Quixote1818
Quixote1818's JournalNew footage shows January 6 rioters yelling at GOP lawmakers
Biden BLASTS Trump in new ad, TERRIFYING new Jan 6 footage drops
Fear is one hell of a motivator.
Trump saying he would be a dictator on day one was a huge mistake! Possibly losing our Democracy to Trump is going to light a bonfire under underneath the Democratic base and anyone in the middle who loves freedom and Democracy. Anyone who isn't religious and doesn't want religious nut jobs telling them what to do, cares about not going to jail if they get an abortion and so on is going to be more motivated to vote this fall than in any election in my lifetime.
Those on the left and middle have a lot more to lose than those on the right in November. I also think this is why the polls have been off so badly. They aren't picking up voter enthusiasm in the Dem base because of all the crazy shit the GOP has been doing lately.
I think we will see a blue wave for Biden this fall to save our Democracy.
The lives changed by Jan. 6 attacks
Convicted Jan. 6 participant calls out Trump
Experts weigh in on what could happen if Trump is convicted
Has this ad been posted yet? It's really well done!
From a Republican group. Hits the dictator issue head on:
https://www.instagram.com/reel/C1QsjTOri1z/?igsh=ZXhsNHk3eGp2eGpv
Conway predicts how Supreme Court may rule on Trump's presidential immunity filing
Global banks see no recession, US companies are more circumspect
Source: Reuters
SINGAPORE, Dec 20 (Reuters) - Heading into 2024, analysts say the U.S. recession they'd been forecasting for two years isn't coming anymore. Everyone else, from companies to investors, is still bracing for a slowdown caused by tepid consumer demand.
Dissonance between the habitually bullish investment bank analysts and the more circumspect money managers is not new. What's different this time is the level of prudence and caution from some top companies as they outline their plans for next year.
Real money managers are in no doubt about which side to trust. After months of being wrong footed, sell-side analysts are a bit too bullish about growth prospects, Fed rate cuts and a consumption recovery, they say.
"Take a grain of salt maybe to measuring the efficacy of some of these sell-side forecasts," says Patrick McDonough, a portfolio manager for PGIM Quantitative Solutions. "I would be a little bit more on the side of the companies.
Consensus forecasts from major banks, including Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, UBS and Barclays, are for global growth to be constrained in 2024 by elevated interest rates, pricier oil and a weakened China, but with low odds for a recession. A year ago, many banks were forecasting a U.S. recession.
Read more: https://www.reuters.com/markets/global-markets-recession-analysis-pix-2023-12-20/
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