Interview 1425 – Financial Survival and the Disappearing Middle Class

by | Mar 7, 2019 | Interviews | 4 comments

James joins Melody Cedarstrom on the Financial Survival radio show for their regular, bi-monthly conversation. This time we discuss the disappearance of the middle class, universal basic income, the International Criminal Court, the Trump-Kim summit in Hanoi and the recent flare up between India and Pakistan over Kashmir.

Watch this video on BitChute / DTube / YouTube or Download the mp4

SHOW NOTES
The International Forecaster

Data Is The New Oil

Left-media Layoffs Spark #LearnToCode Meme, They Are Not Amused

Universal Basic Enslavement

Warren Mosler Defends the Essential Insights of Modern Monetary Theory (MMT)

Victor’s Justice: The Truth About the International Criminal Court

ICC Situations Under Investigation

“It Can’t Be Fixed:” Senior ICC Judge Quits in Protest of US, Turkish Meddling

Interview 891 – Christopher Black Destroys the Myth of the Rwandan “Genocide”

In/Dependence Day: Foreign Intervention Behind Creation of South Sudan

Satellite images show buildings still standing at Indian bombing site

4 Comments

  1. In this paradigm disappearance of middle class was predictable/(predicted to some extent). Current paradigm simplified is encapsulated in the game Monopoly and we know how the game ends.

    Instead of UBI a solution for millions of unemployed that would at the same time solve two big problems (actually many more) is organic agriculture. We would get meaningful employment and healthy food. Certainly I don’t propose Khmer Rouge style solution.

    In case of ICC we should not forget Yugoslavia wars. Crimes in this war were not prosecuted by ICC because it was not established yet, so special tribunal was installed. The whole thing was a big push for ICC.
    NGOs were also instrumental in establishing ICC. ‘Coalition for the International Criminal Court’ has “usual suspects” members and financiers.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coalition_for_the_International_Criminal_Court

  2. I look forward to Corbett’s upcoming article about India and Pakistan.

    Yea.. that’s right…this word “Middle Class” needs another look.
    Things have changed.
    For me personally, financial survival is a struggle. A real struggle.
    One thing which grinds me the wrong way is that so many government mandates keep imposing greater costs and manhours. Taxes, licenses, mandated insurance, rules about this and that and compliance….
    It becomes more added expense to the daily struggle.

    The title of this podcast “Financial Survival and the Disappearing Middle Class” is appropriate.

    I like the line, “The International Monetary System is based on faith.”
    So true.

  3. The following video is of topic. A brilliant piece of propaganda.

    The Future of War, and How It Affects YOU (Multi-Domain Operations)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qOTYgcdNrXE

    They are talking about 3D chess, actually 6D chess (or more), four star general is so cool.
    Dimensions: earth, water, air, space, cyber, people….
    Everything is intertwined, controlled at all levels and sections.

    People are the most important and they must have certain independence.
    Sure, it’s only about war, no, about peace, no…
    They don’t mention hive mind but that’s what it is.

  4. The following ZeroHedge article jives with the title Interview 1425 – Financial Survival and the Disappearing Middle Class.

    3/5/19
    The US Consumer Just Hit A Brick Wall: Here’s Why In 15 Charts
    https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2019-03-05/us-consumer-just-hit-brick-wall-heres-why-15-charts

    EXCERPTS
    When it comes to the growth dynamo behind the global economy, nobody can match the US consumer – not even China: accounting for trillions in annual spending, the US consumer, who represents roughly 70% of US GDP, is also responsible for roughly 17% of global GDP, slightly ahead of the entire country of China.

    However, as recent economic data has shown, the future of the US consumer is suddenly looking ominously cloudy, for two big reasons:
    #1
    rising interest rates, which as Deutsche Bank notes are “beginning to bite” as observed in the number of working hours in sector selling big ticket items… (another chart)
    #2
    … and increasingly tighter loan terms, which coupled with softer loan demand, means that the purchasing power of the US consumer is suddenly facing a very troubling air pocket…. (charts)

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