Martin Armstrong: The 2020 Presidential Election Will Be The Most Violent In American History

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Martin Armstrong: The 2020 Presidential Election Will Be The Most Violent In American History

We have crossed the line. Violence and hate speech is now the normal. There is no tolerance for people to accept an opposing view.

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Therefore, if look at that timing, it would appear that 4.3 years from Trump swearing in on January 20th, 2017 brings us to 2021.354. If we throw in all the economic problems we see coming with pensions and a monetary crisis on top of all of that, I would not count of 2020 being a normal presidential election. It may be the most violent event in American political history.

Phantom Phixer: The Jesuits & The Sinking of the Titanic — a Cabal Murder of Elites Opposing its Central Banking Plans

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CHAPTER 5: THE SINKING OF THE TITANIC

Full text of chapter below the fold.

When we think of events that have transpired in history over the last one hundred to two hundred years, there are certain events that stand out as ones of great horror, great surprise and great sadness. Of the many that come to mind the most devastating have been the destruction of the the World Trade Center in New York City and the sinking of the Titanic.

The greatest tragedies in the last two hundred years can be traced to the Jesuits. We will now show that the Jesuits planned and carried out the sinking of the Titanic, and we will show why they did it.

Continue reading “Phantom Phixer: The Jesuits & The Sinking of the Titanic — a Cabal Murder of Elites Opposing its Central Banking Plans”

Stephen E. Arnold: Google Copyright Abusive Algrorithm — More #GoogleGestapo Madness

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Stephen E. Arnold

Google: Stomping Out Bad Music Types

Google has a lot of content to lord over. And with that responsibility comes the need to police that content when it is misused. Perhaps nowhere does this happen more often than YouTube. While they have clever tools for finding rule breakers, sometimes it fails. We learned more from a recent ARS Technica story, “Google: Sorry, Professor, Old Beethoven Recordings on YouTube Copyrighted.”

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Maybe the problem isn’t within the code of YouTube’s software, but rather its parent company’s loose attitude toward the topic. Take, for example, the time they recently tried to patent a public domain algorithm. We think that maybe the problem isn’t all digital, but the smash-and-grab mentality of Google.

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