Too bad I aint Sheriff. I would arrest those tearing down monuments, and the parents who raised such cabbage headed kids. <spit>
đ
Too bad I aint Sheriff. I would arrest those tearing down monuments, and the parents who raised such cabbage headed kids. <spit>
đ
by williambanzai7
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2017-08-17/tearing-down-liberty
Comment: After Judicial Watch sued the FBI & DOJ and received hundreds of pages of documents, Sessions has decided to reopen the tarmac meeting. About Time !!
Anyone else with a perverted mind think all these recent ‘events’ the media is obsessing over has anything to do with Hillary/Soros/Deep State to draw attention away from this new investigation?? Fits the profile of redirection/deflection by the left is you ask me.
Go get em Sessions! Do your job!! Next is the 33,000 Hillary emails destroyed.
Would like to hear from anyone if the so called “mainstream Media’ mentions this new investigation. So far, only Fox seems to be reporting it, and it is buried below the headlines on Fox.
Thanks. It would be interesting to see a national poll on that question. I suspect that the vast majority of Americans would like to see the statues remain. They are part of our heritage after all.
Yes, PMs looking not so bad …
Cheers
I know we’re a unique crowd here but it’s good to see unanimity on that poll for not taking the statues down. It’s just a ridiculous demand even for the likes of the politically correct snowflake crowd.
PM’s holding up pretty well considering the USD strength.
Welcome back my friends, to the show that never ends…
Pool Shark SloMoe Aug 17, 2017 9:30 AM
Who’s next?
How about the FDR Memorial in Washington DC.
After all, FDR was a racist who put US Citizens in a concentration camp solely because their skin was yellow…
mtl4Â Pool Shark Aug 17, 2017 9:31 AM
Extremist groups always go for the monuments first, just look at how the Taliban operates.
BaBaBouy mtl4 Aug 17, 2017 9:36 AM
The PC Deep State & MSM Is Eating Him Alive…
They Think they Also own our Moral Thinking…
bamawatson BaBaBouy Aug 17, 2017 9:36 AM
it is all beyond belief https://vid.me/Xd6VP
EuroPox bamawatson Aug 17, 2017 9:37 AM
Antifa Flag Comes From The German Communist Party In 1932:
http://www.commonsenseevaluation.com/2017/08/16/antifa-flag-comes-direct…
froze25Â EuroPox Aug 17, 2017 9:41 AM
All true statements by the President.
BaBaBouy froze25 Aug 17, 2017 9:44 AM
“”Extremist groups always go for the monuments first””
Yep, Look At Isis what they did…
These PC Operatives are Grooming the Millenial Bumpkins, For Something nefarious…
froze25Â BaBaBouy Aug 17, 2017 9:44 AM
Affirmative action is a constant reminder of slavery and must be abolished.
The Taliban also removed as many historical sites they deemed to be non-islamic in Afghanistan, Isis did the same.
Don’t say you did not know because many of the pitfalls are spelled out in this article by Jeff Clark; an under 5 minute read.
GoldSilver.com
JUL 20, 2016
Bruce Lamar [name changed] was stunned when he read the one-sentence reply from his fund.
His daughter was starting college, and he needed to withdraw currency from a real estate fund heâd invested in several years ago. He had plenty of cash in the account, so he went ahead and made the request online. But the response Bruce received stunned him.
In big bold letters, he was told that due to the financial crisisâŚ
This isnât a fictional account. And itâs not from the 2008 financial crisis. It happened last week.
Within 11 days after Britain voted to leave the EU, M&G Investments, Aviva Investors, and Standard Life all banned clients from withdrawing funds due to âextraordinary market conditions.â
These are not small, obscure funds in the UK. Each manages billions of British pounds. Because of the crisis, however, it quickly became apparent that continued redemptions would crash the fund and force management to sell assets at fire-sale prices. Executives at each fund felt they had no choice.
Bruce couldnât get his own money out.
What does this have to do with bullion-backed funds?
Gold ETFs have the same risks as these funds. And those risks all center around two wordsâŚ
Counterparty risk is simple: it means you are relying upon another party to make good on your investment. If they fail, for any reason, your investment is in jeopardy.
Bruceâs counterparty was the fund itself. They could not make good on returning his money (at least temporarily, and who knows how long itâll last).
Every bullion-backed ETF also has counterparty risk. When you buy a gold ETF, you rely upon many factors, probably more than you realizeâŚ
If any of these break down, your investment is at risk. Delays for redemptions could easily take place, just like the UK funds above. And with the type of crises Mike and I see ahead, it is highly likely that one or more of these counterparty risks will materialize with bullion ETFs. In fact, some already have.
Here are three distinct counterparty risks of gold ETFs that every investor should be aware ofâŚ
A lot has been written about the pitfalls of GLD (SPDR Gold Trust). But in my view, nothing screams counterparty risk! as much as this excerpt from the prospectusâŚ
So letâs get this straight: GLDâs custodian has subcustodiansâand those subcustodians can have subcustodians? And these subcustodians can store gold without a written custody agreement? And this lack of documentation could affect the trustâand GLD has limited legal recourse?
This doesnât sound legal, let alone smart. It clearly makes GLD an accident waiting to happen. This âchain of custodyâ is so poorly structured that it makes the fund highly vulnerable to all kinds of mishaps.
All it will take is for one supplier to knock over the first dominoââgee guys, we canât get our hands on the gold we were holding for you,â for exampleâand the ripple effect could instantly cripple the fund and force management to freeze withdrawals. In that scenario, investors would not be able to cash out their position.
And consider this:Â while the gold price would soar on this news, the price of the fundâand your investmentâwould plummet!
These are obvious flaws with GLD, but itâs not the only counterparty risk gold ETFs faceâŚ
Now, if you think GLD carries risk, just wait… it gets worse.
Blackrock, the sponsor of the world’s second most popular gold ETF, IAU (iShares Gold Trust), admitted in March that it had failed to register new shares with the SEC. Exchange traded commodity funds are required to do this, but BlackRock reported there was an âadministrative oversightâ and they sold shares that didnât yet exist.
Management claimed IAU shares continued to trade without interruption, but the reality is that management lost administrative control over the fund. They were fined by both the SEC and state securities agencies (not counting possible lawsuits from shareholders).
At least the SEC was on the job, though. Just kidding⌠it turns out the âoversightâ only came to light because the fund itself informed the SEC. In other words, regulators werenât even aware of the violation!
All told, IAU sold $296 million worth of unregistered shares. The problem for investors was that until those shares were registered, the price of the fund did not track the price of gold. Imagine logging on to your account and finding the price of gold rising but the price of your gold fund falling.
Gold demand had spiked at the time, but certainly not more than what weâve seen many times in the past. What happens if gold demand soars again? What if it doubles next time? Or if we have another mania like in 1979? And what does this say about how well equipped this management team is to handle these and other crisis-type events?
This blunder shows that management proficiency of this fund is lacking. All ETFs are subject to managerial skill, or lack thereof.
Most investors were completely unaware of this development. If a stampede for the exits had started, almost none wouldâve got out intact.
The next counterparty risk may be the biggest of them allâŚ
HSBC is Britainâs biggest bank. It is also the custodian for GLD, which means it buys and stores gold for the fund.
Unbeknown to many GLD investors, HSBC has a history rife with unethical behavior. Check out some of their violations over the past couple yearsâŚ
On top of all this, HSBC stock has lost almost half its market value in the past two years⌠at a time the S&P has made new all-time highs!
Does this sound like a bank you want to be the custodian of your gold ETF?
The answer is an obvious NOâand yet HSBC continues to be the cornerstone agency responsible for storing and supplying bullion for GLD.
And itâs not just GLD⌠most bullion ETFs store their gold at a bank.
One reason we hold gold is to protect against the banking systemâand most ETFs are part of that very system!
This link between bullion ETFs and the banking system puts your investment at great risk during an economic or monetary crises. And since Mike believes the next banking upheaval will be one for the record books, bullion ETFs are vulnerable to all kinds of restrictions, emergency regulations, and even confiscation.
Bullion ETFs are a nice idea, but these are just some of the reasons I encourage every investor to sell them. These risks are a real and present danger, and theyâll grow as stability of the financial system worsens.
Yes, holding physical gold isnât risk free. And yes, I work for a bullion dealer. But, if you hold gold and silver Eagles and other popular bullion coins, you hold a tangible asset that has virtually no counterparty risk. You simply canât buy a more crisis proof asset.
Donât run the risk of getting locked out of selling your gold ETF, or maybe even not getting your money back. Itâs not difficult to see that government manipulations, mismanagement, and misdirection will lead to some type of crisis. And those crises will put gold ETFs under greater and greater pressure, making them unable to offer safety from the very events they are supposed to protect us against.
Buy real gold and silver. The next financial crisisâhowever it may manifest itselfâis unavoidable. Put your name on the real stuff and not a paper proxy, promise, or pawn.
Vote Vote
A year ago, South Africaâs biggest gold producer was churning cash, sizing up acquisitions and plotting expansion projects. Today, Sibanye Gold Ltd. is making losses and shutting mines.
The main difference between then and now? A big rebound in the rand.
High costs and labor-intensive operations mean that Sibanye and other South African producers are highly leveraged to one of the worldâs most volatile major currencies.
Sibanye expects to report a first-half loss of at least $360 million, compared with a $22 million profit a year earlier, the company said on Thursday. The loss was partly due to the rand, which averaged 14 percent stronger during the period, and a big impairment charge on unprofitable mines it plans to close.
Since the first discovery near Johannesburg in 1886, gold hasnât been hard to find in South Africa, which was the worldâs biggest producer of the metal for a century until 2007. But with many of its mines dating back to the 1950s and 1960s, much of the low-cost metal has been found. That means production is now located much deeper in the Earth and costs more to extract.
more https://finance.yahoo.com/news/rand-recovery-punishes-south-africa-103020987.html
Old $1290 has been the line in the sand for awhile now. $1300 must mark some liftoff point, although I don’t see why they can’t throw the kitchen sink at that level too.
Was pleasantly surprised by the action in the shares yesterday, especially the small caps. We’ll see what happens.
KL – Kirkland Lake still my best stock by a mile.
No follow through allowed ……
Morning Friends
Winedoc
I got sent this card from my youngest although she added just kidding you look 45.
Ha ! A black jew sues the jews ?
Allen, who was hired in 2012, said that last year she was removed from an account she had worked on for three years by a Goldman partner, Christina Minnis. Allen says her supervisor met with Minnis about the decision and said she made racist and anti-Semitic comments about Allen, who is also Jewish.
AUGUST 16, 2017 / 1:07 PM / 22 MINUTES AGO
Black banker sues Goldman Sachs for racial discrimination(Reuters) – A black banker in Goldman Sachs Group Inc’s (GS.N) personal wealth management unit filed a lawsuit on Wednesday accusing the firm of steering top clients to her white colleagues and denying her promotions because of her race.
Rebecca Allen in the lawsuit filed in federal court in Manhattan said Goldman’s virtually all-white senior leadership team favors white bankers for promotions and lucrative accounts, so they earn more than black coworkers.
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-goldman-…ation-idUSKCN1AW257
Trump ignited a political firestorm yesterday during an impromptu press conference in which he said there was “blame on both sides” for the tragic events that occurred in Charlottesville over the weekend.
Now, the discovery of a craigslist ad posted last Monday, almost a full week before the Charlottesville protests, is raising new questions over whether paid protesters were sourced by a Los Angeles based “public relations firm specializing in innovative events” to serve as agitators in counterprotests.
The ad was posted by a company called “Crowds on Demand” and offered $25 per hour to “actors and photographers” to participate in events in the “Charlotte, NC area.” While the ad didn’t explicitly define a role to be filled by its crowd of “actors and photographers” it did ask applicants to comment on whether they were “ok with participating in peaceful protests.” Here is the text from the ad:
Actors and Photographers Wanted in Charlotte
Crowds on Demand, a Los Angeles-based Public Relations firm specializing in innovative events, is looking for enthusiastic actors and photographers in the Charlotte, NC area to participate in our events. Our events include everything from rallies to protests to corporate PR stunts to celebrity scenes. The biggest qualification is enthusiasm, a “can-do” spirit. Pay will vary by event but typically is $25+ per hour plus reimbursements for gas/parking/Uber/public transit.
For more information about us, please visit www.crowdsondemand.com
If you’re interested in working with us, please reply to this posting with the following info:
- Full Name
- Prior relevant experience (as an actor/performer, photographer, brand ambassador, political activist, etc)
- When are you usually available for work?
- Resume (optional)
- If you’re a photographer, what equipment do you use?
- Are you ok with participating in peaceful protests (optional)?
And a screenshot of the original post:
So what is “Crowds on Demand?” According to their own website, they’re in the business of sourcing large crowds of people to “provide clients with protests, rallies, [and] flash-mobs” all over the country. They even have an entire page on their website dedicated to “Protests and Rallies.”
Are you looking to create a buzz anywhere in the United States? At Crowds on Demand, we provide our clients with protests, rallies, flash-mobs, paparazzi events and other inventive PR stunts. These services are available across the country in every major U.S city, every major U.S metro area and even most smaller cities as well. We provide everything including the people, the materials and even the ideas. You can come to us with a specific plan of action and we can make it happen. OR, you can approach us with a general idea and we can help you plan the strategy then execute it.
Weâve made campaigns involving hundreds of people come to action in just days. We have a proven record of delivering major wins on even the toughest campaigns and delivering phenomenal experiences with even the most logistically challenging events.
The CEO of Crowds on Demand denied to Snopes that his firm was involved in the Charlottesville protests but refused to provide details on the specific purpose of the craigslist ad and/or why it was temporarily removed yesterday before being restored.
“We were not involved in any capacity with the recent tragic events in Charlottesville, Virginia. Our thoughts and prayers are with the families of those impacted by the violence”
Silly question, but if your cause is worthy of protest then why would you need to pay $25 per hour to get people to show up?