Friday, January 16, 2015

CANADA MILITARY NEWS: Bankingn$$$richgonnakillusagain/ USA-Europe-Asia-Middle East-China- all the banking institutions- u are creating a mess in our world of finances again and ordinary people will pay dearly... 2008 all over again/Canada is doing better at Climate Change than USA China Japan or Russia and much of Europe and Asia...come on... JANUARY 16/15... and why is USA always paying 2 fight the planets wars... and Canada, UK, Aussies and French tagging along CLEANING UP MIDDLE EAST AND AFRICAN MESSES.... all these years... give each of your children a good free education and treat your poor better than slaves in the 21st century...come on.. please -GOD BLESS OUR TROOPS... we want u home and know ur soooo tired/and the media still lies




World’s richest see wealth share jump to 48%
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published January 19, 2015 - 7:27pm

LONDON — The richest one per cent of the population will own more than half the world’s wealth by 2016, Oxfam International said in a report released as the World Economic Forum begins in Davos, Switzerland.

Oxfam said the world’s richest people saw their share of global wealth jump to 48 per cent last year from 44 per cent in 2009. Rising inequality is holding back the fight against global poverty as the world’s biggest companies lobby the U.S. and European Union for beneficial tax changes at a time when average taxpayers are still paying the bill for the financial crisis, Oxfam said.

“Do we really want to live in a world where the 1 per cent own more than the rest of us combined?” Winnie Byanyima, Oxfam’s executive director, said in a statement. “The scale of global inequality is quite simply staggering, and despite the issues shooting up the global agenda, the gap between the richest and the rest is widening fast.”

While world leaders such as President Barack Obama and International Monetary Fund chief Christine Lagarde have talked about tackling extreme economic inequality “we are still waiting for many of them to walk the walk,” Byanyima said.

The health-care and financial services industries spent almost $900 million to lobby the U.S. government for favourable legislation in 2013, and more than $200 million was spent on lobbying in the EU, Oxfam said.

At the same time, one in nine people don’t have enough to eat and more than a billion people live on less than $1.25 a day, Oxfam said, ticking off statistics that paint a grim picture for all but the world’s richest.

The charity is calling for a crackdown on tax avoidance by corporations and rich people, as well as increased investment in health and education and equal pay legislation.
http://thechronicleherald.ca/business/1264071-world%E2%80%99s-richest-see-wealth-share-jump-to-48

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CANADA HAVING AN ELECTION YEAR-  2015


well..here it is.... folks.... include Canada will ya... between an election with Justin Bieber running alongside Thomas the 4gotten Teddy Bear and PM Harper ...not gonna change.... Canada's screwed 2..... well here's an arse whopping country music song needing- style.  BOTTOM LINE- this is going2b a hard $$$ year... and this will affect the political view entirely- Harper mayb a bastard...but he's Canada's bastard... and Canada is still the No. 2 fiscal sound country on the planet... 2nd. only 2 Germany. imho




https://www.facebook.com/OMGParadisePage/photos/a.229022883787475.58100.225933684096395/612695055420254/?type=1&theater



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Businessweek
 - ‎33 minutes ago‎




The euro is shaping to be the biggest casualty of Switzerland's decision to scrap its currency cap. Soon after the Swiss National Bank unexpectedly ended its three-year policy of keeping the franc weaker than 1.20 per euro, bearish bets on Europe's common ...




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Disinflation, euro zone and China pose threat to global growth: Reuters poll
The last few months have been marked by rapidly-cooling inflation -- driven by a spectacular 60 percent fall in oil prices since June -- with consumer price rises in many cases far below stability targets set by central banks.

Indeed, euro zone inflation in December turned to overall price falls for the first time since 2009 and economists now see a 90 percent probability the European Central Bank will print money through government bond purchases, possibly as early as next week.

Read more at:


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Well this is from the Middle East gift wrapped 4 our USA 


Quoting official data that tends to be under-reported, an American think-tank, the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation, has said that the manufacturing sector in the US has lost over a million jobs net and over 15,000 manufacturers since the beginning the recession, which took hold in 2008. Based on these numbers, the US only added one new manufacturing job for every five that were lost. This points to the inescapable if uncomfortable fact that much of the ‘growth’ in the USA since the recession’s lows was just a cyclical recovery instead of real structural growth that will improve long-term conditions.

Skid row America

16 January 2015
For the last half year, strident announcements made by various sections of the government of the US have proclaimed that the American economy has recovered, that the country’s gross domestic product (GDP) is rising again, that jobs are being created, that new homes are being built and bought, and that overall, life in the USA is improving.

Much as the American public would like to believe such announcements — for the satisfaction of wants and needs influences behaviour a great deal, and it is in catering to such behaviour that economics is reputed to be useful — the evidence signals otherwise. It is a rosy scenario that has been painted by a group of vested interests amongst which the US government and its various agencies is only one.

Typically, and unsurprisingly, it is television new channels which have repeated the claim, but which have neglected to mention that on this ‘road to recovery’, wages in the US continue to decline, while an ever-greater section of working-age adults have given up looking for work and have dropped out of the labour force altogether.

Paradoxically in such times, Americans (and the people they do business with overseas) search for positive economic news, so official announcements hinting at an American economic turnaround, and news that amplifies such suggestion, tend to proliferate. However, America faces a US$ 458 billion trade deficit and the ‘recovery’ is going to do very little to alter that imbalance.

Quoting official data that tends to be under-reported, an American think-tank, the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation, has said that the manufacturing sector in the US has lost over a million jobs net and over 15,000 manufacturers since the beginning the recession, which took hold in 2008. Based on these numbers, the US only added one new manufacturing job for every five that were lost. This points to the inescapable if uncomfortable fact that much of the ‘growth’ in the USA since the recession’s lows was just a cyclical recovery instead of real structural growth that will improve long-term conditions.

The Obama administration has been quick to make political capital from the top-line data which shows that there has been four years of ‘growth’, that 520,000 jobs have been added in manufacturing in the last three years. What the Obama administration does not mention is the 2.5 million jobs lost between 2007 and 2009, and that by the end of 2013, real manufacturing value added was still 3.2% below 2007 levels, even though GDP grew 5.6%.

The dominance of neo-classical economics is perhaps as much to blame for this state of American affairs as the propensity of publics to be fooled by selective statistics. As long as things appeared to be going well — or were portrayed as going well — the majority of economists did not consider the American condition (despite mounting government debt and a rising trade deficit) a matter for concern. It is time the critical new evidence presented from within the US was recognised and acted upon, in the country’s counties if not in Washington.

For more news from Khaleej Times, follow us on Facebook at facebook.com/khaleejtimes, and on Twitter at @khaleejtimes

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www.breitbart.com/.../2015/.../record-92898000-americans-not-in-the-workforce/ - Cachedby Caroline May9 Jan 20150 ... boomers hitting retirement age — the BLS
reported Friday that in December the unemployment rate declined to 5.6 percent
and


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COMMENT:   We've been saying.... this just cannot continue.... it's heartbreaking....and homeless youth.... and this is the USA... and Canada needs 2 clean up as well.... we deserve better and everyday people - our families made these countries strong and beautiful and free.... our troops died 4 our flags and our very life as we know it.... please God ... we just need political elected 2 work 2gether... seriously... and say how can we help instead of fill out these forms.... children need food, safety, warm bed, clean clothes and love... sigh.
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www.breitbart.com/.../2015/.../record-92898000-americans-not-in-the-workforce/ - Cachedby Caroline May9 Jan 20150 ... boomers hitting retirement age — the BLS
reported Friday that in December the unemployment rate declined to 5.6 percent
and ...


Record 92,898,000 Americans Not In The Workforce


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Staggering Cost Of Illegal Aliens In America 
Taxpayers Taken To The Cleaners
By Frosty Wooldridge 4-10-8

Illegal alien migration into the United States costs American taxpayers $346 billion annually reported by the National Research Council. While employers of illegal aliens rake-in billions of dollars, the US citizens subsidize what may be called organized "Slavery in 21st Century America."

While Congress facilitates outsourcing, insourcing and offshoring of American jobs by the thousands weekly, that same Congress imports 182,000 legal immigrant monthly who need jobs. Another estimated 100,000 illegal aliens arrive each month without jobs. All those immigrants seize jobs from American citizens at slave wages.

What happens to the American taxpayer?

"Immigrants are poorer, pay less tax, and are more likely to receive public benefits than American citizens," said Edwin Rubenstein, reporting on the National Research Council's new book: "The New Americans: Economic, Demographics and Fiscal Effects of Immigration." The Social Contract Winter 2007-08. <http://www.thesoicalcontract.com/>www.thesoicalcontract.com

The NRC found that the average immigrant household receives $13,326 in federal welfare and pays $10,664.00 in federal taxes. Thus, American taxpayers shell out $2,682.00 for each immigrant household.

In addition, the report showed that immigrants affect 15 different executive agencies of the U.S. government.

Earned Income Tax Credit-fraud is rampant and IRS does little to verify existence of children. Clean Air and Climate Change-these goals are unattainable as long as US population grows-driven by unending immigration. Emergency medical treatment-US taxpayer money provides $250 million a year to help hospitals defray costs for illegal aliens. Bureau of Land Management-the Interior Department spends $1 million to mitigate environmental damage done by illegals crossing US southern border. Migrant educational grants-intended to help states educate children of illegal workers. More fraud from over-counting. Office of Foreign Labor Certification-immigrant workers depress wages for US citizens resulting in declines in federal revenues at $100 billion annually.

As shown on CBS with Katie Couric this past week, 300,000 pregnant Mexican women cross the border to birth their babies, known as 'anchor babies', in American hospitals at an average cost of $6,000.00 per birth with no complications. If the child suffers heart defects, Downs Syndrome, Autism or any other problems, the costs jump to $500,000.00 with long term care into the millions of dollars. All footed by the America taxpayer!

Not mentioned in Couric's report, that child enjoys free breakfasts and lunches through 13 years of publicly funded education at an average cost of $7,000.00 per year. Additionally, American taxpayers foot the bill for all medical and housing assistance for the child and mother. More hidden costs add up with ESL classes to teach the child English. Connecticut alone suffers 120 languages in their schools while Colorado suffers over 40 foreign languages that cripple their classrooms.

The list of expenses paid for by American taxpayer soars with time and numbers of illegal aliens. Additionally, legal immigrants sponsor their relatives in chain migration and family reunification at US taxpayer expense.

These immigrants take American jobs while they burn American taxpayer funds for immigrant welfare. This all happens while the US national debt approaches $10 trillion. Immigrants flood into this country while jobs cascade out to China where we owe $1 trillion in T-bills as of 2008. Additionally, we suffer a $700 billion annual trade deficit.

Once those illegal aliens hit this country, half of them work off the books and do not pay $401 billion dollars annually according to the 2005 Bear Stearns Report. Additionally, they form the second largest underground economy in the world. Both legal and illegal immigrants send $80 billion back to their home countries in cash transfers on untaxed money.

When does it end?  Not any time soon!  Who pays? You do! Like the proverbial golden calf, the United States taxpayer bleeds to death daily while our president and Congress fiddle, faddle and scratch their generous rear ends while they facilitate the death of America's middle class.

Our politicians create the problems they campaign to solve; but once in office, as John McCain, Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama have proven with their time in the U.S. Senate-they work more against Americans than for them. The proof in the aforementioned report is, as they say, "in the pudding!"




"To sit back hoping that someday, someway, someone will make things right ­ is to go on feeding the crocodile, hoping he will eat you last ­ but eat you he will."
~  Ronald Reagan




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#Asia's big demons: debt, deflation, demographics. @andymukherjee70 takes them on all at once http://reut.rs/1Cu8dyd  pic.twitter.com/KJU9Jxs25V

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U.S. consumer prices post biggest drop in six years
WASHINGTON - U.S. consumer prices recorded their biggest decline in six years in December and a gauge of underlying inflation failed to rise, which could make the Federal Reserve more cautious about raising interest rates.

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Bitcoin is latest victim of disinflation
By Edward Hadas-January 16, 2015
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Foreigners' net selling of Japan stocks biggest in 5 months

TOKYO, Jan 16 - Foreign investors' net selling of Japanese stocks during the last week was the biggest in five months as their risk appetite was dampened by concerns about weak oil prices and the global economy, exchange data showed on Friday. Foreigners' net selling of Japanese cash stocks was 434.90 billion yen ($3.73 billion) during Jan. 5-9, according to data released by the Tokyo Stock Exchange. "Investors stayed risk averse last week," said Shingo Kumazawa, an analyst at
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Hong Kong shares fall as global economy worries spread

Jan 16 - Hong Kong shares drifted downward on Friday as losses on Wall Street spread to Asia.
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nature vs environmental energy -  climate change is going 2b a real baaaaaaastard isn't
Plans to build a solar farm on protected wildlife-rich grassland have been criticised
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Swiss action ensnares brokers worldwide
Scrapping of currency ceiling hits FXCM, Excel Markets and Alpari

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Amazon-Luxembourg tax deal laid bare
Brussels believes favourable treatment amounted to an illicit state subsidy

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A fix for finance that's radical & ingenious. Sadly, it's also utopian. @DominicElliott reviews "The End of Banking" http://reut.rs/1sGB9mo

this will be a good read
OUT OF THE SHADOWS-  The End of Banking
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Apple, Google settle U.S. poaching lawsuit for $415 million
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BP faces up to $13.7bn penalty for spill
Penalty is $4bn less than highest amount sought by US government

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hmmmmm let's see over 27 illegal Mexicans in USA whilst USA has over 100 million unemployed.... hmmmm... I get it- Who the hell wouldn't
Harper postpones Three Amigos summit amid chilly relations with U.S. and Mexico
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CHECK OUT THIS BRILLIANT ARTICLE FROM A YOUNGBLOOD:
Quote: Let’s state this clearly: If someone believes it is okay to kill another because of a cartoon, — an opinion, for that matter — that person is wrong. The same goes for a book. Or a sentence.

These are in two completely non-overlapping categories at play: speech and violence. Even if you believe there is speech that deserves punishment or reprisal, actions from these categories should never cross over their boundaries. Speech should be responded to with more speech — that’s all there is to it.

If the opinion of another upsets you so much that you feel an unquenchable rage, your response should be to pen the most scathing, bile and vitriol-filled letter of protest imaginable.

You should make cartoons of your own, blasting those who dared offend you. You should gather other writers and artists, create a magazine of your own, put it on the offending artists’ doorsteps and say, “Look, here, this is what we think of you. How dare you.”


ON CHARLIE...

It’s Not About Being Politically Correct: Gen-Y Needs To Recognize Wrong
 Nick Simmons Nick Simmons in Generation Y
Twitter is bursting with expressions of solidarity for Charlie Hebdo. But, laced within is a disturbing trend. Young people, in an attempt to be progressive, are trying to see both sides of the issue.

Generally, there are two sides to an issue that are, if not equally valid, equally worthy of at least a chin scratch. The world is not black-and-white. We know this.

The crux of the issue here is whether or not it is ever acceptable to kill someone because what he or she says offends you.

There is a charge by progressive, smart, young people that says condemning the men who murdered the 12 victims in France outright as “evil” is stifling any conversation as to why they did what they did. They say it’s simplistic.

They say we must be progressive; we must understand their motives, and we must think long and hard about whether their anger was, in any way, understandable, even if we don’t agree with them. This is what progressive thought is all about, and I’m 99 percent onboard.

But, then, they go on; they say that because someone was upset enough to kill, we should take the potential reasoning as to why seriously and take steps to protect ourselves — in our speech — so as to not provoke violence.

They say things like, “It’s silly that they didn’t expect a backlash — there’s always a risk. We should look at why they’re being violent. We should look at Islamophobia, unjust wars and forced westernization.”

This, I believe, is unacceptable and screams of blackmail. Though our goal may be cultural understanding, if we alter our speech in any way because we fear someone may get so offended that he or she may feel the need to kill us, we are submitting to terms outlined in a ransom note.

We are acquiescing to a threat while simultaneously pretending it’s a gesture of sensitivity.

We do, actually, know why they did it, and it’s not because of Islamophobia or cultural oppression. There have been, of course, moments when an uprising has transpired for similar reasons. But, that’s not the discussion at hand.

The reason for the attack on Charlie Hebdo was repeated and repeated and repeated. The very same magazine was firebombed before this incident, and for the same reason: Charlie Hebdo depicted and mocked something the gunmen found to be sacred.

We all understand why — it’s very clear why. The point is this “why” is not acceptable.

There is a restlessness of the issue at the hearts of people who wrestle with the urge to give every perspective equal time.

As Sam Harris once said of the White House in response to the “Innocence of Muslims” embassy fiasco, these people “[disavow] the offending speech while claiming to protect free speech in principle. It may seem a small detail, given the heat of the moment — but so is a quivering lip.”

There are smart people saying things like, “Well, no one should be silenced per se… but maybe they should have been more sensitive.”

The blackmail is there, under a very thin layer of implication: “Look, we’re making you a great offer. All you have to do is be a little more ‘sensitive’ and you won’t have to look over your shoulder for men with guns.” No. A thousand times, no.

Let’s state this clearly: If someone believes it is okay to kill another because of a cartoon, — an opinion, for that matter — that person is wrong. The same goes for a book. Or a sentence.

These are in two completely non-overlapping categories at play: speech and violence. Even if you believe there is speech that deserves punishment or reprisal, actions from these categories should never cross over their boundaries. Speech should be responded to with more speech — that’s all there is to it.

If the opinion of another upsets you so much that you feel an unquenchable rage, your response should be to pen the most scathing, bile and vitriol-filled letter of protest imaginable.

You should make cartoons of your own, blasting those who dared offend you. You should gather other writers and artists, create a magazine of your own, put it on the offending artists’ doorsteps and say, “Look, here, this is what we think of you. How dare you.”

But, for people to say it is somehow understandable that, in place of that kind of response, these people got bullets and blood — that the violent offense simply comes with the territory of being a cartoonist — is not a middle ground that deserves our time.

Remember, I’m not talking about Islam, the Quran or any other book, faith or general ideology. I’m talking about one, specific idea — the idea that the penalty for openly mocking a person or a figure or an ideology can ever be death.

The moment you pick up a gun instead of a pen, you have lost the argument. You will win the war of flesh, surely. But, that thing you care about — the idea you defended — is lost. You lose the war of ideas when you stop using ideas as your artillery. Your idea is exposed as weak because it required an armed guard to defend it.

Let us, sadly, use that old, clichéd benchmark of indefensible evil: In the same way it really was okay to condemn the bad ideas of Nazism, it really is okay to condemn the bad idea of sacred cows and violent reprisal. It is not anti-progress, racist, ethnocentric or anything else to make this claim definitively.

To young people whose intentions are often simply to avoid repeating the tragic missteps or perspectives of our parents’ parents throughout history, this is not the time to look for such nuance. It is a good thing to try and understand those who would do you violence.

And, there are places where pure empathy is important. We should look harder at our wars, foreign policy, leaders, personal prejudices, heteronormativity, bigotry, patriarchy, homophobia, transphobia, xenophobia, Islamophobia, tribalism and racism. These are issues that contain nuance and require open and rigorous discourse and empathy.

But, balanced discourse is exactly what is at stake here.

If free speech succumbs to blackmail, these other dominos will fall, as well, because there will be a subset of the population that cannot speak. We need not muddy these specific waters to make them seem deep. We need not try to look for a defensible position on the side of those who killed the Charlie Hebdo employees and police officials.

It is a fallacy that just because there are two sides to an issue, both sides are equally valid.

If, as Jon Stewart said, we are on “team civilization,” we can say the side that picks up guns and kills people in response to a cartoon is wrong, no matter what or whom the cartoon depicts.

Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not reflect the official position of Elite Daily.

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An emergency meeting is held by foreign ministers of the Arab League in Cairo, Egypt, Jan. 15, 2015. Arab foreign ministers met on Thursday in Egypt's capital for an extraordinary meeting of the Arab League to discuss several regional issues

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WEF summit to look for answers to major global challenges
English.news.cn   2015-01-14 23:21:01


GENEVA, Jan. 14 (Xinhua) -- The World Economic Forum (WEF) Annual Meeting 2015 scheduled from Jan. 21 to 24 in Davos of Switzerland would serve as a platform looking for solutions to major challenges faced by the world, said the organization on Wednesday.

Over 2,500 participants from more than 140 countries representing business, government, international organizations, academia, civil society and the media are expected to participate in this year's annual gathering, the WEF said.

The upcoming meeting is to be framed around 10 major global challenges, namely: environment and resource scarcity, employment skills and human capital, gender parity, long-term investing, infrastructure and development, food security and agriculture, international trade and investment, the future of the internet, global crime and anti-corruption, social inclusion, and the future of financial systems.

Addressing a pre-event press conference, Klaus Schwab, founder and executive chairman of WEF, said 2015 would be a "critical" year, being "a year where we are at a crossroads."

"The world has changed substantially. We are in a post-crisis world. That is the reason why we have chosen the 'New Global Context' as this year's theme," said Schwab.

Schwab shared his expectations for the annual meeting, which included reaching an understanding of the new context and searching for solutions in such a framework, making contributions to confidence-building efforts for the conflict areas, and achieving progress in addressing major global challenges.

According to the WEF, over 40 heads of state and governments are expected to be at the four-day meeting where participants can attend the 280 sessions and workshops and exchange opinions on a range of issues.

Jennifer Blanke, chief economist with WEF, explained to Xinhua about this year's theme.

"We have seen that there is a rise in terms of conflict, a lack of trust in many cases. We felt that it is very important this year to step back, (to think) what is different about this new global context, how can we actually restore trust in the global economic and political system, so we can really expect in future decades a more collaborative environment," said Blanke.

She highlighted that one of the important issues for this year's meeting is to bring in the topic of security for the first time.

"We realize that there is a huge interplay between the economic system and the geopolitical system. It is very important for experts in both areas to understand each other very well, so we can come up with better solutions," said Blanke.


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Approximately 1 Million Unemployed Childless Adults Will Lose SNAP Benefits in
... January 5, 2015 .... Most of these waivers, however, expire after 2015. ... in
effect in areas with about 30 percent of the U.S. population; the rest of the country
 ...
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Unemployed adults without children will lose food assistance. ... January 6, 2015.
Print · Comments. Photo Credit: Robert Kneshcke/Shutterstock. One million of the
nation's poorest people will be cut from the federal Supplemental Nutrition ...


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AND.. 
What about Canada then....
COMMENT:  It's not just the US...
The UK National Lottery has had its worst six months of sales since its launch in 1994, operator Camelot reported today.

Revenue from the various Lottery games slumped to almost £2.3 billion in the period to September 28, down 5.2% on the same time last year.


     USA

    Revenue from the various Lottery games slumped to almost £2.3 billion in the period to September 28, down 5.2% on the same time last year.


 
USA LOTTERY SALES PLUNGING  2015 


The US Economy Is So Bad... Even Lottery Sales Are Collapsing
Tyler Durden's picture
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/14/2015 16:33 -0500
For what appears to be the first time on record, Powerball Lottery Sales declined year-over-year. As the following slides show, lottery sales declined 19% in FY14 vs FY13 and even more stunningly reflective of a nation whose disposable income (and hope) is in such short supply, sales in the first half of FY15 are down 40% from the first of FY14. As LaFleurs concludes, this will make it very challenging for most Lotteries to manage their budgets...



COMMENT:

When Lotterys started, the economy was in pretty good shape, and most Amercians never had the chance to gamble at the local level, and it was also considered a moral weakness in a lot of areas, so it started off slow..."its for the Children"!  sales pitch got a lot of people to put aside their moral beliefs as an excuse...then came scratchoffs, now I see people pissing away 50-100 dollars sitting out in their cars scratching furiously away at the Quickymart, taking the 'winning' tickets back inside, and trading them in for more...

Then a few Indian casinos popped up within a 50 mile radius, furthur wringing out the weak hands, then the economy took a shit...so people started selling at the 'cash for gold' places to get their gambling money...then Craigslist came on the scene, and people started selling all sorts of shit to get money to gamble with, except nobody had any disposable income anymore...All the money that USED to be spent at Garage Sales, small shops and restaurants etc...and thats how I lost my ass on my Beanie Baby investment...


COMMENT:
You've got schmucks spending $50 a week on Lotto when they're making minimum wage....  when a bigger schmuck spending $100 a week wins then the others think 'I'm not spending enough'   They know how to 'sell the dream'.

Problem is that with the cost of food going up and wages going down people don't HAVE any 'disposable income' left....

The slots at places like Yonkers Raceway in NY are full of seniors losing their social security checks... - and they think MORE casinos are going to help?




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and...

QUOTE:  "China is still growing at a robust pace but continues on a path of gradual deceleration,” the World Bank said in its 2015 forecast released late Tuesday, which lowered its global growth forecast from 3.4 percent to 3 percent for the year. Growth in emerging-market nations slipped, pointing to a slowdown in productivity and dampened growth prospects, the report noted.

Copper prices fell sharply on Wednesday to their lowest since 2009 amid an Asian sell-off that drove the metal’s March delivery price to $2.496 a pound on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The benchmark price of iron ore, a key ingredient in the production of steel, was close to its five-year low on Wednesday, at $68.50 a ton. Meanwhile, Brent crude, the global oil price, fell 12 cents to $45.77 a barrel in London while U.S. oil dropped 52 cents to $46.07.

“It would be wrong to dismiss the possibility that the acceleration in the decline in copper prices is an indication of a sharper downturn in the global economy and especially in China,” Julian Jessop, chief global economist for Capital Economics, said in a Wednesday note to investors, signaling that demand for these raw materials might also be declining in the world’s second-largest economy.


Iron Ore, Copper, Oil Prices: Is This The Beginning Of A Global Slowdown, Or Just A Supply Glut?


and...

The oil market tumbled on Thursday (Jan 15) after OPEC said it produced more oil in December than its limit, despite sharply falling prices, and lowered its global demand outlook for its crude.



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The euro fell sharply against the dollar on Thursday (Jan 15) after Switzerland surprised investors by removing its currency's floor against the euro, sending the Swiss franc soaring.


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U.S. stocks plunge into red territory after volatile trading
EW YORK, Jan. 13 (Xinhua) -- U.S. stocks slashed big early gains to turn lower Tuesday despite upbeat data, extending losses for a third straight day.

Buoyed by the good start of the fourth-quarter earnings season, the market surged in the morning session, with the Dow soaring as much as 282 points, before the three benchmark indices dived into negative territory in the afternoon trading and ended mildly lower, as falling oil prices continued to haunt the market.

At the close, the Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 27.16 points, or 0.15 percent, to 17,613.68. The S&P 500 slipped 5.23 points, or 0.26 percent, to 2,023.03. The Nasdaq Composite Index edged down 3.21 points, or 0.07 percent, to 4,661.50.

Aluminum giant Alcoa Inc. released strong quarterly results after Monday's closing bell to unofficially kick off the earnings season.

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China's consumer prices grew 2 percent in 2014 from one year earlier, well below the government's 3.5-percent target set for the year, official data showed on January 9.
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Chinese Government Abolishes Rare Earth Export Quotas
15 January 2015
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China has policy buffers to sustain growth: World Bank

China Daily, January 15, 2015


China has adequate policy buffers to arrest steep falls in economic growth and to maintain domestic demand this year, amid bleak prospects for the global economy, said a report published by the World Bank on Wednesday.
The bank's biannual Global Economic Prospects report estimates China's GDP growth to slow to 7.1 percent this year from 7.4 percent in 2014, with the downtrend set to continue till 2017 with 6.9 percent growth.
"China is undergoing a carefully managed slowdown," the report said.
The multilateral organization believes that China's public debt, which is less than 60 percent of the GDP, can provide fiscal space to employ stimulus against the slowdown. "It also provides some room to bail out banks if nonperforming loans were to rise sharply."
Fiscal space refers to the flexibility of a government in its spending choices, and, more generally, to the financial well-being of a government.
The World Bank said there is very little probability of a sharp decline in China's growth. If such an event were to happen, it would trigger a disorderly unwinding of financial vulnerabilities and have considerable implications for the global economy, it said.
China's growth is still impressive, and will account for more than one-third of the global growth in 2015, said Bert Hofman, country director for the World Bank in China.
"Despite the lackluster recovery in high-income countries, China's economy will still benefit from growing external demand and lower oil prices."
The National Bureau of Statistics is expected to release the full-year GDP for 2014 on Jan 20, with most economists anticipating the full-year number to be around 7.3 to 7.4 percent, the first time that China's growth rate would miss the official target, which was 7.5 percent.


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We need 2 look at new ways 2 do things Canada- and frankly our Environment Record - with a population of only 36 million people with the 2nd largest country in the world is not bad....








we know we have 2 change our ways globally.... now environmentalists are arguing that nature is being brutalized by wind farms, etc.- and all the things they preached 4 over the years...and we have all been quietly changing as the silent Majority. TRUTH IS- come on pls. make up ur minds- the world has 2 change....and we are... BUT people matter- humanity matters... and let's make sure that we, the people, own these things - not big business or government... eh? imho
PHOTO 1- ATLANTIC OCEAN- use wind instead of oil rigs
PHOTO 2 : IRELAND- nature vs environment energy- Plans to build a solar farm on protected wildlife-rich grassland have been criticisedPANews
PHOTO 3: - What we stand 2 lose- Canada has best drinking water and natural beauty left in the world- let's not ruin it- the World's last Playground of Nature
PHOTO 4: Mathew Reichertz uses the narrative form of the comic book for his exhibit, Garbage, the story of an encounter between himself and his neighbours Jan. 9, 8 p.m., at the Saint Mary's University Art Gallery
PHOTO 5- The global reality... Canada is doing very very well environment wise.... 2nd largest country in the world WITH ONLY 36 MILLION PEOPLE. Have a great weekend folks?
















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"Unless someone like you cares a whole awful lot,
Nothing is going to get better. It's not."

— Dr. Seuss, from The Lorax














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Canada tops G8 countries in social, environmental progress, global ranking shows

TAVIA GRANT THE GLOBE AND MAIL
Last updated Thursday, Apr. 03 2014, 5:51 AM EDT

http://m.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/canada-tops-g8-countries-in-social-environmental-progress-global-ranking-shows/article17786468/?service=mobile


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AND FRANCE... 



...

don't u think we need 2 choose between war and actual humanity???   NATO WAS 2B disbanded after Afghanistan and it's $$$billions 2 pay 4 humanity and climate and jobs 4 youth of this world... 











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One of the best speeches ever..




Reagan 101

Today is President Ronald Reagan's 101st birthday.  Our nation is a far different place than it was during the Renaissance years of the Reagan Administration.  In this critical election year it would be wise for our elected leaders, candidates for office and our fellow citizens to revisit the simple wisdom and uncommon vision of Ronald Reagan.
To sit back hoping that someday, someway, someone will make things right is to go on feeding the crocodile, hoping he will eat you last--but eat you he will.
There are no easy answers, but there are simple answers.  We must have the courage to do what we know is morally right.
The problem is not that the people are taxed too little.  The problem is that the government spends too much.
If the big spenders get their way they'll charge everything on your taxpayers express card, and believe me they never leave home without it.
Government always finds a need for whatever money it gets.
Government does not solve problems it subsidizes them.
The government's view of the economy can be summed up in a few short phrases: If it moves, tax it.  If it keeps moving, regulate it.  And if it stops moving subsidize it. 
No government ever voluntarily reduces itself in size.  Government programs, once launched, never disappear.  Actually a government bureau is the nearest thing to eternal life we'll ever see on this earth.
Government is like a baby.  An alimentary canal with a big appetite at one end and no sense of responsibility at the other.
Many of us find ourselves telling the younger generation about what America used to be like.  Our president believed in American Exceptionalism and bowed to no foreign leader, our president understood that our nation was "the last best hope of man on earth," our president did not pander to our enemies and betray our allies and our president made us proud to be American citizens.  We were governed by the rule of law, we were protected by our constitution and the free market created jobs and opportunities for advancement.  Ronald Reagan warned us.
Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction.  We didn't pass it to our children in the bloodstream.  It must be fought for, protected, and handed on from them to do the same, or one day we will spend our sunset years telling our children and our children's children what it was once like in the United States where men were free.
You and I have a rendezvous with destiny.  We will preserve for our children this, the last best hope of man on earth, or we will sentence them to take the first step into a thousand years of darkness.  If we fail, at least let our children and our children's children say of us we justified our brief moment here.  We did all that could be done.
America has reached a turning point, what sort of country will we leave behind?  Have we done all that could be done?
February 6, 2012

Today is President Ronald Reagan's 101st birthday.  Our nation is a far different place than it was during the Renaissance years of the Reagan Administration.  In this critical election year it would be wise for our elected leaders, candidates for office and our fellow citizens to revisit the simple wisdom and uncommon vision of Ronald Reagan.
To sit back hoping that someday, someway, someone will make things right is to go on feeding the crocodile, hoping he will eat you last--but eat you he will.
There are no easy answers, but there are simple answers.  We must have the courage to do what we know is morally right.
The problem is not that the people are taxed too little.  The problem is that the government spends too much.
If the big spenders get their way they'll charge everything on your taxpayers express card, and believe me they never leave home without it.
Government always finds a need for whatever money it gets.
Government does not solve problems it subsidizes them.
The government's view of the economy can be summed up in a few short phrases: If it moves, tax it.  If it keeps moving, regulate it.  And if it stops moving subsidize it. 
No government ever voluntarily reduces itself in size.  Government programs, once launched, never disappear.  Actually a government bureau is the nearest thing to eternal life we'll ever see on this earth.
Government is like a baby.  An alimentary canal with a big appetite at one end and no sense of responsibility at the other.
Many of us find ourselves telling the younger generation about what America used to be like.  Our president believed in American Exceptionalism and bowed to no foreign leader, our president understood that our nation was "the last best hope of man on earth," our president did not pander to our enemies and betray our allies and our president made us proud to be American citizens.  We were governed by the rule of law, we were protected by our constitution and the free market created jobs and opportunities for advancement.  Ronald Reagan warned us.
Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction.  We didn't pass it to our children in the bloodstream.  It must be fought for, protected, and handed on from them to do the same, or one day we will spend our sunset years telling our children and our children's children what it was once like in the United States where men were free.
You and I have a rendezvous with destiny.  We will preserve for our children this, the last best hope of man on earth, or we will sentence them to take the first step into a thousand years of darkness.  If we fail, at least let our children and our children's children say of us we justified our brief moment here.  We did all that could be done.
America has reached a turning point, what sort of country will we leave behind?  Have we done all that could be done?
February 6, 2012

http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2012/02/reagan_101.html

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