CHINA: "Good afternoon. I'm a debt collector. May I speak with Uncle Sam?"
US: "Call my attorney. His name is Samuel Paparo." [click]
marketplace.org
CHINA: "Good afternoon. I'm a debt collector. May I speak with Uncle Sam?"
US: "Call my attorney. His name is Samuel Paparo." [click]
marketplace.org
Other urls found in this thread:
fee.org
en.m.wikipedia.org
medium.com
marketplace.org
en.wikipedia.org
finance.yahoo.com
natlawreview.com
twitter.com
>Samuel Paparo
Who does everyone owe debt to?
>Who does everyone owe debt to?
It's a tangled web of unimaginable scale. International financiers are Bernie Madoff on steroids.
fee.org
Also, for clarity...
>Harry Potter Jews
I still can't believe that the studio didn't sniff this out before or during production.
What the fuck is this autistic MKU gif
>MKU
?
I'll admit it's obnoxious. I dunno.
No kidding. Kill this guy
Project MKUltra
>marketplace.org
>One reason China may be shedding U.S. Treasurys is to control the depreciation of its currency, the yuan, which has lost value as the dollar has strengthened.
oh no no no
Based knowledgeposter. Thanks, user.
Ah, of course.
>On the institutional side, local central banks loosely regulate their currency markets. However, no single global regulator exists to police the worldwide forex market.
Good reads, sir.
Sorry, Chang. According to the International Covid-19 Reparations Act, you owe the rest of the world 10 quadrillion dollars.
Please move to cancel all your foreign debts as an advance on your first payment and recall all your expats for 500 years of factory work.
>According to the Complaint, the [broker-dealer] mismarked 96% of a (((certain hedge fund’s))) short sale orders of two separate issuers’ stock, totaling more than $250 million, as “long” or “short-exempt.” This mismarking allegedly generated $1.6 million in brokerage fees to the BD. The effect of the mismarking was that the hedge fund was able to sell the securities short even though it already had a short position in the securities and (((did not borrow))) or locate additional shares to sell short.
Kek.