Contents Pages by Subject

Economic Stimulus

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Change the News - Luke Rudkowski - Tim Picciott

The pandemic emergency stimulus package will exceed $6 trillion! That's a $2 trillion in: aid for families, airline bailouts, and a $350 billion small business loan program. The remaining $4 trillion will allow the federal reserve to bailout whoeve

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Change the News - Like Rudkowski, Tim Picciott

Re: CV UBI Stimulus Bill. The new law, which requires small employers -- those with fewer than 500 employees -- to provide limited paid-leave benefits to employees who are affected by the viral emergency.

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Zero Hedge - Tyler Durden

Stop and pause for a moment and think about what just happened. The Federal Reserve says the US economy is strong, but it just initiated emergency monetary policy last seen during the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression.

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Zero Hedge - Tyler Durden

A slightly more dovish Fed, and the corresponding perceived increase in the odds of further stimulus by the US central bank, failed to excite investors much as the coronavirus continues to dampen the mood on global markets.

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World Alternative Media-Tim Picciott-John Sneisen

John Sneisen and Tim Picciott CFP® CRPC® breakdown the shadow QE efforts the FED is employing to hold the economy together. They also discuss the effect share buybacks have had on the market and how some companies like GE have wasted Billions in p

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arclein

Also, the employment data contradicts the logic of Trump's tariff policy. According to CNBC, while there are about 200,000 workers in the steel, aluminum and iron industries, there are 6.5 million people employed by businesses that use steel. This

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Ron Paul Liberty Report

What happens when you combine tax cuts with massive increases in domestic and military spending? A debt tsunami. With the waters churning around Donald Trump's "guns and butter" approach, can Congress be counted on to step in and rein in spending?

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http://www.bloomberg.com

In October 2011, things were looking bleak at Goldman Sachs Group Inc.'s commodities business. Revenue was down, competition was up, employee attrition was at an all-time high and new regulations were on the horizon.

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