Moon of Alabama Brecht quote
April 10, 2022
The MoA Week In Review – NOT Ukraine OT 2022-43

Last week's posts at Moon of Alabama:

Interesting summery …

… and a few corrections to it by Agitpapa:

1-This Swiss ex-gen staff colonel's Ukraine analysis has a lot of inaccuracies and speculation, as well as some interesting points. In 2014-17, the CIA/nazi Maidan coup regime's 1st attempt to exterminate Russian speakers in Donbass ended in a crushing


Other issues:

Europe's demise:

The JCPOA Nuclear Agreement is dead:

Use as open NOT Ukraine thread …

Comments

DunGroanin | Apr 11 2022 20:33 utc | 105
US will have to deal with Russia and China combined in Pakistan. US will lose, Khan will win.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Apr 12 2022 2:04 utc | 101

When it comes to FUKUS depravity, hell is the limit…
Serbia prez Vucic accuse NATO warplane shadowing Serb airliner into Russian airspace…..
Are the mofo trying for another KAL007 ?

Posted by: denk | Apr 12 2022 2:40 utc | 102

(One two, one two, this is just a test.. In the hallowed words of the Beastie Boys
https://youtu.be/RLZOXw6RUqE)
Mushrooms communicate using own language
https://www.ctvnews.ca/sci-tech/new-study-suggests-mushrooms-may-talk-to-each-other-with-up-to-50-words-1.5856341
“Computer scientist Andrew Adamatzky from the University of the West of England analyzed electrical activity from four species of fungi and published his findings last Wednesday in the journal Royal Society Open Science. He found that spikes in electrical activity were used by fungi to communicate and transmit information to other fungi in their network.”
CBC exclusive: Government backtracks on plan for online-only applications
https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/asylum-claims-online-1.6416573
“…every second counts while making asylum applications. If claimants are stuck waiting to have access to technology or counsel, “they will still have the onus of explaining the additional delay for not having made the claim earlier. So that in turn will cause more anxiety for them.””

Posted by: Bruised Northerner | Apr 12 2022 13:40 utc | 103

I just saw the headline below and had to share today’s fundamentals

Stocks rebound as inflation hits highest level since 1981

Posted by: psychohistorian | Apr 12 2022 15:24 utc | 104

I just saw the headline below and had to share today’s fundamentals

Stocks rebound as inflation hits highest level since 1981

Posted by: psychohistorian | Apr 12 2022 15:24 utc | 111

Classic bull trap in progress!

Posted by: malenkov | Apr 12 2022 17:08 utc | 105

Below is a Xinhuanet posting about a UN report concerning the increased financial divide between rich and poor countries.

UNITED NATIONS, April 12 (Xinhua) — A “great finance divide” between rich and poor countries amid the COVID-19 pandemic poses a major setback for sustainable development, warns a UN report.
“The 2022 Financing for Sustainable Development Report: Bridging the Finance Divide,” released Tuesday, finds that while rich countries were able to support their pandemic recovery with record sums borrowed at ultra-low interest rates, the poorest countries spent billions servicing debt, preventing them from investing in sustainable development.
On average, the poorest developing countries pay 14 percent of revenue for interest on their debt, almost four times higher than developed countries, at 3.5 percent. Globally, many developing countries were forced to cut budgets for education, infrastructure and other capital spending as a result of the pandemic, says the report.
While many developed countries saw a rapid economic recovery from the pandemic shock in 2021, developing countries did not regain lost ground. In one in five developing countries, GDP per capita was projected to remain below 2019 levels by the end of 2023. This is even before accounting for the fallout from the war in Ukraine, says the report.
The pandemic shock plunged 77 million more people into extreme poverty in 2021, it says.
Unless the international community reverses course, this divergence will persist, and may further intensify over the coming months and years, the report warns.
Global geopolitical tensions are rising, fueling uncertainty. The conflict in Ukraine has led to sharply rising commodity prices, further supply bottlenecks, and increased financial market volatility and downside economic risks, raising the specter of stagflation. The tightening of global financing conditions in the face of rising inflation will put more countries at risk of debt distress, further constraining their fiscal space and hampering economic growth, it says.
Today, 60 percent of least developed and other low-income countries are already at high risk of, or in debt distress. Vaccine inequity remains high. Climate change will continue to exacerbate financing challenges, particularly in vulnerable countries, it says.
The report recommends actions in three areas. First, financing gaps and rising debt risks must be urgently addressed. Second, all financing flows must be aligned with sustainable development. Third, transparency and the information ecosystem must be improved to enable countries to better manage risks and use resources.
UN Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed, who launched the report at the UN Headquarters in New York, called for action to address the “great finance divide.”
“The international community has taken important steps to mitigate the pandemic’s social and economic fallout, including through large-scale provision of emergency financing and the creation of debt relief instruments. But more is needed to close the recovery gap, address the risk of debt distress and secure a better future for our children and for ourselves,” she said.

The world needs a debt jubilee and a multipolar form of governance and financial structure, IMO

Posted by: psychohistorian | Apr 13 2022 4:28 utc | 106

A news story about prices for oats spiking (Chicago again) led me to the Western Producer online zine (do people still say zine?) to listen in on the ag-related chatter.
One topic is fertilizer use and GHG emissions.
The government of Canada, in its recently released budget, proposed a target of reducing fertilizer application by 30 percent below 2020 levels. (See this report)
https://agriculture.canada.ca/en/about-our-department/transparency-and-corporate-reporting/public-opinion-research-and-consultations/share-ideas-fertilizer-emissions-reduction-target/discussion-document-reducing-emissions-arising-application-fertilizer-canadas-agriculture-sector
Western Producer painted a gloomy picture for individual farmers with that target. But didn’t raise the subject of GMO canola. A noticeable oversight in the discussion, in my view!! I also thought (Pollyanna-ish I know) that the government must have some kind of strategy for achieving that target. Mr. Google gave me a link to a scientific paper from 2008.
It’s about GM canola, but GM not to be herbicide tolerant or Roundup Ready, but GM to use nitrogen efficiently. (GMNUE canola – that’s catchy.)
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18298428/

Posted by: Bruised Northerner | Apr 13 2022 14:16 utc | 107