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Edward McLaughlin
Mark Moss
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Comments by "Edward McLaughlin" (@edwardmclaughlin7935) on "Mark Moss" channel.
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"Hello, I have a leak in my bathroom, can you fix it?" "You got any chickens?"
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Appreciate all your stuff Mark, but this is definitely up there with the most crucial you've put out. Thank you.
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Schwab's book. He did well didn't he, to write the book, get it published and distributed as soon as he heard of the breakout of the virus? (Frowns and strokes beard)
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The difference between Keynesian economics and Austrian economics: Keynesian economics is what is covered in the colleges and universities. Austrian economics is what has been systematically excluded from the academy.
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"The large print giveth; the small print taketh away" Tom Waits
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Klaus Schwab's office is missing that white fluffy Persian cat and small pool with circling fins.
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Great aim mate. Best of luck.
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Looks like I've driven by for a chat through my car window.
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The 3M winner combination: Moss/Mannarino/maneco64. Don't forget Heresy Finacial - spoils the 'M'thing but there you go.
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The central banks are anglers. They have us on the hook but we are huge and their line is weak - we are far too big to be hauled-in by force; and so they must play this very cleverly. They are watching for when we fight. At that point they have to let out some line. Then when we settle down again, they gently pull the line in. They are playing us until we tire and can be landed.
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Meanwhile, right across the MSM and recently, even in many of the 'alternative' information sources here on Youtube (Kitco for instance) the whole approach is one of damping down fears and the reassurance that 'we have turned the corner'. So much respectful attention is paid to Fed' announcements; they are positioned to give the impression that they are doing all they can to save the dollar and the people who hold currency. The whole production is got-up so as to lend an air of responsible stewardship to Fed' and government leaders. Yet, all the while, the economy remains severely wounded and prone. We, through the downing of the system by which we trade and feed ourselves, are being bled white to the soothing muzak of Yellen, Powell and Co.
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What does the IMF make me want to do? Puke.
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I'm sat on my sofa watching Netflix. Someone throws free money at me. That's a stimulus for me to watch more Netflix.
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Shoot Mark, that was some good research.
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Listening to that line from Yellen, that '..worry about the debt later', I'm reminded of Ray Liotta's voice in Goodfellas when the supplies are going in the front door of the nightclub and going straight out the back. Everyone knows the bill ain't getting paid.
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They will be imposed on us. They will work for a very short time and they will not work.
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shashakeeleh It's paraphrased yes; but there is no difference in the essential point.
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@shashakeeleh5468 Mark phrases it in a different form from the original while meaning the same thing - that's paraphrasing in my book. Tell me how this is not so.
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@shashakeeleh5468 'Look it up'. The sound of someone who doesn't have anything to back up what they've said; realise they're wrong and haven't the decency to hold up their hands to admit it; and scuttle off to spout bollocks elsewhere.
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@shashakeeleh5468 Same no answer.
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@shashakeeleh5468 The statement in the video means exactly the same as the original. Prove me wrong why don't you?
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@shashakeeleh5468 I've done all my research, so much so that I have shown you to be wind and piss.
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@shashakeeleh5468 Like I said: wind and piss.
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@shashakeeleh5468 Done it mate. Told you but you seem somehow unable to come to terms with reality.
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Julian Assange mentioned around 4:45 is actually Jens Stoltenberg, current head of NATO.
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As Gerald Celente so eloquently titles him: Andrew 'nipple rings' Cuomo.
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Gates was just whining the other day about the fact that, for some reason, people were directing so much criticism at him. He pulled the 'conspiracy theory' card. We all love you really Bill.
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Vital that as many people as possible get to know this stuff, so thanks for this. Looking forward to Pt2.
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Mark, you speak towards the end here, of how to escape the new system by buying tangible assets. Surely, those who put CBDC in place, will have as their main objective, the prohibition of any moves to rebuild something which is by its nature, in direct opposition to, and in competition with its aims? Surely the buying of gold and silver for instance, would be banned?
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@1MarkMoss Thanks. I certainly hope that sound money will not be snuffed out. Thanks also for your stream of info' on all this stuff. Thanks in part to all that, I'm not quite the naive that I was and I'm a lot 'better placed' now for the coming roller coaster ride!
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'Digital fiat'? So my hard-earned is still at the mercy of politicians and bankers, but I just get to think I'm not gonna get shafted 'because blockchain or something'?
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Won me over on every point, Mark, until the 'Bitcoin as saviour' message at the end. Not that I'm anti-Bitcoin; it sounds like it's a great system, independent of government or other third-party manipulation. It's just that, along with the food, energy and monetary crises that are being thrust upon us, there is also much hinting by our string-pulling friends, of the coming 'cyber attacks'. Basically, they can at any time shut down my broadband or even my electricity supply, so that any crypto I might want to access is put out of my reach. As Mike Maloney has recently quipped: "The end of the world comes as a message: 'Could not connect to the server' ". https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=baKgMVb5F54
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Raises lots of questions. Was it ever wise to 'weaponise' the dollar as described? Isn't the end of that situation to be celebrated? Given the intrinsic corrupt nature of our current physical fiat, am I right to look on moves to allow that corruption to evolve to a digital platform, as just more efficient tyranny? Long term, how would my having Bitcoin help me - in that, obviously the CBDC that is to pay me, is not going to allow me to move payments to and from such an arch enemy? Is the deferred gratification of the saver going to even be a thing if these expiration dates are put on funds? In other words, will I be forced to just keep on buying more burgers and shirts when I'd rather save up for that Gibson Les Paul? How will I tip a good waiter? How will prostitutes live?
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Great exposition once again. So really, the dollar is being attacked by a two-pronged sword: the Fed/Treasury revolving door scam is doing the softening up - the artillery barrage; and now the field is ready for Soros's infantry to be unleashed. It's almost as if it was a joint operation?
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Things will continue to go tits up until practical economics and money management are core curriculum in schools.
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You mean, the education system has got it all wrong? That teaching kids to hate white males while neglecting to tell them how to work out compound interest, isn't going to bring home the bacon ooooops! sorry, I mean, the nut cutlets?
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Sounds very plausible to me. Thanks for all the work you put in Mark.
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Thanks once again, Mark. Truth dragged in from the fog and slapped on the table - made accessible to the layman.
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G C '...a day off...'? I've had an enforced ten months off mate, with every sign that this period of doing nothing is not going to change.
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If we had inherited CBDC from our forebears - never known any other currency, and some bright spark invented this weird stuff: little discs of metal and slips of paper we could carry around in our pockets and exchange for goods, 'cash' I've heard it called; then everyone would want in on it.
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Can't wait to see how the MSM will blame all of this on Putin.
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Just a minor correction: the man shown in the photo next to John Major is not Soros, it's Norman Lamont.
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c2s Calm down mate, you'll be fine.
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He could be right and wrong at the same time. The 'squeeze' that's coming is actually going to be so much more than that - it's going to be a crushing. By that I mean that the state will not be looking for 25% of your earnings; not 40%, not60%. They want people to have nothing and for the state to have it all. Therefore, unless Mr Berry can find a loophole (and as he's much cleverer than I, he might do just that, when I can't) then the huge profits he makes from his bet, will be taken. And I'm not sure he will be that happy camper envisaged by Uncle Klaus.
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Lots at steak here.
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WHAT! HISTORY! You mean....like....before I was EVEN BORN! Before even Pot Noodles were invented!
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Spot on, Mr Moss. It's as if Powell/Yellen & Co were using the Weimar situation as their playbook. Alasdair Macleod has an interesting tale: during the final throes of the 1923 collapse of the German currency, it was possible to buy outright, a substantial detached house in one of the better parts of Berlin, for 6oz of gold.
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DYLON We are all a part of the reset. We don't have a choice: the economy is being reset before our eyes. Why else would the economies of the west be shut down so easily on the lame excuse of a middle-ranking virus?
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@danieldanio9546 Please let me know when you find a refuge from it. I'm in.
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On the real-estate investment thing: it's that 2030 comment form Shcwab that bothers me. If, by 2030 we are to own nothing and be happy; then surely bricks and mortar possessions are going to be the central snatch? (Still wondering if I'm going to wake up and I've had a vivid nightmare and the pubs never did close down and I can book my flight after all)
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