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Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
2 yrs

How Waddy Wachtell influenced the career of Lindsey Buckingham: “This is your shot”
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faroutmagazine.co.uk

How Waddy Wachtell influenced the career of Lindsey Buckingham: “This is your shot”

"This doesn't happen again." The post How Waddy Wachtell influenced the career of Lindsey Buckingham: “This is your shot” first appeared on Far Out Magazine.
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Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
2 yrs

‘Generation Indigo’: the triumphant return of Poly Styrene
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faroutmagazine.co.uk

‘Generation Indigo’: the triumphant return of Poly Styrene

The magnum opus of a punk icon. The post ‘Generation Indigo’: the triumphant return of Poly Styrene first appeared on Far Out Magazine.
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Nostalgia Machine
Nostalgia Machine
2 yrs

‘Joker: Folie à Deux’ is Oddly Featuring Nostalgic Songs
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www.remindmagazine.com

‘Joker: Folie à Deux’ is Oddly Featuring Nostalgic Songs

Get some first-look photos!
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
2 yrs Politics

rumbleRumble
Joe Biden Is The Real Threat To Democracy
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
2 yrs Politics

rumbleRumble
Could DeSantis Still Be Trump's VP?
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
2 yrs

Claims That Crime Rates Are Plunging By the Media? Those Are Criminally Inaccurate
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townhall.com

Claims That Crime Rates Are Plunging By the Media? Those Are Criminally Inaccurate

Claims That Crime Rates Are Plunging By the Media? Those Are Criminally Inaccurate
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Let's Get Cooking
Let's Get Cooking
2 yrs

Anya Taylor-Joy's Wedding Cake Was An Anatomically Correct Heart
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www.mashed.com

Anya Taylor-Joy's Wedding Cake Was An Anatomically Correct Heart

In an Instagram post‚ actress Anya Taylor-Joy revealed that she secretly wed her now-husband in 2022. Their wedding cake? An anatomically correct heart.
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Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
2 yrs

Imagine Dragons Return With “Eyes Closed”
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rockintown.com

Imagine Dragons Return With “Eyes Closed”

Imagine Dragons have released “Eyes Closed.” “After taking some time off the road and spending time catching up with family and loved ones‚ I finally have felt the desire to go back to the sonic places that originally brought me the most joy‚ but with a new outlook and mentality‚” offered the band’s Dan Reynolds. “It’s finding that right balance of nostalgia and freshness that brings me the most joy in the studio.” Imagine Dragons’ last record‚ “Mercury — Act 2‚” which combined with ’21’s “Act 1‚” to create a double album. The band has spent much of the past couple years on the road in support of the two albums. The post Imagine Dragons Return With “Eyes Closed” appeared first on RockinTown.
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
2 yrs

Peter Schiff: Gold Is Telling Us the Fed Is Wrong
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www.infowars.com

Peter Schiff: Gold Is Telling Us the Fed Is Wrong

With its price at record highs and foreign central banks clamoring for the yellow metal‚ gold is strengthening as a hedge against terrible monetary policy. This week Peter returned from vacation‚ and he was just in time for a surge in the price of gold. He discusses the factors contributing to gold’s record prices‚ the similarities between today and the 1970s‚ and data pointing to future inflation in America. Peter starts this episode by noting how gold’s recent rise hasn’t received much coverage from the mainstream financial press: “$30 on a Sunday night— that’s very rare to see that kind of move. But what’s even more rare is that there was no news. It’s not like something happened. Nobody dropped the bomb anywhere‚ right? It just went up. And that was on top of the near $40 rise that gold had on Friday before the holiday weekend. … Very rare to have that kind of move. But also very rare was the complete lack of attention that the gold rally has been getting.” The media’s silence on gold serves larger financial interests in America that benefit from a weak economy and dollar: “Another reason that CNBC and other financial analysts don’t want to talk about gold is because of the message that gold is sending. … Gold is not just some commodity. It is a commodity‚ but it’s a special commodity. … Gold is special because of the monetary properties and the monetary role that gold plays. If anything can be said to be the canary in the coal mine‚ it’s gold. … What is gold telling people‚ if they’re smart enough to listen? What gold is screaming is that what the Fed is contemplating is a mistake‚ that cutting interest rates whenever these cuts begin is the wrong policy.”Introducing Next Level Foundational Energy from Dr. Jones Naturals starting at 30% off! This cutting-edge dietary supplement is designed to elevate your energy levels and support your overall well-being. Even widely respected Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan has acknowledged the signaling power of gold’s price‚ but Jerome Powell and the current Fed are ignoring the signs of a weak economy: “The Fed says they’re data dependent. Well‚ why are they ignoring all of this data that says everything they’re saying about inflation is BS? Powell keeps saying‚ ‘yes‚ we’re confident we think inflation is going to go back down to 2%.’ Why? Why should it do that? What gives him this confidence? Just because he’s raised interest rates up to 5.25%? Big deal! That’s not a high rate of interest‚ especially when you have a big inflation problem.” Any student of history can recognize the political parallels between the inflation of the 1970s and now: “We had the Vietnam War‚ which was expensive. We had the war on poverty‚ which was also expensive. Interestingly‚ we’ve lost both of those wars. … Poverty won‚ but we spent a lot of money on both of those wars. Then we also had the space race. … So the government was running these big deficits. … Where did the government get all the money to pay for all this stuff? Well‚ it borrowed it‚ right? They ran deficits‚ and they printed a lot of money. And so naturally‚ the consequence was inflation‚ rising prices.” Peter sees a weakening dollar as the main recent driver behind gold’s price. If the dollar depreciates against other foreign currencies‚ gold could take off: “I still believe that soon we’re going to see the dollar crack against other fiat currencies. And when that happens‚ you’re going to see a much more spectacular rise in the price of gold. If you think about what’s already happened‚ we’ve seen this big jump in gold prices without a weak dollar relative to other fiat currencies. Imagine how much stronger gold would be if the dollar were also falling in relation to the euro or the Australian dollar‚ Canadian dollar‚ emerging market currencies‚ the yen.” Apparently foreign central banks can see what Powell can’t‚ and they’re stockpiling gold because of it: “Foreign central banks realize that we don’t care [about inflation]. They’re holding all these dollars‚ and they see that we’re about to create more of them. We’re going to cut rates in the face of mounting evidence that they’re ignoring that inflation is going to be moving in the opposite direction. They claim that they want it down at 2%. All the evidence shows that it’s headed higher and their response is ‘we’re going to cut rates.’ And so foreign central banks want to get out.“ With its price at record highs and foreign central banks clamoring for the yellow metal‚ gold is strengthening as a hedge against terrible monetary policy. If Peter is right about future price action‚ now is the perfect time for investors to add to their precious metal holdings. Learn Why The Globalists Are Killing Their Own Monetary System
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
2 yrs

Artificially Low Interest Rates Are Creating Economic Chaos
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www.infowars.com

Artificially Low Interest Rates Are Creating Economic Chaos

Easy Money = Dumb Money If you asked him‚ Edward Chancellor wouldn’t say he’s particularly Austrian. Yet The Price of Time: The Real Story of Interest‚ the dense book he most timely published during the height of the inflation summer of 2022‚ is as obsessed with centrally planned interest rates as your average Misesian. Like many before him‚ and many in the Austrian camp‚ Chancellor identifies the many ills that trouble the world and locates their cause in a dysfunctional interest-rate regime. In Chancellor’s own words‚ “The most important question addressed in this book is whether a capitalist economy can function properly without market-determined interest.” Most readers of these pages will automatically respond‚ no—free-market capitalism rests on an uninhibited market for capital and debt‚ and thus interest rates act as a rationing mechanism and guiding principle. The rest is just implementation‚ as Michael Malice might say. A skilled journalist and trained historian‚ Chancellor’s writing is calm and balanced‚ nuanced and well thought through. It’s littered with citations and quotes from economists and commentators both past and present. That’s also part of why making it through the three-hundred-plus carefully written pages of The Price of Time is such a hardship. It’s fascinating and engaging but dense and ultimately a bit confusing. The author gives no clues for where we’re going‚ over and above the early hint that low interest rates have all sorts of bad downstream effects on an economy and its financials. The signposts are missing. Another piece of annoyance is the frequent antimarket talking points he returns to—monopoly power‚ corporations centralizing through acquisition and control‚ debt-issuing and share buybacks to boost financial returns‚ inequality‚ and wealth concentration.Survival Shield X-3 is BACK at the Infowars Store! Get 40% OFF on the next evolution in activated nascent iodine HERE The saving grace is they all fit into a low-rates story. Much like James Grant‚ of Grant’s Interest Rate Observer‚ remarks‚ “A little-known fact about unicorns . . . is that they feed on interest rates. They like low‚ little rates—the tinier‚ the better.” The same goes for the conglomerate empire-building‚ leveraged buyouts‚ takeovers paid for with shares‚ or even the explosion of ultra-high-net-worth individuals. It wasn’t a flaw in the capitalist system that generated these perverse outcomes‚ but the Fed-manipulated‚ centrally planned rates and its money printing. He traces the long history of interest back to Mesopotamia‚ but it’s in his treatment of the last few centuries that the book really shines. He identifies John Locke as “the first writer to consider at length the potential damage produced by taking interest rates below their natural level.” He continues‚ In the wake of the global financial crisis of 2008‚ central bankers slashed interest rates‚ hoping to revive economies by easing the burden of debt and boosting asset values. Their aims were remarkably similar to those espoused by the seventeenth-century advocates of easy money. Locke had already spelled out the consequences for them: “Paper wealth has multiplied while genuine wealth has stagnated.” At the bottom of all bubbles‚ continues Chancellor‚ lies “a disconnect between finance and the real world.” Low interest rates turn otherwise careful and diligent investors into financial engineers and imbue venture capitalists with a “spray-and-pray” mentality‚ like macro analyst Andreas Steno says in a piece I keep coming back to over and over‚ “Three Reasons Why Everyone‚ Zuckerberg‚ Me‚ and Their Dogs Turn into Idiots When Rates Are 0 Percent.” “Easy money‚” concludes Chancellor‚ “was dumb money.” Cue WeWork and fake meat companies‚ GameStop and zombie companies‚ the mania around environmental‚ social‚ and governance‚ and the FTX collapse. He quotes Murray Rothbard and Ludwig von Mises with as much ease and approval as he does Jeremy Bentham or Daniel Defoe‚ and he digs up some remarkably Austrian commentary from the past. A nineteenth-century British banker‚ after one of England’s infamous midcentury panics‚ remarks‚ “As a rule‚ panics do not destroy capital; they merely reveal the extent to which it has previously been destroyed by its betrayal into hopelessly unproductive works.” “The book inclines quite strongly toward the Austrian interpretations‚” Chancellor confessed in an interview with Jeff Deist last year. Maybe that’s why so many establishment outlets didn’t touch it. Sane economic reasoning is apparently right-wing extremism. (And The New York Timesbestseller list is editorial content anyway‚ so go figure.) Case in point: Jamie Martin’s piece for the London Review of Books—which more favorably could have been titled “Don’t Slash My Precious Government Spending!”—completely missed the point of Chancellor’s well-assembled armada‚ instead rallying against austerity: “As a consequence‚ [countries cutting government spending] face the prospect of years of lost growth‚ deteriorating public services and infrastructure‚ and political instability. . . . There are no zombie countries whose destruction will make us better off.” Ugh. Toward the end of The Price of Time‚ Chancellor finds an eerie echo of our times in Lewis Carroll’s last novel Sylvie and Bruno‚ published in 1889. In it‚ emperor-mandated money printing generates wealth‚ two eggs cost less than one‚ and a loan is repaid before it is even issued. The absurdity is amusing—until central bankers a century later thought to make it a reality. “Carroll would have understood that when the price of time is set at nothing or turns negative‚ and central banks print money without limit‚ finance becomes absurd.” Accordingly‚ capitalism without bankruptcy is like Christianity without hell. The best way to destroy capitalism truly is to mess with its most important set of prices: the price for “hired money‚” incorporating as it does the spread between present and future goods‚ and the time value of money between the various stages of production. In the concluding chapter‚ Chancellor picks up the pace‚ throws caution to the wind‚ and turns downright radical: Each time the monetary authorities stepped forward to deal with some real and pressing problem—whether the collapsing banking system‚ the unravelling of international credit and rising unemployment in 2008‚ or Europe’s sovereign debt crisis a couple of years later—there followed secondary consequences that were never properly considered or resolved. Learn Why The Globalists Are Killing Their Own Monetary System
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