Sunday, 9 November 2025

Remembrance Day 2025: Rare WWI & WWII Film Footage

Oct 27, 2023 | Leonard Cohen recites 'In Flanders Fields' by John McCrae in this Remembrance Day Video.

Real film footage from World War I to Afghanistan, set to Hans Zimmer's music, and sound effects from the Battlefield video games.

As we pay homage to the heroes of the past and present this Remembrance Day or Memorial Day, let us also pledge to safeguard a future where peace and unity prevail, for the alternative is a world forever changed.

This Remembrance Day Video serves as a poignant reminder of the sacrifices made for freedom.


Saturday, 8 November 2025

Flights Cancelled as Longest US Shutdown Ever Continues

Nov 8, 2025 | Elections in the United States this week showed that many of Donald Trump's former supporters are turning on him: blaming him for their economic woes.

Difficulties only exacerbated by a six-week-long government shutdown that's now starting to hit air travel.

More than a thousand flights were cancelled yesterday, and nearly another thousand today. The government says it needs to relieve pressure on air-traffic controllers, currently working without pay.


Out-of-touch Trump Talks Up Economy among Sycophants and Stars in Miami

THE GUARDIAN: President jets in to speak at ritzy American Business Forum as millions see their food aid slashed – crisis, what crisis?

It was the week in which Republicans took a beating at the polls, the government shutdown became the longest in history, and 42 million people across the country, including 3 million in Florida, saw their federal food aid slashed.

But in the alternative reality of Miami, where tickets to an overwhelmingly conservative business conference headlined by Donald Trump cost up to $1,990, and billionaires from Saudi Arabia rubbed shoulders with equally wealthy American tycoons such as Jeff Bezos and Ken Griffin, those events created barely a ripple.

Instead, in a gesture that appeared almost to mock the widening disparity between the city’s haves and have-nots, organizers of the America Business Forum cooked up a little treat for attendees: a $50 gift card to spend on food to sustain themselves while they listened to their president congratulate himself for a “golden age” he said his “economic miracle” had delivered.

Advocates say the move, along with the high-budget opulence of the conference itself, was an ill-timed insult to more than a half-million Miami-Dade county residents who just saw their own ability to buy essential groceries for their families kiboshed by the gutting of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (Snap). » | Richard Luscombe in Miami | Friday, November 7, 2025

Elon Musk's Trillion Dollar Scam Exposed (ft. Christopher Hitchens)

Nov 8, 2025 | What would Christopher Hitchens say about Elon Musk receiving a compensation package potentially worth one trillion dollars? In this devastating AI reconstruction, Hitchens' trademark wit and moral clarity are unleashed on the most obscene example of corporate wealth extraction in modern history.

Canada PM Mark Carney's BIG Announcement on the End of Economic Ties with Trump's US

Nov 8, 2025 | Canada’s PM Mark Carney declares US trade "rupture" over: $50B tariff hit sparks $78B deficit budget for independence on November 4, 2025! Carney’s first federal budget slashes bureaucracy by 40K jobs, cuts temporary immigration 50%, boosts defense to 5% GDP by 2035. Prioritizes "Buy Canadian," doubles non-US exports in decade.

Michael Lambert: The Grim Reality of Britain's Economic Future

Nov 8, 2025 | I was tempted to begin this video by warning anyone of a nervous disposition to look away — because the truth about Britain’s economic future is not pleasant.

In this video, I explain why I believe the U.K. faces long-term decline, why genuine recovery is almost impossible, and how Brexit has made everything worse by cutting us off from our largest trading partner.

I also look briefly at the U.S. economy, where an AI bubble may soon burst, but the heart of this video is Britain — its structural weakness, political chaos, and loss of direction.



Michael Lambert's new channel: How Thinking for Ourselves Is Becoming Harder »

Thursday, 6 November 2025

Tesla Shareholders Approve $1tn Pay Package for Elon Musk

THE GUARDIAN: Chants of ‘Elon’ erupt after compensation plan approved despite opposition from several high-profile investors

Tesla shareholders approved a $1tn compensation plan for CEO Elon Musk on Thursday, awarding the world’s richest person what would be the largest corporate payout in history if he meets the goals necessary to receive it.

The pay package, which several high profile investors opposed, demonstrates that shareholders still believe Musk can lead the automaker in an era dominated by robotics and artificial intelligence.

The result of the vote was announced at the annual shareholder event in Austin, Texas, with more than 75% of investors voting in favor of the plan. Chants of “Elon” erupted in the room at the news of its approval.

“Thanks guys,” Musk said, after briefly dancing on stage alongside the company’s Optimus robots. » | Maddy Lauria and Nick Robins-Early | Thursday, November 6, 2025

Trump’s Secret War on the Dollar

Nov 6, 2025 | In today's video, I explain how Trump’s actions weaken the dollar, empower foreign-born far-right oligarchs in the US, and threaten America’s long-term financial stability. This is self-sabotage, and it is traitorous.

Donald Trump's Economy is FAILING

Nov 6, 2025 | Despite Trump's constant remarks about the great state of America's economy, the reality of the situation is dire. Steve Schmidt looks at the state of the American economy and why Trump's lies will have a terrible impact on our country.

Bernie Explains the Senate Fight That's Doubling Healthcare Premiums While the Rich Get Tax Breaks

Nov 6, 2025


ANTHONY DAVIS can be supported on Patreon here.

Tuesday, 4 November 2025

Wall Street and Bitcoin Plunge over AI Bubble Fears

THE TELEGRAPH: Global stocks fell sharply and Bitcoin plunged below $100,000 as fears mount that an artificial intelligence bubble is about to burst.

The price of the cryptocurrency dropped by as much as 6.7pc on Tuesday, briefly falling to $99,936 (£76,747) - the first time it has fallen below $100,000 since June.

It means Bitcoin has now officially entered a bear market, with the prices falling by more than 20pc since its last peak in October.

Global share prices also slumped as the bosses of Wall Street giants Goldman Sachs and Morgan Sachs predicted major stock market falls and the US investor depicted in the film “The Big Short” placed a $1bn bet against AI.

America’s benchmark S&P 500 index fell by 1.18pc while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite dropped by 1.84pc.

Share indexes in France, Germany and Japan also all sank by more than 1pc on Tuesday amid fears the AI-led market boom is running out of steam. » | Chris Price. Melissa Lawford US Economics Correspondent | Tuesday, November 4, 2025

Saturday, 1 November 2025

Inside Germany's Massive Spending Spree | Business Beyond

Oct 31, 2025 | After years of economic stagnation, Germany is investing hundreds of billions of euros into modernizing its infrastructure and promoting climate-friendly technology. The huge spending reverses a long period of frugality, in which the country was limited by strict borrowing rules, enshrined in the constitution. Now Chancellor Friedrich Merz is loosening the country`s purse strings and promising swift changes. Can this policy u-turn transform Germany`s economic fortunes and what will it take to turn all this money into growth?

Friday, 31 October 2025

This is How TAKAICHI Wants to Change Japan Forever

Oct 30, 2025 | Japan has just made history with the appointment of its first female Prime Minister: Sanae Takaichi. But her arrival in power could not have happened at a more delicate moment.

With the economy stagnant, inflation hitting wallets, the yen at historic lows, and an internal political crisis following the break with its coalition partner, Japan is facing a perfect storm.

Who is really the Japanese "Iron Lady"? What can we expect from her economic policy, marked by the return of the controversial Abenomics? And how will this shift affect relations with China, South Korea, and the United States?


Thursday, 30 October 2025

How Don Jr. is Profiting Billions Off His Father’s Presidency

Michael Wolff explains.

The Guardian View on Argentina’s Election: One Step Closer to Becoming a Trumpian Client State

THE GUARDIAN — EDITORIAL: A $40bn rescue may have helped Javier Milei scrape through midterms, but it leaves Argentina’s democracy and economy more dependent than ever on Washington

Argentina’s rightwing president, Javier Milei, his party and its allies claimed victory this week in key congressional elections. But it was Donald Trump who emerged the biggest winner. A $40bn lifeline from the US president gave Mr Milei’s beleaguered government just enough credibility – and apparent firepower – to halt the Argentinian peso’s slide. Crucially, this helped to stabilise consumer prices in the final weeks of the campaign. The US rescue engendered a short-lived aura of competence that allowed Mr Milei to shift the blame for rising prices back to the opposition, despite his own role in accelerating inflation by devaluing the currency when he took office.

Mr Milei’s wasn’t a decisive triumph. His rightwing coalition got 40% of the midterms vote thanks largely to a low turnout and a fragmented opposition. His “chainsaw” programme of privatisation and public spending cuts has not been popular. Polls suggest that six in 10 voters disapprove. Unsurprising, perhaps: since Mr Milei took office in December 2023, Argentinians’ purchasing power has fallen sharply, real wages have declined and more than 200,000 jobs have been lost. » | Editorial | Wednesday, October 29, 2025

What Life Is Really Like for North Korean Elite

Oct 27, 2025 | Behind Pyongyang’s spotless skyline lies a secret world of unimaginable privilege and silent terror. From million-dollar Mercedes convoys and $30,000 cognac to private zoos, smuggling networks, and fear-based loyalty — this is the untold story of North Korea’s élite.

Discover how the “Little Royals” live like kings while the rest of the nation survives on two bowls of rice a day. Explore a world built on contradictions — where luxury meets paranoia, and privilege depends on obedience.


Are We in a Golden Age of Sycophancy?

Oct 22, 2025 | Globe and Mail features writer Ian Brown joins host Andrew Zucker to discuss his latest piece, “We Live in a Golden Age of Sycophancy.” Brown discusses global leaders’ use of flattery with Trump, how Canada reacted to the Carney-Trump meeting, and the dangers of bootlicking in business and beyond.

Nvidia Is Now Worth $5 Trillion as It Consolidates Power in A.I. Boom

THE NEW YORK TIMES: The A.I. chip maker has become a linchpin in the Trump administration’s trade negotiations in Asia.

As Jensen Huang, the chief executive of the chip making giant Nvidia, traveled to Asia to meet with President Trump on Wednesday, his company’s value topped $5 trillion. It was a show of wealth that would have been unthinkable a few years ago.

But that was before the ChatGPT chatbot ignited an artificial intelligence boom that is remaking the global economy. It was before other tech titans began spending hundreds of billions of dollars on construction projects on almost every continent. And it was before Nvidia’s computer chips, the most essential and expensive component in almost every A.I. scheme, became a linchpin of the Trump administration’s foreign policy.

Nvidia’s milestone, making it the first publicly traded company to top $5 trillion in market value, is indicative not only of the astonishing levels of wealth consolidating among a handful of Silicon Valley companies but also the strategic importance of this company, which added $1 trillion in market value in just the past four months.

Nvidia has become a driving force behind the U.S. economy. Spending on data centers, which are filled with the company’s chips, accounted for 92 percent of the country’s gross domestic product growth in the first half of the year, according to Jason Furman, a professor of economic policy at Harvard. Without it, the economy would have grown 0.1 percent. » | Tripp Mickle | Reporting from Washington | Wednesday, October 29, 2025