Gavin Newsom and the Silicon Valley Bank Failure - The Kim Monson Show

Gavin Newsom and the Silicon Valley Bank Failure

The Silicon Valley Bank Coverup and the Roads Leading to Gov. Gavin Newsom
CEO and Founder of Open the Books Adam Andrzejewski discusses his recent Substack essay The Silicon Valley Bank Coverup and the Roads Leading to Gov. Gavin Newsom. Sixth generation farmer and rancher Trent Loos shares his perspective regarding Tyson Foods closing two of their chicken production facilities.

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The Kim Monson Show
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Gavin Newsom and the Silicon Valley Bank Failure
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CEO and Founder of Open the Books Adam Andrzejewski discusses his recent Substack essay The Silicon Valley Bank Coverup and the Roads Leading to Gov. Gavin Newsom. The Silicon Valley Bank Failure is shedding light on numerous connections and instances of corruption involving the bank. The Silicon Valley Bank is deeply invested in green energy and climate change. This pursuit links the bank to Gov. Gavin Newsom, who also has heavy involvement in green energy. If the government were to lower interest rates, hundreds to thousands of banks across the country would be solvent again. If the reserve requirements for banks were to be tightened, thereby taking liquidity out of the economy, inflation could be stopped without raising interest rates or making banks insolvent. This is not occurring largely because there’s pressure to uphold the status quo. The Silicon Valley Bank helped Newsom by loaning him money to grow his various wine businesses. Moderna is currently in the hot seat in the US Senate due to a hearing called by Bernie Sanders. Open the Books wants to get national attention on this and is looking to file a complaint on Moderna’s activities through Health and Human Services. Listen to the full interview in the first hour.

Interview with Trent Loos

Sixth generation farmer and rancher Trent Loos shares his perspective regarding Tyson Foods closing two of their chicken production facilities. The current fertilizer shortage can partly be attributed to its suppliers in Russia having been cut off. Regardless of this, fertilizer is synthesized from natural gases, which have also come increasingly under fire. Tyson has recently closed 2 chicken plants, impacting ~1700 workers. Loos speculates that this was actually a result of ineffective workers forcing the plants to shut down. The fact that people are so widely losing their work ethic has extremely concerning ramifications. The number of animals in Colorado feedlots is now 10% lower than it was a year ago. Beef is notably impacted. There are about as many USDA employees as there are farm families in the US. Listen to the full interview in the second hour.

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