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The logical conclusion of right wing conservatism is Islam
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2023-01-30 at 8:16 AM UTCThey were the first ones to believe western secular education is evil and a society that separates Church and State is doomed.
Sharia law for all the western nations! fuck the secular WOKE crowd that wants to damn us all to evil and sin. Muslims actually want to live in peace with the jedis and only attack them in the middle east, the modern right NAZI LO)L GAS DA JEDIS FUYS deserves to be targeted for their aimless genocidal views.
The same ones crying about "christ" being removed from "christmas" and pay their taxes like a good goy to nice secular society.. Yup we have finally reached the point where this is the truth, inshallah
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2023-01-30 at 9:31 AM UTCThe far right cannot be differentiated from Sharia Law proponents.
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2023-01-30 at 9:49 AM UTC
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2023-02-10 at 1:04 AM UTCLeftist scum need to wake up to the truth of ALLAH
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2023-02-10 at 5:17 AM UTCListen up wastelanders, have you ever felt like your right-wing ideologies just aren't pure enough? Well, I have the answer for you - Right Wing Islam! Yes, you heard that right, this is the only true and pure form of right-wing thought, offering a perfect blend of conservative values and religious devotion. And what better way to show your devotion than converting to Islam and embracing the tenets of this great faith?
And, as if that weren't enough, you'll also get to enjoy the refreshing taste of Nuka-Cola while you do it! That's right, drink Nuka-Cola, the drink of the future, while you bask in the glory of Right Wing Islam! So why wait? Make the right choice and convert to Right Wing Islam today! And don't forget to grab a Nuka-Cola while you're at it!
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2023-02-10 at 5:20 AM UTCthat reminds me, Nasrallah's been strangely quiet over the period of the Iran attacks and the recent crackdowns on the Gaza Strip
I hope he's planning a surprise party -
2023-02-10 at 6:31 PM UTCThe author of this post has returned to nothingness
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2023-02-10 at 6:39 PM UTC
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2023-02-10 at 6:47 PM UTCAmen brudda keep those bitches inside, I don't wanna see that shit. I am tempted enough by the kike porn shoved down my throat as a white male
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2023-02-10 at 8:03 PM UTCIn the end, it really doesn't matter what religion you follow, because it only comes down to how you lived your life, what actions you took, what actions you didn't take, what good you did, what bad you did. On the day of judgement, the only thing that will matter is your history, and your current state of mind.
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2023-02-10 at 8:19 PM UTC
Originally posted by ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ In the end, it really doesn't matter what religion you follow, because it only comes down to how you lived your life, what actions you took, what actions you didn't take, what good you did, what bad you did. On the day of judgement, the only thing that will matter is your history, and your current state of mind.
thats such a western based thinking
is one half of the planets belief of death more correct than the other
which geometry is the right one 🔷🕋🔯☪️✝️⛩🕉☯
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2023-02-10 at 8:35 PM UTCOnly two meanings of death can be true.
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2023-02-10 at 9:02 PM UTC
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2023-02-10 at 9:03 PM UTC
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2023-02-10 at 9:31 PM UTCIn God we trust. Everybody else pays cash.
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2023-02-10 at 9:41 PM UTC
Originally posted by ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ In God we trust. Everybody else pays cash.
“Cash doesn’t crash”
To understand the value of cash, let’s unpack a metaphor which anti-cash advocates often use – that of the horse cart and the car. The insinuation is that those clinging on to cash are similar to the people who clung on to the out-of-date horse cart after the invention of the better, faster car. Eventually, though, horse carts became a thing of the past – and financial institutions want the same thing to happen with cash.
But this metaphor is problematic. While slow horse carts did get in the way of faster cars, cash doesn’t block cashless. A better metaphor is cash as a bicycle instead of a horse cart. Phasing out cash is like closing down bike lanes that run alongside roads – all in order to make more space for cars. But although bikes are slower, they’re also safer, don’t produce air pollution, and reduce traffic.
Back in the day, car manufacturers touted all the benefits of the new car while suppressing news of car accidents. The same is the case with banks and payment companies today – they’re all for promoting the speed and convenience of cashless, but you’ll never hear them promoting surveillance or cyberhacking.
And although cars and cashless are usually faster, this isn’t actually always the case. In fact, in our modern, congested cities, cycling can sometimes be faster and more effective than sitting in a traffic jam. The same can be said for cash. When communication systems are about to be jammed by weather events like hurricanes, people flock to withdraw “offline” cash, as it will never fail. Similarly, take the 2008 financial crisis. All over the world, huge lines were commonplace in front of ATMs because customers were afraid that their bank would be the next to fail. But “cash doesn’t crash,” as the saying goes.
Unfortunately, when economic, political, or climate crises strike in the future, it will be much harder for people to withdraw cash if current trends continue. One reason is the slow death of the ATM. British government data shows that between 2015 and 2020, the amount of ATMs shrunk by 24 percent.
This brings us to the class element of the war on cash – its usage is associated with working-class and minority groups. This makes sense, as these sections of society have most often been historically discriminated against by elite institutions like banks. For them, cash is an important way to participate in capitalist society while having some protection from exploitation.
Unlike a credit card that might put you into debt, cash is honest. So it comes as no surprise that cash helps working-class people save money. Ironically, studies from Visa itself show that people spend more with their card than with cash in various situations. At a family restaurant, for example, customers dole out 40 percent more money on average if they’re paying with card.
Cash is physical and tangible, and you can literally see it disappear as you spend it. Card companies, on the other hand, want us to spend more. The more we spend, the more we go into debt – and the interest on debt payments leads to more profit for financial companies.
It’s not even a stretch to say that cash has a history of association with progressive social change. There are plenty of previously illegal things that relied on the use of cash, such as homosexuality, interracial relationships, or the black market for illegal substances.
Take Prohibition, for example. Although drinking alcohol was illegal, tens of millions still engaged in it. It may have been illegal, but it wasn’t immoral. Like so many other previously illegal activities, it existed in a gray area and was pushed underground.
Without cash, these gray areas would be much more difficult to maintain. The push for legalizing cannabis would not be possible in a cashless society, for example. Cash provides life support for the cannabis industry; at the same time, its supporters advocate for its use. This has allowed medical marijuana to become widely available and provide relief from countless illnesses.
Whether it’s for an illegal rave or raising money for disruptive climate activism, cash is key for advancing social progress. And the rise of cashless payments is slowly choking out the possibility for creative deviance. This is particularly true if you consider how easy it is for the state to request a payment history of bank customers. Under legislation such as the US Patriot Act, the government doesn’t even need to inform the citizen that they’ve accessed bank records. And a citizenry that’s being watched is less likely to engage in subversive activities.
But there is some good news for the future of cash at present – although not for the best reasons. The use of cash is currently on the rise due to the growing number of crises humanity is experiencing. Whether it’s Covid-19 (and the associated economic impact), war, or climate catastrophe, there are quite a few crises the world is currently dealing with. And as cash doesn’t crash, people everywhere are reverting to money they can touch and see – and store in a box under the bed rather than in the faceless digital aether that might melt away at any moment.
All of this is not meant to overly romanticize cash. But considering its positive effects in helping to put the brakes on financialized capitalist growth, as well as affecting social change, it’s definitely worth defending. At the end of the day, cash helps human beings interact organically. It empowers them to be autonomous rather than relying on middlemen to facilitate all monetary transactions – and charging a fee to boot. -
2023-02-11 at 12:25 AM UTCOne morning you will wake up to find all the banks and the government have gotten together and decided all bank notes will be worthless after such and such a date, probably 10 days. Instructions will be given to turn in all bank notes and coins to the nearest bank location for your account ledger to updated with the amount. Any bank notes or coins left in the system after the 10 days will be of zero value and will be thrown into the streets as worthless.
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2023-02-11 at 12:45 AM UTC
Originally posted by ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ One morning you will wake up to find all the banks and the government have gotten together and decided all bank notes will be worthless after such and such a date, probably 10 days. Instructions will be given to turn in all bank notes and coins to the nearest bank location for your account ledger to updated with the amount. Any bank notes or coins left in the system after the 10 days will be of zero value and will be thrown into the streets as worthless.
Yah just like when they did the whole, oh bring us ur silver certificates and shit because we got this new baller ass money over here dawg check this shit out
They are doing the same thing except this time we have the internet.
The global nwo is progressing extremely well and before you know it we will see a false flag alien invasion to lock us down forever 1984 style
Idk if we'll see it or our kids or our kids kids but its coming. -
2023-02-11 at 2:54 AM UTC
Originally posted by ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ One morning you will wake up to find all the banks and the government have gotten together and decided all bank notes will be worthless after such and such a date, probably 10 days. Instructions will be given to turn in all bank notes and coins to the nearest bank location for your account ledger to updated with the amount. Any bank notes or coins left in the system after the 10 days will be of zero value and will be thrown into the streets as worthless.
I can't wait! will they fuck up and have to fork their globalist coin like venezuela did years ago? They seem to ironed out the bugs though and its been working without any problems now for a while.
https://cointelegraph.com/news/venezuela-appears-to-have-hard-forked-the-petroFor blockchain-based cryptocurrencies like the petro to even stand a chance at a national level, they need a central authority that holds enough of the anchor reserves (U.S. dollar, Euro or otherwise) to back it up. "The cryptocurrency world will only succeed in the long-run if they are organized as currency boards," says Hanke. A currency board acts as a central authority (in the place of a central bank) that makes decisions about the exchange rate — it allows for unlimited exchange of the local currency and can only add more local currency if it has equal amounts of foreign currencies. "Until then, these cryptocurrencies are just not currencies. They are highly speculative assets but they are so volatile that they are not stable units of account," Hanke says.
Who knows, the world might just not be ready yet for a national blockchain-based currency. But Maduro's petro isn't a good assessment of how ready we are. It's effectively a cautionary tale of misunderstanding a very powerful technology. Instead, Maduro's government is using the petro to distract the international community from the nation's economic instability, diaspora, and political unrest. The doomed petro experiment shouldn't prevent other nations from taking a gamble on a national cryptocurrency, but it very well might.
Except this article and LITERALLY EVERY ARTICLE BEFORE 2020 says "this will never work"
yet according to STATE OWNED MEDIA and the countless evidence I can find, it works just fine, their entire system runs off of it.
1 month ago
what the fuck is the west doing?
"‘Britcoin’ could arrive in the second half of the decade"
https://www.cnn.com/2023/02/07/investing/digital-currency-uk-britcoin/index.html
Originally posted by Ghost American SEC has banned steaking crypto well here at the WTU we do not stand for that and any Americans who want to stake crypto, contact us and we can help you find friendly companies and build the new economy together
RISE UP!
against the SEC
https://www.coindesk.com/policy/2023/02/10/sec-chief-gensler-warns-crypto-firms-to-comply-with-rules-after-kraken-shutters-staking-program/
LMAAAAOOOOOO talk about losing the tech race
Originally posted by Ghost
The government is lucky people are willing to make their own ecosystems and not rely on them because we know they will fuck it all up and we are ready
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2023-02-17 at 2:02 PM UTCI could live with curry 3 times a day.