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tv   Keiser Report  RT  February 10, 2022 3:30pm-4:01pm EST

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the old note, in the midst of the fishes, the only interest of the fisher, moby on the face, shone the only ones in danger. the fisherman also at risk of losing all the plugin, my thought ups of them before they get the then of about that i'm of the level more thought i get them. i'd be real. she's been able to have the viewership lock on screen with ah, i am matched guys are this is the kaiser report here something you probably haven't heard? did you know that we're facing a molecule crisis? stacey, what is going on?
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right, well actually this is an extraordinary headline because max i have been chronicling the demise of the world out there outside of this hyper big point. nice world right here. now salvatore, where hard money rules. well, in the world of soft money, it's down to the fundamental level of the molecule where things are disintegrating . this is according to the head of research commodities research at goldman sachs. he says, quote, i've been doing this 30 years and i have never seen markets like this. this is a molecule crisis. out of everything. i don't care if it is oil, gas, coal, copper, aluminum, you name it where out. so we're seeing mass shortages supply chain issues across the world outside of this hyper between ice hard money standard here. now salvador, there's no shortage of love, no shortage of hope. and no shortage of good time. right?
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a molecule crisis, shortages of everything, every commodity running into shortages, which of course would mean supply line disruptions and inflation and food and security. we're seeing food back to those historic guys back in 2011. but more importantly, as you allude to their since $971.00, when the world went on a fee on money standard, everybody, every entrepreneur, every business man, every country in the world has gotten addicted to mal investment has gotten addicted to non melody. and the idea that every single problem can be cured by simply printing more money. and now we're at a point where all of the mal investment and all that waste has now resulted in a molecule crisis, as is discussed in this report, which is predictable. and it's also irreversible. if you recall about 2 years ago, 3 years ago,
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perhaps maxima here in kaiser report mentioned that the laws of economic physics had been disturbed that the time space continuum had been disturb. so the molecule, of course, is down to the mass levels and now mass enter the equation where there's a crisis, a mass. so the time space continuum was when we had the crisis and negative interest rates, we saw the negative interest rates around the world. negative real rates deeply negative in the united states, deeply negative it across europe. we have a negative price of energy. when oil prices went negative a few years ago during the early days of the financial crisis of the latest one, right? when us drove the, which is an e t f based on forward contracts, they went negative. so we've already had all sorts of economic disturbances because of the non south intervention through command and controllers in the world. so they're losing control of time, space and molecules right now. that's
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a good point. why would albert einstein say if both the time and the mass and velocity were all subject to the pull up euro over there at the federal reserve bank, who doesn't seem to think physics matters, doesn't understand the possible scarcity. and the rock model is needed to run the economy and then believe in the magic money tray of m m t. right? so here we are. as you point out, we already went through the crisis where time not only had no value, but it had negative value with negative interest rates and a negative price royal. we're having a crisis in the molecular structure of the economy where a molecules. busy are running scarce in the ra commodities that fuel the basic economic activity around the world. and this will set up an incredibly dangerous time. it's dangerous because like when you're flying in an airplane, you're supposed to be able to, if you're flying at night or into fog or into bad weather,
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you have to be able to read the instruments, right? because otherwise, you can't tell if you're flying up or down or where you're going like you have no sense of it. so that is to say with, when they keep on it as a poll, it bureau as a sort of, you know, command in control of the price of money. what they've done is they, there's no bearing. there's no horizon that they know how to focus on any longer. so if they started like tweaking a little bit in the beginning, they're so off course now that they don't know what is up and what is down, that's why though we're in an ongoing financial crisis in the world, it feels like we're going up. it feels like we're flying up because markets are going higher because commodity prices are going higher because property prices are going high. so they feel like it's good times, but actually you're crashing straight into the ocean. the federal reserve bank, the european central bank, and the bank of japan. i've created essentially
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a bermuda triangle of money, where the economy flying through. there is still quick version of no 0 price discovery. create utter chaos, and that's where we're at now. that's where we're at now, but you know, here in el salvador, we aren't there because we're already on a hard money center. we're on the big coin standard. and i want to show you this tweet. we're gonna turn to a clip in a moment, but this is from jack dorsey, formerly of twitter, abandoned twitter, and now he's looking so much better because he's abandoned twitter and he's full time on bitcoin over at square cash up by here as quote, a big part of the future is happening in el salvador. that's why max and i are here because they're still a future because time still has value here because of the big standard. because as you've been kelly figuring that out and putting this nation on a big one standard, he with jack dorsey was speaking to michael sayler of micro strategy. and here's a clip of what he said. you know, what makes the claim even more acceptable,
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especially to smaller sellers. so certainly makes it more convenient to individuals because they don't have to wait for a transaction time. so there's, you know, it's 10 minutes and, you know, we're, we're getting an opportunity to see a grand experiment at scale. and also we're where you have a closed loop because i could wait. and i, i think, you know, we're offering to better lightning to better decline and about wisconsin. this open monetary system. and i think those lessons will be very important to us. we continue to scare us around. well, you know that, that famous a, quote, the future is already here. it's just not even the distributor, but part of the future happening. and so, and so i would all right now it's not even the distributed around the world on
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little by little. it will be, it may not be this the manifestation that we see right now. but the spirit of it is this probably going to rhyme with what we see in other countries and certainly in the future, right. the future is now here in el salvador. i mentioned albert einstein a moment ago, and he was featured prominently in a very famous advertising campaign by apple computer put together by steve jobs called thank different than a teacher, remarkable, visionaries and thinkers throughout history. i think of that and we're done today. you would have to do a president g. kelly would be part of that, and he is a world class visionary and thinker like an einstein or a martin luther king or an amelia earhart or a steve jobs. and that's why this country is a growth is skyrocketing and people just are desperate to move here and be a part of this revolution. the point is that the future is now it's right here and
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it's happening and it's being evenly distributed. that's the thing that between does what maximize here in kaiser for i've been doing for over 10 years, is covering the unequal distribution of the paper. money being printed non stop this whole time since the crisis that began in 2008 max and i started here in 2009, we've been covering this money printing and the distribution of it as sent us back to the stone ages. literally we have shortages, we have commodities shortages, we have a crisis, and molecules, we have a time space continuum has been ripped apart. so that's what all their money printing and the distribution of it being so unevenly distributed to the very, very, very top to the few families that run the world. so you know that the very, like the waltons, right, the wal mart family. if you look at the top 20 wealthiest americans like half of them, or just one family. so the point is that that's over in the future is here now,
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and it could be a brighter future if you come down here and you move here rather than say in this place outside here, there's the time space continuum and the frank fabric of material, the material world is disintegrating. yeah, i mean you're putting it in very start terms as if we are heading into a black hole in being spaghetti fi. and the, with the space time continuum ceases to be. molecules are in short supply, and there are millions of people desperate to move to el salvador. this is not what people had on their 2022 bingo card. but yet here we are. and so also like outside this hyper bitcoin ised world where there's hope and the future and love like there's the just the fund and the fear mongering of the nonstop disintegration of the fee out world. and that's is that we have here at the headline from the economist magazine as long as bitcoin and its ilk are decentralized. the ability of
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far right groups to use them will remain. so that's the economist magazine funding bitcoin. now here's what michael sailor responded to that the same thing could be said of earth, air, fire, and water. we're all humans, we're honest, one planet we share, we all, they breathe the air, they see the sunshine they, they feel the serve, you know, get over it. bitcoin is here and it's real and it's all around us. right. read an interesting perry of journalism. if you can call it that, so the economists, they seem to just simply take their worst human atrocities that they can remember and whatever they don't lie, they put an equal sign between stuff they don't like without an investigation. the economist is never written about big going, they've never looked in the big line. they've never had anything intelligent to say about they find, but they don't like it because a challenge is the bank of england, they're paying master. so they say big coin something they know nothing about
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equals the devil. ok, that's their journalism, that's they call journalism and it, but we see this all over the world now in the united states and britain, and there is a very, very little journalism lot except for shells like joe rogan. but that's why he wants to be taken off the air because he's doing journalism, which costs the actual time and money. the economist is just the rubber stamping propaganda. they don't actually do any work for their garbage. there's also to show, aside from joe rogan experienced this off, so the kaiser report experience. and i also want to quickly read another response to the economist, which is true, of course, from brand b t c. and he says, i think this is implying far right groups can't currently use the u. s. dollar or cash. exactly. so forget that, that's fun, that's over we've. we've debunked that right here right now. and one more thing that jack dorsey said in this interview with michael sayler at st. mike, a strategy that i really picked up on. i thought it was a great way to say it is. he said that between changes you every single day for the
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better, like it just keeps making you changing your mindset. yes, exactly, and the. 3 time it's a spin on the quote that you don't change bitcoin, bitcoin changes you along with other quotes from max kaiser, available in book form called the book of mac search for it online and get your copy today. it's in english and it's in spanish. if you want to know why all these people sound so smart, read the book back because that's kind of like where all the smart stuff was said years ago by yours truly max geyser. yes, we're actually going to be delivering a copy of that to the president about salvador so he can try to understand the minor max. oh, but i also finally in the last 45 seconds here, i do want to cover one thing that was on the drive out here to i was wanting back from san salvador where we were for the past week. we can have, you know, just to show the mindset and the, the, just the different sort of world here versus in the disintegrating world filled
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with death, despair, and lack of hope and no, and the price of the molecules. well, here's max tweeting, road surfing, and als on day. so i just think it's a wonderful photo because it feels like what we use that we grew up with. and when america was great, before i remember make america great. again, that's how we grew up in the 1970s. we used to ride in the back of a pickup truck standing up, but you know, we don't have that sort of tolerance for risk anymore. we don't have time here in el salvador for the carrots. no guarantee on el salvador, i just got to get work done. so you're going to getting work done. we're going to take a little break. but when we come back, much more coming your way with them is composed of many different surplus. you know, such as a visceral
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who is an idea of using a fine reactor with aah. algorithm. so neural networks have been following us everywhere. we look online because our relationships are what matters most us. and that's how we find meeting
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and how we make sense. um, are place in the silicon valley see, don't mention in that slick presentations. however, the ghost workers who train the software humans are involved in every step of the process when you're using anything online. what we're sold, as is, miracle of automation behind your screen is loanable workforce that feeds algorithms for next to nothing. on a very good day, i can do $5.00. now. a really bad day. i could do $0.10. now. these workers are invisible by design. it's about labor costs, but it's also about creating layers of lesson responsibility between those who solicit this kind of work and need it, and those who do it. and the me welcome back to the guys report. i'm
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guys are time now to turn to josh young of new story charity here in the well, salvador josh, welcome take you. it's a pleasure to be on. alright, so i met you a few weeks ago near san salvador. when you turned over the keys to new homes that your organization built for low income families. now before we discuss that, i would tell us about new story. what exactly is it? when does your story begin? yeah, sure. so new story is a non profit charity set up to do profits differently. so new story is twofold. a new story for families who are beneficiaries, the poems, like you saw, and then a new story for nonprofits, upgrading with 100 percent transparency and knowing exactly where your money is going and working at a high level and innovation, which is different from most nonprofits. our mission is to pioneer solutions and global homelessness. right. so i know how did you get in involved in that? yeah, so i joined new story at the very beginning of the pandemic. i met brett hagler,
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our ceo in the atlanta, literally the day before they closed office. i had been accepted to harvard grad school, so i was about to go there when i was just really moved by the mission at the same time in parallel. but apple tv documentary that new story was featured in just got released 3 d printed homes in mexico. and prior to seeing new story, i've always had a bleeding heart, but also wanted to excel at the highest level. so i usually precluded me from joining a non profit full time, but seeing a new story, operating like a for profit, like startup company, really motivated me to give it a swaying and like i would hit it off with right right away. and then they went into hiring for but we both kind of took a risk on each other. i declined going to harvard grad school and he hired me in
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the middle of a very uncertain time. but because it was such a pivotal moment, really in the world of not nobody really knowing what was going on, everybody's losing their jobs, a lot of chaos within that chaos. there was also a unique opportunity to lead and to love. so i wanted to do that right on the front lines, doing impactful work. so i did decided to join the story and not be on the sidelines at grad school. right. so you describe yourself as a bleeding heart, but wanting to perform at the highest level. and which is an unusual combination and one that usually doesn't work because the 2 sometimes are mutually exclusive, right. and certainly the economy we live in, the hyper financial i hyper competitive world definitely is mutually exclusive.
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and this is to say no. 2 to harvard grad school seems i think a lot of people watching this would be, that seems crazy. right. because i mean, that's year farmer grad school is the step into the elite of, of our society where it's almost guaranteed to become ultra successful. so you're saying now i didn't do that, i went to el salvador to build low income housing. more or less. yeah. it's really, you're right. usually they are mutually exclusive and i'm going to brag on new story a little bit. i'm really proud to be a part of the organization. we were one of the 1st nonprofits to ever be accepted into y commentator. and for those listening, if you're not familiar, why commentator is the premier startup accelerator in the world operated on the same cisco, they produce companies like air b and b coined base door dash, a whole list of for profit companies that have gone on to the 1000000000 dollar
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1000000000 dollar company, nonprofit, new new story. yep. it was in the y carbonate or startup accelerator, b. c. yeah. you know, or set success in san francisco and. 3 so i guess dig into a little bit more so it's a non profit, but always how's the word? so, where structured completely differently from any non profit. i know we have to completely separate bank accounts and this is what initially got us except in and why commented or is one bank account is exclusively for home building costs, and then the other one is for our operational expenses. so we've been blessed have some really strong supporters that well, mostly wealthy individuals, some companies who donate directly to our operations. so they fund things like my
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salary, different events. we'll host innovations. we try so that we can promise that a 100 percent of old donors, all their money donated goes directly to families in need and building homes for those families. it's just a very unique setup and we call those families the builders. they are building new story alongside us and yes. ok. so you have to bank account. so $11.00 account is every dollar in that in that account goes 100 percent to the project of creating a new home. the other account is for salaries, administrative costs and things like that. yeah. and transparent and you can see exactly where your money is going. there's no question of what your fun things you've worked hard for. you are now giving to charity. you know exactly where that's going and where it's being put to use. ok. so let's talk about the sense avenue or the project which is in san salvador. i visited the project. there was
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home the minister of housing was there. yeah. and the keys were given to a family that was moving in to this new home. yeah. and so how many of these units now are have been, have been built or are planned to be built? yes, so in el salvador specifically, we've built almost a 1000 homes so far and we have plans to build many more just within this next year . we plan to build about $800.00 more homes in san salvador. and then we have a project specifically in l. dante, where we're using bitcoin one to fund the construction of the homes, and then 2 families will repay their, the principal of their loans. it's going to be no interest rate and a 100 percent of how much it costs for us to make it over a longer term period. so we'll basically charge families a very affordable rate,
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less than what they're paying in rent for inadequate housing. and they'll just have a 10 year term length where they pay the, the cost that it takes us to construct, which is really cheap because we do it in bulk. and we have all these different aid innovations that help us make it cheaper, completely funded by donations. we're a non profit and they pay over about 10 years at $60.00 a month for a total of $7500.00 roughly in our community. less than $10000.00 for sure. right, so. 2 and, and talking to the folks there at the project. so the families living there have a monthly commitment to this. plus they pay for electricity and they pay for water and all in all its at all these costs. and it's about half of the average income of a family in that area. right. housing cost less or 30 percent less than 25 percent . less than 25 percent. yeah that's, that's what we go towards and if families,
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so we have a target range of income at the base of the pyramid in need of housing and dirt, floors, tarp, roofs 10 walls. but they have some level of income. so we make a decision to basically sponsor these homes, give them a rate that's less than 25 percent or varies a little bit on family, depending on their income ranging from $250.00 a month to $500.00 a month. and those, those families will pay less than 25 percent of whatever their income is. and then if they, as their income increases, which we've seen in all of our communities, on average families increase their income after getting a house by 63 percent, which is pretty phenomenal, right?
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ok, they a more and then their term length goes down. they can acquire their house, they have full deed and property. after the end of their term, after they paid off their home and owning a home here and same salvador and owning your own land has been unheard of for decades. unless you were like a generational wealth family, there's no path to home ownership and the deal they own their homes. yes. and so you've taken really the approach of less study the market, let's say the income level for started the housing market. let's create a situation which is essentially a non profit yet, but if there is a real economics involved, there's not just donating house the people you're saying, given all the economics that we know, we can create a situation where you end up after 10 years on your home, and this is a business in that it is able to support itself on
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a minimalistic basis, the overhead, etc. so it's a real you may have taken a real startup approach. so yes, it's a y combination situation. yeah, more or less, right. and so they've come in and what have they been just providing capital or do they have some other other expertise that they're offering? yeah. why come any are decided to take out a bus where the 1st non profit they devoted resources to. so they donated to our overhead for a year, and then they also provided mentors and advice and all the different peer to peer connections. they're kind of with our peers. so air b and b would appear like these different companies. we were held to the same exact standard, they would help us that our goals, which would be just beyond what we could think of and that kind of started our model. one of our models, a new story is crazy until it's not so kind of like with my situation,
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passing on the harvard grad school, most people might think that's crazy. but now you're seeing all the different opportunities i'm having because i took a risk on a startup, essentially, even if not financially, like, there's so much opportunity to learn and to grow. that maybe outweighs harvard grad school. and we're gonna see about that have another segment to chat about those fascinating stuff. john, thanks bring i guys report. thank you for having me. all right, i was going to do this addition pass to report with may max taiser. like i guess josh young news story, charity is on next time. ah, ah, the mediterranean is the world's most proficiency unsustainable exploitation of its fish dogs, which maureen biodiversity under great thread,
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and your selection. again, the quote was for sure your guest on the system because our system i can continue to pull the cookie capital from with tech and want to put a loose despite the eas promises to end over fishing by 2020. the situation is changing too slow. well, i'm very disappointed with that they've basically no, in public interests. they also do know in the mid interest of officially the only interest of the fishery. moby on the face of the only ones in danger. the fishermen also at risk of losing or picking them up something before they get to them about that level. when i get them with buddhism viewership along. with
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sure with school, i'm disappointed that we seem to have dialogue between a meat and a deaf person. top russian and the british definitely maps up here, found no common ground on regional security concerns. i made escalating tensions over ukraine as they met for folks in moscow. mainstream media going into overdrive in their reporting on a ledge doping by a 15 year old russian focus capture the international olympic committee warning. it's a pure speculation why you know the size, the pandemic, why you would try to stigmatize canadians. why would you do this to a country that is already suffering and deeply damaged by so many it is a canadian prominence that takes a barrels of criticism for his aggressive stones.

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