
Professor Richard A. Werner
7.6K posts

Professor Richard A. Werner
@ProfessorWerner
Nikkei 2-9-1995: Richard A. Werner: 'Quantitative Easing to Create Recovery'. Book: Princes of the Yen https://t.co/weWUfm3AWK. See https://t.co/eE0p0vpJkB



A disturbing prophecy of the future - with AI data centres acting as central hubs for digital control over the population.

@VoicesUnheard Trump just relaxed the rules for reducing environmental toxins from systems using coolants. They said it was "to reduce the price of groceries": WHAT DO YOU THINK apnews.com/article/hfc-al…






‼️ Ma hajnali 5 órakor a román hatóságok és a végrehajtó lyukat ütöttek a nagyváradi premontrei rendház több száz éves falán, és megkezdték Fejes Rudolf Anzelm apát kilakoltatását. Az utolsó alkalommal (amikor ismét a helyszínen voltam), a bejelentett időpontban a nagyváradi magyar hívek ellenállása miatt a végrehajtók már nem mertek jönni. Így aztán ezúttal hajnalban, váratlanul, a falat áttörve, erőszakkal hatoltak be a műemlék épületbe a román hatalom emberei. Eközben 11. napja várom Orbán Anita külügyminiszter válaszát a nyílt levelemre, amelyben azt kértem, hogy lépjen a magyar kormány, és Orbán Anita rendelje be a román nagykövetet. 11. napja válaszra sem méltatta ezt a kérést. De nemcsak a magyar kormány nem tett semmit (Magyar Péter ígérete ellenére sem), de az RMDSZ is asszisztált ahhoz, ami ma hajnalban történt. Ez bizony árulás! A nagyváradi magyarság 300 éves ikonikus templomában most már misézni sem tudnak, miután még a sekrestyét is elfoglalták.















Data centers being built to ‘MICROMANAGE population through new financial world order’ ‘Your money won’t work outside certain zone’ ‘AI really about CONTROL over your liquid assets’

While Romanian families shivered in unheated apartments and waited hours for meager bread rations, Nicolae Ceaușescu built himself a 1,100-room palace that consumed $3 billion of his nation's wealth. The Casa Poporului stands today as a monument to the inevitable outcome when central planners face zero market constraints on their appetites. Ceaușescu's palace contains 12 stories above ground, spreads across 365,000 square meters, and required 20,000 workers laboring in shifts around the clock. He demolished entire historic neighborhoods of Bucharest to clear space for his architectural ego trip. Meanwhile, his citizens endured bread queues, rolling blackouts, and heating restrictions so severe that hospitals couldn't maintain proper temperatures. The dictator diverted the nation's resources toward marble, crystal chandeliers, and gold leaf while his people literally froze. Without market prices to signal genuine demand or profit-and-loss mechanisms to punish waste, political authorities inevitably channel resources toward projects that serve their personal preferences rather than human needs. Ceaușescu faced no competitors, no angry shareholders, no bankruptcy risk. He simply commanded the nation's productive capacity to serve his grandiose vision. The palace required 3,500 tons of crystal, 480 chandeliers, 1,409 ceiling lights, and 700,000 tons of steel and bronze. Every ton of material that went into those ornate rooms represented food, medicine, fuel, or housing that never reached Romanian families. The arithmetic is brutal but simple: centralized control means resources flow toward political vanity projects rather than genuine human priorities. The building still stands, largely empty, costing millions annually just to maintain its unused splendor.




The British Principle of Plausible Deniability: How the CIA’s Latin American Regime Changes Were Made in London Richard Werner (@scientificecon): For decades, U.S. intervention in Latin America took the form of covert operations, which always ran under the principle—it’s a very British principle—of plausible deniability. “Well, we didn’t do that.” “Oh, this poor president of this country got assassinated. It has nothing to do with us,” right? This is how it’s been working for decades in Latin America. You can list the countries, just country after country, regime change operations by the CIA, in fairly brutal ways, and then getting regimes into power that are essentially puppet regimes run by the CIA, presidents and prime ministers assassinated, and so on. But always: “Oh no, it wasn’t us,” denied. Although we do have whistleblowers like Fletcher Prouty and his great book, The Secret Team, which tells you a lot about how the CIA became so powerful, totally out of bounds and out of control, beyond its legal powers. It’s been active beyond its legal powers for decades.




