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Offline Fat Earl

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Re: ISIS and the Middle East
« Reply #640 on: January 07, 2016, 02:26:24 PM »
It's a psyop.

 :o
The love that we withhold is the pain that we carry, life after life.

Re: ISIS and the Middle East
« Reply #641 on: January 14, 2016, 12:32:46 PM »


In one of the last messages posted at the 2016 Presidential Election thread, we looked at the possibility of higher inflation in the US for 2016.

Now, an even more challenging issue: the price of oil.

Most analysts have declared that the low price of oil is here to stay, even predicting that it will reach some $20/barrel.

They base this kind of reasoning on these arguments:

-Iran will hit the market with a new supply of oil
-Economic slow-down will reduce demand
-Low prices are needed to damage the economies of Russia and Iran
-Higher rates = dollar strength = lower oil prices

However, the oil market has seen high prices irrespective of the dollar’s strength.

Also, there is the geo-political factor which is very important.

If there is panic and risk aversion, the price of oil will rise very fast again.


Let us look at a 20 year chart for oil prices:



(the blue vertical lines that occur every 83 months – about every 7 years; the last two important lows were late 2001 and late 2008)


And there are unexpected developments: Russia to launch its own crude benchmark in 2016.

"Our goal is to take a place among the major indicators. Currently, the pricing for most of our oil exports which as well determines our budget, is in the hands of our partners.”

SPIMEX advisor Segey Kvartalnov


The West's biggest long-range fear is that Russia and China will increasingly back their currencies with gold rather than U.S. dollars, which would make them independent currencies rather than the dollar satellites they are at present.


« Last Edit: January 14, 2016, 01:18:39 PM by sandokhan »

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Offline Lord Dave

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Re: ISIS and the Middle East
« Reply #642 on: January 14, 2016, 01:12:24 PM »
Every us presidential cycle.  See the other, smaller dips?

Connect the dots.
If you are going to DebOOonK an expert then you have to at least provide a source with credentials of equal or greater relevance. Even then, it merely shows that some experts disagree with each other.

Re: ISIS and the Middle East
« Reply #643 on: January 14, 2016, 02:10:51 PM »


Money is gold, nothing else

J.P. Morgan, 1912


Let us translate this very important quote into the business language of today:

Gold Is Money, Everything Else Is Credit

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Offline Lord Dave

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Re: ISIS and the Middle East
« Reply #644 on: January 14, 2016, 02:20:50 PM »
And when gold is no longer valuable?
If you are going to DebOOonK an expert then you have to at least provide a source with credentials of equal or greater relevance. Even then, it merely shows that some experts disagree with each other.

Re: ISIS and the Middle East
« Reply #645 on: January 14, 2016, 07:04:50 PM »



The only time when gold will not be valuable is in the case of a major geological/astronomical catastrophe.

Here is the price of gold for the past 100 years:




In reference to the message I posted earlier today on oil prices, here is the relationship between gold and crude oil values:

http://forum.tfes.org/index.php?topic=1805.msg85493#msg85493





Re: ISIS and the Middle East
« Reply #647 on: February 04, 2016, 07:29:45 AM »


Back on January 5, I wrote:

http://forum.tfes.org/index.php?topic=1805.msg84596#msg84596

May, very possible Kurdish referendum on independence


http://www.reuters.com/article/us-iraq-kurds-idUSKCN0VB2EY (Iraqi Kurdish leader calls for non-binding independence referendum - Feb. 2, 2016)

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Offline Lord Dave

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Re: ISIS and the Middle East
« Reply #648 on: February 04, 2016, 07:44:29 AM »
Which has been called for before by that guy.

So people will continue to do what they've done before.
If you are going to DebOOonK an expert then you have to at least provide a source with credentials of equal or greater relevance. Even then, it merely shows that some experts disagree with each other.


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Offline Lord Dave

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If you are going to DebOOonK an expert then you have to at least provide a source with credentials of equal or greater relevance. Even then, it merely shows that some experts disagree with each other.

Re: ISIS and the Middle East
« Reply #651 on: February 06, 2016, 07:24:08 AM »


Feel free to use the available space in this thread to offer your own predictions and your own analysis of the events taking place in the Middle East.

Scenario #3 included the fact that a new Sunni state will be created, being carved out of eastern Syria: exactly the aim of the new possible arabian coalition incursion.


In the messages posted on December 1 and December 10, I reminded everyone of the fact that also Turkey is preparing to invade northern Syria.

Turkish MP and member of the country’s main opposition party warned that the probability of Turkey’s military invading Syria is increasing.

Erdogan Toprak, member of the Republican People’s Party (CHP) who has served as the MP for Istanbul’s third electoral district since 2011, pointed out that the recent visit of the Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu to Saudi Arabia has strangely coincided with the start of the Syrian peace talks in Geneva, as well as with the worsening of Ankara’s relations with Moscow following the alleged violation of Turkish airspace by a Russian Su-34 warplane.

In a weekly report by the parliamentary team he leads, Toprak also noted that President Erdogan’s visit to Riyadh in December 2015 was immediately followed by an announcement heralding the creation of the Islamic military coalition, and that Turkey immediately offered to join it.



Re: ISIS and the Middle East
« Reply #652 on: February 09, 2016, 12:37:50 PM »


What would happen if Turkey invades Syria from the north, and the multinational coalition marches into Syria from the south?

http://www.unz.com/tsaker/week-seventeen-of-the-russian-intervention-in-syria-does-erdogan-want-war-with-russia/

Now, it is well known that Arab and Turkish operatives are already on the ground, in Syria.

The analysts who wonder why the Israeli air force (400 F-16/F-15 fighters) or Turkey's air force (some 240 F-16 fighters) would let the Russians settle in at the Khmeimim base (S-400 unit and some 16 very advanced fighters), must understand that they had no choice: Russia has at its disposal the formidable scalar ether weapons discussed earlier in this thread.

Of course, this brings up the question: why would Nato want a war with Russia at any cost? Even if Nato allies itself with China and then begin a synchronous attack on Russia, they would stand no chance at all against the scalar weaponry employed by the Russian Ministry of Defense.

Therefore something else must be going on: a certain knowledge, of a certain kind of event, which would presumably offer some kind of an advantage in case of a large scale war. However, the nature of this event makes it very difficult to predict in advance which areas of the world would be affected most, and which ones would be affected least.

Some financial analysts have correctly noticed that now it is possible for the Fed to raise rates (this time around they will not save Wall Street) and also for the dollar to weaken (as China and Russia back their currency with gold); they think that while there might not a repeat of the Great Depression, there will certainly be no economic collapse looming in the near future.

This view fails to take into account the fact that the great economic/financial decisions taken over the past 100 years, were made by people who had a foreknowledge of that certain event described above.

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Offline Lord Dave

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Re: ISIS and the Middle East
« Reply #653 on: February 09, 2016, 01:38:19 PM »
So, why hasn't Russia taken over the world with Scalar Weapons?
Or defeated the US during the cold war?
Or done.. Well, anything productive?
If you are going to DebOOonK an expert then you have to at least provide a source with credentials of equal or greater relevance. Even then, it merely shows that some experts disagree with each other.

Re: ISIS and the Middle East
« Reply #654 on: February 09, 2016, 03:53:32 PM »
Formidable scalar ether weapons? Care to explain what that is?
Ignored by Intikam since 2016.

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Offline Lord Dave

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Re: ISIS and the Middle East
« Reply #655 on: February 09, 2016, 04:10:35 PM »
Formidable scalar ether weapons? Care to explain what that is?

Basically EMP and Radar.
If you are going to DebOOonK an expert then you have to at least provide a source with credentials of equal or greater relevance. Even then, it merely shows that some experts disagree with each other.

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Offline Ghost Spaghetti

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Re: ISIS and the Middle East
« Reply #656 on: February 09, 2016, 05:28:37 PM »
Formidable scalar ether weapons? Care to explain what that is?

Magic superweapons which blew up Tunguska, that factory in China and apparently haven't been used since in any Soviet or Soviet-backed conflict. Don't ask. Just smile and nod.

Saddam Hussein

Re: ISIS and the Middle East
« Reply #657 on: February 09, 2016, 09:07:25 PM »
Formidable scalar ether weapons? Care to explain what that is?

Magic superweapons which blew up Tunguska, that factory in China and apparently haven't been used since in any Soviet or Soviet-backed conflict. Don't ask. Just smile and nod.

Do not tempt me to bring here the entire Tunguska file, the fact the that the explosion which occurred on June 30, 1908, at that location, was seen all the way from London, with a curvature of over 4000 km to count, it was seen from every major capital of Europe also...

Re: ISIS and the Middle East
« Reply #658 on: February 13, 2016, 02:25:32 PM »

Re: ISIS and the Middle East
« Reply #659 on: February 15, 2016, 10:07:49 AM »


There is a less obvious consequence to the entire situation in Syria: the Syrian army is exhausted by the prolonged war, the heavy losses, the weakening of the combat potential.

This is the reason why only now the Arab coalition and Turkey are threatening to invade Syria.

It would mean some kind of a conflict in the Black Sea between Russia and Turkey, with Nato intervening on the behalf of Turkey.

On Monday, February 8, Russia’s defense minister, Army-General Sergei Shoigu, announced that the military forces of the Southern and Central Military districts, the Aerospace Forces (Vozdushno Kosmicheskikh Sil—VKS) the airborne troops (Vozdushno Desantnye Voyska—VDV), the military transport air force (Voenno Transportnaya Aviatsiya—VTA), the Black Sea Fleet and the Caspian Flotilla were being mobilized for full battle readiness. The VKS will, according to Shoigu, “prepare to perform massive air raids and to repel massive air attacks” while army units and the VDV are testing the ability of rapid long-distance deployment.

The massive mobilization of forces and their forward deployment began without prior warning. Shoigu ordered his deputy Anatoly Antonov—a career diplomat employed by the defense ministry since February 2011—to “inform foreign military attachés about the snap battle readiness exercise” as it was already in progress (Mil.ru, February 8 ).

The use of military maneuvers as a covert prelude to war is traditionally seen by Russian generals as the best way to achieve strategic and tactical surprise. Military exercises can disguise the massive prewar troop movement that would otherwise be virtually impossible to hide.


Of course, if the Sunnis invade Syria with an army of 150,000 military personnel and hundreds of airplanes, it will be able to reach Damascus very fast, even if Russia responds with an air campaign. This means that Iran will be forced to intervene, by invading Syria from southern Iraq.
« Last Edit: February 15, 2016, 10:09:32 AM by sandokhan »