Miscellaneous News

AssassinsMace

Lieutenant General

How dare China use the truth to spread propaganda and sell their fighters! Frankly I thought fighter pilots were suppose to have some level of education. AI? How was AI used to lie about this? Is there a computer simulation of this shootdown(s) out there that people are mistaking as real that’s fooling everyone? Like the US side doesn’t lie like WMDs in Iraq to commit war crimes like starting a war to have an excuse to take over the world oil supply…? Oh yeah, they don’t engage in big lies over there. Was this YouTube channel paid for by the CCP for furthering the lie by leaning on the side that India lost aircraft by Pakistan? How dare communists use capitalism to sell their fighters especially when it’s based on telling the truth. The world is suppose to believe in their lies. That’s the Western way.
 

FriedButter

Brigadier
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Goldman Sachs hires former British PM Sunak as senior adviser​

Goldman Sachs on Tuesday named former UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak its senior adviser, adding a veteran policymaker to its roster as banks navigate rising geopolitical and regulatory uncertainty.

For Sunak, the appointment marks a return to the bank where he first worked as a summer intern in investment banking in 2000 and later as an analyst between 2001 and 2004.

“In his role, he will ... advise our clients globally on a range of important topics, sharing his unique perspectives and insights on the macroeconomic and geopolitical landscape,” Goldman CEO David Solomon said in a statement.
 

FriedButter

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White House: Tariff price hikes are possible, but so is a meteor strike​

A top White House economic advisor on Tuesday likened the odds that President Donald Trump’s tariffs will lead to higher prices to those of a meteorite striking earth.

“Rare events happen. We get pandemics or, or meteors or whatever,” said Stephen Miran, chairman of Trump’s Council of Economic Advisers, on CNBC’s “Squawk Box.”

But “there’s just no evidence thus far of it happening,” Miran said.

Anchor Melissa Lee noted that Miran was equating tariff price increases with extremely rare events.

“I don’t mean to be dismissive,” he replied. “All I mean to say is that prediction is difficult, and we should always speak in terms of odds and possibilities.”

“I don’t have a crystal ball telling me the future and neither does anyone else,” he said.

Miran also promoted a new report from his White House council, which highlighted the fact that prices of imported goods had fallen between December of last year and May, despite fears that Trump’s tariffs would hike prices.

Trump did not announce his “reciprocal” tariff agenda until April. And he has twice extended the deadline he set for countries to reach bilateral trade deals with the U.S. and avoid these highest rates.

While prices some individual goods have already risen as a result of tariffs, Trump’s policies have yet to spur the overall inflation that businesses and consumers feared.

Many economists say they still expect to see prices increase in the coming months. And they point to multiple reasons why those higher prices have not yet appeared.

One is the fact that Trump has repeatedly delayed implementing many of his most severe “liberation day” tariffs.

A second is the delay between tariffs and their real world price impact, while a third factor is the stockpiling that many companies did earlier this year.

Miran was asked on CNBC whether the White House expects the tariffs to raise prices in the future.

″‘Won’t it come eventually?’ said Miran, paraphrasing the anchor’s question. “I mean, sure, eventually, you know, a meteor is going to strike or whatever. But we’ve been waiting many months now and that evidence has just not emerged.”

The White House report analyzed two inflation gauges: the Personal Consumption expenditure Price Index, or PCE, which is followed by financial markets, and the widely tracked Consumer Price Index, or CPI.

“The results clearly show the price of imported components declining, starting in March, while overall prices were close to unchanged or increased slightly,” the report concluded.
“Rare events happen. We get pandemics or, or meteors or whatever,” said Stephen Miran
 
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