A reader says Trump is a whore, but who pays the price?

Trump is paying the price for whoring himself out to the liberals in the 80’s.

Andy

We’re all paying the price. Trump is only controlled opposition to the liberal NWO. The Rothschilds and the synagogue of Satan banking cartel are keeping Trump afloat with his legal donations and it’s Rothschild money levitating his scam DJT stock holdings. Evidently, he has accumulated at least $50 million in donations this week alone in the wake of his politicized criminal conviction. Guess where much of that came from? It wasn’t from Joe six-pack.

Trump’s stake in the DJT social media mirage is now worth about $4.2 billion, yet his social media company lost $327 million last quarter. The total market cap of DJT is $8.6 billion. The firm even recently paid him out another $1.5 billion of stock for meeting certain incentives. What goals did he meet? DJT continues to burn through its cash reserves and has little to no revenue.

Emmanuel Goldstein would be furious if he found out how much the Rothschilds pay Trump to be the puppet for the unfolding political crisis and probable social unrest. The United States and the rest of the Western world is already being ruled by the synagogue of Satan’s INGSOC political party. The only people who don’t know yet are the voters who actually take all this manufactured “chaos” seriously.

I recall a much better world before the advent of the internet. Who says the Internet is the great equalizer? The people get poorer, sicker, and more stupid by the day.

Today’s “once saved, always saved” NT-only Christian crowd are a terrible embarrassment to the true church and are spoon-fed trivial falsehoods with their Google searches, which work to hone their deceived minds. Indeed, these last day Christians are referred to as the Laodiceans in the Bible, and most of them support Donald Trump as well as the Israel nation state, because they somehow believe the Jews are God’s chosen.

Take a look at Alex Jones’ X feed. Read the Cassandra pieces at Natural News. Listen to the podcasts of the rest of the self-censoring alt-media hucksters. There are no more “alternative” media left. Everything is controlled down to the finest detail.

I used to feel sorry for anyone who took these diversions seriously. The personal lives of most people have burned to the ground, yet they’re more concerned about things of little to no importance to them. Trump is paid handsomely to dismantle the Republican party and be the punching bag of the Democrats. Notice that no one else has to endure these types of legal struggles. That’s because Trump is paid to get into the kayfabe ring.

Trump is as liberal as they come. I lived in Manhattan during the ’80s and ’90s and grew up on Long Island. Trump’s comings and goings were continual Page Six fodder. He was friends with the Clintons and Bloomberg’s of the world. They all promote the false dichotomy of bioweapon injections and multi-trillion dollar fiscal deficits, while effectively supporting every social and banking Marxist plank of the synagogue of Satan. They all pray at the Wailing Wall and throw the true American legacy under the bus.

Believe me; while Trump profits, we pay the price for his whoring.

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7 thoughts on “A reader says Trump is a whore, but who pays the price?

  1. World Rate Paths Set to Diverge With ECB’s First Cut

    The European Central Bank (ECB) headquarters in Frankfurt, Germany.

    (Bloomberg) — The European Central Bank could open the door to a weaker euro on Thursday as its first interest-rate cut of the cycle puts the region on a divergent policy path from the US.

    With a quarter-point reduction all but certain, officials will finally embrace a widening in the difference between borrowing costs on either side of the Atlantic, the implications of which they’ve discussed for months.

    ECB policymakers led by President Christine Lagarde have insisted they’re comfortable plowing a separate furrow from the Federal Reserve, even if that risks a weaker currency that could stoke inflation.

    How tolerant officials will be is likely to loom large in their debate on further possible easing — even more so after recent reports hinted at lingering consumer-price pressures. Most recently, data on Friday featured an underlying inflation gauge that unexpectedly rose in May for the first time in a year.

    The ECB can already see how diverging policy prospects have begun to impact global markets. The euro has fallen to its weakest level against the pound in almost two years on the view that the Bank of England will lag the ECB in lowering rates.

    What Bloomberg Economics Says:

    “Bloomberg Economics forecasts a cut of 25 bps in June, and, after a pause in July, more reductions of the same size in September, October and December.”

    Bank of Italy Governor Fabio Panetta acknowledged on Friday that cutting borrowing costs poses a currency risk to prices, but added that tight US policy could also hurt global demand and thereby curb euro-area inflation.

    His Austrian colleague Robert Holzmann recently sounded more ominous, acknowledging that “the Fed with the dollar is, figuratively speaking, the gorilla in the room” for officials.

    Thursday’s decision will include quarterly forecasts that will be scrutinized for hints of future policy intentions, as will Lagarde’s press conference. Money markets for now are betting on two reductions in total this year, with a small chance of a third.

    Denmark’s central bank is likely to match the ECB move with a quarter-point cut of its own just hours after the euro zone outcome.

    Elsewhere, US payrolls and a suspenseful Canadian decision on a possible rate cut will be among highlights in the coming week.

    US and Canada

    In the wake of fresh US inflation and spending data, the government’s jobs report on Friday is expected to show show steady employment growth again in May. The median forecast in a Bloomberg survey calls for a 190,000 increase, a modest acceleration from the prior month.

    That would produce a cooling in average job growth over the most recent three months, adding to evidence that labor demand is softening. The unemployment rate, based on a separate survey of households, is projected to hold at 3.9%.

    Average hourly earnings are seen rising 3.9% from May of 2023, matching the prior month’s annual gain. While earnings growth is holding at a three-year low, worker pay gains remain stronger than before the pandemic.

    The Labor Department will also issue March job openings data on Tuesday, and economists project nearly 8.4 million vacancies — slightly lower than the prior month. Openings continue to ease as employers have greater success filling positions as the job market becomes more balanced.

    In addition to government data, the Institute for Supply Management will release results of its May surveys of manufacturers and services providers on Monday and Wednesday, respectively.

    Looking north, the Bank of Canada is in a position to soon begin an easing cycle. The country has seen four disinflationary reports in a row, and a report on Friday showed slower-than-expected economic growth as well.

    Economists and traders broadly expect the central bank to deliver a 25-basis point cut to its key policy rate on Wednesday. Still, there remains some uncertainty about how a cautious Governor Tiff Macklem and his policymakers will respond.

    Given that household consumption remains strong and job gains blew past expectations last month, they may wait for more data and kick off an easing cycle at the July 24 meeting instead.

    Asia

    Asia gets a slew of purchasing manager indexes on Monday.

    China’s Caixin manufacturing PMI is likely to show activity at small- and medium-sized enterprises continuing to hum along, with the gauge forecast to inch higher in May to mark a seventh month above the 50 boom-or-bust threshold. The services reading is also seen edging higher.

    Indonesia, South Korea, the Philippines, Taiwan and Vietnam get PMIs the same day.

    Figures on Wednesday are expected to show Australia’s economy grew a tad in the first quarter versus the previous period, in what would be the 10th straight expansion.

    Exports and inventories data a day earlier will give economists reference material to fine-tune their gross domestic product estimates.

    In Japan, corporate profits and capital spending numbers will provide a steer on how first-quarter GDP may be revised.

    Headline inflation may have slowed a bit in Indonesia in May. Statistics on consumer-price growth are also due from South Korea, Thailand, Taiwan and the Philippines.

    Real wages in Japan probably fell for a 25th month in Japan, a possible topic when Bank of Japan policy board member Toyoaki Nakamura speaks on Thursday.

    Elsewhere in central banks, the Reserve Bank of India is expected to hold its benchmark repurchase rate steady at 6.5% for an eighth straight meeting when the policy committee meets on Friday, as hotter-than-usual weather pushes back expectations for a pivot to rate cuts.

    The week ends with China’s May exports.

    While the ECB will take center stage, a slew of industrial numbers will also be released throughout the week.

    Italian and Spanish factory PMIs for May are released on Monday, while production numbers for April will be published in France, Spain and Germany, respectively, starting on Wednesday — offering clues on the health of the economy at the start of the second quarter. German factory orders and trade statistics are also due.

    On Friday, a gauge of wages — a key indicator studied by officials trying to gauge risks to inflation — will be released by the ECB.

    BOE policymakers will stick to a self-imposed quiet period with the election campaign under way before the UK’s July 4 general election.

    Turning south, Turkish officials hope that May inflation data on Monday will mark the peak, and that price growth will rapidly decelerate thereafter thanks to aggressive monetary tightening. Analysts surveyed by Bloomberg anticipate an outcome of almost 75% in May, up from 69.8% a month earlier.

    Other central bank decisions scheduled in the wider region include:

    On Tuesday, Ugandan officials are set to hike rates for a third straight meeting to support the shilling, which is under pressure because of a funding squeeze as the World Bank halts new financing over anti-LGBTQ legislation.

    A day later, neighboring Kenya is set to keep its key rate on hold to prop up its currency and monitor the impact of recent floods on food prices.

    Also on Wednesday, Poland’s Monetary Policy Council may keep its benchmark unchanged at 5.75%.

    On Friday, few economists predict an increase from Russia’s central bank but the outcome may be a close-run thing, with the possibility that officials could choose to deliver their first hike of the year.
    Latin America

    Mexico posts full-month and bi-weekly inflation reports, both currently running a bit above central bank forecasts. While a quarter-point interest-rate cut at Banxico’s next meeting on June 27 remains the consensus, it’s not a given.

    Chile’s economy accelerated sharply in the first quarter and analysts expect April GDP-proxy data out this week to show that the second quarter got off to a strong start as well.

    On the other hand, consumer prices are expected to drift higher in the near term, and the May print posted this week likely inched up from April’s 4% reading to just above the tolerance range.

    Brazil watchers will pay close attention to the central bank’s weekly Focus market readout, which over the last month has seen inflation expectations for 2024 to 2026 creep progressively higher above the 3% target.

    Central bank chief Roberto Campos Neto noted in May that inflation expectations have been rising steeply.

    On a more positive note, first-quarter output data for Brazil are all but certain to show Latin America’s biggest economy rebounding after stalling out in the second half of 2023.

  2. Yes indeed. There is no reason for any trial to be an in-your-face TV reality show. But Trump was a TV star long before he was a presidential candidate. One theory I read was that the TV show was preparing him for the public eye as part of his training to become the selected president. Because I believe presidents are not elected but selected. As for connecting the dots on the financial details I will leave that up to Mr. Stone who has a much better understanding of how it works than most.

    I am from a Russian Orthodox Christian family going back too many generation to count and it really surprises me how different Western Christianity is. Please understand that I don’t think I’m better than anyone else because I’m Orthodox. If anything, I am far worse because there is so much I don’t do. If I can say in a few words to make my point I will say this: If your Christianity is popular among the people you are doing it wrong.

  3. For your readers:

    Six-part series on Trump, sexual blackmail, the KGB, and Mossad. He is certainly controlled opposition—maybe the biggest of all time.

    1. https://fitzinfo.net/2016/10/29/trump-controlled-by-mossad/
    2. https://fitzinfo.net/2016/11/08/trump-controlled-by-the-mossad-part-ii/
    3. https://fitzinfo.net/2016/11/19/trump-controlled-by-the-mossad-part-iii/
    4. https://fitzinfo.net/2018/05/13/trump-controlled-by-mossad-part-iv/
    5. https://fitzinfo.net/2018/06/03/trump-controlled-by-mossad-part-v/
    6. https://fitzinfo.net/2020/10/27/trump-controlled-by-kgb-mossad-part-vi/

    It seems this “conviction” is a charade to boost his waning popularity with his former base. Since he doesn’t have the retarded pizzagate narrative and anti-Hillaryism to rely on like the first time around, this is the synagogue’s best tactic, which is pretty desperate and pathetic looking.

  4. Well stated. Trump is nothing but a Rothschild Cut Out who sold his soul decades ago.
    Most people have short term memories. Me….I remember clearly who he was. Nothing about him has changed.

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