šØAll Australians must proceed with extreme caution regarding what they own, say, or share online in relation to the now-prohibited hate group āWhite Australiaā and its once associated political branches- NSN & EAM.
Demonstrating membership, support, recruitment, coordination, fundraising, or other forms of assistance towards said "hate group" can carry a maximum of 15 years imprisonment.
ā¢Don't praise the group online.
ā¢Don't share spinning sonnenrad edits with NSN footage.
ā¢Delete all related photos & videos of said group
ā¢Leave any group chats that include numerous ex-members, even the dead chats from 2 years ago
Please take this seriously.
Donāt allow yourself to become an example made by the state.
The law will come into effect from midnight.
āWhy is this country trying to kill us?ā
Major toilet paper brands in America have been found to contain forever chemicals. PFAS cause cancer, hormone disruption and more
Major brands include
21 in brands total were found to contain forever chemicals. It should be illegal
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š¢ Oil Markets Are Dangerously Complacent About Whatās Coming ā Commodities Veteran Jeff Currie
Jeff Currie, former Goldman Sachs global head of commodities research and now senior adviser at Carlyle, warns financial markets are catastrophically underestimating the oil crisis building beneath the Iran war.
š āYouāre borrowing oil from the futureā:
āThereās a big difference between a deficit and a shortage. Weāre in a deficit. Demand is above supply. We are drawing inventories.ā
U.S. distillate inventories have already fallen to 102 days of supply from 120 just weeks ago. Gulf Coast tank bottoms sit around 200ā220 million barrels. āIf you get below 220, youāre already in a pretty tricky situation. Weāre not that far away.ā
š āYouāre going to have to feel itā:
Currie says the inflection point where deficit becomes outright shortage could arrive within days: āIf youāre at 102, youāre going to feel it like any day.ā
š The Strait of Hormuz ...
šŗšøšŖšŗšÆšµšØš¦š¬š§ G7 finance ministers to meet amid warning of economic consequences of prolonged Strait of Hormuz closure
Ahead of a meeting of finance ministers from the Group of Seven developed economies in Paris on Monday, a senior European official says the situation in the Middle East has highlighted how exposed the interconnected global economy is to external shocks.
āOpening the Strait of Hormuz and bringing the conflict to a lasting end are of the utmost importance in mitigating the impact on the economy,ā Eurogroup President Kyriakos Pierrakakis said in a statement.
The Eurogroup is a body that brings together ministers from the euro area and is being represented at the G7 meeting by Pierrakakis, who is also the Greek finance minister. The G7ā²s core members are the U.S., U.K., Canada, France, Germany, Italy and Japan.
āThe European economy has proven resilient in the face of this energy crisis. Yet, the global economy will feel the pressure ā even if ...
š¢ Oil markets could be a month away from the moment of truth. Brace for a ānon-linearā price spike and panic buying, analysts warn
Dire warnings about oil supplies are coming from everywhere lately as the Strait of Hormuz remains largely closed while President Donald Trumpās trip to China failed to produce a breakthrough to reopen the critical waterway.
While investors have been trading on hopes that the Iran ceasefire will remain intact, there is little sign that the oil trade will return to normal soon, forcing them to reckon with the reality of worsening shortages and an imminent tipping point ahead.
JPMorgan predicted that commercial oil inventories in the developed world could āapproach operational stress levelsā by early June. Saudi Aramco said global inventories of gasoline and jet fuel could reach ācritically low levelsā ahead of the summer.
The International Energy Agency warned the world is drawing down oil inventories at a record pace, with 164 million barrels ...