I am max kaiser this is the kaiser report lockdown baby present planet global lockdown while things are being revealed as the tide of neoliberalism goes out stacy yes one can just see you until we say otherwise that we realize we are under lockdown as is most of the rest of the world this is the covert 19 pandemic on going around the world but on top of that we have a money printing pandemic we have a us feel dollar global system pandemic that weve been discussing for the past 10 years here on kaiser report and one of the people most responsible for the imbalances that we see in the world that the global trade imbalances the global neal liberal imbalances caused by. All of this insanity of sending our manufacturing overseas for example is Larry Summers he was the treasury secretary under bill clinton from 1909 to 2001 so he oversaw glass steagall remove all he oversaw w t o. Except in china into the World Trade Organization he saw all those sort of things that dismantled the commodity
A key figure in americas downfall the problems of the kovac 19 virus today and the problems in the markets around the world have a direct antecedent to Larry Summers and that codds array of elites harvard elites and wall street the leads who decided to this array the American Economy carve out everything and leave a rotting corpse in their wake and now hes frantically trying to deflect and assign blame and point fingers and he needs to look in the mirror Larry Summers as a heinous repulsive character in American History who is goes down in history as somebody who is a Benedict Arnold the almost quality theres a saying that goes he who smelt it dealt it well heres the guy who smells the situation perhaps hes the one that dealt this rotten smelly situation now think about it in the United States as we covered many times that the United States is a hospital masquerading as a country we have 18 percent of our g. D. P. Is devoted to the Health Care System and one of the arguments that many
A recent review in the philadelphia enquirer says this exhibition has love, death, and psychodrama. It goes on to examine a wealthy irish noble man who is part kickens with a spritz of Yankee Doodle into there is no doubt that his story from his traumatic head wound, to the demise at the hand of his own tenants is a cracking good tale, but it is more than love, death, and psychodrama. We see the entanglements of the 18th century and the global interconnectedness of the American Revolution. We find a story at the age of revolutions and also a story of today. A story of who we are and how we got here, and what the past means to us as a people or as nations. But we also find a detective story. A decades long mystery that started with two regullatively obscure paintings that had 22 works of art. One of the greatest mysteries of the past year, and my job brings me many, many joys on a regular basis, but one of the greatest has been watching this exhibition evolve and witnessing matts excite
Exhaustion. 11,000 soldiers of the American Revolutionary army starving and freezing in Winter Quarters. Shivering sentinels keeping an wary eye on that well fit british forces, safe and warm and captured philadelphia. 20 miles to the southeast. Morning,one chilling 2000 of the ragtag colonials are without shoes, feet wrapped in rags. One third to one half of them are unfit for duty. Before this terrible winter is over, 3000 of them are to die. On the windswept hills and ridges, huts of clay with floors of dirt provide the only shelter. In all the leak lonely , whiteness, the only cover is blood that stains the drifting snow. A revolutionary poet says this for them bitter words and , bitter memories of the war of king george as they left their bloody footprints on the snows of valley forge. Yes, the revolutionary war could have ended here. Yet somehow, this winter of despair becomes the turning point of the revolution. Corps] from it, comes defeat for the , the birth of the United Stat
But one thing we talked about in this show, we pitched it as looking without rather than always looking within. Panhandleplains museum, and the museum is the largest Historical Museum in texas if you count it by the number of artifacts. The exhibition title is cattle, cowboys, and culture, kansas city and, real on the building of the urban west. The curator and us are both natives of kansas city. We were always interested in why this place seems so familiar to us. And michael started looking at the number of objects in the museums Permanent Collection related to kansas city and it turns out there were over 1000 objects on the database he pulled up. We started at look started looking at what kind of objects there were, and found such a good array of a variety of objects, we thought we needed to do a show that told the sisterhood of kansas city and amarillo. A lot of people might expect amarillo corrupt looking to dallas or houston, but this is around the train system and the cattle indu