Theme: Subsidy

  • Women don’t contribute. In fact, history will fairly readily judge this era as f

    Women don’t contribute. In fact, history will fairly readily judge this era as folly of adding women to the workplace so that their entire productivity can be captured by taxation, can run up consumer and national debt, so that only a few white men over 35 are net contributors to taxes, and so that population collapses, and our government, our economies, and our companies become uncompetitive, and education from primary to academy is destroyed by the female intolerance for meritocracy and face before truth.

    Reply addressees: @Womenrising2023 @FuryForth @AutistocratMS @NoahRevoy


    Source date (UTC): 2024-01-31 23:15:07 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1752832914226626560

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1752832244228423958

  • (AFAIK, relative equality is irreversible, but the vast redistribution from men

    (AFAIK, relative equality is irreversible, but the vast redistribution from men to women will have to end. It was bad enough when we went from one propertied family with one vote, to one family regardless of responsibility one vote, to one person one vote. So I suspect continued collapse of marriage, economic democracy, and separate houses for men and women. That said, what I really expect is to see the conservative women continue to repproduce and the progressive (selfish) women continue not to, and the legislation will level out, because that reproductive shift is already happening. But this current circumstance can’t survive for long. The damage to society, poltics, economics, and long term redistribution is irreversible.

    Reply addressees: @Womenrising2023 @AutistocratMS @NoahRevoy


    Source date (UTC): 2024-01-31 00:06:40 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1752483499804700672

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1752481828785496270

  • 27B losses by Startups from VCs in the first eleven months of 2023 and the data

    27B losses by Startups from VCs in the first eleven months of 2023 and the data isn’t comprehensive and discounts the total. And that number doesn’t include big publicly funded startups that collapses. or the 45B that was burned by Facebook on the metaverse. …. It’s just the evidence of changing interest rates creating the boom and riasing interest rates ending it.

    I can’t believe the sh-t ideas that were funded by VCs. Absolutely ridiculous.

    https://t.co/ZdUUeaj5nm


    Source date (UTC): 2024-01-21 03:08:10 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1748905295068200960

  • RT @EPoe187: Contemporary whites pay billions of dollars a year to improve the l

    RT @EPoe187: Contemporary whites pay billions of dollars a year to improve the lives of less successful groups, yet they are still berated…


    Source date (UTC): 2023-12-20 21:56:06 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1737592739078762813

  • “Greece shouldn’t have been allowed to adopt the euro.”– And they should have c

    –“Greece shouldn’t have been allowed to adopt the euro.”–

    And they should have clamped down on (a) the size of he bureaucracy, and (b) tax evasion which is endemic, and they shouldn’t have used the low intrerest rates to fuel a housing boom to absorb their underperforming labor markets, because of their underperforming government in producing a globally competitive economy.


    Source date (UTC): 2023-12-15 17:28:49 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1735713537186500610

  • RT @dr_duchesne: Outrageous: A study entitled “Borderless Welfare State: The Con

    RT @dr_duchesne: Outrageous: A study entitled “Borderless Welfare State: The Consequences of Immigration on Public Finances” ———– s…


    Source date (UTC): 2023-12-14 16:13:01 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1735332070413550002

  • RT @navyhato: The bottom two pay taxes to bankroll the migrants who sit on benif

    RT @navyhato: The bottom two pay taxes to bankroll the migrants who sit on benifits and get everything provided for them by the government.…


    Source date (UTC): 2023-12-13 16:23:25 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1734972303211888924

  • This is a half truth masquerading as a whole truth. The doubling of the work for

    This is a half truth masquerading as a whole truth. The doubling of the work force has lead to massive increases in consumption taxation government and redistribution – at the cost of the family and replacement levels of reproduction, ending the capacity for redistribution,…


    Source date (UTC): 2023-11-24 16:59:57 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1728096124819395008

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1727472757313851392

  • Indirectly yes. 1. central banks and the treasury facilitate credit expansion. 2

    Indirectly yes.
    1. central banks and the treasury facilitate credit expansion.
    2. And the central banks do have some idea of the amount of money created through credit expansion.
    When I discuss these matters I just throw the entire bucket into the fed, because in the end, that’s…


    Source date (UTC): 2023-10-17 23:59:50 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1714431052003885302

    Reply addressees: @shity_paradigm @MinClaydough @bryanbrey @JeffSnider_AIP

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1714427833689506273

  • Indirectly yes. 1. central banks and the treasury facilitate credit expansion. 2

    Indirectly yes.
    1. central banks and the treasury facilitate credit expansion.
    2. And the central banks do have some idea of the amount of money created through credit expansion.
    When I discuss these matters I just throw the entire bucket into the fed, because in the end, that’s who is both producing, recording, and most importantly insuring the new credit money.

    BELOW

    3. How Credit Expansion Operates
    4. Credit Expansion explained

    3. How Credit Expansion Operates. When banks expand credit by issuing new loans, they effectively increase the money supply. This is a fundamental concept in fractional-reserve banking, where banks are required to hold only a fraction of their deposits in reserve. The rest can be loaned out. When a bank makes a new loan, it credits the borrower’s account, thereby creating new money. This new money is a liability on the bank’s balance sheet but an asset for the borrower, who can spend it, thus increasing the active money supply.

    Here’s how it works in more detail:

    Fractional-Reserve System: Banks are required to hold a certain percentage (the reserve ratio) of their deposits in reserve. The rest can be loaned out.

    Loan Issuance: When a bank issues a loan, it credits the borrower’s account with the loan amount. This is new money that didn’t exist before.

    Money Multiplier Effect: The borrower spends the loan by transferring it to other accounts (e.g., buying a car, investing in a business, etc.). The recipients of that money may then deposit it into their own bank accounts, and the process continues, further expanding the money supply.

    Ledger & Accounting: Each loan and deposit is carefully recorded by the banks.

    Banks are generally required to report various statistics, including loan data, to the central bank. The specifics of what needs to be reported and how often can vary by jurisdiction. This data can be essential for the central bank’s monetary policy decisions. However, it’s worth noting that while the central bank can track the credit created by the banking system, this system is not perfect, and there is often a time lag between when credit is created and when it gets reported and analyzed.
    (which is why the fed is always ‘late’.)

    AND:

    4. Credit expansion refers to an increase in the availability of loans or the creation of new credit by financial institutions, typically banks. This usually occurs in response to a more accommodative monetary policy by a central bank, which lowers interest rates and eases reserve requirements. The fundamental aim is to stimulate economic activity by making borrowing cheaper and more accessible for both individuals and businesses.

    Here’s a step-by-step breakdown:

    Monetary Policy Shift: A central bank lowers interest rates and may also reduce reserve requirements for commercial banks. This action increases the amount of money that banks have at their disposal to lend.

    Increased Lending: Due to reduced interest rates and lower reserve requirements, commercial banks can now offer more loans and at more favorable terms. This incentivizes borrowing.

    Consumer Spending and Investment: As loans become cheaper and easier to obtain, consumers are more likely to borrow money for spending on goods, services, and investments. Businesses also take advantage of the lower borrowing costs to invest in expansion and development.

    Economic Stimulus: The increased borrowing and subsequent spending generally lead to higher economic activity. This is often measured in terms of growth in Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

    Potential Risks: While credit expansion can stimulate economic growth, it can also lead to higher levels of debt and can potentially inflate asset bubbles. If the rates of borrowing outstrip the rates of repayment or productive investment, the economy could become unstable.

    Inflationary Pressure: An increase in the money supply through credit expansion can also lead to inflation, as more money chases the same amount of goods and services.


    Source date (UTC): 2023-10-17 23:59:49 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1714431051626328064