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  1. 7 days ago on bacon

    The real origins of ‘trickle-down economics’

  2. 4 months ago on The Argyle Sweater

    They busted up a crime ring…

  3. over 1 year ago on Non Sequitur

    Both Mozart and Haydn had fun with the Bassoon. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VF8MmpKA6mk

  4. over 1 year ago on Mike du Jour

    Love your work, Mr. Lester. I hope you keep it up.

  5. over 1 year ago on Jack Ohman

    Amen.

  6. over 1 year ago on Ted Rall

    A bit off topic. But, thanks, Ted. This comic made me laugh out loud. “Not being bankers” is the funniest punchline you’ve had in awhile.

  7. over 1 year ago on Mike Luckovich

    Yes, thank you Mr Wiz, for your in-depth analyses. I, too, look forward to seeing your comments and consider them legitimate information. It’s been awhile since your last post, I hope all’s well. Back to the topic: If memory serves, it was Clinton who gutted the Glass-Steagall Act, aka true banking regulation. That Act brought us out of the Wall Street/Banksters 10 year boom and bust cycle that existed for 50 some years prior to the Great Depression. Losing Glass-Steagall allowed the Banksters to run wild and create the subprime mortgage crisis. Since being replaces by the milquetoast Dodd-Frank Act and then severely weakened by TFG, it seems that history is repeating itself.

  8. over 1 year ago on Bliss

    In Portland, the stars only come out in summer. Same as the Sun.

  9. almost 2 years ago on Matt Wuerker

    Keith Olbermann does a decent job of explaining the whys and whatnot’s and especially the timing of the release. I was thinking the same way as you, and apparently Keith was, too. But,in the end it has more to do with the 14th Amendment and not getting Muellered than I realized: https://www.iheart.com/podcast/1119-countdown-with-keith-olbe-99705496/

  10. almost 2 years ago on Non Sequitur

    “No indictment, no problem” The Wells Fargo business model.