Money

  • Long Report: Giving it away is misguided

    It’s believed that giving things away for free and informally is the least constructive way to help society and this has been proved by international research by a number of international groups led by academics.

    In the UK, it has led to an exponential increase in criminal harassment because of a false ethic of seeking help and causing alarm. This has led to extreme circumstances of harm and offence being caused across the four nations.

    It’s now believed that asking for help is a policing matter and that it needs to be set out in local policing arrangements that people cannot harass the local community based on any felt need on any given day of the year.

    The moral factor

    The matter of criminal harassment is only just being understood by those that have to look into the detail of the mentality of a person that uses every hour of the day to cause thousands of instances of harm wherever they choose to live.

    The intervention of social care services is vital in this matter because they harness the power of person-centred care and attention that UK citizens are able to provide, that they are good at, and are able to do even at the public’s cost.

    What does an empty hand mean to you?

    The link between asking for help and harassment is now firmly established. It’s clear who is doing it and why they’re doing it. It’s difficult though to work in a new approach to any policing arrangement because it takes serious – and detailed – working practices to do it.

    Uncharitable nature

    The core of the problem is an influx of uncharitable people into the business and meaning of the charitable sector itself. It’s meant this sector has stopped at the point of taking money and has not developed into the forms and structures that it needed to.

    The outcomes are obvious to see in part in the incessant protests that also try to mix in a message of charity for other people. They too have stopped short at the point of offering help and have not considered the lasting implications of both the wrong people and wrong sources of help being involved.

    The modern world is a complex place, but a fundamental feature of it now is an ability to provide and this involves the human nature and condition in a form of Judicial support for the justice aspects of it. It makes it work and it makes it sensible.

  • Caught: “BBC” fake Elon Musk contact

    In an exclusive for Conservative News Site, a leading criminal figure in an attempt by “BBC” staff to steal money from Elon Musk has now been spotted in a public place.

    A suspect
    A suspect alleged of serious financial misdemeanours and plotting to steal financial sums and assets from an American entrepreneur.

    This man is a hard person to track down because he uses bunkers and other facilities to hide from authorities across the world.

    His intent is to bankrupt Elon Musk’s staff and to take money from his own personal accounts to launder by criminals worldwide.

    Anti-Musk hatred

    The financial and corporate crime in London is said to be centred mainly on UK-based institutions, some of which are household names.

    This has resulted in intense litigation and severe disruption to normal services in some public bodies.

    It’s also meant thousands of house arrests, ongoing Police investigations, and other audits of premises and the personal assets of some citizens.

  • Exclusive: Johnson paid £300,000 by GB News

    It’s believed Boris Johnson is due to appear on GB News as a guest contributor, but the questions about this arrangement are beginning to sound alarm.

    It’s believed by some in media roles in London that Johnson was paid £300,000 by GB News to shut Russia Today in favour of its slot.

    This amounts to corruption if it’s true, although some have also said that it only counts as his signing up fee for his new role. It’s allegedly not an easy rumour to avoid.

  • Revealed: The Papacy & media donations

    It’s a confusing old world, isn’t it? Life takes us by surprise. It has its ups and downs. It takes a left turn, and then a right. It goes uphill, and then it dips into a downhill run.

    This is the same with leadership, and heading a worldwide organisation is a stressful job. However, the Catholic Church has a growing problem coping with its realities.

    It pertains to media, and more specifically the inflow and outflow of donations to and from it.

    The revelations are damning, in part because it causes harm to devotees, who are harassed mainly by Italian-based security groups incessantly breathing down their necks.

    The mistakes made now draw attention to these people, and to the Pope himself.

    The questions start with why accounts aren’t being kept properly, such as how money is given by media groups in return for prized coverage and then returned at other times, apparently for relief programs.

    The security personnel are alleged to have mafia members, but are mainly led by Vatican-suppliant men that are accused of rape, among other tactics familiar to seedy operations.

    The mixing in of personal threats makes it too traumatic for most people. It’s confusing and it doesn’t relate to people’s worship, according to those Catholics affected.

    The twists of turns of this saga have perplexed many priests too, who don’t understand why it’s happening and can’t get a response. Their struggle is to care for the flock, while the Pope meanders about.

  • Bitcoin is a Crypto pace setter

    The overall tanking of crypto prices in recent weeks is down to one point of fact: Bitcoin. The founding trendsetter is leading the alternative markets by the fluctuating behaviour of its holders.

    The recently-released World Liberty Financial token also dived, along with $TRUMP and many others that were once riding higher. The reality of a skewed market is that one coin guides them all.

  • Crypto is making finance local

    The local ledger system that underpins much of the Crypto that people can access day to day is a revolution in the way money is managed in front of us. In the case of digital assets, the safety is in knowing that the world isn’t the oyster of the financial future. This makes it a domestic tool for anyone to begin to understand more about finance without the baggage of profit returns or bleak forecasts based on production output.

    The straightforward, streamlined concept is supported by a foundation of open source activity. This is the network that makes the Crypto world what it is. It’s not behind thick walls or hidden deep in the recesses of cavernous security systems. It’s a surface-level activity by an investing community that works within the rules to bend them. It’s a new way to manage time and resources in money matters.

  • Trump-backed token launches

    Trump-backed World Liberty Financial has launched its token into mainstream general release. It’s called WLFI and trades on many popular, open platforms. Its start price is low – less than a US dollar – but it’s projected to increase in value as protocols set in.

    The token was a governance item used by holders to vote on changes to the WLF platform. However, due to owner pressure, it’s now possible to trade it. This means profit may be derived from value. It may lead to losses, like a traditional, straightforward share.

  • Financial crash is a reminder of the future

    The financial world isn’t liable to just crash. It’s a myth of popular economics to think so. The fortunes of countries don’t tank overnight. The process is long.

    It’s the belief of some that policy guides collapse. It’s seen as a slow-motion car crash. They at least see the pieces coming together, and seek to avoid the impact.

    The so-called tried and tested ‘models’ of thriving in a time of turmoil are proven to fail, however, and analysis only really proves itself in the short term.

    It’s fair to say crashes are mistakes, not intentions. There isn’t a bank that plans for it, and there aren’t any that avoid its break on the shores of customer behaviour.

    The essential flaws in any system need exposure, and smoothing out. The chaos that ensues around it is something of a modern phenomenon now.

  • Is Crypto a non-starter?

    The rise of Bitcoin (BTC) is just one piece of technology getting there into the mainstream.

    It doesn’t mean everybody’s changing their money to fit the new way.

    The financial system isn’t changing to blockchain.

    There isn’t a new form or format for everyone anytime soon. This is fallacious thinking.

    The inventors of alternative technology want their aims to be achieved. It’s a vision for the future they can control with their own hands.

    It’s a system that works for their own values – however niche a collective it may be.

  • Disaster is a new sort of crisis

    It looks likely that unexpected events will become more and more of a risk in the near future. The types of events of late, such as meltdowns, accidents, and incidents, are such we don’t expect.

    The financial system is extremely diverse. It means the involvement of new entities is increasing at a pace. The complexity it results in may be a source of such errors we cannot anticipate in future.

  • Gov debt at critical level

    The UK’s finances are under a microscope following Sir Keir Starmer’s election victory. His Chancellor Rachel Reeves has also come out swinging with a number of high profile policy announcements.

    However the national finances continue to show a steep decline into an abyss.

    In a report published last Friday the UK’s national debt has reached a level equivalent to 99.5% of GDP (ONS). This is a result of accumulated borrowing by successive governments over a longer period of time.

    It’s as bad as it was previously in the 1960’s. It really is time for change.