Debanking

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Cousin Jack
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Re: Debanking

Post by Cousin Jack »

I dont think it is the homosexuality we need to worry about, that is just one obvious example of the altered behaviour and failure to accept cultural norms. Surely that is exactly what humans are doing in many overcrowded cities. You dont find too many serious criminals in small villages.
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Re: Debanking

Post by Mr. Dazzle »

Cousin Jack wrote: Mon Sep 04, 2023 2:05 pm I dont think it is the homosexuality we need to worry about, that is just one obvious example of the altered behaviour and failure to accept cultural norms. Surely that is exactly what humans are doing in many overcrowded cities. You dont find too many serious criminals in small villages.
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Re: Debanking

Post by JackyJoll »

Mr. Dazzle wrote: Mon Sep 04, 2023 8:36 pm
Cousin Jack wrote: Mon Sep 04, 2023 2:05 pm I dont think it is the homosexuality we need to worry about, that is just one obvious example of the altered behaviour and failure to accept cultural norms. Surely that is exactly what humans are doing in many overcrowded cities. You dont find too many serious criminals in small villages.
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Re: Debanking

Post by mangocrazy »

This will come as no surprise to @Yambo but it seems like Santander are being their usual unhelpful and uncooperative selves again...

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-66890530
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Re: Debanking

Post by mangocrazy »

The New Yorker ran an in-depth piece about it in February:

https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2023 ... unravelled

I found this paragraph particularly telling:

“In finance, globally, you have a situation where the only effective police are the Americans,” Paul Murphy told me. “Our regulators—they’re out to lunch. Incompetent, mainly.” He added, “What you’ll find, say, here in London is that you can be a crook, stealing money from people around the world. As long as you’re not stealing from people in Britain, you can do anything.”
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Re: Debanking

Post by mangocrazy »

Potter wrote: Mon Sep 25, 2023 12:03 pm
mangocrazy wrote: Mon Sep 25, 2023 12:00 pm The New Yorker ran an in-depth piece about it in February:

https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2023 ... unravelled

I found this paragraph particularly telling:

“In finance, globally, you have a situation where the only effective police are the Americans,” Paul Murphy told me. “Our regulators—they’re out to lunch. Incompetent, mainly.” He added, “What you’ll find, say, here in London is that you can be a crook, stealing money from people around the world. As long as you’re not stealing from people in Britain, you can do anything.”

That might be true, but as with the other examples I used, the most staggering things like this are allowed to run because the public would prefer to believe that it's just a crazy conspiracy and remain comfortably numb.
When you've got the might of the German financial establishment telling you it's a conspiracy then it's understandable that people might believe what they are told. I don't recall seeing this widely reported at the time - it seems like the FT were ploughing something of a lone furrow.
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Re: Debanking

Post by Screwdriver »

Funny thing is, just in my last post (before it got deleted) someone chipped in with "what you reckon all these rich people gather around and conspire to make even more money for themselves". Not a direct quote but the gist of it.

I'm like, "well, yeah. It's called the WEF, they meet in Davos".

Without casting aspersions, does anyone seriously believe these uber rich elites are going to go out of their way to make things better for humanity? Or bearing in mind what little we can discover about the proposals, are they gaming the system to benefit themselves?

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Re: Debanking

Post by mangocrazy »

Potter wrote: Mon Sep 25, 2023 1:05 pm
mangocrazy wrote: Mon Sep 25, 2023 12:18 pm
When you've got the might of the German financial establishment telling you it's a conspiracy then it's understandable that people might believe what they are told. I don't recall seeing this widely reported at the time - it seems like the FT were ploughing something of a lone furrow.
That's my point, even the FT were debunked as conspiracy nutters, or corrupt and in cahoots with short sellers.
Anyone less than that level trying to raise it were actually threatened with serious violence and they shut up - a lone man on a motorcycle forum would get hammered for it and called all sorts of names, but it was all true, just quite unbelievable if you've always believed that this stuff only happens in movies.

I've been exposed to just enough that I wouldn't discount anything as "just conspiracy lunacy" these days, this is a great example to show that even the most ridiculous of conspiracies can turn out to be true.
Yes, fraud on that kind of scale is almost too big to comprehend, and Wirecard were fraudsters hiding in plain sight. They went after anyone shorting the stock with some serious muscle and most people would just cave in and unwind the position. What it does expose is a criminal lack of oversight and a complete absence of regulatory control - in fact the regulators appear to have been complicit. And I doubt anything has changed since.
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Re: Debanking

Post by asmethurst99 »

Potter wrote: Mon Sep 25, 2023 10:24 am Has anyone seen the Netflix documentary about Wirecard?

This is a great example of what was actually going on in terms of hacking, spying, political skullduggery, foreign intelligence interference, election rigging, and good old fashioned fraud.

A few people were screaming from the rafters about it for years but being ignored by the masses as conspiracy nutters and ridiculed - in fact if Screwd had posted about it a few months before the bubble burst then no doubt he'd have been called a conspiracy nutter again - but there it is, all exposed now for everyone to see.

It's actually quite incredible how long these things take to bring down, but just like Jimmy Saville, grooming gangs and things like Wirecard, the general public don't want to believe it, so they don't.
I read the FT article (i think) it’s quite sobering wasn't one of the journalists threatened with Jail - followed by private investigators etc
Edit I think that was the least of it
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Re: Debanking

Post by gremlin »

BaFin were, and remain, a paper tiger, reined in by the German got. who covet the position of being the hub of European banking, which remains steadfastly in London.
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Re: Debanking

Post by Yorick »

gremlin wrote: Tue Sep 26, 2023 11:30 am BaFin were, and remain, a paper tiger, reined in by the German got. who covet the position of being the hub of European banking, which remains steadfastly in London.
That's nice dear.





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Re: Debanking

Post by gremlin »

Screwdriver wrote: Mon Sep 25, 2023 1:21 pm Funny thing is, just in my last post (before it got deleted) someone chipped in with "what you reckon all these rich people gather around and conspire to make even more money for themselves". Not a direct quote but the gist of it.

I'm like, "well, yeah. It's called the WEF, they meet in Davos".

Without casting aspersions, does anyone seriously believe these uber rich elites are going to go out of their way to make things better for humanity? Or bearing in mind what little we can discover about the proposals, are they gaming the system to benefit themselves?

You will own nothing and you will be happy.
An alternate view is that if you want the global economy to function well, it could pay dividends to get the world's bankers and business leaders together to agree policies to keep the markets stable and functioning, as this promotes business, which is good for them, and in turn generates wealth for everybody by trickling down.
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Re: Debanking

Post by Screwdriver »

gremlin wrote: Tue Sep 26, 2023 12:31 pm
Screwdriver wrote: Mon Sep 25, 2023 1:21 pm Without casting aspersions, does anyone seriously believe these uber rich elites are going to go out of their way to make things better for humanity? Or bearing in mind what little we can discover about the proposals, are they gaming the system to benefit themselves?

You will own nothing and you will be happy.
An alternate view is that if you want the global economy to function well, it could pay dividends to get the world's bankers and business leaders together to agree policies to keep the markets stable and functioning, as this promotes business, which is good for them, and in turn generates wealth for everybody by trickling down.
You are right of course but that does not condone the excessive manipulation of the political/social system which is being made by those with the financial clout to get away with it. The two scenarios are not mutually exclusive. Capitalism needs a system of regulation and a certain degree of cooperation between these financial behemoths but their actions overstep the mark. It is a power grab and they are sidestepping democracy in the process.
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Re: Debanking

Post by mangocrazy »

Going back to the Wirecard fraud, one of the main players was a guy named Jan Marsalek who it is believed is now in hiding in Russia. I was reading a piece about the 5 alleged Bulgarian spies being tried in the UK and guess whose name popped up - yes, Jan Marsalek... He gets around a bit that chap...

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-66923824
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Re: Debanking

Post by gremlin »

mangocrazy wrote: Mon Sep 25, 2023 12:00 pm

“In finance, globally, you have a situation where the only effective police are the Americans,”
How did SVB fail so spectacularly earlier this year if that's the case?

Smaller banks effectively lobbied the Fed to be exempt from liquidity regulations. The Fed folded.
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Re: Debanking

Post by mangocrazy »

gremlin wrote: Tue Sep 26, 2023 7:11 pm
mangocrazy wrote: Mon Sep 25, 2023 12:00 pm

“In finance, globally, you have a situation where the only effective police are the Americans,”
How did SVB fail so spectacularly earlier this year if that's the case?

Smaller banks effectively lobbied the Fed to be exempt from liquidity regulations. The Fed folded.
Yeah, I think that quote only applies to non-USA banks. the Fed is very happy to prosecute non-native banks but have a blind spot when it comes to US banks. I remember the way they went after HSBC (who quite frankly, deserved it) for AML activities, when US banks were doing the same thing. HSBC were a bit too good at it and stealing market share from US banks and so they had to be put in their place, or so it seemed.
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Re: Debanking

Post by Screwdriver »

gremlin wrote: Tue Sep 26, 2023 7:11 pm
mangocrazy wrote: Mon Sep 25, 2023 12:00 pm

“In finance, globally, you have a situation where the only effective police are the Americans,”
How did SVB fail so spectacularly earlier this year if that's the case?

Smaller banks effectively lobbied the Fed to be exempt from liquidity regulations. The Fed folded.
The entire system is totally corrupt. I am surprised SBF hasn't accidentally murdered himself after disabling the cameras.

Remembering Jeffrey Epstein was as deeply involved in a similar state sponsored ponzi scheme as SBF. The pedo stuff was just bit of fluff and a handy little sideline in blackmail. The "state sponsored' jibe is when you look at exactly who was "investing" in these scams. When SVB went down, a few too many "prominent persons" stood to lose too much money so the banks got bailed out by the taxpayer (as per usual).
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Re: Debanking

Post by gremlin »

FTX had no oversight by the regulator, as is the case with crypto. Hardly accurate to say it was state sponsored. SBF was paraded around as some sort of god by the press and followed by the greedy get-rich-quick idiots like the Pied Piper.

I have no fear of the BoE introducing a crypto, as like other fiat currencies, it will have governance and oversight. FTX (and Binance and countless others) are simply Ponzi schemes. Once somebody notices the emperor is bollock naked it comes crashing down.
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Re: Debanking

Post by Mr. Dazzle »

I don't want the government to watch me, but if they could regulate stuff too that'd be just dandy :thumbup:
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Re: Debanking

Post by gremlin »

Mr. Dazzle wrote: Tue Sep 26, 2023 9:34 pm I don't want the government to watch me, but if they could regulate stuff too that'd be just dandy :thumbup:
To which one should ask, 'If they ain't watching, how can they regulate?'

The government has no need to watch you anyway, sitting tapping away on here, buying stuff on Amazon, using your bank card....

Your digital footprint is everywhere and I suspect the government doesn't really GAS about you or I. Your bank, supermarket and Amazon, though... them boys want to milk you for all the data they can.
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