Showing posts with label Repeal PRWORA Project. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Repeal PRWORA Project. Show all posts

Monday, July 26, 2021

The Antislavery Campaign by the Unknown Soldier of America

The Commemoration of the National Security Act of 1947 by the Unknown Soldier of America


Antislavery Campaign of 2021. The Commemoration of the National Security Act of 1947 by the Unknown Soldier of America.

Monday, the 26th Day of July 2021. I am dedicating this Day of my life to the Antislavery Campaign of 2021, the Repeal PRWORA Project, the Great Awakening Movement. I will not wrestle or struggle against people but, I will confront spiritual wickedness in highest places.

My claims about my CIA Connection would not be validated or verified by the United States, India, or Tibet while none of these parties can refute the fact of my existence. I designate myself as ‘the Unknown Soldier of America’ for I am trained by a professional army and served to defend the US security interests without obtaining an Identification Document issued by the US. I voluntarily chose to serve in the Army to defend Freedom, Democracy, Peace, Justice, and Human Rights.
Antislavery Campaign of 2021. The Commemoration of the National Security Act of 1947 by the Unknown Soldier of America.

On the 26th Day of July 1970, I started my military training to participate in the CIA’s Secret War in Occupied Tibet. In the man’s plan, I exist as a mere pawn used in War on Communism, the legacy of the Cold War Era of Geopolitics. What is God’s Plan for my life?

On Monday, the 26th Day of July 2021, I confess that I have not arrived at the destination of my life. I continue to struggle for my personal freedom and human rights. I continue to wrestle against the dark forces keeping Tibetans away from freedom.

Antislavery Campaign of 2021. The Commemoration of the National Security Act of 1947 by the Unknown Soldier of America.

On this day, July 26, 1947, President Harry Truman signed the National Security Act that set up the Central Intelligence Agency. The Cold War Era secret diplomacy shaped the course of my life that began in Mylapore, Madras, Chennai. My Life’s Journey from Mylapore to Chakrata, Uttarakhand and later to Ann Arbor, Michigan is a direct consequence of my CIA Connection destined on July 26, 1970.

Antislavery Campaign of 2021. The Commemoration of the National Security Act of 1947 by the Unknown Soldier of America.

I was granted Short Service Regular Commission in the Indian Army Medical Corps in the rank of Lieutenant on July 26, 1970. On completion of my military training, I received the promotion, the substantive rank of Captain with effect from July 26, 1971. My first posting of Military Service sent me to Special Frontier Force, Headquarters Establishment No. 22/Vikas Regiment, Chakrata in support of the CIA’s Mission in South Asia. I describe “My CIA Connection” as ‘Kasturi-Sarvepalli-Mylapore-Madras-India-Tibet-US Connection’.

Antislavery Campaign of 2021. The Commemoration of the National Security Act of 1947 by the Unknown Soldier of America.

On July 26, 1986, I left Muscat, Oman to arrive in the United States in search of the Final Destination of my Life.

Antislavery Campaign of 2021. The Commemoration of the National Security Act of 1947 by the Unknown Soldier of America.

On Monday, July 26, 2021, I live in Ann Arbor, Michigan still hoping to arrive at the Final Destination of my Life. My CIA Connection may either sanction Slavery in the United States or imprisonment in the Enemy’s Camp.

Rudra Narasimham Rebbapragada
Special Frontier Force-Establishment No. 22-Vikas Regiment

Antislavery Campaign of 2021. The Commemoration of the National Security Act of 1947 by the Unknown Soldier of America.

July 26th, 2021. This Day of my life. My CIA connection was made possible because of the Cold War Era secret diplomacy to wage war against Communism.

This Day in My Life – July 26 – My CIA Connection. God’s Calendar predestined meeting between Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru and the US President Harry Truman. Cold War History. War on Communism.

President Harry S. Truman signs the National Security Act, which becomes one of the most important pieces of Cold War legislation. The act established much of the bureaucratic framework for foreign policy making for the next 40-plus years of the Cold War.

Antislavery Campaign of 2021. The Commemoration of the National Security Act of 1947 by the Unknown Soldier of America.

July 26th, 2021. This day of my life. My CIA connection is made possible by President Harry Truman’s war against Communism.

This Day in My Life – July 26 – My CIA Connection. God’s Calendar predestined events of my Life’s Journey From Mylapore, Madras to Ann Arbor, Michigan. Thanks to US President Harry S. Truman’s War on Communism.

Antislavery Campaign of 2021. The Commemoration of the National Security Act of 1947 by the Unknown Soldier of America.

July 26th, 2021. This day of my life. My CIA connection is the product of The Cold War Era geopolitics.

This Day in My Life – July 26 – My CIA Connection. Cold War Era History. God’s Calendar predestined events of My Life’s Journey From Mylapore, Madras to Ann Arbor, Michigan. Thanks to US President Harry S. Truman’s War on Communism.

Antislavery Campaign of 2021. The Commemoration of the National Security Act of 1947 by the Unknown Soldier of America.

July 26th, 2021. This Day of my life. My CIA connection promises to impose either slavery in the US or imprisonment in the Enemy’s Camp. Man’s plan vs God’s plan will decide the ultimate outcome.

This Day in My Life – July 26 – My CIA Connection. In Man’s Plan, I exist as mere Pawn used in War on Communism, Legacy of Cold War Era Geopolitics. What is God’s Plan?

Antislavery Campaign of 2021. The Commemoration of the National Security Act of 1947 by the Unknown Soldier of America.


Antislavery Campaign of 2021. The Commemoration of the National Security Act of 1947 by the Unknown Soldier of America.

Antislavery Campaign of 2021. The Commemoration of the National Security Act of 1947 by the Unknown Soldier of America.
Antislavery Campaign of 2021. The Commemoration of the National Security Act of 1947 by the Unknown Soldier of America.

Antislavery Campaign of 2021. The Commemoration of the National Security Act of 1947 by the Unknown Soldier of America.


Antislavery Campaign of 2021. The Commemoration of the National Security Act of 1947 by the Unknown Soldier of America.



Antislavery Campaign of 2021. The Commemoration of the National Security Act of 1947 by the Unknown Soldier of America.

Antislavery Campaign of 2021. The Commemoration of the National Security Act of 1947 by the Unknown Soldier of America.

Antislavery Campaign of 2021. The Commemoration of the National Security Act of 1947 by the Unknown Soldier of America.

Antislavery Campaign of 2021. The Commemoration of the National Security Act of 1947 by the Unknown Soldier of America.



Antislavery Campaign of 2021. The Commemoration of the National Security Act of 1947 by the Unknown Soldier of America.

Antislavery Campaign of 2021. The Commemoration of the National Security Act of 1947 by the Unknown Soldier of America.


Saturday, April 18, 2020

EQUAL JUSTICE UNDER LAW. THE BATTLE AGAINST THE CORONAVIRUS DISEASE

NATURAL LAW vs MAN-MADE LAW. THE ECONOMIC IMPACT OF THE COVID-19 Natural Law vs Man-Made Law. The Economic Fallout of the COVID-19. Natural Law vs Man-made Law: The United States is governed by its supreme law called the Constitution of the United States of America which is founded on the principles of Natural Law. December 19, 1998. President Clinton was impeached for the wrong reasons. His presidency can be described as ‘The Clinton Curse’. In 1996, the US President Bill Clinton signed into Law the Welfare Reform Act popularly known as PRWORA. This man-made law divides the US workforce into two categories. 1. The native workers, and 2. the alien workers. The alien workers may use a Personal Identification Number (PIN) or Individual Taxpayer Identification Number (ITIN) to pay all taxes just like the native workers. However, they are not entitled to receive any of the public fund benefits. According to the IRS, in 2015, 4.35 million people paid over 13.7 billion in net taxes using an ITIN. ITIN holders are not eligible for all of the tax benefits and public benefits that U.S. citizens and other taxpayers can receive. Natural Law vs Man-Made Law. The Economic Fallout of the COVID-19. We cannot speak about the impact of COVID-19 in the US using universal terms. The impact is modified by man-made law. This unjust and unfair treatment of alien workers is a sinful action. The US may spend $2 trillion and more to blunt the attack by COVID-19. Because of the unfairness driving the country’s response, the nation may fail to reap the blessings of the LORD God Creator who made the man in His own image. “We are far more connected with one another than we previously thought—not just because our jobs are connected with one another, not just because the value chains are spread throughout our countries, but because our lives are built in connection with one another. COVID-19 is dangerous because it exploits how close we have all become.“ COVID-19 is dangerous because it does not recognize the Man-Made Law. I demand Equal Justice Under Law. Rudra Narasimham Rebbapragada Special Frontier Force-Establishment No. 22-Vikas Regiment Natural Law vs Man-Made Law. The Economic Fallout of the COVID-19. COVID-19’S HISTORIC ECONOMIC IMPACT, IN THE U.S. AND ABROAD As the epicenter of the coronavirus outbreak shifts from Italy to the U.S., SAIS Europe’s Filippo Taddei discusses the economic fallout Americans should brace for ByHub staff report / Published 2 days ago More than 2.1 million people around the world have become infected with COVID-19, and more than 140,000 people have died from the disease. The United States, now approaching 650,000 infections, is the new epicenter of the outbreak. But as U.S. officials rush to contain the spread of disease, the federal government is also grappling with the dramatic—and unprecedented—toll the epidemic has had on the economy. In four weeks, 22 million Americans have filed for unemployment benefits. Technical glitches have prevented millions of Americans from receiving their stimulus checks from the U.S. Department of the Treasury. And the Small Business Administration, which supports U.S. entrepreneurs with loans and funding, has run out of money for its Paycheck Protection Program. In fact, there is no country in the world that can be held up as a model for both its economic and public health response to the coronavirus pandemic. For insights on how U.S. and European governments—and particularly Italy, the previous epicenter of the COVID-19 outbreak—have worked to contain the economic fallout from the global health crisis, the Hub turned to Filippo Taddei, a Johns Hopkins associate professor of international economics and a faculty member at SAIS Europe. The conversation has been edited for length and clarity. Over the past several weeks we’ve seen central banks around the world, particularly the European Central Bank and the Federal Reserve, move with extraordinary speed to shore up financial markets, but these efforts have not calmed volatility. Is there anything else for central bankers to do, or is this an economic crisis that can only be solved through public health measures? It is true that the size of the intervention is impressive. The size of the Federal Reserve’s intervention still remains higher than the ECB, and its promptness to act in the market has been much greater compared to the ECB. Perhaps this is not surprising since the ECB is a combination of the different central banks from EU member countries. The real difference between the Federal Reserve and the ECB is how timely they have been in their responses. The U.S. started very strongly with a “preemptive strike”-style intervention, announcing a rate cut outside of the usual standard monthly meeting. Conversely, the president of the ECB held the usual press conference following the monthly meeting of the bank board, but her language wasn’t clear on how much the ECB would act in order to combat the global shock from the pandemic. For central bankers, words often matter more than the actual money, so the wording of statements is crucial, especially at times like these. If we look at the uncertain start by the ECB and quick action by the Federal Reserve, in both cases the real difference is not about the money that central banks can put down, but rather how credible they can be to serve as an anchor against uncertainty. This is a concern for everyone right now—we have a great degree of uncertainty in how long this pandemic will last, and that’s fundamental, unfortunately. What we don’t want is to add an additional layer of uncertainty about policy. The additional uncertainty is whether our institutions, like the ECB and other central banks, are willing to support the financial sector to make sure that credit keeps on flowing to the real economy, no matter what. This is not as obvious as it might sound: banks hold a large amount of government debt in their balance sheet and, whenever government bonds come under pressure, the increase in their yields threatens the stability of the banking system. When the ECB president asserted that the central bank’s job is not to ensure that Euro Area countries’ debt trades at low rates, she said something true but self-defeating. During such an unprecedented situation, the last thing a central banker should suggest is that an essential part of private banks’ assets could suffer, hindering their ability to operate and extend credit. Facing an unconventional shock, poor messaging and language is a huge drawback—the central banks need to be clearer so that their language matches the extraordinary moment that we’re facing. The current economic crisis calls to mind the Great Recession of 2008 in terms of widespread damage, and some draw comparisons to the Great Depression of the 1930s. Do you feel these are accurate comparisons? Are there other precedents for what we’re experiencing, or is it a singular “black swan” event? I don’t think these are the right comparisons because both crises—the Great Recession and the Great Depression—were essentially demand shocks. What you do with a demand shock is standard macroeconomic policy, and even allowing certain mistakes, we saw in the response to the Great Recession how fiscal and monetary policies worked to alleviate a demand shock. This is something else. This is supply shock. Here, everything was functioning as normal, but as COVID-19 intensified, bringing thousands and then tens of thousands into the health system, we have decided to shut down the economy. This was because governments discouraged and then prohibited people going to work. If you think about it, supply is the measure of what we collectively produce, but the virus caused a sudden contraction of the labor supply. This has then caused a loss of confidence that resulted in a demand shock, too, but it’s a spillover, an indirect effect due to a fundamental contraction in our ability to produce goods and services. When you face a supply shock, policies like those used during the Great Recession work, but only in containing the secondary shock to people’s confidence, the demand shock. It’s important to respond on the fiscal and monetary fronts. What’s really key is that we don’t add additional shocks on top of the initial crisis that is having such a severe effect on our ability to work and produce. If you want to compare the current crisis to something that happened in the past, a better comparison is the oil shock and energy crisis during the 1970s and early 1980s. The sharp increase in the price of oil made the production and transportation of goods a lot more expensive, hindering productive capacity as is going on right now. In the United States, relief efforts were initially stymied by a lack of consensus on how to allocate resources between working people and industry. How have EU countries navigated this tension, and are there lessons for U.S. lawmakers on crafting an effective stimulus response? When you compare the policy situations in the EU and U.S., keep in mind that the EU is much more gradual in its adjustment. The U.S. is a country of choice and action, where things that seem unmovable before a crisis are suddenly thrown into flux—like the agreement on a $2 trillion stimulus bill. The EU is much more gradual in its approach. While the economic shock is common to all nations, it is not undertaken uniformly. So, what we’ve seen in Europe is an increasingly stricter response on the health front and an increasingly stronger economic support across the continent, but always undertaken in a gradual fashion. Europe, and Italy in particular, can serve as a point of observation: if you are too gradual in your response, you run the risk of COVID’s course being worse than it might have otherwise have been. Really, Italy’s response made sense in the face of an unknown scenario, but perhaps we could have learned a little bit better from the events and responses in Asia. The clear message from our experience is that you need to intervene as swiftly and uniformly as possible. In light of the experience worldwide, one major concern for the U.S. is that different states are acting in different ways in trying to contain the virus. What are the primary risks for Italy, other EU countries, and the U.S. as the economic crisis precipitated by COVID-19 continues? Global productive capacity has shrunk severely and abruptly as a consequence of lockdown and some needed equipment, like ventilators, is in short supply. In normal times, the economy would quickly adjust by reallocating its workforce through new investments. This is simply impossible when people can’t effectively work due to the outbreak. As overall production of goods and services is reduced, government action ensuring capacity to contain the epidemic as quickly as possible is justified if we want to bring people back to work. This type of policy action makes sense, and the crucial matter is to identify what is the most effective level of authority needed to aggressively address the outbreak. In any case, whether in the U.S. or in Europe, trying to convert production into what is immediately needed to end the outbreak is appropriate. Italy has been encouraging this industrial conversion extensively as well, and so have other countries in Europe. There are different cases of companies that have started producing respirators, masks and protective garments, and other helpful medical supplies. If we want to think of the long-term consequence of the COVID crisis, we should focus on public debt. The Great Recession left us with a legacy in the U.S. and EU of greatly expanded government debt. We think of the Great Recession as a temporary shock that we recovered from but now, as we look at the current crisis, we will be increasing government debt greatly compared to GDP. This is a legacy that will remain for a long time and will pose very pressing policy questions. As we think about the future of advanced economies, in the U.S. and Europe, we have to ask ourselves how we will be dealing with a level of government debt that will exceed, as a share of GDP, the amount we had at the end of WWII. Our management of this new massive debt through the policy response in the aftermath of the crisis will shape our society determining the economic balance between generations, the actual opportunities for future generations, and the technological disruption and transformation that was already in place before this outbreak. COVID-19 has had an unprecedented impact on labor, with the U.S. Treasury Secretary estimating that unemployment could reach 20% in the U.S. What are the long-term impacts, both in Europe and in the United States, of such severe unemployment? We have to be careful not to pay too much attention to the unemployment rate alone as the crisis is also generating substantial underemployment: a large share of the workforce is not able to work as much as they could or wish. In Italy, to give you a sense of the labor situation, only somewhere between 40-50% of the labor force is able to work as efficiently as before. That means that between 50-60% of our workers are either working remotely or not working at all. It’s an unprecedented change in peace time, affecting everyone, not just the Italian economy. There’s a large body of literature on the long-term consequences of unemployment, even when due to a short-term shock. When people lose their jobs, the long-lasting effects are not just on their income. Unemployment has a negative effect on workers’ skills and education, even on their health—people who are unemployed become sicker. Your human capital, the skills of your country’s workforce, decay over time because of the loss of jobs. To mitigate this, the Italian government is doing all it can to keep people as attached to their jobs as possible by preventing companies from enacting layoffs. In order to achieve this objective, short time compensation schemes—usually available only for large industrial firms—have been expanded to almost every sector and firm size. Through these schemes, the government pays reduced salaries, which allows employers to keep their employees without going bankrupt. In the U.S. these schemes exist in more than 20 states but the country is less equipped in this dimension. U.S. workers experience a quicker turnover: they are laid off more often but then re-hired more quickly compared to the EU. The current scenario is different, though, from the usual business cycle because the current shock could discontinue many of these businesses altogether. What governments need to do at the moment is try to prevent the destruction of capital and desertification of existing businesses. Preventing employers from laying off people is likely to be in their and the economy’s best interest, even if they work very little, since this can help to better protect essential human capital. At the moment, the size of resources behind the relief package put in place by the U.S. government has surpassed the combined set of responses taken across Europe. In the United States, public health officials have looked to Italy to anticipate future scenarios. Do you think this is an apt comparison? What lessons can leaders in the United States and other nations learn from the strategies taken by the Italian government? Yes, it is a possibility, but there are a couple of lessons that Italy’s experience can provide in order to prevent or mitigate the outbreak we experienced. The first is relatively easy: you have to test widely without limiting your attention only to the people showing symptoms. When you test people, keep them separated applying as much social distancing as possible. The U.S., where health care triage is much quicker, plays at an advantage here. These protocols might be more effective right now in containing the spread of the virus. A concern that we have seen in Europe is that if you don’t implement a response nationwide, containing the virus will be much harder. The response might not need to be exactly the same everywhere in the country, but you must require coordination and quick scalability. The U.S. must avoid the same mistake we had in Italy and the rest of Europe: if you don’t provide a coordinated response to containment, including possible restrictions to the movement and actions of people, the outbreak will only get worse. Make no mistake: this is costly economically, because production contracts sharply across the board, but if you can contain the outbreak in a shorter period of time, you will most likely end up congesting hospital capacity, increase the death toll and, eventually, extend the length of the economic shock. We are far more connected with one another than we previously thought—not just because our jobs are connected with one another, not just because the value chains are spread throughout our countries, but because our lives are built in connection with one another. COVID-19 is dangerous because it exploits how close we have all become. Natural Law vs Man-Made Law. The Economic Fallout of the COVID-19.

The Biblical Perspective on the Coronavirus Disease

In Indian Tradition, we examine actions and behavior entirely on individualistic terms. The individual is held accountable for his own sinful or evil actions. I am examining the problem from the Biblical perspective. The Old Testament Book of Deuteronomy describes the duties and the responsibilities of national entities. It describes the LORD's Commandments to a national entity called Israel. For acts of obedience, the nation gets blessed and becomes prosperous. For acts of disobedience, the nation gets cursed and suffers. It gives several examples of the kinds of pain and misery that people may experience as consequences of a variety of curses that God promised. In my analysis, the Coronavirus Disease is an example of the curse that God promised for acts of disobedience. While I am always concerned about China's evil action in Tibet, I am now concerned about America's own actions that constitute disobedience of God's Commandments. Israel was given duties and responsibilities in the conduct of their national affairs. Those rules are applicable to all nations. These are not rules about religious worship. These are the rules about the administrative principles and values that must guide the governance of the nation. Most importantly, the LORD demanded the observance of the SABBATH tradition. It applies to all people including aliens and slaves who could be residing in the country. Apart from men, it applies even to farm animals, the trees, the plants, the fruit bearing trees that man may cultivate. The US is failing as a consequence of the disobedience of the LAW that God has instituted in very clear terms. Rudra Narasimham Rebbapragada Ann Arbor, MI 48104-4162 USA SPECIAL FRONTIER FORCE-ESTABLISHMENT NO. 22-VIKAS REGIMENT THE ECONOMIC FALLOUT OF THE CLINTON CURSE. THE UNITED STATES NEEDS THE BLESSINGS OF THE LORD GOD CREATOR The economic fallout of ‘The Clinton Curse’. The United States needs the Blessings of the LORD God Creator. I reviewed the opinions of nine global thinkers on the issue of the economic fallout of the Coronavirus pandemic. None of the nine global thinkers mentioned about the need for the Blessings of the LORD God Creator. In my analysis, no man, and no nation can ever hope to be self-reliant. Both the individual entity, and the national entity will only exist if and only if if the existence is granted by the LORD God Creator’s Mercy, Grace, and Compassion. Rudra Narasimham Rebbapragada Special Frontier Force-Establishment No. 22-Vikas Regiment The economic fallout of ‘The Clinton Curse’. The United States needs the Blessings of the LORD God Creator. How the Economy Will Look After the Coronavirus Pandemic THE CLINTON CURSE. THE RETURN OF ORIGINAL SIN. THE UNITED STATES IS CURSED TO RUN ITS GOVERNMENT WITH BORROWINGS FROM FOREIGN NATIONS. The pandemic will change the economic and financial order forever. We asked nine leading global thinkers for their predictions. BY JOSEPH E. STIGLITZ, ROBERT J. SHILLER, GITA GOPINATH, CARMEN M. REINHART, ADAM POSEN, ESWAR PRASAD, ADAM TOOZE, LAURA D’ANDREA TYSON, KISHORE MAHBUBANI APRIL 15, 2020, 5:10 PM BRIAN STAUFFER ILLUSTRATION FOR FOREIGN POLICY. The Clinton Curse. The United States needs the Blessings of the LORD God Creator. After many weeks of lockdowns, tragic loss of life, and the shuttering of much of the global economy, radical uncertainty is still the best way to describe this historical moment. Will businesses reopen and jobs come back? Will we travel again? Will the flood of money from central banks and governments be enough to prevent a deep and lasting recession, or worse? This much is certain: The pandemic will lead to permanent shifts in political and economic power in ways that will become apparent only later. To help us make sense of the ground shifting beneath our feet, Foreign Policy asked nine leading thinkers, including two Nobel-Prize-winning economists, to weigh in with their predictions for the economic and financial order after the pandemic. We Need a Better Balance Between Globalization and Self-Reliance by Joseph E. Stiglitz Economists used to scoff at calls for countries to pursue food or energy security policies. In a globalized world where borders don’t matter, they argued, we could always turn to other countries if something happened in our own. Now, borders suddenly do matter, as countries hold on tightly to face masks and medical equipment, and struggle to source supplies. The coronavirus crisis has been a powerful reminder that the basic political and economic unit is still the nation-state. The coronavirus crisis has been a powerful reminder that the basic political and economic unit is still the nation-state. To build our seemingly efficient supply chains, we searched the world over for the lowest-cost producer of every link in the chain. But we were short-sighted, constructing a system that is plainly not resilient, insufficiently diversified, and vulnerable to interruptions. Just-in-time production and distribution, with low or no inventories, may be capable enough of absorbing small problems, but we have now seen the system crushed by an unexpected disturbance. We should have learned the lesson of resilience from the 2008 financial crisis. We had created an interconnected financial system that seemed efficient and was perhaps good at absorbing small shocks, but it was systemically fragile. If not for massive government bailouts, the system would have collapsed as the real estate bubble popped. Evidently, that lesson went right over our heads. The economic system we construct after this pandemic will have to be less shortsighted, more resilient, and more sensitive to the fact that economic globalization has far outpaced political globalization. So long as this is the case, countries will have to strive for a better balance between taking advantage of globalization and a necessary degree of self-reliance. This Wartime Atmosphere Has Opened a Window for Change by Robert J. Shiller There are fundamental changes that happen from time to time—often during times of war. Though the enemy is now a virus and not a foreign power, the COVID-19 pandemic has created a wartime atmosphere in which such changes suddenly seem possible.Though the enemy is a virus and not a foreign power, the pandemic has created a wartime atmosphere in which fundamental changes suddenly seem possible. This atmosphere, with narratives of both suffering and heroism, is spreading with the disease. Wartime brings people together not only within a country, but also between countries, as they share a common enemy like the virus. Those who live in advanced countries can feel more sympathy with those suffering in poor countries because they are sharing a similar experience. The epidemic is also bringing us together in countless Zoom get-togethers. Suddenly the world seems smaller and more intimate. There is also reason to hope that the pandemic has opened a window to creating new ways and institutions to deal with the suffering, including more effective measures to stop the trend toward greater inequality. Perhaps the emergency payments to individuals that many governments have made are a path to a universal basic income. In the United States, better and more universal health insurance might just have been given new impetus. Since we are all on the same side in this war, we may now find the motivation to build new international institutions allowing better risk-sharing among countries. The wartime atmosphere will fade again, but these new institutions would persist. The Real Risk Is Politicians Exploiting Our Fears by Gita Gopinath Over only a few weeks, a dramatic chain of events—tragic loss of life, paralyzed global supply chains, interrupted shipments of medical supplies between allies, and the deepest global economic contraction since the 1930s—has laid bare the vulnerabilities of open borders.People may self-assess their individual risks and decide to curtail travel indefinitely, reversing 50 years of rising international mobility. If support for an integrated global economy was already declining before COVID-19 struck, the pandemic will likely hasten the reassessment of globalization’s costs and benefits. Firms that are part of global supply chains have witnessed firsthand the risks inherent in their interdependencies and the large losses caused by disruption. In future, these firms are likely to take greater account of tail risks, resulting in supply chains that are more local and robust—but less global. In emerging markets, whose embrace of globalization included a steady opening to capital flows, we risk seeing capital controls being reimposed as these countries scramble to shield themselves from the destabilizing forces of the sudden economic stop. And even as containment measures gradually come off worldwide, people may self-assess their individual risks and decide to curtail travel indefinitely, reversing half a century of rising international mobility. The real risk, however, is that this organic and self-interested shift away from globalization by people and firms will be compounded by some policymakers who exploit fears over open borders. They could impose protectionist restrictions on trade under the guise of self-sufficiency and restrict the movement of people under the pretext of public health. It is now in the hands of global leaders to avert this outcome and to retain the spirit of international unity that has collectively sustained us for more than 50 years. Another Nail in the Coffin of Globalization by Carmen M. Reinhart World War I and the global economic depression in the early 1930s ushered in the demise of a previous era of globalization. Apart from a resurgence of trade barriers and capital controls, an important explanation for this demise is the fact that more than 40 percent of all countries at the time entered default, cutting many of them off from the global capital markets until the 1950s or much later. By the time World War II ended, the new Bretton Woods system combined domestic financial repression with extensive controls of capital flows, with little resemblance to the preceding era of global trade and finance.Pandemic-induced recessions may be deep and long—and as in the 1930s, sovereign defaults will likely spike. The modern globalization cycle has faced a series of blows since the financial crisis of 2008-2009: a European debt crisis, Brexit, and the U.S.-China trade war. The rise of populism in many countries further tilts the balance toward home bias. The coronavirus pandemic is the first crisis since the 1930s to engulf both advanced and developing economies. Their recessions may be deep and long. As in the 1930s, sovereign defaults will likely spike. Calls to restrict trade and capital flows find fertile soil in bad times. Doubts about pre-coronavirus global supply chains, the safety of international travel, and, at the national level, concerns about self-sufficiency in necessities and resilience are all likely to persist—even after the pandemic is brought under control (which may itself prove a lengthy process). The post-coronavirus financial architecture may not take us all the way back to the pre globalization era of Bretton Woods, but the damage to international trade and finance is likely to be extensive and lasting. The Economy’s Preexisting Conditions Are Made Worse by the Pandemic by Adam Posen The pandemic will worsen four preexisting conditions of the world economy. They will remain reversible through major surgery but turn chronic and damaging absent such interventions. The first of these conditions is secular stagnation—the combination of low productivity growth, a lack of private investment returns, and near-deflation. This will deepen as people stay risk-averse and save more following the pandemic, which will persistently weaken demand and innovation. Second, the gap between rich countries (along with a few emerging markets) and the rest of the world in their resilience to crises will widen further.Economic nationalism will increasingly lead governments to shut off their own economies from the rest of the world. Third, partly as a result of flight to safety and the apparent riskiness of developing economies, the world will continue to be over-reliant on the U.S. dollar for financing and trade. Even while the United States becomes less attractive for investment, its attraction will increase relative to most other parts of the world. This will lead to ongoing dissatisfaction. Finally, economic nationalism will increasingly lead governments to shut off their own economies from the rest of the world. This will never produce complete autarky, or anything close to it, but it will reinforce the first two trends and increase resentment of the third. More Than Ever, the World Looks to Central Bankers for Deliverance by Eswar Prasad The economic and financial carnage wrought by the pandemic could leave deep scars on the world economy. Central banks have stepped up to the challenge by tearing up their own rulebooks. The U.S. Federal Reserve has bolstered financial markets with asset purchases and provided dollar liquidity to other central banks. The European Central Bank has declared “no limits” to its support of the euro and announced massive purchases of government and corporate bonds, and other assets. The Bank of England is financing government spending directly. Even some emerging-market central banks, such as the Reserve Bank of India, are considering extraordinary measures—all risks be damned.Central bankers, once considered cautious and conservative, have shown they can act with agility, boldness, and creativity. Fiscal stimulus by governments, on the other hand, has proved to be politically complicated, cumbersome to implement, and often difficult to target where the need is greatest. Central bankers, once considered cautious and conservative, have shown they can act with agility, boldness, and creativity in desperate times. Even when political leaders are unwilling to coordinate policies across borders, central bankers can act in concert. Now and for a long time to come, central banks have become entrenched as the first and main line of defense against economic and financial crises. They may come to rue this immense new role and the unrealistic burdens and expectations it will impose on them. The Normal Economy Is Never Coming Back by Adam Tooze As the lockdowns began, the first impulse was to search for historical analogies—1914, 1929, 1941? Since then, what has come ever more to the fore is the historical novelty of the shock we are living through. There is something new under the sun. And it is horrifying. The economic fallout defies calculation. Many countries face a far deeper and more savage economic shock than they have ever previously experienced. In sectors like retail, already under fierce pressure from online competition, the temporary lockdown may prove to be terminal. Many stores will not reopen, their jobs permanently lost. Millions of workers, small-business owners, and their families are facing catastrophe. The longer we sustain the lockdown, the deeper the economic scars, and the slower the recovery. The longer we sustain the lockdown, the deeper the economic scars, and the slower the recovery. What we thought we knew about the economy and finance has been radically disturbed. Since the shock of the 2008 financial crisis, there has been a lot of talk about the need to reckon with radical uncertainty. We now know what truly radical uncertainty looks like. We are witnessing the largest combined fiscal effort since World War II, but it is already clear that the first round may not be enough. There are few illusions about the unprecedented acrobatics that central banks are performing. To deal with the accumulated liabilities, history suggests some radical alternatives, including a burst of inflation or an organized public default (which would not be as drastic as it sounds if it affects government debts held by central banks). If the response by businesses and households is risk-aversion and a flight to safety, it will compound the forces of stagnation. If the public response to the debts accumulated by the crisis is austerity, that will make matters worse. It makes sense to call instead for a more active, more visionary government to lead the way out of the crisis. But the question, of course, is what form that will take and which political forces will control it. Many Lost Jobs Will Never Return by Laura D’Andrea Tyson The pandemic and subsequent recovery will accelerate the ongoing digitalization and automation of work—trends that have eroded middle-skill jobs while increasing high-skill jobs during the last two decades and contributed to the stagnation of median wages and rising income inequality.Many low-wage, low-skill, in-person service jobs, especially those provided by small firms, will not return with the recovery. Changes in demand, many of them accelerated by the economic dislocation wrought by the pandemic, will change the future composition of GDP. The share of services in the economy will continue to rise. But the share of in-person services will decline in retail, hospitality, travel, education, health care, and government as digitalization drives changes in the way these services are organized and delivered. Many low-wage, low-skill, in-person service jobs, especially those provided by small firms, will not return with the eventual recovery. However, workers providing essential services such as policing, firefighting, health care, logistics, public transportation, and food will be in greater demand, creating new job opportunities and increasing the pressure to raise wages and improve benefits in these traditionally low-wage sectors. The downturn will accelerate the growth of nonstandard, precarious employment—part-time workers, gig workers, and workers with multiple employers—leading to new portable benefits systems that move with workers and broaden the definition of employer. New low-cost training programs, digitally delivered, will be required to provide the skills required in new jobs. The sudden dependence of so many on the ability to work remotely reminds us that a significant and inclusive expansion of Wi-Fi, broadband, and other infrastructure will be necessary to enable the accelerating digitalization of economic activity. A More China-Centric Globalization by Kishore Mahbubani The COVID-19 pandemic will accelerate a change that had already begun: a move away from U.S.-centric globalization to a more China-centric globalization. The COVID-19 pandemic will accelerate a change that had already begun: a move away from U.S.-centric globalization to a more China-centric globalization. Why will this trend continue? The American population has lost faith in globalization and international trade. Free trade agreements are toxic, with or without U.S. President Donald Trump. By contrast, China has not lost faith. Why not? There are deeper historical reasons. Chinese leaders now know well that China’s century of humiliation from 1842 to 1949 was a result of its own complacency and a futile effort by its leaders to cut it off from the world. By contrast, the past few decades of economic resurgence were a result of global engagement. The Chinese people have also experienced an explosion of cultural confidence. They believe they can compete anywhere. Consequently, as I document in my new book, Has China Won?, the United States has two choices. If its primary goal is to maintain global primacy, it will have to engage in a zero-sum geopolitical contest, politically and economically, with China. However, if the goal of the United States is to improve the well-being of the American people—whose social condition has deteriorated—it should cooperate with China. Wiser counsel would suggest that cooperation would be the better choice. However, given the toxic U.S. political environment toward China, wiser counsel may not prevail. The Economic Fallout of The Clinton Curse. The United States needs the Blessings of the LORD God Creator. THE CLINTON CURSE vs UNIVERSAL BASIC INCOME Presidents' Day 2020. The Nation must wake up to the reality of the Clinton Curse. Presidents' Day 2020. The Nation must wake up to the reality of the Clinton Curse. In "American Gulag - Notice of Slavery Award" THE CLINTON CURSE - REPEAL THE WELFARE REFORM ACT TO REAP THE BLESSINGS OF GOD

Thursday, August 22, 2019

THE SUPERPOWER'S SUPER STRUGGLE TO SURVIVE THE DEBT TSUNAMI

THE SUPER POWER'S SUPER STRUGGLE TO SURVIVE THE DEBT TSUNAMI

Image result for debt tsunami

THE CLINTON CURSE-SUPERPOWER-SUPER STRUGGLE AGAINST DEBT

US President Bill Clinton Launched A ‘New Beginning’ On August 22, 1996, With A View To Balance The Budget Unfairly Targeting The Financial Contributions Made By The Hourly Wage Workers Toiling In The US. I Trace America’s Economic Downfall From That Day. The three dimensions of ‘The Clinton Curse’ are 1. Shrinking National Economy, 2. Growing Federal Budget Deficit, and 3. Steadily worsening Foreign Indebtedness.
US Deficit Estimated To Hit $1 Trillion For 2020, CBO Says Finance NowCNN — By Donna Borak, CNN

THE CLINTON CURSE. SUPERPOWER. SUPER STRUGGLE AGAINST DEBT.
THE CLINTON CURSE. SUPERPOWER. SUPER STRUGGLE AGAINST DEBT.
THE CLINTON CURSE. SUPERPOWER. SUPER STRUGGLE AGAINST DEBT. The Congressional Budget Office raised its estimate of the projected federal budget deficit Wednesday and is now predicting that the deficit will reach $960 billion for the 2019 fiscal year, which ends on September 30, and reach $1 trillion for the 2020 fiscal year.
The CBO had previously estimated an $896 billion deficit for 2019 and $892 billion for 2020.

  • The Treasury Department reported earlier this month that the US budget deficit has already hit $867 billion for the first 10 months of the fiscal year, an increase of 27% over this time last year. “The nation’s fiscal outlook is challenging,” said Phill Swagel, director of the CBO. “Federal debt, which is already high by historical standards, is on an unstainable course, projected to rise even higher after 2029 because of the aging of the population, growth in per capita spending on health care and rising interest costs.”
He added that to put spending on a sustainable course, “lawmakers will have to make significant changes to tax and spending policies — making revenues larger than they would be under current law, reducing spending below projected amounts, or adopting some combination of those approaches.”
The White House’s Office of Management Budget has run slightly higher numbers, predicting that the deficit will exceed $1 trillion for the entire fiscal year.
The country’s debt has been piling higher under the Trump administration in part due to a $1.5 trillion tax cut signed into law in 2017 along with a massive spending package passed by Congress. Adding to the amassing heap is a two-year budget deal, signed by President Donald Trump, set to raise government spending by hundreds of billions of dollars.
Trump pledged to eliminate the federal debt during the 2016 campaign.
“CBO projects that the recent budget deal will add $1.5 trillion, plus interest, to our rapidly growing debt over the next decade,” said Michael Peterson, CEO of the Peter G. Peterson Foundation in a statement. “That’s on top of an already unsustainable outlook driven by major structural factors like demographics and rising health care costs.”
The dismal economic forecast also comes as the President said his administration is weighing several tax cut proposals to help keep the economy moving. Doing so would only further reduce the government’s revenue and add to the country’s deficit.
“The recent budget deal was a budget buster, and now we have further proof,” said Maya MacGuineas, president of the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, in a statement. “Both parties took an already unsustainable situation and made it much worse. Debt is now going to grow to almost the size of the economy within the decade. If Congress keeps extending tax cuts, debt will likely exceed the size of the economy within the decade.
THE CLINTON CURSE – WHY THE UNITED STATES FAILED ON AUGUST 22, 1996?

The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
The Campaign to Repeal the Welfare Reform Act of 1996 is not about giving citizenship rights to non-citizens. It is about upholding the Supreme Law of the Land to abolish bondage, servitude, and slavery. The Reconstruction of America is not yet over. Slavery re-appeared in this Land in a new form and remains hidden or unnoticed. ‘The Clinton Curse’ explains as to why the United States failed on August 22, 1996. The Curse reveals the nature of The Beast that is waiting to overtake this nation.
THE CLINTON CURSE – THE BEAST IS WAITING TO OVERTAKE THE UNITED STATES

The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
WHERE IS PROTECTION FOR MAN DURING GOLDEN YEARS OF HIS LIFE? HOW TO SURVIVE THE CLINTON CURSE?

The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
THE GREAT AWAKENING MOVEMENT – SPIRITUAL WARFARE AGAINST THE CLINTON CURSE

The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
A NEW BEGINNING IN AUGUST 1996 TO BALANCE THE BUDGET – RECOGNIZE REALITY OF THE CLINTON CURSE

The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
PRESIDENT CLINTON’S NEW BEGINNING IN 1996.
ECONOMIC OPPRESSION OF ALIEN WORKERS

The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
On August 22, 1996, US President Bill Clinton (Democrat) signed into Law that reintroduced Slavery, Involuntary Servitude, Serfdom and Forced Labor in the pretext of making ‘A New Beginning’. Welfare Reform Act or Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act (PRWORA) is unjust and unfair for it violates Constitutional Law that defends the natural rights of all people living in the United States. All US taxpayers must be treated as equals for receiving retirement income benefits for which they paid taxes. President Clinton’s action constitutes a transgression of President Abraham Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation that saved US Non-Citizens or Aliens from the indignity of Slavery.

The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
EXPOSING THE CLINTON CURSE – TRAVESTY OF EMANCIPATION PROCLAMATION

The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
NATURAL LAW vs MAN MADE LAW – SLAVERY IS CONTEMPT OF OVER 600,000 AMERICANS WHO DIED BECAUSE OF SLAVERY

The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
US CONGRESS MUST DO THE RIGHT THING TO SAVE AMERICA FROM THE CLINTON CURSE

The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
I ask my readers to review 43-word 13th Amendment and tell me if those words still govern, rule, and operate the lives of all people, wage earners who perform labor paying taxes.
My readers should not be surprised if I describe the US Congress as “Slave Driver.” The reason for my claim is based on PRWORA enacted by the US Congress in 1996 that amended The US Social Security Act of 1935. This legal provision enacted by 104th US Congress is incorporated as Section 202(y) of the Social Security Act. It mandates that no Retirement Income benefits shall be payable to registered alien(non-citizen) taxpayers in the United States without showing proof of lawful residency as determined by the Attorney General. In my view, unexpired Employment Authorization Document (EAD) must not be demanded if a worker has attained full retirement age as determined by law.
Social Security Act, Section 202(y) violates the principle enshrined in those 43 words called the 13th Amendment. This 1996 amendment to the Social Security Act is fundamentally flawed for it is unconstitutional. It takes away the property rights (earnings, wages, and retirement income) of individuals who paid Federal, State, Local, Social Security and Medicare Taxes working in this country to attain full retirement age.
The Emancipation Proclamation issued by President Abraham Lincoln (Republican) in September 1862 came into effect on January 01, 1863 freeing slaves in all territory still at War with the Union. These slaves were not citizens of the Land and had no political rights of their own. In Law, Servitude or Slavery refers to the burden imposed upon the property of a person by a specified right another has in its use. Servitude involves labor in which the person who performs labor has no right to his earnings from labor. The Emancipation Proclamation specifically protects, defends, preserves and safeguards rights of aliens or non-citizens residing in the United States.
The amended Social Security Act unconstitutionally gives power to Social Security Administration to withhold the property (wages, earnings, monthly retirement income benefits) of alien workers who are not convicted by US Court of Law. In my analysis, The Social Security Act of 1935 amended in 1996 fails to uphold the US Constitution as the Supreme Law of this Land.

The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
I ask my readers to make the distinction between Social Security Tax and Monthly Retirement Benefit. The first represents the tax paid to the government and the second represents earning or wage entitled to a retired person to provide income and security during old age.

The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
The 150th Anniversary of the 13th Amendment
December 9, 2015.|Speaker Ryan’s Press Office
WASHINGTON – Earlier today, at a ceremony in Emancipation Hall of the United States Capitol Visitor Center, President Obama and leaders of Congress commemorated the 150th anniversary of the 13th amendment to the Constitution. Following are House Speaker Paul Ryan’s (R-WI) remarks at the ceremony, as prepared for delivery: The Thirteenth Amendment is just 43 words long. It is so short that, when you read it, you can almost miss the whole significance. You have to stop and remind yourself that 600,000 people died in the Civil War—600,000 died over 43 words. Or to be more precise, they died in a war that decided whether those 43 words would ever be written.
All said and done, President Clinton’s Evil Plan failed to resolve the problem of National Debt. The Repeal Movement exposes President Clinton’s contemptuous violation of Constitutional Principles of equal protection, equal justice and equal treatment under Law.

The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
US Social Security Administration must either obtain a criminal conviction or designate septuagenarian Senior Alien as “SLAVE” to withhold the payment of his monthly retirement income.

The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
President Clinton’s Slavery Law of 1996 tramples upon fundamental freedoms and human dignity entitled to all human beings without any concern for their country of origin or citizenship status.

The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
The US Congress can levy taxes but cannot deprive any person of Life, Liberty, and Property without due process of law. The United States Cannot Balance the Budget and cannot solve the problem of mounting National Debt without reaping the Blessings of God’s Promise. President Clinton’s tricks and gimmicks will utterly ruin and destroy the Nation for he failed to obey the LORD.

The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?
The Clinton Curse. Why the United States failed on August 22, 1996?

Ann Arbor, MI, USA


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