The Wicked
"I will release 7 plagues down on you. Repent. Repent, Repent".
That is the Lord telling, threatening one of the 7 churches that Ya All at the end of the road. Ya All need to seriously change your ways.
"I am releasing the first plague. Repent. Repent. Repent".
But Oh The Hell No.
Instead they chose to Naw On Their own mouths.
Let The Unjust Be The Unjust.
Let The Filthy Be The Filthy.
Somewhere in Isiah.
I Will Not Put A Wicked Thing Before Me.
I Will Not Know A Wicked person.
Psalm 101
Following this vapor trail.
What The Lord is saying is that does not even have the time for the wicked.
For the unjust.
For the filthy.
So Humans.
Why do a large portion of you feel that you are the ones to challenge the wicked.
"I Turn My Head and Close My Eyes To The Iniquities and Transgressions Of Man".
So Citizens.
What is the rush to get even.
The majority of Scores are lost in the final Settlements.
Prisons, full to capacity tell the story.
Hey.
Be it far from me.
Maybe you iz the one.
That showz this and that wicked maggot how the cow eats the cabbage.
For The Wrath Of God Is revealed From Heaven Against All UnGodliness and Unrighteousness Of Men Who Suppress Truth In The Un Righteousness
The Thoughts of The Wicked Are An Abomination To the Lord.
Watch Your Tongue.
Cut Off All Negative Thoughts At The Start.
For Real People.
What The Hell Ya All Even Want To Even Begin To Get Up Into The Fracas and Frey Of The Wicked Maggot-tiles?
There are those that walk this Earth.
Whose Daily Job Is To Right Wrong.
Settle Scores.
Remove The Double Poisonous Thorn From The Public's Deep Already Scared flesh.
Day to Day.
Dedication.
Resolve.
Protocol So Defined.
Dictum That Can Not Be Mis Stepped By One Nano Fraction.
"This Is Not Their County".
"This Is My County".
The Proud Sheriffs Deputy Stated Without Hesitation or Any Falter.
Not One Damn Iota Of Doubt.
I've stated various times on this blog that without a doubt.
Nothing To Even Think About.
Certainly Nothing To Analyze.
'Poe' The Tuffest Gang In The City.
On Da Street.
Period.
Let 'Poe' Do What 'Poe' Do.
Get The Hell Out of Dodge.
Let These Brave and Courageous Men and Women Who Put It On The Line Daily Do Their Job.
Cauze for sure.
As much as you dis like wicked.
Law Enforcement Detests Wicked.
This is what they go to work for every day.
For the absolute lowest of pay.
Especial here in the Wild Wild West.
Arizona.
Like Dis.
'Poe' ain't all up in the out there 24/7 365 for the benefits.
They are out there to keep wicked and wrong from crawling up and tightly lodging their maggot infested selves completely up your tail tipe.
When 'Poe' pulls you over for whatever infraction that you already have a litany of lies and excuses erasing your special self from any type of a 'Your Bad' any where in this or any other hemisphere.
Shut the fuck up.
License, Registration and Insurance.
Please.
Cauze trust me the last thing this Patrol Officer wants to do is walk up to a vehicle in the middle of no where whatever.
Truth be told.
Patrol Officer iz not paying you a social visit.
You Breaking The Law Einstein.
When Ya all up in da crib and decide to get jiggy and stupid with whoever happens to be with you and everything starts to go sideways.
This is the very last call in the world.
A Domestic.
That these Brave Men and Women want to walk in on.
But walk in they do.
Not a scintilla of a bit of hesitation or question.
Just doing their job.
A job that not only does not provide the best of pay and benefits.
But instead a job that gives not one guarantee that these Warriors of The Street will pull into their own drive way at the completion of shift.
When you are asked to comply.
Break up the hostile crowd.
And your choice is resistance on every level.
You will be disbanded by force.
Or as the new last century phase goes;
'Police Brutality".
Get stupid and dangerous with 'Poe'.
You gettin Brutalized.
Hopefully.
Ya All Hear The Pop.
That Distinct Un Mistakable Sound
One Hears When Their Cranium Exits
Their Rectal cavity.
Feel me?
So far?
Now. On To The World.
I just read this article.
I find this article fascinating for the reason that history, with it's winners and losers always has a way of coming around full circle.
When Dictum and Protocol call for the absolute of 'The Should Be's' and not The Actual 'What Is'.
The path strayed wild from the actual course.
The 'Should Be' collectors come calling for their Pound of Flesh.
Or
As the case may be in this situation.
Their pound of Gold.
I've stated before that there will be that most definite distinct time when China presents to The United States the over bloated and fat dripping 'Black American Express Card' bill.
Payable.
Now.
In Gold.
We are approaching collection day America.
Just when Ya All thought it couldn't get any worse.
Ryan. Out.
As Usual.
The following article is provided by the Great Folks at;
Realclearworld.com
Da Real Cheeze
The Opinion Pages| Op-Ed Contributor
Why does this matter for us now? Just as America displaced Britain as the world’s pre-eminent economic power in the interwar period, so, too, the large debts and fiscal pressures confronting the West, and the rise of China and other economic powers, challenge us to think about the future of finance.
For most of the 19th century the British pound had been the world’s “reserve currency,” the currency in which trade and finance were denominated. “As sound as a pound” became a widely used expression. The pound was pegged to gold at a fixed rate of just under £4 per ounce.
At the outbreak of World War I, Britain abandoned the gold standard. You could no longer exchange pounds for gold. The gold standard was reintroduced in 1925, but this, as John Maynard Keynes observed, proved to be an economic mistake.
British prices and, more crucially, wages, would have to be forced down by 10 percent to maintain the competitiveness of British exports. As American agricultural and industrial exports soared in the 1920s and 1930s, the dollar effectively replaced the pound. It was American bankers who helped out the financially strapped Weimar Republic in the 1920s. The British, as exporters of capital, were a diminished force.
By the time of Bretton Woods, the United States held roughly 60 percent of the world’s gold supply. “Think of the gold in Fort Knox,” America’s chief negotiator at Bretton Woods, Harry Dexter White, said. “That is why we are in a powerful position.” He added, “We have the wherewithal to buy any currency we want.”
Bretton Woods fixed the dollar price of gold at $35 per ounce, and all the other major currencies — the pound, the franc, the mark, the yen — were subsequently pegged to the dollar, even though they could not be exchanged directly for gold. This system lasted until 1971. By then, America was under the financial strain of the Vietnam War and Lyndon B. Johnson’s Great Society. With mounting deficits and an adverse balance of trade, America struggled to maintain gold convertibility at the old rate of $35 an ounce. So President Richard M. Nixon abandoned the fixed dollar price of gold established at Bretton Woods (over the objections of the Federal Reserve chairman, Arthur F. Burns).
International critics said that the United States, by ending the dollar link to gold, was turning its back on its responsibilities as the guarantor of the international monetary system. Over the decades, the situation has gotten worse. The United States is $17.6 trillion in debt owed to the public, and large trade deficits are the norm. Yet there is no scope for revisiting the international monetary system, despite great dissatisfaction by countries like China and the Persian Gulf states, which hold large foreign currency reserves. Americans themselves question the security of the dollar when their country faces such large trade and budget deficits.
China’4 trillion in reserves — accumulated through its mercantilist trade policies — give it plenty of ammunition to claim leadership in the creation of a new monetary order. The Chinese, however, are most unlikely to bid for monetary hegemony in the near future. For the past 25 years they have pursued a policy of aggressive export growth to drive their economy. China successively devalued its currency, from 1.50 renminbi to the dollar in 1980, to 8.72 in 1994. (Today the renminbi trades at 6.20 to the dollar, which the United States still considers artificially low.)
Could China someday peg its currency to gold, as Britain did in 1821? China has the reserves to do this, and it could have the political will, if the dollar proved to be unreliable as a store of value in the future.
Of course, Britain’s earlier adoption of the gold standard, in 1821, worsened a sharp deflationary period, during which, according to one calculation, consumer prices fell nearly 50 percent, between 1818 and 1822.
Nevertheless, to its supporters the gold standard ensured British fiscal and monetary dominance during the rest of the 19th century. As the British historian A.J.P. Taylor observed, 19th-century Britons believed that “a country could not flourish without a balanced budget and a gold currency.” Since Keynes, the West has tried to deny this proposition, with our reliance on deficit spending and “fiat” money, backed mainly by the expectation that a government will not default on its debts.
China is not as indebted as the West, but it is looking to “rebalance” its economy by raising demand by consumers, who want to enjoy the standard of living enjoyed across the Western world. Since 2010, the renminbi has appreciated 14 percent without drastically hurting Chinese exports.
Having expanded its manufacturing base and captured international markets, China may well find a world hooked on its products. It could eventually — in, say, 20 years — peg the renminbi to gold, considering it preferable to the dollar as a store of value, because of its permanence and longevity. With a balanced budget and a gold-backed currency, China’s economy could be even more formidable than it is today. Such a move would truly mark its return as the “Middle Kingdom.” Hard as it may be to contemplate today, this scenario would, in many ways, be a more secure basis for an international monetary regime system than the system of floating exchange rates that Nixon inadvertently created in 1971, one that forever overturned the Bretton Woods order.
Kwasi Kwarteng, a Conservative member of Parliament, is the author of “War and Gold: A Five-Hundred-Year History of Empires, Adventures and Debt.”
No comments:
Post a Comment