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The Terrible Consequences Of The Sanctions Against Putin


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2022 Jun 20, 4:17am   18,119 views  107 comments

by ohomen171   ➕follow (2)   💰tip   ignore  

#consequencesofputinsanctions I am always on the lookout for unusual stories that most of the media misses. Russia used to export a massive amount of timber. With sanctions, it is difficult for Russia to continue with these exports. This causes big disruptions in the timber market worldwide. Germany is being forced to bring coal plants that generate power and heat back online to replace natural gas no longer coming from Russia. Then we have the Russian naval blockade of Ukraine's Black Sea ports that leave 20 million metric tons of wheat in silos and put up 100 million people in Africa and the Middle east in danger of potential starvation.
Putin is engaging in some cold-blooded calculus here. "Make things very uncomfortable for people in the west and they will cave in and let me do what I want to do." Long ago, Western democracies caved into Hitler in hopes of appeasing him and stopping a second world war. We know what happened afterward. We are going to have high gasoline and diesel prices. We are going to suffer high prices for food, timber, and natural gas for a long time to come. We are going to see large numbers of people face starvation. We cannot let Putin win this battle!!!! Decades ago, Stalin and Chairman Mao engineered famines that killed millions of people. Putin is the same kind of monster

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67   Patrick   2022 Jul 24, 3:17pm  

https://slaynews.com/news/europe-slash-gas-usage-survive-winter-iea-chief-warns/


Europe must drastically reduce natural gas consumption in order to survive through the winter, the head of the International Energy Agency (IEA) has warned.

IEA chief Fatih Birol recently called on all European Union (EU) member states to reduce gas consumption by 15% in the face of the threat of a complete Russian gas cutoff.

However, the IEA now says the EU will need to cut even more in order to get through the winter.

“Even if there is no single accident… Europe still needs to reduce its gas consumption about 20% compared to today in order to have safe and normal winter months,” Birol said.

Birol made the comments while issuing, what he called, a “red alert” for energy markets.
68   richwicks   2022 Jul 24, 3:53pm  

Patrick says

https://slaynews.com/news/europe-slash-gas-usage-survive-winter-iea-chief-warns/



Europe must drastically reduce natural gas consumption in order to survive through the winter, the head of the International Energy Agency (IEA) has warned.

IEA chief Fatih Birol recently called on all European Union (EU) member states to reduce gas consumption by 15% in the face of the threat of a complete Russian gas cutoff.

However, the IEA now says the EU will need to cut even more in order to get through the winter.

“Even if there is no single accident… Europe still needs to reduce its gas consumption about 20% compared to today in order to have safe and normal winter months,” Birol said.

Birol made the comments while issuing, what he called, a “red alert” for energy markets.



More like 40%.

Europe has always been dependent on Russian Energy, even when it was the USSR. When the USSR collapsed, if traitors didn't run their nations, they would have made inroads and agreements with Russia.

I think it's just a question of when. Either Europe will ally itself with Russia and dump their alliance with the United States, or the United States will dump their alliance with Europe and ally itself with Russia. When Russia was communist, the choice was clear, but they aren't communists anymore, they're just horrifically corrupt, just like Europe and the United States is.
69   RWSGFY   2022 Jul 27, 10:09am  

Terrible consequences indeed:

Business Retreats and Sanctions Are Crippling the Russian Economy

118 Pages
Posted: 20 Jul 2022
Last revised: 27 Jul 2022
Jeffrey Sonnenfeld
Yale School of Management

Steven Tian
Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute

Franek Sokolowski
Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute

Michal Wyrebkowski
Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute

Mateusz Kasprowicz
Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute

Date Written: July 19, 2022

Abstract
As the Russian invasion of Ukraine enters into its fifth month, a common narrative has emerged that the unity of the world in standing up to Russia has somehow devolved into a “war of economic attrition which is taking its toll on the west”, given the supposed “resilience” and even “prosperity” of the Russian economy. This is simply untrue – and a reflection of widely held but factually incorrect misunderstandings over how the Russian economy is actually holding up amidst the exodus of over 1,000 global companies and international sanctions.

That these misunderstandings persist is not surprising. Since the invasion, the Kremlin’s economic releases have become increasingly cherry-picked, selectively tossing out unfavorable metrics while releasing only those that are more favorable. These Putin-selected statistics are then carelessly trumpeted across media and used by reams of well-meaning but careless experts in building out forecasts which are excessively, unrealistically favorable to the Kremlin.

Our team of experts, using private Russian language and unconventional data sources including high frequency consumer data, cross-channel checks, releases from Russia’s international trade partners, and data mining of complex shipping data, have released one of the first comprehensive economic analyses measuring Russian current economic activity five months into the invasion, and assessing Russia’s economic outlook.

From our analysis, it becomes clear: business retreats and sanctions are catastrophically crippling the Russian economy. We tackle a wide range of common misperceptions – and shed light on what is actually going on inside Russia, including:

- Russia’s strategic positioning as a commodities exporter has irrevocably deteriorated, as it now deals from a position of weakness with the loss of its erstwhile main markets, and faces steep challenges executing a “pivot to Asia” with non-fungible exports such as piped gas

- Despite some lingering leakiness, Russian imports have largely collapsed, and the country faces stark challenges securing crucial inputs, parts, and technology from hesitant trade partners, leading to widespread supply shortages within its domestic economy

- Despite Putin’s delusions of self-sufficiency and import substitution, Russian domestic production has come to a complete standstill with no capacity to replace lost businesses, products and talent; the hollowing out of Russia’s domestic innovation and production base has led to soaring prices and consumer angst

- As a result of the business retreat, Russia has lost companies representing ~40% of its GDP, reversing nearly all of three decades’ worth of foreign investment and buttressing unprecedented simultaneous capital and population flight in a mass exodus of Russia’s economic base

- Putin is resorting to patently unsustainable, dramatic fiscal and monetary intervention to smooth over these structural economic weaknesses, which has already sent his government budget into deficit for the first time in years and drained his foreign reserves even with high energy prices – and Kremlin finances are in much, much more dire straits than conventionally understood

- Russian domestic financial markets, as an indicator of both present conditions and future outlook, are the worst performing markets in the entire world this year despite strict capital controls, and have priced in sustained, persistent weakness within the economy with liquidity and credit contracting – in addition to Russia being substantively cut off from international financial markets, limiting its ability to tap into pools of capital needed for the revitalization of its crippled economy

Looking ahead, there is no path out of economic oblivion for Russia as long as the allied countries remain unified in maintaining and increasing sanctions pressure against Russia, and The Kyiv School of Economics and McFaul-Yermak Working Group have led the way in proposing additional sanctions measures.

Defeatist headlines arguing that Russia’s economy has bounced back are simply not factual - the facts are that, by any metric and on any level, the Russian economy is reeling, and now is not the time to step on the brakes.

Download the visual slide deck accompanying this research monograph here: https://yale.box.com/s/7f6agg5ezscj234kahx35lil04udqgeo


https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=4167193
70   richwicks   2022 Jul 27, 10:15am  

RWSGFY says


Terrible consequences indeed:

Business Retreats and Sanctions Are Crippling the Russian Economy

118 Pages
Posted: 20 Jul 2022
Last revised: 27 Jul 2022
Jeffrey Sonnenfeld
Yale School of Management

Steven Tian
Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute

Franek Sokolowski
Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute

Michal Wyrebkowski
Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute

Mateusz Kasprowicz
Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute

Date Written: July 19, 2022


For Fuck's Sake - the West has the same stupid propaganda nonsense bullshit the Soviets did now.

You know what happened when McDonald's closed their doors? ALL the buildings were seized and now there's a Russian McDonald's running in its place, meanwhile, western propaganda is telling us that we need to eat fucking bugs.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vkusno_i_tochka
71   Patrick   2022 Jul 29, 10:10am  

https://theconservativetreehouse.com/blog/2022/07/28/first-major-german-city-turns-off-hot-water-and-public-building-electricity-to-save-gas/


Hanover, a city in the northwest of Germany, has become the first major metropolitan area to try and reduce the use of natural gas by removing hot water from public buildings. The move comes as natural gas supplies from Russia are reduced to 20% of capacity. Germany is attempting to fill up storage facilities of natural gas in order to survive the winter.
72   Patrick   2022 Aug 20, 7:37pm  

https://www.eugyppius.com/p/crisis-government-excess-deaths-in


To reduce energy consumption in the face of the looming German gas crisis, Economics Minister Robert Habeck has proposed a bizarre set of indoor temperature ordinances that continue the pattern of direct state interventions in everyday life first established by mass containment.

Workspaces where hard physical labour is performed are not to be heated above 12 C, under the new rules. Those involving moderate labour while standing will have their temperatures capped at 16 C, and moderate labour while sitting at 17 C. Places where light labour is performed standing, will be permitted temperatures as high as 18 C, while white-collar office spaces where everybody sits and types will be permitted nothing warmer than 19 C. The heating of hallways and other common spaces will be outlawed, as will certain kinds of restroom water heaters. There will be a general ban on using electricity or gas to heat private pools, and shops will be ordered to keep external doors closed at all times. Political pressure is growing for similar ordinances limiting gas consumption in residences.

While some doubt that these rules can be enforced, German police have already proven effective at enforcing pandemic-era contact limits in private homes. And even if indoor temperatures are never systematically checked by authorities, I’m pretty sure that the simple prospect of unannounced inspections and fines will be enough for most employers to declare a third season of home office, with the added prospect of offloading higher gas prices onto their employees.

It is most curious, how this totally new catastrophe should call forth some of very same measures demanded by the Corona pandemic. Not only will home office return, but municipal pools will close again and cities will be kept dark at night, a de facto limitation on evening mobility that might well encourage some places to reimpose the curfews last seen in the winter of 2020/21. Meanwhile, some of the very same spaces recently commandeered for excess hospital capacity and mass vaccination will be repurposed as heated shelters for the old, the sick and the poor.

Not any unified plan, but rather a long series of contingencies, have caused the German gas crisis. Yet the steadfast refusal of the Scholz government to consider any course of action that might ameliorate the shortage, always with a new excuse, grows every day more unsettling.

There’s the obvious explanation, that the Greens in government are merely taking advantage of this opportunity to achieve their higher goal of restricting fossil fuel consumption, as they’ve always wished. But I think there might be another, deeper way to understand this too. I suggest that we’re seeing here the emergence of a new political style, which you might call Crisis Governance—or, as a friend put it, “the continuation of Corona policy by other means.” One of my core themes here has been the deepening demobilisation of western states, as power is diffused downwards from the political apex into the bureaucratic institutions, the press and major corporate enterprises. The great advantage of this power-sharing is a near-total uniformity of political views that it has inspired across the socio-cultural elite, but it comes at the cost of initiative, coordination and strategy.
73   Ceffer   2022 Aug 20, 7:53pm  

Are all those Globalist Masonic Yalies hoping for gigs on CNN or MSNBC? No pride, no respect for truth, honor or facts, just another agitprop regurgitation mill. More captured academia attempting to give credibility to lies. Skull and Bones smile.
74   komputodo   2022 Aug 20, 9:13pm  

richwicks says

RWSGFY says



Terrible consequences indeed:

Business Retreats and Sanctions Are Crippling the Russian Economy

118 Pages
Posted: 20 Jul 2022
Last revised: 27 Jul 2022
Jeffrey Sonnenfeld
Yale School of Management

Steven Tian
Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute

Franek Sokolowski
Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute

Michal Wyrebkowski
Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute

Mateusz Kasprowicz
Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute

Date Written: July 19, 2022


For Fuck's Sake - the West has the same stupid propaganda nonsense bullshit the Soviets did now.

You know what happened when McDonald's closed their doors? ALL the buildings were seized and now there's a Russian McDonald's running in its place, meanwhile, western propaganda is telling us that we need to eat fucking bugs.

Vkusno i tochka translates to : McDowells....home of the big Mick.......the clown dude is Boris McDowell
https://mcdowells.mortenjonassen.dk/
75   richwicks   2022 Aug 20, 10:44pm  

komputodo says


Vkusno i tochka translates to : McDowells....home of the big Mick.......the clown dude is Boris McDowell
https://mcdowells.mortenjonassen.dk/


So what?

I'm pointing out that Western countries leaving Russia didn't change a thing other than provide opportunity for a bunch of local corporations.

And McDonald's didn't fuck over their investors for nothing. They were paid to do this and we paid for it, American taxpayers paid for it.

All the stupidity in sanctioning Russia and withdrawing American and European countries, that's fucking over Europe and the United States - the citizens - who gives a shit about them though? Right?

We just gave Ukraine more money for this dumbass war than Russia spends on their entire military in a year, as a result, I'm talking to my Italian friend that lives in Switzerland explaining to me why they are going to have power blackouts in the winter.

All this so some asshole traitor to his country that is under the thumb of the US intelligence agencies can decimate the Ukrainian population in the HOPE that it will weaken Russia a bit while using the country as a money laundering pit. Ukraine is going to be left impoverished, what is left of Ukraine, and they are going to be put under massive amounts of austerity.

This really is a war against Europeans in general. It's going to fuck Europe, it's going to fuck Ukrainians (mostly) and Russians and the United States - but some banks are going to make some SERIOUS money. All wars are banker's wars.


original link

It's not an exaggeration.

The Ukrainian war advantages a few corporations but mostly banks. It's fucking everybody else.
76   komputodo   2022 Aug 20, 10:55pm  

richwicks says


komputodo says


Vkusno i tochka translates to : McDowells....home of the big Mick.......the clown dude is Boris McDowell
https://mcdowells.mortenjonassen.dk/


So what?

I'm pointing out that Western countries leaving Russia didn't change a thing other than provide opportunity for a bunch of local corporations.

And McDonald's didn't fuck over their investors for nothing. They were paid to do this and we paid for it, American taxpayers paid for it.

All the stupidity in sanctioning Russia and withdrawing American and European countries, that's fucking over Europe and the United States - the citizens - who gives a shit about them though? Right?

We just gave Ukraine more money for this dumbass war than Russia spends on their entire military in a year, as a result, I...


You are preaching to the choir. OTOH, McDonalds leaving might have changed something...It might make russians less fat
77   richwicks   2022 Aug 20, 11:46pm  

komputodo says

You are preaching to the choir.


Fair enough, I expected a different mindset.

I just hate this fucking war. It's fucking us all over, Russia no matter WHAT the outcome I think will come out ahead. Europe is going to freeze if this shit doesn't end soon, and meanwhile we're going to be selling "freedom gas". So stupid, so easily avoidable.
78   Onvacation   2022 Aug 21, 7:28am  

RWSGFY says

, a common narrative has emerged

Think they'll ever investigate what Hunter was doing with Burisma and the Big Guy?
79   richwicks   2022 Aug 21, 11:00am  

Onvacation says

RWSGFY says


, a common narrative has emerged

Think they'll ever investigate what Hunter was doing with Burisma and the Big Guy?


Looks like all their oil and natural gas production are done in Ukraine and Kazakhstan, if Russia's export of energy to Europe can be terminated, they will be in a very good position, however it appears that much of their production is in Eastern Ukraine and should Russia win this war (and I expect they will) and annex parts of Eastern Ukraine (which I ALSO expect they will), it may leave Burisma in a much worse position.

This would explain why it's so important for Biden to ensure Ukrainian victory over Russia.

But that's just my quick take on it. The fact that a crackhead was working on the Burisma Board of Directors when he doesn't know the language and doesn't know anything about the industry is enough for me to conclude it's a no show job.
80   Ceffer   2022 Aug 21, 11:17am  

richwicks says

just hate this fucking war. It's fucking us all over,

Isn't that kind of the whole idea?
82   Patrick   2022 Aug 30, 9:58am  

https://thegoodcitizen.substack.com/i/70988024/and-the-cognitive-dissonance-on-climate-bullshit-energy-destruction-and-sacrificing-for-democracy-in-ukraine-is-still-everywhere


And the cognitive dissonance on climate bullshit, energy destruction, and sacrificing for “democracy” in Ukraine is still everywhere.






83   HeadSet   2022 Aug 30, 1:56pm  



English speaking country that uses the Euro? Is that Ireland?
87   Patrick   2022 Sep 6, 3:35pm  




I thought they were already doing that.
88   richwicks   2022 Sep 6, 5:10pm  

ZipperTits says


So that oil supply is running on borrowed time. When winter comes and the oil backed up on the all the pipelines in Siberia freezes in place, the pipelines will be permanently damaged as well.


No. When oil freezes, and it can, it doesn't expand, it shrinks. Water is the one of the very few liquids that expands when it solidifies. My father used to sell heating oil in an area where it would get to -40F. Diesel becomes a slurry at 32F, and becomes a gel at 15 F. Heating oil is just diesel. When this happens, he would cut the diesel with kerosene which has a freezing point of -40.

Lines aren't damaged with petrochemicals freeze in them, but it won't flow.

ZipperTits says


And it took almost thirty years for the Russians to fix those the last time that happened (fall of the Soviet Union).


The USSR was run by a bunch of incompetent assholes that treated their (competent) underlings like shit - when the USSR collapsed, people went John Galt, and left their asshole Communist Stooge leader to try to fix the mess themselves, because they weren't being paid anyhow.

See any similarities to the United States today?



There's a TON of people underneath that asshole who were better and more competent at the job he ultimately took, but the democratic party needed a faithful stooge, not somebody that was competent. I guarantee that if that fucker has any idea what he's doing, he's just BARELY competent at doing it, and depends on his underlings entirely.

Look, we have SERIOUS problems here at home. The assholes that have stolen power in the United States are DESPERATE for distractions, that's really all Ukraine is for them, and money laundering. Currently, at this very moment, they are in the process of creating energy and food shortages, as a distraction. They create problems so that we never deal with them, you know, the problem.
89   Ceffer   2022 Sep 6, 5:31pm  

How about hanging the unelected, fraudulent, fecal impaction leaders from lamp posts and asking: "Is that enough for you Putin? Send back the gas and oil."
90   Eric Holder   2022 Sep 6, 5:57pm  

richwicks says

The USSR was run by a bunch of incompetent assholes that treated their (competent) underlings like shit


... and Ruscia is continuing that tradition.
91   richwicks   2022 Sep 7, 1:50am  

Eric Holder says


richwicks says


The USSR was run by a bunch of incompetent assholes that treated their (competent) underlings like shit


... and Ruscia is continuing that tradition.



No. Russia isn't. They are fighting a war right now, long haul, with about a 20:1 ratio of deaths, and letting Europe freeze to death.

They aren't incompetent. They very well may cause a European revolution.

Stop pretending they are stupid, just because you WISH they are.

They falsely claimed the Nordstream I had to be closed because of maintenance, they sent the device to a foreign country for maintenance (why not bring them to Russia?) and it's just them egging on the establishment. Russia will close down energy exports, will send it to China and India, and THEY will be the exporters, and in the meantime, EU citizens will suffer and perhaps freeze.

And they will say "we're blameless, we'd LIKE to export energy to you, but your government won't allow it."

It's interesting to see a country engage in strategy, I've not seen in in such a long time, what with the stupid fucking asshole traitors of this nation. Moron fucktards that are only in their position because they fucked the right person, or are related to some pedophile that is under the intelligence agency's thumb. We are so fucking corrupt.

Europe is run by a bunch of CIA agents, quislings, traitorous scum. When people start freezing to death, it will get interesting. I hope all those traitors hang from lampposts, and I know full well they are the traitors my nation controls, but my nation is run by traitors as well. As they lose power, that gives us more.
92   WookieMan   2022 Sep 7, 5:11am  

Cannot remember if I commented on another thread about this conflict, but it's mostly out of the news in the midwest. Chicago has a large Ukrainian population too. So it's kind of weird. I think #3 in the US. We have a neighborhood call Ukrainian Village in Chicago.

I don't do national/world news except for what I hear on local affiliates. The conflict has become unimportant here at least. It's kind of weird.
93   Patrick   2022 Sep 11, 11:23pm  

https://thecradle.co/Article/news/15426


Egypt is preparing to adopt Russia’s Mir payment system and include the Russian ruble on the list of currencies used by Egyptian banks and tourism companies, according to an Egyptian Central Bank official who spoke with Al Monitor. ...

Cairo reportedly made the decision in anticipation of the winter tourism season, taking advantage of Europe’s ill-fated sanctions campaign against Russia.

Several countries across the world are seeking to start using the Mir payment system, chief among Iran, which has long been the target of punitive economic sanctions from the west.

The head of Iran’s banking and insurance department of the Iranian Finance Ministry, Qorban Eskandari, said on 16 August that Tehran is “just months away” from implementing the Russian payment system, which serves as an alternative to western systems like Visa and Mastercard.

Days later, Russian and Iranian companies started conducting trade in their national currencies for the first time.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said early in August that five of Turkey’s most prominent banks have already started using the Mir payment system.

Bahrain is also planning to introduce the Russian system “in the near future,” according to the kingdom’s ambassador to Russia Ahmed Abdulrahman al-Saati.

“In Bahrain, we will soon introduce the Russian Mir payment system into banking services, which will allow tourists from [Russia] to relax comfortably and safely with us,” Al-Saati said during the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum (SPIEF) in July.

Sanctions imposed on Russia in the wake of its invasion of Ukraine have backfired for the most part, pushing Moscow closer to its allies in the Global South, and leaving both the US and Europe scrambling to deal with the loss of Russian fuel.
94   Patrick   2022 Sep 12, 1:27pm  

https://mailchi.mp/ronpaulinstitute/eusanctions-116257?e=5289e1161e


Europe Commits Suicide-by-Sanctions

Sept. 12 - A Swiss billboard is making the rounds on social media depicting a young woman on the telephone. The caption reads, "Does the neighbor heat the apartment to over 19 degrees (66F)? Please inform us." While the Swiss government has dismissed the poster as a fake, the penalties Swiss citizens face for daring to warm their homes are very real. According to the Swiss newspaper Blick, those who violate the 66 degree heating limit could face as many as three years in prison!

Prison time for heating your home? In the “free” world? How is it possible in 2022, when Switzerland and the rest of the political west have achieved the greatest economic success in history, that the European continent faces a winter like something out of the dark ages?

Sanctions.

While long promoted – often by those opposed to war – as a less destructive alternative to war, sanctions are in reality acts of war. And as we know with interventionism and war, the result is often unintended consequences and even blowback.

European sanctions against Russia over its invasion of Ukraine earlier this year will likely go down in history as a prime example of how sanctions can result in unintended consequences. While seeking to punish Russia by cutting off gas and oil imports, European Union politicians forgot that Europe is completely dependent on Russian energy supplies and that the only people to suffer if those imports are shut down are the Europeans themselves.

The Russians simply pivoted to the south and east and found plenty of new buyers in China, India, and elsewhere. In fact, Russia’s state-run Gazprom energy company has reported that its profits have increased by 100 percent in the first half of this year.

Russia is getting rich while Europeans are facing a freezing winter and economic collapse. All because of the false belief that sanctions are a cost-free way to force other countries to do what you want them to do.

What happens when the people see dumb government policies making energy bills skyrocket as the economy grounds to a halt? They become desperate and take to the streets in protest.

This weekend thousands of Austrians took to the streets in a “Freedom Rally” to demand an end to sanctions and the opening of Nord Stream II, the gas pipeline on the verge of opening earlier this year. Last week an estimated 100,000 Czechs took to the streets of Prague to protest NATO and EU policy. In France, the “Yellow Vests” are back in the streets protesting the destruction of their economy in the name of “defeating” Russia in Ukraine. In Germany, Serbia, and elsewhere, protests are gearing up.

Even the Washington Post was forced to admit that sanctions on Russia are not having the intended effect. In an article yesterday, the paper worries that sanctions are inflicting “collateral damage in Russia and beyond, potentially even hurting the very countries that impose them. Some even worried that the sanctions intended to deter and weaken Putin could end up emboldening and strengthening him.”

This is all predictable. Sanctions kill. Sometimes they kill innocents in the country targeted for destruction and sometimes they kill innocents in the country imposing them. The solution, as always, is non-intervention. No sanctions, no "color revolutions," no meddling. It's really that simple.
95   richwicks   2022 Sep 12, 1:44pm  

Patrick says


What happens when the people see dumb government policies making energy bills skyrocket as the economy grounds to a halt? They become desperate and take to the streets in protest.


Well, good.

They should have done this 20 years ago when the United States started to create rapefugees and their traitorous quisling "leaders" accepted them with open arms.

I nearly view this as a test - a test of "what will you idiots put up with? Can you stupid sheep not think regardless of stupid unending propaganda?"

I really think this is becoming a test. People should have been outraged 20 years ago, but they weren't, so, fuck 'em.
96   Eric Holder   2022 Sep 12, 2:02pm  

Patrick says


https://mailchi.mp/ronpaulinstitute/eusanctions-116257?e=5289e1161e

Europe Commits Suicide-by-Sanctions


Would be fun to revisit this dare prediction next Spring. Or next year. I offer mine: Europe will be a-ok, and nobody would die from any of "horrible consequences of sanctions on Putin". I'm offcially putting Ron Paul on the stupid cunt watch.

Meanwhile, 50,000 Russians are already dead in that war (confirmed by their own MOF, btw)...
97   FortwayeAsFuckJoeBiden   2022 Sep 12, 2:08pm  

you know Patrick sometimes i think they started war against Russia to fight Brics. brics is competitor and a powerful one.
98   Patrick   2022 Oct 23, 2:22pm  

https://slaynews.com/news/worlds-largest-steel-manufacturer-warns-crisis-plants-shut-down/


The CEO of the world’s largest steel manufacturer has issued a grim warning as plants continue to shut down amid the mounting energy crisis.

Reiner Blaschek, the CEO of ArcelorMittal Germany, warns that the German wing of the company can no longer compete due to soaring energy costs.

The energy crisis in Germany is turning into a manufacturing crisis, Blaschek warns.


Germany fucked by the American Deep State.
100   richwicks   2023 Feb 1, 5:27pm  

Booger says

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-russia-stalingrad/the-return-of-stalingrad-russian-region-proposes-renaming-airport-idUSKCN10Z1DI

The return of Stalingrad: Russian region proposes renaming airport

It's fucking Reuters.

If it's from Reuters or Associated Press, it's from the CIA. How can you not know this at this point?

This is pure propaganda. Even if it's true, who gives a shit? Is this world fucking important news we all need to know? Always these stupid fucking trivialities to try to guide people's EMOTIONS. Never the brain!
101   richwicks   2023 Feb 1, 5:28pm  

Patrick says

https://slaynews.com/news/worlds-largest-steel-manufacturer-warns-crisis-plants-shut-down/



The CEO of the world’s largest steel manufacturer has issued a grim warning as plants continue to shut down amid the mounting energy crisis.

Reiner Blaschek, the CEO of ArcelorMittal Germany, warns that the German wing of the company can no longer compete due to soaring energy costs.

The energy crisis in Germany is turning into a manufacturing crisis, Blaschek warns.


Germany fucked by the American Deep State.


Pretty simple solution would be just to move the plants to Russia. Germany has to stop fucking around and being under the yoke of their guilt over WWII, MUCH of which is undeserved, but is partially deserved.
103   RWSGFY   2023 Feb 1, 7:57pm  

Patrick says

https://slaynews.com/news/worlds-largest-steel-manufacturer-warns-crisis-plants-shut-down/



The CEO of the world’s largest steel manufacturer has issued a grim warning as plants continue to shut down amid the mounting energy crisis.

Reiner Blaschek, the CEO of ArcelorMittal Germany, warns that the German wing of the company can no longer compete due to soaring energy costs.

The energy crisis in Germany is turning into a manufacturing crisis, Blaschek warns.


Germany fucked by the American Deep State.


Aaaaaand the energy costs are back were they were prior to 02/24/22.
104   Misc   2023 Feb 5, 12:30am  

If you cut enough usage prices will come down, but the price is still higher in Germany than a year ago.

https://ycharts.com/indicators/germany_natural_gas_border_price
105   komputodo   2023 Feb 5, 8:24am  

ohomen171 says

Putin is engaging in some cold-blooded calculus here. "Make things very uncomfortable for people in the west and they will cave in and let me do what I want to do."

Biden and his administration are engaging in some cold-blooded calculus here. "Try to make things very uncomfortable for Putin and Russia and hopefully they will cave in and let us do what we want to do.
106   komputodo   2023 Feb 5, 8:39am  

ohomen171 says

We cannot let Putin win this battle!!!!

Since you feel that strongly about it, then get your ass over there and help the ukrainians fight. Otherwise its just bullshit.

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