That would be nice!!!!!
🙂
That would be nice!!!!!
🙂
Provided the pattern of metals stays on its ” slow” but sure path silver should be around 40 by the end of July.
Elisabeth MacDonough have veto power over Trump’s big beautiful bill. She also was involved aiding demos during Jan th. She could be fired but wasn’t. She could of been over rided but Thiel feared it would cause a rebound undermining the order of things but it already is if lawfare is sabotaging everything a president is doing that he was elected for and she’s cherry picking things out the demos want out without votes.
Most Americans assume they live under the jurisdiction of the Constitution. But the courts increasingly operate under a hybrid system of statutory and administrative law, often enforced through what is functionally maritime law. Don’t believe me? Take a look at the gold-fringed flag in most courtrooms. That’s not just decoration. It’s a symbol of admiralty jurisdiction, meaning you’re not in a constitutional court. You’re in a corporate tribunal. And speaking of corporations, the United States is defined in 28 U.S. Code § 3002(15)(A) as a federal corporation. You are not a sovereign individual under natural law. You are a legal entity—an asset tracked by a Social Security number and collateralized against the national debt.
So no, martial law was never formally declared. But we’ve been living under a continuous state of emergency ever since.Â
Martial Law In Mascara: How FDR Hijacked The Constitution And No One Told You | ZeroHedge
The stock market is looking forward here and realizes that interest rates will be heading lower, which will be good for corporate earnings. The US dollar is also forward looking. The PM shares are hanging in there, but the scum have to keep their boots on the necks of the metals themselves to prolong the perception that Metals are a bad place to park your money…….
Durable goods beat by a mile, up 16.7%. Clearly skewed by probably aircraft orders.
GDP missed badly. -0.5% vs estimates of -0.2% – drifting further into recession.
Weekly jobless claims beat -235 vs. estimates of -245.
The Fed has no excuse for not cutting. None.
The dollar is still weak and the 10 yr. inching down to 4.27%
What do WE get? Suckitude in pm’s. Crimex has things well under control at the moment.
Quiet around here. I’ll step off for a while myself. Enjoy the day all.
Silver shares look decent premarket, most up 1-2%. Gold shares more muted. Not sure what the early bump in silver was all about but just looks like a blip that London got fixed quickly.
The dollar has screwed us all week, would be nice to see us get our money’s worth at some point this week. Volatility has pretty much collapsed in the metals, I guess that’s not bad if we’re slowly gaining ground, but I doubt that will last too long.
Dollar starting to creep back up. Silver shares coming back to reality. We need more arms twisted.
edit: Back to reality now. The dollar moved up two ticks and that was enough to push us back to flat. What a joke.
PM’s have been sort of meandering higher in the overnights, but not much. Silver was up $.11, Gold up $11
It appears someone has stepped in to buy silver in the last 15 minutes or so, it’s now up $.55. Gold still up $11, ugh.
I suspect the action in silver is related to the action in platinum and palladium, which are soaring – up almost 4% each.
Anyhoo, most things are looking up this am, as the dollar is down again for the 4th day in a row. Oil, Bitcoin, rates all flat. SM up a little – tech leading.
Gold should be doing better, but we’re used to that. They’ll try to keep the damage in silver at a minimum by keeping gold down. We see stupid stuff like that all the time.
and as I’ve typed, they just dropped silver $.20 and gold $4.
I better stop typing… 🙂
BTW – there’s a ton of eco data today. GDP, Home Sales, Durable Goods, Weekly jobs. Data has moved the needle much lately, but who knows?
Silver came through. Gold did enough. Shares not so much.
Thinking we need about a $30 up day in gold tomorrow. Good to see silver back above $36 and not collapsing.
It’s never easy. The dollar has fallen 3 straight days and hasn’t helped, so there’s that. Flip a coin.
I’d hoped we’d do a little better in the shares, and gold will need a stronger day tomorrow, but there’s a chance we can crawl out of the malaise.
I guess we’ll see how they close em’. Like the move in silver, hope it starts to perk up.
… might stand for delivery at the CME starting Friday … and lasting all July.
Chances are this won’t happen as much of the open interest is undoubtedly speculators … but even 90 million ounces would be a new record and put quite a whole in their supply.
Uncle Jed would say … ‘well doggies’ … ‘the bankers are going to end up with the seat of their britches on fire’
Chuckle
… in order to lock you down and show who is boss … to show you why you need radical change … a new currency regime you better accept and keep your mouth shut …
Trump’s ‘High Risk Game’ in Middle East Threatens ‘World War 3’: Doug Casey
If Iran’s leaders are part of this game (like the Nazi’s in WWII) … expect a reescalation of aggression after a brief pause.
Nukes this time?
Although it would be Kabuki (for public consumption) … don’t be surprised if somebody (somewhere) that doesn’t really matter get nuked … and for lockdowns (everywhere?) to follow … color revolutions around the world certainly fits the bill as an excuse. (stay inside and shut up).
Then you get CBDC’s shoved up your butt.
It’s a beautiful world. (if you are a high-level parasite).
Chuckle

The parasite mafia ring leaders don’t want stable coins moving in on their action.
BIS Claims Stablecoins Fail As Money, Calls For Strict Limits On Their Role | ZeroHedge
Now isn’t that too bad.
This is just like the 30’s when states, banks, and cities were issuing their own currencies that eventually went worthless.
The cabal needs a monopoly, or their bankrupt credit currency scam will go belly up … too bad.
Don’t give it to them … buy and use real money whenever possible … gold and silver.
Cheers all
About darn time. Just need it to keep going a little and these shares to kick it in gear for some confirmation.
They’ll fight it as always.
as you know, I think we’ll hold. The dollar is doing its job today, and hitting the metal early, but I think we’ll square up. The silver shares are attempting to hold again, I think that’s bullish too. We are getting close to the end of month and the last two month ends have sucked, so there’s that. I’m still bullish until GLD completely blows down through the 50 dma, if that happens then we head to your $3100 area at least. We’ll see.
I’m wrong a lot but who knows, even a blind squirrel gets an acorn now and then. 🙂
edit: NEM just popped positive, I like the fact that it has led the whole way up, and silver about to go green.
NVDA and NFLX hit new all-time highs this am. Unbelievable to me. Absolutely nothing hurts the SM, nothing.
There is a decent case to say that we are in a C wave down in Gold, under Elliot wave analysis….if so the move has been relatively flat/sideways…so far…which suggest huge bullish power, when the correction is over..ie if we hold a 3500/3100 range .
Financial world anyway.
Nothing cooking in pm’s, pm shares, or the SM – flat. Dollar, rates – flat. Oil up 1%. Bitcoin up almost 1%.
Very little eco data. Nothing that will move markets.
Just hoping gold stabilizes and bounces a little today, with a bigger bounce tomorrow that moves it away from the 50 dma.
Hope stinks eternal.
Ystdy I put up a post talking about how bad the financial situation is in Japan…….ie
Japan’s debt markets are beginning to blow up.
Japan is the grandfather of monetary policy insanity. Every crazy move western central banks have introduced in the last 15 years was first introduced by Japan a decade earlier. The U.S. first introduced Zero Interest Rate Policy (ZIRP) and Quantitative Easing (QE) in 2008. Japan’s central bank, the Bank of Japan (BoJ) introduced that lunacy in 1999 and 2001, respectively.
Since that, the BoJ has:
Bought so many shares in Japanese stocks that it is the largest shareholder of Japanese stocks in the world. Indeed, it is a top 10-shareholder in 40% of the companies trading on Japan’s stock market: the Nikkei.
Acquired over 50% of Japan’s debt outstanding.
Launched a single QE program equal to 25% of Japan’s GDP.
Cut interest rates to NEGATIVE
here is a monthly chart of Dollar/Yen…..with monster base that says the Yen could more than halve from here…..ie the Crisis is real and going to get way worse.
Yesterday. Computers say more unrest to do with war. Canada paying more for NATO preparing for war. Going to start a draft. Things will heat up in summer pointing out August further on around 26-27 minutes in. Europe globalist knows people aren’t gonna put up with their purposeful suppression and demise of their country’s knowing they had enough of their BS and their time is running out and when they become more dangerous to the citizens like increasing censorship, if the patriots continue to commit to each other to fight back and they see they will become more popular numbers the globalists will loose their power over them.
Leavitt is starting to sound as dumb as the black labradoodle. And it’s sounding more and more like Iraq except that Iran is working towards a bomb. “Everyone knows what happens when you drop fourteen 30,000lb bombs perfectly on their targets: total obliteration.”
Yeah, but they aren’t 30,000lb bombs, sweetheart. It’s a 5,342lb bomb in a 27,000lb body. By comparison, Britain’s Grand Slam, a development of Barnes Wallis’s original Tallboy earthquake bomb, was 9,500lb of explosive in a 12,500lb casing, making the modified Lancasters almost unflyable, but hey that’s what “very brave pilots” are for.
Total obliteration? You just don’t know. You’ve no way of verifying what happened in the mountain. And if the targets had been moved (you don’t need all them trucks for 400kg of uranium) then they weren’t “perfectly on their targets”.
And Trump’s “very brave pilots” flying at high altitude over an area with no aircraft and vastly diminished air defences: yeah, all operations have risks, but for this one the greater risks were probably refuelling problems rather than the enemy.
Contrast all this fluff and bluster with the measured, understated comments of Ian MacDonald, MOD spokesman during the Falklands war.