This should explain to normies how they are being robbed on a daily basis
(media.greatawakening.win)
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This is very nice.
It is my belief that normies need a steel-capped boot stamping on their face forever to get it.
The white hats are dusting off some kind of less permanent analogue as we speak.
Wait until the normies find out that $1.00 today is equivalent to 59 CENTS in 2000. Source: Inflation Calculator
It blows my mind that you think this is something everyday people, like very much most people that are normal, don't know. It is conventional wisdom. Children in Jr High use it as deep thoughts material during their first subverting or rebelling.
It has become so aggressive that the fraud is right in your face.
My first car was $6000 in 1998 and it was only 5-years old whenever I bought it, which is crazy to think about. These days that kind of money would only snatch something from the salvage yard
My first car was £500 brand new! It looked like this but was an older model. OK, I'm old.
Haha, what the heck is that thing? An old ambulance or milk truck?
It is the traditional Mini in van form. If you bought any other version you had to pay Purchase Tax which I guess is like Sales Tax in the US.
Oh my goodness, that's hilarious. I would not have put that together. The little mini is so cute ... the van .. well, not so much, lol. But it's weird you'd have to pay a tax (like you said, like sales tax) on one vehicle but not the other. Did you have to pay any tax? I know over there you guys have VAT but not sure if it's on everything. Thanks for the explanation and the picture. :D
I have to say, that picture of the van does not show it in the best light but it was the first one I found in the right colour!
We used to have purchase tax in the days before we had VAT. Vans were regarded as business vehicles so were exempt from purchase tax at the time. If you bought a van then added windows in the back yourself you then became liable for the tax.
Mr Bean's camper van
Not necessarily, $6,000 was quite a lot for the era especially on a used vehicle that is 5 years old. My first vehicle in 2005 was a 1995 Jeep Cherokee with 171,000 miles when I got it at age 16 - cost was $1700!
Mine was a Toyota sedan with all of the bells and whistles and it had only 15,000 miles. Probably was the low mileage.
In January, I sold my neighbor's 1993 Nissan Altima with 259,000 miles for $1100. In this area it is extremely difficult to get something NICE for cheap.
This is why many kids will continue to live at home.
yep, done by design.
Median income is not $36k now. It's about 60-70k
That might be individual income versus household income.
The Census Bureau reports, Income in the United States: 2022 and Poverty in the United States: 2022, show that before taxes, median household income declined 2.3% to $74,580 and the poverty rate (11.5%), as measured by the official poverty measure, was not statistically different from 2021.
The 2023 Current Population Survey Report estimated the 2022 US Population over the age of 15 to be 271,500,000 of which 239,100,000 (88.07%) had incomes over $1. Among those earning $1 or more, the median income was $40,480 and the mean income was $59,430.
That totally says it.
Inflation is a good way for the banks to make money. Imagine if you put $1000 into the bank and the bank immediately converts that to gold. With 10% inflation you could take it out the following year and the bank would sell its gold for $1100, give you $1000 and pocket the change.
OK, I don't suppose they actually buy bars of gold like that but it illustrates the principle.
Somewhere I heard that income tax actually isn't needed to support the Federal government, it's actually a sneaky way to combat inflation.
Assuming that's true, it's scary to think the infernal revenue service does more to control inflation than the Fed does...
Oh, it's not. The founding fathers had that all figured out. Tariffs on foreign products was the main way government was supported. And it worked for centuries, until the Federal Reserve was created in 1913 and a 1% income tax was 'sold' to the American people to finance WWI.
yep...
It’s worse that that. Per SCOTUS on several occasions, income is defined as earnings on investments, what we now refer to as capital gains. They’ve made it abundantly clear that wages are not included under that definition. So now they tax wages AND income (capital gains) all under color of law (16th amendment not being ratified is irrelevant as SCOTUS already decided Congress had the right to tax income, but again, they defined income as earnings on investments). Taxes in America are nothing but money laundering operations and used to pay debt on dollar creation we have every right to do for ourselves for free. There’s literally no need for a debt based currency but the international banking cartel has done a masterful job at keeping people ignorant about that and thus, keeping us under their thumb. It’s why JFK lost his head.
recolor the lower text in blue or green, some other color than grey. It's too easy to ignore the way it is...
It's a screenshot from the US Debt Clock - blame them :)
...Okay, wow, that took way longer than it needed to, lol
https://files.catbox.moe/0gbdi4.png
lol, ah, so it's on purpose then...
gimme two seconds.
Straightforward as it gets!
https://twitter.com/Keanubtc/status/1708372611678327097
I've been watching Max for years, he's full on :)
I don't know why you think that everyone doesn't already know this. It's conventional wisdom. This is not controversial.
Ok, so tell someone they are earning less than half what they were 20 years ago and tell me if they already know.
Clearly not everyone knows this, otherwise they wouldn't be asleep.
Sound great but who's gonna start seizing?