US students are getting worse at math as science and reading skills stagnate — Fellowship of the Minds


The entire education system needs to be junked and all the teachers fired and the retired one have there retirements canceled. This is a major FUBAR

kommonsentsjane's avatarkommonsentsjane

This is what happens when school administrators are concerned that everyone receives a participation trophy and coddle special snowflakes. Maybe they should focus more on real education instead of worrying about which bathrooms transgenders should use. From Daily Mail: Americans students are having major math problems and have fallen behind the rest of the world, a new […]

via US students are getting worse at math as science and reading skills stagnate — Fellowship of the Minds

Reblogged on kommonsentsjant/blogkommonsents.

Even when you have all of the “It Takes a Village” people trying to come up with an answer – they were all dumbed down with Bill Clinton’s “modern math” where 2 plus 2 can be any number you want it to be – in other words – whatever blows your skirt up – as Bill would say.  Then, as the story goes, they would never be able to agree to…

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NATO globalists sing ‘We Are the World’ — Fellowship of the Minds


If they could actually sign it would be a bit better, they are nuts!

kommonsentsjane's avatarkommonsentsjane

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2_wfMrz9_mY

I stumbled across a video of NATO foreign ministers singing Michael Jackson’s “We Are the World” at the end of a meeting in Antalya, Turkey in May 2015. Does anyone else find it creepy that these globalists were singing “We Are the World”? By the way, the skinny guy in glasses circled in yellow below […]

via NATO globalists sing ‘We Are the World’ — Fellowship of the Minds

Reblogged on kommonsentsjane/blogkommonsents.

nato-budget

Very interesting – yes, the group sings – We are the World – while the U.S. foots the bill – see for yourself.(22%).

They should be singing this song instead.

“Onward Christian Soldiers.”

kommonsentsjane

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More libtard butthurt: Michael Moore calls for protesters to ‘disrupt’ Trump’s inauguration — Fellowship of the Minds


Moore needs to find a life!

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Moore should find a cure for his disorder. Otherwise it’s going to be a long four years for him. From Fox News: Michael Moore — who predicted Donald Trump would win the presidency months before his surprise victory — is now encouraging people to protest the President-elect’s upcoming inauguration. “Disrupt the Inauguration. The Majority have spoken […]

via More libtard butthurt: Michael Moore calls for protesters to ‘disrupt’ Trump’s inauguration — Fellowship of the Minds

Reblogged on kommonsentsjane/blogkommonsents.

When is this guy going to grow up and be a part of the citizenry?  Do people really take him serious – and focus on his remarks?  He comes across as a  buf·foon – a ridiculous but amusing person.

kommonsentsjane

airport

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KOMMONSENTSJANE – HISTORY OF GOLD


The Government can and will do what ever they think they need regardless of the consequences, That is why we elected Trump. Maybe we’ll be OK for the next 4 years.

kommonsentsjane's avatarkommonsentsjane

Subject: Gold Confiscation — Should You Actually Worry?

I Don’t Worry about Gold Confiscation (and You Probably Shouldn’t Either)

By Guy Christopher

  • Image result for photos of gold bars

Most gold owners are familiar with worries of forced government gold confiscation – that one day black-ops shock teams will toss homes to find that stash of coins and bars.

The sole historical source for the modern fear of “confiscation” was President Franklin Roosevelt’s 1933 Executive Order 6102 telling America to cough up its gold in the midst of The Great Depression.

But closely reading FDR’s infamous order offers a sobering perspective which doesn’t fit the ever-evolving folklore. This reality might calm some confiscation fears…

•FDR’s executive order was far from an outright grand theft “confiscation.” It was a paid-for expropriation. Surrendering a $20 double-eagle to the bank got you a $20 fiat paper note. While aiming to steal the economic power of gold, FDR left its nominal…

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Congressman Running for DNC Chair Thought the GERMANS BOMBED Pearl Harbor


A progressive Democrat what else would you expect … lol

Petition Started to Remove Anti-Trump Texas Elector Chris Suprun


I’m not from Texas so it would not count. but it would be nice if they could get rid of him!

Washington Post admits article on ‘Russian propaganda’ & ‘fake news’ based on sham research


They need to investigate the American media not the Russians

German Companies Pull Ads From Breitbart


Tyler Durden's picture

While the WaPo admitted, two weeks after its infamous hit piece on “fringe media” which it labelled as “Russian propaganda fake news“, that its entire article was based on reporting that was wrong, the adverse consequences are piling up for the sites named in the list, among which the popular conservative hangout Breitbart. German carmaker BMW, the restaurant chain Vapiano, supermarket chain Rewe, and Deutsche Telekom have all pulled their ads from the pro-Trump news site due to concerns about its content, the Associated Press reported on Wednesday.

“The positions held by Breitbart.com contrast with Vapiano’s values, such as openness and tolerance,” said the restaurant chain offering Italian food across Europe and the US.

Deutsche Telekom is also present on the American market through its subsidiary T-mobile, the third-largest wireless carrier in the US. Replying to a DW inquiry, Deutsche Telekom said they “very much regret” that their ads appeared on Breitbart, which according to Deutsche Welle “is often branded a far-right hate site.”

The company “does not tolerate discriminatory actions or statements in any way,” a representative for the company said. “We reacted immediately, taken the ads off and put the site on a blacklist,” they told DW.

The move by German corporations coincides with Twitter campaigns that pressure companies to cut off ad revenue to far-right outlets – the Stop Funding Hate in the UK and the Kein Geld Für Rechts (No Money for the Right) in Germany. It follows a similar decision last week, when as we reported before US cereal company Kellogg’s also pulled its ads from Breitbart, saying that its “values” were not aligned with those propagated on the website.

Breitbart, whose former executive chairman is currently Obama’s right hand man Steve Bannon, responded with a slew of anti-Kellogg’s articles, decrying the cereal company as “far-left” and calling for a boycott of its products.

The “left-wing causes and projects” backed by Kellogg’s included Save the Children Fund, the Ms. Foundation for Women, and the World Wildlife Fund, according to information presented on the site.

While it is unclear how the spat between advertisers and content providers will be resolved, and if it will ultimately see the involvement of Donald Trump as an “arbiter”, it is becoming increasingly clear that the push to starve any website that opposes mainstream media ideology has only just begun.

Portland “Orecrats” Target Income Inequality: Pass Massive 25% Tax On Corps With “Excessive CEO Pay”


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Submitted by Michael Shedlock via MishTalk.com,

Liberals in the city of Portland Oregon have put their foot down against income inequality.

The “Orecrats” are not going after CEOs, but rather corporations that have CEO salaries the “Orecrats” deem excessive.

The tax penalty on corporations is as much as 25%.

portland-tax

Please consider Portland Adopts Surcharge on C.E.O. Pay in Move vs. Income Inequality.

Moving to address income inequality on a local level, the City Council in Portland, Ore., voted on Wednesday to impose a surtax on companies whose chief executives earn more than 100 times the median pay of their rank-and-file workers.

 

The surcharge, which Portland officials said is the first in the nation linked to chief executives’ pay, would be added to the city’s business tax for those companies that exceed the pay threshold. Currently, roughly 550 companies that generate significant income on sales in Portland pay the business tax.

 

Under the new rule, companies must pay an additional 10 percent in taxes if their chief executives receive compensation greater than 100 times the median pay of all their employees. Companies with pay ratios greater than 250 times the median will face a 25 percent surcharge.

 

The tax will take effect next year, after the Securities and Exchange Commission begins to require public companies to calculate and disclose how their chief executives’ compensation compares with their workers’ median pay. The S.E.C. rule was required under the Dodd-Frank legislation enacted in 2010.

 

Thomas Piketty, a professor at the Paris School of Economics and an authority on income inequality who wrote “Capital in the Twenty-First Century,” said he favored the Portland tax as a first step.

 

“This is certainly part of the solution,” Mr. Piketty wrote in an email, “but the tax surcharge needs to be large enough; the threshold ‘100 times’ should be substantially lowered.”

 

Another supporter of the tax is Charlie Hales, the mayor of Portland.

 

“Income inequality is real, it is a national problem and the federal government isn’t doing anything about it,” Mr. Hales, a Democrat, said in a telephone interview. “We have a habit of trying things in Portland; maybe they’re not perfect at the first iteration. But local action replicated around the country can start to make a difference.”

 

Mr. Hales, who did not seek re-election, will leave office at the end of the month.

Attacking Symptoms

Portland attacks the symptom of the problem, not the problem. The Portland legislation may even enhance the problem.

If possible, CEO’s will take stock options and bonuses to escape the rule. If this idea catches on (and most economically foolish ideas promoted by the Left do catch on) corporations will reduce hiring and expansion plans.

Economic illiterate of the day, Thomas Piketty, says “the threshold ‘100 times’ should be substantially lowered.”

It would behoove Piketty to think about what the real problem is, instead of attacking symptoms of the problem.

The problem is not CEO pay. The problem is a Fed hell-bent on promoting inflation in a deflationary world. Combine that with financial repression tactics of central banks that have negative interest rates on 75% of the world’s bonds.

The Fed explicitly targeted asset prices and bailed out the banks at taxpayer expense. Congress passed scores of “affordable housing programs” that benefited homebuilder CEOs more than anyone else.

The Fed has a very Asymmetric Policy of ignoring asset bubbles then bailing out the corporations involved in them.

In September, I noted Federal Reserve Vice-Chairman Stanley Fischer Admits Fed Sponsors Wealth Inequality.

Fisher stated negative rates “seem to work” while admitting they are bad for savers but they “typically they go along with quite decent equity prices.

Expert Opinions

Economic illiterates like Piketty, deemed an “expert” on income inequality by fellow economic illiterate writers at the New York Times, attack symptoms of the problem, not the problem.

In a foolish attempt to defeat routine consumer price deflation, the Fed has sponsored yet another asset bubble that will bring about damaging asset bubble bust and credit deflation. The BIS would agree.

The Globalization Genie’s Long Left The Bottle


Tyler Durden's picture

Submitted by Raul Ilargi Meijer via The Automatic Earth blog,

The world is facing the “first lost decade since the 1860s”, said Bank of England governor Mark Carney this week. Arguably good for soundbite of the day, but the buck stops there. The only way that buck could have kept rolling would have been for Carney to take a critical look at himself and his employer(s), but there was none of that.

The Canadian import governor has no doubts about anything he’s done, or if he does he shows none. Instead he puts the blame for all that’s gone awry, on some -minor- elements of what he think globalization means, not with the phenomenon itself, or his enduring support for, and belief in, it. The problem with that is it’s indeed belief only; he can’t prove an inch of what he says.

Globalization is an act of faith inside a politico-economic belief system, and all it needs according to Carney and many others in his ‘church’ is a little tweaking. That globalization itself could be the driving force behind Brexit, Trump and the defeat of Italian PM Renzi does not enter into the faith’s ‘thought’ system.

Neither does the possibility that globalization is what it is, in and of itself, a process that in the end cannot be tweaked. That globalization is simply yet another form of centralization that follows the same rules and laws all other forms do, where power and wealth always, of necessity, wind up in the hands of a few, through pretty basic centrifugal forces.

Carney Lays Out Vision to Revive Benefits of Globalization

Mark Carney launched a defense of globalization and set out a manifesto for central bankers and governments to boost growth and make the world economy more equal. The Bank of England Governor said they must acknowledge that gains from trade and technology haven’t been felt by all, improve the balance of monetary and fiscal policy, and move to a more inclusive model where “everyone has a stake in globalization.” Carney’s speech in Liverpool, England, comes amid rising disquiet about the state of the world economy and political status quo that helped propel Donald Trump to victory in the U.S. presidential election and boost support for the U.K.’s exit from the European Union.

 

Trump isn’t right to favor more protectionist policies in response to globalization , Carney said in a television interview broadcast after his speech. The answer is to “redistribute some of the benefits of trade” and ensure that workers are able to acquire new skills. “Weak income growth has focused growing attention on its distribution,” Carney said in the speech.

 

“Inequalities which might have been tolerated during generalized prosperity are felt more acutely when economies stagnate.” Describing the world as facing the “first lost decade since the 1860s,” the BOE governor said public support for open markets is under threat and rejecting them would be a “tragedy, but is a possibility.”

 

Carney also defended the central bank’s current policy stance. The BOE has faced criticism from politicians after officials took measures including cutting interest rates and expanding asset purchases in August to support the economy after Britain’s June vote to leave the EU. “Low rates are not the caprice of central bankers, but rather the consequence of powerful global forces, including debt, demographics and distribution,” he said, adding that they helped to prevent a deeper economic downturn.

People like Carney will insist that globalization spurs growth, right up to the moment where they’re either voted out or fired. And they’ll probably keep on insisting until their dying days. But why are we in that “first lost decade since the 1860s” then? Is that really only because ‘we’ failed to “redistribute some of the benefits of trade”, something that can allegedly be easily rectified by enabling workers to ‘acquire new skills’?

Where is the proof for that? And why have economies stagnated in the middle of the entire process of globalization? Is that solely because ‘some of’ the benefits were not distributed well enough? If that is so, and wealth distribution is the only problem with globalization, at what point do we redistribute ourselves into the realm of communism? Where’s the dividing line? It all feels mighty vague and unsatisfactory, and not a little goal-seeked.

Like a large part of the Brexit voters in Britain, millions of Italians have been on the losing side of globalism’s ‘benefits distribution’. And this weekend they found an outlet for their frustration about it. Like Brexiteers voted against Cameron and Osborne much more than they voted for anything in specific, and Trump won because Americans are fed up with the Obama/Clinton/GOP model, Italians voted against PM Renzi and his idea to take power away from parliament and give it to him.

Judging from poll numbers, they also seem to have gained confidence in Beppe Grillo’s, and the Five Star Movement’s, ability to do something real in politics. It has taken a while, and that makes sense because the movement doesn’t fit the model of politics as they’ve known it all their lives.


Wikipedia

Also, there are many Italians who have largely agreed with much of what Grillo has been saying all along, but were deterred by the way he delivered it. Ask an Italian and they’re likely to say “too angry, too rude” when it comes to Grillo. And it’s true, his style doesn’t seem to fit in with the rest. But then that’s also exactly his forte. Because there comes a point when everything that does fit in, becomes suspect.

The old guard, from Renzi to Berlusconi to the socialists, will double their efforts to keep Grillo out of the center of power now. President Mattarella is in on it: he asked Renzi to stay on as PM until after the budget has been pushed through, and is then likely to install another technocrat government, tasked with changing laws with the express intent of making it harder for Grillo to get into power.

And Renzi, of course, is on the same wavelength as Carney, and the entire EU -and global- cabal: globalize, reform, re-distribute ‘some benefits’, execute more austerity, rinse and repeat.

What’s particular about Italy in this sense is what it has been able to preserve, unlike most other nations. That is, Italy has a lot of small enterprises, often family owned, with highly skilled workers. That doesn’t fit today’s globalization model, since it’s deemed not competitive enough when you’re forced to fight for market share.

But if globalization, and the entire growth model, is over anyway, as I’ve often asserted, it’s a whole different story. If that is true, the country had better save what’s left of its business model, because it’s ideal for a post-centralized world. ‘Workers’ wouldn’t have to ‘acquire new skills, and leave old and proven skills to be forgotten and gather dust.

The world is changing rapidly and that will become even a lot more evident in 2017. The incumbent economic and political systems, as well as their proponents and cheerleaders, are on the way out. They have all failed miserably. What comes next will be profoundly chaotic for quite a while, and that will be perilous. There is not one single (belief) system to replace them, there will be many and they will often clash.

In some places, the political right will prevail, in others the left. In most, from the look of things, neither will, if only because at the end of the day both left and right are still part of incumbent systems. Europe has a number of elections coming up and in at least some of these, parties from outside the incumbent systems will come out on top.

Whether they can then go on to form governments is perhaps another story; the system will not give up easily. But it is done. Carney’s recipe of ‘some’ redistribution of wealth and acquiring new skills is widely shared in power circles, and that will be the system’s undoing. All it has to offer is more talk about more growth and more globalization, and while people protest only the latter, neither is on offer.

One of the tools the media use to discredit anything that comes from outside the system is to label it all ‘populist’. It’s a miracle it hasn’t become a honor label yet. In Europe, all new rightwing parties (a label in itself) get called populist, Le Pen, Wilders, Frauke Petry in Germany, the Lega Nord in Italy. But so does someone like Beppe Grillo, who politically has nothing in common with these people.

Moreover, many of their ideas are not to the right of existing parties at all. Despite some of his views, new French Republican candidate François Fillon is not called a populist, ostensibly because he’s from a large incumbent party, but so are Trump and Sanders in the US, and they do get called populist.

Empty labels, fake news and oceans of debt keep the systems -somewhat- going for now. But the genie’s long left the bottle. The ‘incumbents’ have failed their people for far too long, most of all economically. And they keep on claiming that everything will be alright, everyone will be better off if only we execute more globalization, and give them all a few pennies more.

It really is too silly to be true that that is what existing systems and their servants are still trying to make everyone believe. While it is so obvious that so many have long stopped believing. You would think they’d change their messages to reflect that change in society. But they don’t know how. And it’s that very inability that feeds those pesky ‘populists’.

The same François Fillon could be a contender in France against anti-EU Le Pen because he’s expressed doubts on Brussels. Dutch PM Rutte has cautiously critiqued the union too. But those shifts in words if not real opinions come far too late. Britain has said No and there’s zero chance that more nations will not do the same. Just give them the option, give them a vote.

The only way to keep Europe from descending into chaos is to abandon the EU, lock the doors and throw away the keys. The same is true on a global scale, with all the globalist trade agreements that most people have long lost faith in. We will either see a peaceful transition to a system not based on centralization, or we will not see peace, period.

And to think economic meltdown hasn’t even truly started yet, has been kept hidden behind a wall of debt, and so many people are already so fed up with the whole shebang.