Get Mystery Box with random crypto!

apid bank transfers, and the China-run CIPS system is going to | Real America News

apid bank transfers, and the China-run CIPS system is going to attract a lot of nations who will abandon western-run SWIFT. This will shift power to China and away from America.

Health Ranger, [27/02/2022, 20:15]
15/ 23 We anticipate sharp increases in gold, silver, oil and certain mineral commodities tied to Ukraine: Copper, aluminum, cobalt, manganese and even lithium. Copper and aluminum are used to make electrical wiring, which of course is used in homes, buildings, vehicles, computers, etc. Expect insane price increases in all goods made from these elements, probably dwarfing the price spikes witnessed during covid. The supply chain shortages will get WORSE and will persist for YEARS.

Health Ranger, [27/02/2022, 20:15]
16/ 23 On the agricultural side, it looks like Ukraine's traditional spring planting of crops is a bust. And Russia's crops will face export restrictions. Odessa and the other ports along Ukraine's southern border are non-functional for commercial activity. This means a HUGE lack of wheat, corn and soy for Middle Eastern countries as well as Southeast Asian nations that traditional purchase from Ukraine. Effectively, this will put massive pressure on food prices across the globe, contributing heavily to rising food inflation in 2022 - 2023.

Health Ranger, [27/02/2022, 20:16]
17/23 Economically, this all means we can expect HUGE price increases in food, materials and energy (we must consider the Nordstream 2 pipeline being shuttered by Germany) with expected spikes in gold and silver that will likely be targeted by paper contract selling by the corrupt banks in order to artificially suppress "spot" gold and silver. But the organic, natural upward pressure of prices on both metals will be intense. Effectively, globalists have set off a global war against not just Russia, but against HUMANITY, and billions of innocent people will suffer the consequences.

Health Ranger, [27/02/2022, 20:16]
18/23 Hydrocarbons are used to create fertilizers via the Haber chemical process which converts hydrocarbons into ammonia (NH3) by grabbing nitrogen from the air (atmosphere is about 79% nitrogen). This puts nitrogen into a form that plants can use as food. Right now, about 5 billion people around the globe depend on this Haber equation to feed themselves. With Russia's pipelines shut down, and Biden attacking America's energy sector, and bans on fertilizer exports, we can expect a GLOBAL FERTILIZER SHORTAGE that will lead to widespread food inflation and famine.

Health Ranger, [27/02/2022, 20:17]
19/23 FARMING is about to get extremely difficult (supply chain disruptions for spare parts) and expensive (fuel prices), with vastly increased global demand on prices for crops. Fertilizer production will remain alarmingly low in Europe and North America. The only policy that would reverse this and lower food prices would be for Biden to open up oil drilling, pipelines and energy exploration. This would also hurt Russia due to falling energy prices, but Biden would rather PUNISH America than punish Biden, so the restrictions will stay in place.

Health Ranger, [27/02/2022, 20:17]
20/23 Remember, HIGH energy prices hurt the American people but help Putin. LOW energy prices help the American people (and result in affordable food) but hurt Putin due to Russia's reliance on energy exports. Thus, Biden's anti-energy policies are specifically targeting the American people with what are essentially energy sanctions, while there are NO sanctions placed in Russia's energy exports as they head for record prices. Stated again, Biden is clobbering America and aiding Russia. Americans will starve while Putin rakes in the energy cash. (All by design.)

Health Ranger, [27/02/2022, 20:18]
21/23 We predict food riots in US cities at some point as food inflation makes even basic sustenance unaffordable to low-wage workers. The working poor are headed toward a massive uprising as both fuel and food become nearly impossible to afford, even at $12 - $15 hourly wages. At some point soon, just driving to work makes no economic sense because