Monday, November 22, 2021

BIDENOMICS - 26% OF AMERICANS SAY ECONOMY IS TOP CONCERN SINCE PANDEMIC STRUCK - JOE BIDEN SAYS THE DEMS' TOP CONCERN IS DOUBLING CRONY BILLIONAIRES' WEALTH

 Make Amazon Pay was formed in 2020 and has since helped to organize a number of strikes and protests against company policies. The campaign states on its website: “During the COVID-19 pandemic, Amazon became a trillion dollar corporation, with Bezos becoming the first person in history to amass $200 billion in personal wealth. Meanwhile, Amazon warehouse workers risked their lives as essential workers, and only briefly received an increase in pay.”

A video on the Make Amazon Pay website further states: “Amazon’s wealth has increased so much during the pandemic that its owners could pay all 1.3 million of its employees a $690,000 COVID bonus and still be as rich as they were in 2020.”

Read more at Business Insider here.


Bidenflation: 26% of Americans Say Economy Is Top Concern, Highest Since Pandemic Struck

Joe Biden sits in his 1967 Corvette Stingray on July 16, 2020, in Wilmington, Delaware. (Adam Schultz/Biden for President/Flikr)
Adam Schultz/Biden for President/Flikr
4:16

The number of Americans who rank economic issues as the nation’s top problem has reached the highest point since the pandemic began, Gallup poll said Monday.

The latest survey found that 26 percent of Americans view economic issues—such as inflation, unemployment, and general economic conditions—as a top priority.

At the same time, Gallup’s measure of economic confidence has been plunging for five months. The latest data shows confidence at a negative 29, close to the worst levels of negative 32 and negative 33 hit in April 2020.

Inflation is high and rising, pushing up prices at a record pace and a wide variety of goods and services. The average cost for a Thanksgiving Day dinner will be up by 14 percent, according to the Farm Bureau.

The most frequently mentioned specific economic issues are the economy in general terms at 10 percent and inflation at seven percent. Unemployment was next at five percent.  No other economic matters—such as the federal budget deficit, income inequality, or fuel or oil prices—exceed 1 percent, according to Gallup.

Inflation concerns are at their highest level since April 2001 but there is a sharp partisan divide. Eleven percent of Republicans name it as a top concern, compared with just one percent of Democrats. Seven percent of independents say inflation is their top concern. The last time significantly more than 7 percent of Americans named inflation as a top concern was May 1985, when it registered 11 percent.

As recently as September, inflation barely registered as a top concern. The swift rise in concern follows inflation reigniting this autumn and hitting a 30 year high in October.

This has flummoxed the Biden administration and its allies on the American left. The administration at first argued that inflation was confined to just a small part of the economy and would likely pass quickly. When inflation broadened and showed signs of heating up instead of fading, the Biden administration persisted to deny its importance until it switched to blaming corporations for raising prices.

On Monday, the Biden administration said it was nominating Fed chair Jerome Powell to a second term, a move many analysts say may be an attempt to show that the administration now takes the threat of inflation seriously. Powell is considered more likely than other potential nominees to pivot to tightening policy to bring down inflation.

The share of Americans saying they are most worried about the economy, now at 10 percent, had not hit double digits since 2017, when the Trump administration’s economic policies and promises to protect American industry from China’s predatory mercantilism eased economic concerns.
Thirteen percent of Republicans said general economic conditions were a top priority, while 10 percent of independents and 7 percent of Democrats gave this response.

“Biden’s ability to improve his economic and overall job approval ratings appear to be tied to his ability to address inflation and shortages, if the stronger parts of the economy can remain that way,” Gallup editor Jeffrey M. Jones wrote in an analysis of the poll results.

Despite the recent climb, economic concerns are well below the peak levels hit during the financial crisis. In February 2009, 86 percent of Americans said the financial crisis was the top issue.

“Even in relatively good economic times in the past, it was common for more than 30% of Americans to name an economic issue,” Jones wrote.

More Americans say the number one problem is government, at 21 percent. Concern over the coronavirus has fallen to being the top priority for 13 percent of Americans, half what it was during the Delta variant surge in August. Other specific issues commonly mentioned as the most important problem in the new survey are immigration at nine percent, unifying the country at six percent, and race relations or racism at five percent.

–UPI contributed to this report.

THERE'S NO ONE UP HIGH TECH'S ASS MORE THAN BIDEN! THERE WILL BE NO HIGH-TECH ANTI-TRUST UNDER THE BIDEN REGIME!

The donation comes after the House Judiciary Committee’s Subcommittee on Antitrust introduced five bills last summer aimed to curb anti-competitive practices in the tech industry. The bills have been presented as a bipartisan effort to rein in the power of dominant Silicon Valley companies. 

IT PAYS TO OWN A FEW DEMOCRAT POLS

A video on the Make Amazon Pay website further states: “Amazon’s wealth has increased so much during the pandemic that its owners could pay all 1.3 million of its employees a $690,000 COVID bonus and still be as rich as they were in 2020.”

Read more at Business Insider here.


Jeff Bezos Donates $100 Million to Obama Foundation

The Associated Press
The Associated Press
3:02

Amazon founder Jeff Bezos is donating $100 million to the Obama Foundation in the wake of Amazon clashing with the Biden administration over antitrust issues.

Bezos’ $100 million donation to the Obama Foundation, made in honor of late Rep. John Lewis, is the foundation’s largest individual contribution received to date, the Obama Foundation announced in a Monday press release.

Jeff Bezos lectures normal people about climate change

Jeff Bezos lectures normal people about climate change Pool/Getty)

GLASGOW, SCOTLAND – NOVEMBER 08: Former US President Barack Obama delivers a speech while attending day nine of the COP26 at SECC on November 8, 2021 in Glasgow, Scotland. (Photo by Christopher Furlong/Getty Images)

The donation comes after the House Judiciary Committee’s Subcommittee on Antitrust introduced five bills last summer aimed to curb anti-competitive practices in the tech industry. The bills have been presented as a bipartisan effort to rein in the power of dominant Silicon Valley companies.

One bill aimed to prevent technology companies from favoring their own products and services on their platform, a practice that Google and Amazon have been accused of. Another targeted the use of data obtained from competitors to gain an advantage over them, a practice that has made Amazon the subject of an EU antitrust investigation.

Moreover, Lina Khan, the Chairperson of the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), is reportedly probing Amazon’s $8.5 billion acquisition of MGM Studios. In June, Amazon demanded that Khan recuse herself from any FTC probes of the company, reported New York Post.

Bezos’ nine-figure gift to the Obama Foundation was arranged by former Obama press secretary and current Amazon senior vice president of global corporate affairs Jay Carney, according to a report by Puck News.

The Obama Foundation says Bezos’ donation will “help expand the scope of programming that reaches emerging leaders in the United States and around the world,” adding that Bezos “has asked for the Plaza at the Obama Presidential Center to be named the John Lewis Plaza.”

While the foundation was vague regarding what Bezos’ donation will be spent on, it said that the money will give “the next generation of emerging leaders” the “necessary tools, resources, and training needed to be the change they want to see in the world, just as Congressman Lewis did.”

“I’m thrilled to support President and Mrs. Obama and their Foundation in its mission to train and inspire tomorrow’s leaders,” Bezos said.

Earlier this month, former President Barack Obama jetted into Glasgow, Scotland, for the COP26 climate conference to tell “old folks” to “get out of the way.”

“From the perspective of the Obama Foundation, one of the things I’m most excited about is to see the young activists from around the world who are taking up the baton and not just working in their own countries, but now forming a collective movement across borders to tell the older generation that has gotten us into this mess that we all have an obligation to dig our way out of it,” Obama said in a recorded a video message.

You can follow Alana Mastrangelo on Facebook and Twitter at @ARmastrangelo, and on Instagram.

DEMOCRAT = THE MODERN SLAVE LABOR PARTY OF OPEN BORDERS, GLOBALIST AND NAFTA PIGS!

BEZOSHEAD IS RIGHT AT NAFTA BIDEN'S SIDE WITH MARK ZUCKERBERG ON THE OTHER SIDE PUSHING FOR AMNESTY, WIDER OPEN BORDERS TO KEEP WAGES DEPRESSED AND NO LEGAL NEED APPLY!

‘Make Amazon Pay:’ Workers in 20 Countries Plan to Strike on Black Friday

Alma Delia Garcia of New York Communities for Change speaks during a protest organized by New York Communities for Change and Make the Road New York in front of the Jeff Bezos' Manhattan residence in New York on December 02, 2020. (Photo by Kena Betancur / AFP) (Photo by KENA …
KENA BETANCUR/AFP via Getty Images
3:29

Amazon employees in 20 countries are reportedly preparing to strike on Black Friday as part of a campaign titled “Make Amazon Pay.”

Business Insider reports that Amazon employees in 20 different countries are planning a mass strike on Black Friday, one of the busiest shopping days of the year, as part of the “Make Amazon Pay” campaign. The campaign includes a coalition of 70 organizations including Greenpeace, Oxfam, and Amazon Workers International.

Mural of Amazon founder Jeff Bezos.

Mural of Amazon founder Jeff Bezos. (Thierry Ehrmann/Flickr)

Amazon CEO Andy Jassy

Amazon CEO Andy Jassy (Isaac Brekken/AP)

The workers are demanding accountability from top executives who they believe are placing profits ahead of worker wellbeing. Individual workers “from oil refineries, to factories, to warehouses, to data centers, to corporate offices” are expected to take part in the walkout on November 26.

Make Amazon Pay wrote in a list of demands on its website: “The pandemic has exposed how Amazon places profits ahead of workers, society, and our planet. Amazon takes too much and gives back too little. It is time to Make Amazon Pay.”

The protests come as Amazon employees continue to complain of long hours, low pay, and strict performance review systems. Make Amazon Pay is demanding increased salaries, improved job security, and the suspension of the “harsh productivity and surveillance regime Amazon has used to squeeze workers.”

The group is also calling for a “pay back to society” which will include enhanced environmental sustainability efforts, increased transparency over the use of user data and privacy measures, and the immediate end of partnerships between Amazon and police forces and immigration authorities which are “institutionally racist.”

“Amazon is not alone in these bad practices but it sits at the heart of a failed system that drives the inequality, climate breakdown, and democratic decay that scar our age,” Make Amazon Pay wrote in its demands.

A company spokesperson told Business Insider that the company is “inventing and investing significantly” in several of the categories that the campaign is calling for action in, including climate efforts. The spokesperson said:

These groups represent a variety of interests, and while we are not perfect in any area, if you objectively look at what Amazon is doing in each one of these areas you’ll see that we do take our role and our impact very seriously.

Make Amazon Pay was formed in 2020 and has since helped to organize a number of strikes and protests against company policies. The campaign states on its website: “During the COVID-19 pandemic, Amazon became a trillion dollar corporation, with Bezos becoming the first person in history to amass $200 billion in personal wealth. Meanwhile, Amazon warehouse workers risked their lives as essential workers, and only briefly received an increase in pay.”

A video on the Make Amazon Pay website further states: “Amazon’s wealth has increased so much during the pandemic that its owners could pay all 1.3 million of its employees a $690,000 COVID bonus and still be as rich as they were in 2020.”

Read more at Business Insider here.

Lucas Nolan is a reporter for Breitbart News covering issues of free speech and online censorship. Follow him on Twitter @LucasNolan or contact via secure email at the address lucasnolan@protonmail.com


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