed an “infrastructure” bill to install remote kill switches in all vehicles after 2026.

In the wake of COVID, government officials just can’t give up their newfound power to restrict the behavior and movements of citizens.

Travel restrictions are a key tenet of the World Economic Forum’s Great Reset, which for example promotes the notion of a “carbon passport” to limit travel in the name of climate change.
 
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President Trump Identifies LA Riot Organizers as “Paid Agitators” and “Insurrectionists”​


June 9, 2025 | Sundance

Link: https://theconservativetreehouse.co...izers-as-paid-agitators-and-insurrectionists/

[vid at site link, above]

President Trump returns to the White House from a brief and undocumented trip to Camp David. After pausing to talk to the construction teams assembling the massive new flagpole on the White House grounds, President Trump briefly spoke to reporters who asked questions about the Los Angeles riots.

During the Chopper Presser, President Trump noted the people behind the violence and mayhem in LA are “paid agitators, insurrectionists and bad people.” WATCH: [ck site link, above, top]


 
Excellent vid and journalism here, folks--catches the mentality of these traitorous, criminal rioters--what are they?--just the same moronic "liberals" & commies--ought to be beaten severely, maybe even shot (like w. "rubber bullets" sometimes used), eh? Regardless, it's all ORGANIZED, FUNDED, AND LARGELY DIRECTED BY JEWS, JEWS, JEWS, MORONS--keeps attn of mass-murder in Gaza, if u're aware

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This vid here shows "woke" mentality--which then helps make-up much of "woke" culture itself, serious mind-virus--subjectivism, so extreme it becomes satanic

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