President Donald Trump Bilateral Meeting with South African President Cyril Ramaphosa


Posted originally on Rumble By Bannon’s War Room on: May 21, 2025, at 3:00 pm EST

LIVE: House Rules Committee meeting on Trump’s ‘big, beautiful’ bill


Posted originally on Rumble By Bannon’s War Room on: May 21, 2025, at 2:00 pm EST

Colorado’s ‘Rehabilitative’ Prison Is Holding Political Prisoner Tina Peters, Jayne Zirkle Reports


Posted originally on Rumble By Bannon’s War Room on: May 21, 2025, at 2:00 pm EST

MAX TEGMARK: AI will be vastly more impactful than the Industrial Revolution.


Posted originally on Rumble By Bannon’s War Room on: May 21, 2025, at 1:00 pm EST

NOOR BIN LADIN: President Trump and his administration are REFUSING to pay the World Health Organization’s membership fees as the U.S. leaves the WHO.


Posted originally on Rumble By Bannon’s War Room on: May 21, 2025, at 1:00 pm EST

“It Is Treason.” Rudy Giuliani UNLEASHES On Those Responsible For Cover Up Of Biden Health Problems


Posted originally on Rumble By Bannon’s War Room on: May 21, 2025, at 1:00 pm EST

Bessent Disagrees on US Credit Downgrade


Posted originally on May 22, 2025 by Martin Armstrong 

ScottBessent

US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent rebuked Moody’s lowered rating of US credit from AAA to AA1. “First of all, I think that Moody’s is a lagging indicator, and I think that’s what everyone thinks of credit agencies,” Bessent said. “Larry Summers and I don’t agree on everything, but he’s said that when they downgraded the U.S. in 2011. So it’s a lagging indicator.”

The US Treasury Secretary must maintain that the nation’s economy is in sound health. Former Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen voiced similar sentiments last year when Fitch downgraded the US credit, calling the move “arbitrary.” “I strongly disagree with Fitch’s decision. The change announced today is arbitrary and based on outdated data,” Yellen insisted. She then went on to insist the federal government had the funds to back two wars in Ukraine and Palestine, as there is no spending limit for governments.

In 2011, Standard & Poor cut its rating also after a debt ceiling crisis caused by politicians. The global markets felt the impact of that news. Fitch has been warning of a possible downgrade since May 2023, due to the massive debt burden and political mismanagement. The White House continued its spending spree and our politicians could not agree on a limit for the debt ceiling. The warnings were there.

The difference this time is that Moody’s has not downgraded US credit since 1917. The issue is not consumer confidence in the US or even investor confidence. The primary concern is CONFIDENCE in the system itself that has clearly been failing. Over 70% of US debt is short-term, and Washington has been unable to pass or adhere to a budget. The Democrats are saying that this is reason to collect more tax revenue, while the Republicans aim to curb government spending. Both fail to realize that they are too late either way, and the system itself must change because the problem cannot be fixed with the same line of thinking that created this disaster in the first place.

Capital is not going to flee the US because of Moody’s downgrade. Where else would it go?

Ratings agencies are indeed reactionary rather than proactive. The debt crisis has been looming for a long time. The Economic Confidence Model turns again in late 2026, and we are watching the beginning of the end for government debt as a trustworthy asset class.

Japan’s Rice Crisis Rattles Politics


Posted originally on May 22, 2025 by Martin Armstrong 

ricefield

Japanese Minister Taku Etō has been forced to resign amid the ongoing rice crisis. For those unaware, Japan has been facing a severe rice shortage since 2024, which makes the US egg crisis look minuscule in comparison. Etō delivered a fatal blow to his career by saying that he does not need to worry about the price of rice since he receives it freely through donations.

His comments were taken as a modern-day “Let them eat cake.” “I asked myself whether it is appropriate for me to stay at the helm [of the agriculture ministry] at a critical time for rice prices, and I concluded that it is not,” Etō added, according to the Kyodo news agency. “Once again, I apologise to people for making extremely inappropriate comments as minister when they are struggling with surging rice prices.” He later added that his wife was upset with him for his comments, as they do purchase rice once the donations run dry.

Poor weather conditions in 2023 led to a significant decline in crop yields. The Japanese government has placed high tariffs on imported rice, and Japanese consumers strongly prefer domestic varieties. The government is releasing over 300,000 metric tons of rice from its emergency reserves through July, in addition to the 310,000 tons released since March, but this is not sufficient to meet demand.

Japan reluctantly began importing rice to meet demand. In February alone, Japan imported roughly 40% of what it imported in FY2023. Last week, rice prices hit a record ¥4,268 yen ($29) for 5kg of rice, up from ¥4,214 the previous week. The Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications alerted the public that rice prices rose 92.1% year-on-year in March, but prices continued to rise. Last month in mid-April, a 5kg bag of rice reached ¥4,220 (about $29–$30), marking the highest price on record and over an 80% YoY increase.

Japan was previously nearly entirely self-sufficient in rice production, but recently bought rice from South Korea for the first time in 25 years, and has also turned to the United States to fill the gap. Panic buying remains prevalent despite the high cost of rice, as it is a staple in the Japanese diet.

bowl of rice

The rice crisis controversy is causing the public to lose confidence in the government at large. Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba’s Administration approval rating sunk to an all-time low of 27.4%. This scandal is occurring weeks ahead of the July Upper House election. This is yet another blow to the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), which previously derived mass support from farmers. Over 4,000 farmers took to the streets of Tokyo to demand that the government lift regulations, as the government has been paying farmers to limit their harvest for over 50 years.

The New York Times reported that the average farmer earned $23,000 annually as of 2022, making the industry unattractive to the youth as the number of farmers begins to shrink with an aging population. One farmer told the NYT that a third of rice paddies in his town have been abandoned, and farmers worry that misguided agriculture policies are spurring the decline. The EU and US allow farmers to produce as much as possible, and the government subsidizes any losses, while Japan has taken an opposite approach. The Japanese government believes it would lose $2.65 billion per year if it were to subsidize harvests, but it is already paying farmers $2.32 billion to ration production.

The Liberal Democratic Party has primarily been in power since 1955. The rice crisis is causing a serious decline in confidence as the party is polling at a historic low. Prime Minister Ishiba issued a public apology for his minister’s remarks that led to public outrage, but the damage has been done. The economy is always the driving factor behind political support. The people no longer have trust in the Liberal Democratic Party as they have refused to change policy and seem disconnected from the current cost-of-living crisis.

No Tax on Tips Act


Posted originally on May 22, 2025 by Martin Armstrong 

Waiters

The “No Tax on Tips Act” passed in the Senate after a unanimous vote. At last, the Senate can agree upon one item. The legislation permits a tax deduction worth up to $25,000 for tips for workers earning under $160,000 as of 2025, with the figure expected to increase over the years along with inflation. The bill comes with a major caveat.

The measure only applies to cash tips. It is well-known that service workers often underreport or fail to report their cash earnings. There is a high probability that this measure is to ensure that workers properly report their earnings to the IRS to ensure the government can track every passing penny.

The Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration (TIGTA) conducted a study in 2018 that found 52% of overall tips went unreported, costing the IRS an estimated $44 billion annually. The study found that personal services and food services workers—those who rely on cash tips—were most likely to in incompliance. These are the workers who are often paid under minimum wage and derive the majority of their income from tipping culture. The IRS believes that tips account for 10% of the total individual income tax underreporting gap.

The previous law required tips above $20 per month to be reported. Failure to report could equate to a 50% penalty of Social Security and Medicare taxes owed on the underreported tips. Yet, it is extremely rare for the IRS to actually hunt down individuals who fail to report. The same TIGTA report found that only 34 tip examinations were completed in FY2026, although the IRS believed 15,000 employers withheld $6.3 billion in tip income from the government. From 2013 to 2027, the IRS only completed 262 tip examinations and those mainly occurred on a voluntary basis.

Ride-share workers and others in the service industry who have gone digital will not benefit from this legislation. Tipping culture in America has crept up throughout the years, with the average tip amount coming in at 20%. Americans are asked to tip on everything with the introduction of POS monitors that often ask for a tip when service was not provided.

A recent survey found that up to 90% of Americans feel tipping culture is “out of control,” with 66% holding a negative view of the tip system. Around 83% would like to see a man on mandatory service fees. Three in five Americans (60%) believe employers have shifted the responsibility of employee compensation onto the customer. Still, only 25% of Americans felt that tips should be taxes. Tipping culture is quite different outside America where employees are paid living wages. Every European I know who has visited the States was shocked to see how much they were expected to add to their final bill.

Overall, the new legislation is not exactly a ban on taxed tips. The legislation would have banned taxes on all tips if they were truly concerned with service workers struggling with the cost of living. The Trump Administration has still failed to uphold its promise to remove taxes on overtime pay. Governments are consistently on a hunt for taxation, and this measure will simply allow the government to accurately track cash in circulation.

Qatar Spent Millions Funding Conservative Media This Year in Advance of President Trump Visit


Posted originally on CTH on May 21, 2025 | Sundance

Put this into two files. (1) The confirmation file that it’s “always about the money;” and (2) The ‘things that make other things’ suddenly make sense file.  Also, I wouldn’t suggest doing much with this, other than making a mental note for y’all deep weeds walkers; after all, we are not much fun at partisan parties when we don’t pretend the corruption gig is one-sided.

Readers here will know well that since the beginning of this year I have asked what’s going on with conservative media and this sudden pro-Qatar stuff they’ve been pushing. [Tucker example and more here]

Well, apparently long before the White House announced a historic ‘first ever’ trip to Qatar, the Qatari Prime Minister Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani began telling their lobbyists in DC to reach out to conservative media influencers with lucrative payments to shape a favorable pro-Qatar narrative.

[STORY HERE] “Tucker Carlson was far from Qatar’s only target in its quest to influence conservative media. Established right-of-center outlets like Fox News Digital, Just The News, the New York Post, the Daily Mail, and the Washington Examiner were all targeted to varying degrees by Qatari foreign agents in the months following Trump’s election, records show.”

Things certainly make a lot more sense now.   As the saying goes, “it tracks.”

That said, if Qatar had a media strategy to enhance a foreign policy agenda with the Trump administration, well, that wouldn’t be a surprise; it’s just how things are done.  However, in the background of the puzzling question about how those decades of outlines of Qatar being correctly called out for corruption disappear, well, it appears the Qataris just paid to disappear them.  Go figure.

DISCLAIMER: Qatar has blocked the Conservative Treehouse ever since we published the two-year investigative piece called “The Benghazi Brief.”  Even U.S. military stationed at the Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar cannot access CTH without using a VPN.

In a time of deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act.” ~ G. Orwell

Like I always say, trust your instincts.

GO DEEP ~