These are some of our videos from the previous two years. We took a short break from recordings this year due to other work taking up our time, but in this new year we shall be restarting our recordings with the strength and vigor our class deserves!
👏4
Forwarded from Marx Engels Lenin Institute
YouTube
Why Am I Not a Trotskyist?
When I was in college, I was influenced by Trotsky's theory of permanent revolution. I even joined a Trotskyist party. But over time, I came to reject these views. Here is why.
Note: This Video was recorded in Feb. 2020, So Any Reference to Events & News…
Note: This Video was recorded in Feb. 2020, So Any Reference to Events & News…
👍3
Forwarded from DD Geopolitics
🇷🇺❌ 🔥 🇪🇺 The supply of Russian gas through Ukraine has ceased as of 8:00 a.m. Moscow time on January 1, Gazprom reports.
The company stated that it lacks the technical and legal capability to deliver gas.
🔴 @DDGeopolitics | Socials | Donate | Advertising
The company stated that it lacks the technical and legal capability to deliver gas.
Please open Telegram to view this post
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
😐1
Forwarded from DD Geopolitics
🇷🇺❌ 🔥 🇪🇺 The transit of Russian gas to Europe through Ukraine completely stopped at 8:00 a.m. Moscow time, according to data from European gas transmission operators.
🔴 @DDGeopolitics | Socials | Donate | Advertising
Please open Telegram to view this post
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
😐2
Forwarded from DD Geopolitics
🇸🇰 Fico warned that halting the transit of Russian gas to Europe through Ukraine would have a serious impact on EU countries, but not on Russia, Reuters reports.
🔴 @DDGeopolitics | Socials | Donate | Advertising
Please open Telegram to view this post
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
💯2
Forwarded from DD Geopolitics
🇪🇺📈 🔥 Gas prices in Europe have reached their highest level since October 2023, reports Bloomberg.
This occurred following the cessation of Russian gas transit through Ukraine, amid colder weather in Europe and the shutdown of a Norwegian liquefied natural gas plant due to a compressor failure.
After the transit through Ukraine stopped, any disruptions at global LNG export facilities directly impact European prices.
This could further accelerate the depletion of gas from European storage facilities, where reserves are already decreasing at the fastest pace since 2021.
🔴 @DDGeopolitics | Socials | Donate | Advertising
This occurred following the cessation of Russian gas transit through Ukraine, amid colder weather in Europe and the shutdown of a Norwegian liquefied natural gas plant due to a compressor failure.
After the transit through Ukraine stopped, any disruptions at global LNG export facilities directly impact European prices.
This could further accelerate the depletion of gas from European storage facilities, where reserves are already decreasing at the fastest pace since 2021.
"Although Europe is unlikely to run out of gas this winter, thanks to reserves and supplies from other providers, traders may find it harder to refill storage for the next heating season," Bloomberg comments.
Please open Telegram to view this post
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Forwarded from MintPress News
Media is too big
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
"Who gives a sh*t."
Israeli women were questioned about whether they were aware of the number of children who have been killed in Gaza during Israel's genocide.
Israeli women were questioned about whether they were aware of the number of children who have been killed in Gaza during Israel's genocide.
Forwarded from Megatron
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
🇦🇺 ANOTHER Boeing landing gear fail aborts take-off as 'wheels EXPLODE'
Watch Melbourne Airport emergency crews put out black smoke under plane
@Megatron_ron
Watch Melbourne Airport emergency crews put out black smoke under plane
@Megatron_ron
Forwarded from The Islander
The Euro’s Collapse and the Greenback’s Last Illusion
The euro’s descent to a two year low of 1.032 USD is the sound of a currency cracking under the weight of its own contradictions. Germany’s industrial stagnation, Europe’s energy crisis, and complete surrender of monetary sovereignty to DC have turned the euro into a sacrificial lamb on the altar of empire. But let’s not mistake the dollar’s temporary resilience for permanence. It’s a currency underwritten by $36.2 trillion in debt and more than $200 trillion in unfunded liabilities, a bankrupt Ponzi scheme of historic proportions, posing as stability. Both currencies are hurtling toward collapse, but Europe will go first, because vassals are always sacrificed to keep the empire’s illusions alive.
Germany, heart of the Eurozone, has been gutted. Once Europe’s industrial engine, it limps along, strangled by soaring energy costs and a U.S.-driven embargo on cheap Russian oil and gas. Growth this year will barely scrape 0.2%. Volkswagen and Bosch, industrial giants that once symbolized German power, are scaling back as LNG bills pile up. This was no accident. Europe didn’t lose sovereignty, it gave it away. Its decision to sanction its own energy lifelines was both economic folly and geo-servitude. We cannot forget the Nord Stream sabotage; Germany, fully aware of who committed the act of economic terror, chose silence over sovereignty, humiliation over defiance.
But while the euro collapses, the dollar isn’t sitting on quick sand. It clings to its final illusions of credibility, even as it’s underwritten by mountains of debt and liabilities that no amount of Fed magic can erase. And then came the theft, the empire’s $300 billion seizure of Russian sovereign wealth. Beyond theft; it was the opening of Pandora’s box. The empire told the world that no reserves are safe, no currency is immune if you dare step out of line. This was much more than a moment of recklessness, it was a precedent that will haunt. What was meant to cripple Russia will be used against the empire itself, as nations accelerate their flight from dollar hegemony.
The euro’s plight is intertwined with this arrogance. Europe’s decision to bow to DC didn’t just destroy its economy, it ceded the very monetary sovereignty that once made the euro a contender for global relevance. The ECB has slashed rates four times, and predictably its currency keeps falling. It’s a vassal of the greenback, enslaved by policies designed not for Europe’s prosperity but for to buy the empire time.
Meanwhile, the dollar revels in its short-term resilience, propped up by faux military dominance and the inertia of global finance. But the theft of Russian reserves has shattered the illusion of dollar stability for the rest of the world. Nations across the Global South now see the empire for what it is: a bankrupt enforcer clinging to its racket. The dollar’s credibility isn’t real but enforced. And once enforcement becomes the only tool, the system collapses from within.
Europe will fall first, sacrificed to buy the empire a few more hours. DC, fully willing to watch Europe burn, has already shown its hand. The mafia-style LNG extortion racket, the indifference to Europe’s collapsing industry, and the Nord Stream humiliation are proof enough. The empire doesn’t have allies, it has dependents. But don’t think the dollar will escape its own reckoning. When the world finally moves to alternatives untethered from the empire’s whims, both the euro and the dollar will be relics of a failed order.
And here’s the final note: the theft of Russian assets was was a declaration of war on the global financial system itself. It shattered the last vestiges of trust in the empire’s currency regime.
The euro may be the first to collapse, but make no mistake: the dollar will be next. When the dust settles, Washington will look back on the theft of $300 billion as the moment it signed its own death warrant.
This isn’t just the decline of currencies, it’s the funeral dirge of an empire that mistook coercion for strength.
- Gerry Nolan
The euro’s descent to a two year low of 1.032 USD is the sound of a currency cracking under the weight of its own contradictions. Germany’s industrial stagnation, Europe’s energy crisis, and complete surrender of monetary sovereignty to DC have turned the euro into a sacrificial lamb on the altar of empire. But let’s not mistake the dollar’s temporary resilience for permanence. It’s a currency underwritten by $36.2 trillion in debt and more than $200 trillion in unfunded liabilities, a bankrupt Ponzi scheme of historic proportions, posing as stability. Both currencies are hurtling toward collapse, but Europe will go first, because vassals are always sacrificed to keep the empire’s illusions alive.
Germany, heart of the Eurozone, has been gutted. Once Europe’s industrial engine, it limps along, strangled by soaring energy costs and a U.S.-driven embargo on cheap Russian oil and gas. Growth this year will barely scrape 0.2%. Volkswagen and Bosch, industrial giants that once symbolized German power, are scaling back as LNG bills pile up. This was no accident. Europe didn’t lose sovereignty, it gave it away. Its decision to sanction its own energy lifelines was both economic folly and geo-servitude. We cannot forget the Nord Stream sabotage; Germany, fully aware of who committed the act of economic terror, chose silence over sovereignty, humiliation over defiance.
But while the euro collapses, the dollar isn’t sitting on quick sand. It clings to its final illusions of credibility, even as it’s underwritten by mountains of debt and liabilities that no amount of Fed magic can erase. And then came the theft, the empire’s $300 billion seizure of Russian sovereign wealth. Beyond theft; it was the opening of Pandora’s box. The empire told the world that no reserves are safe, no currency is immune if you dare step out of line. This was much more than a moment of recklessness, it was a precedent that will haunt. What was meant to cripple Russia will be used against the empire itself, as nations accelerate their flight from dollar hegemony.
The euro’s plight is intertwined with this arrogance. Europe’s decision to bow to DC didn’t just destroy its economy, it ceded the very monetary sovereignty that once made the euro a contender for global relevance. The ECB has slashed rates four times, and predictably its currency keeps falling. It’s a vassal of the greenback, enslaved by policies designed not for Europe’s prosperity but for to buy the empire time.
Meanwhile, the dollar revels in its short-term resilience, propped up by faux military dominance and the inertia of global finance. But the theft of Russian reserves has shattered the illusion of dollar stability for the rest of the world. Nations across the Global South now see the empire for what it is: a bankrupt enforcer clinging to its racket. The dollar’s credibility isn’t real but enforced. And once enforcement becomes the only tool, the system collapses from within.
Europe will fall first, sacrificed to buy the empire a few more hours. DC, fully willing to watch Europe burn, has already shown its hand. The mafia-style LNG extortion racket, the indifference to Europe’s collapsing industry, and the Nord Stream humiliation are proof enough. The empire doesn’t have allies, it has dependents. But don’t think the dollar will escape its own reckoning. When the world finally moves to alternatives untethered from the empire’s whims, both the euro and the dollar will be relics of a failed order.
And here’s the final note: the theft of Russian assets was was a declaration of war on the global financial system itself. It shattered the last vestiges of trust in the empire’s currency regime.
The euro may be the first to collapse, but make no mistake: the dollar will be next. When the dust settles, Washington will look back on the theft of $300 billion as the moment it signed its own death warrant.
This isn’t just the decline of currencies, it’s the funeral dirge of an empire that mistook coercion for strength.
- Gerry Nolan
👍1