2. An American-European Euro-dollar payment system.
Number 1 makes your economic heart stagger.
Number 2 is no better than a candy wrapper.
Russia, rich in gold, linked to China, a manufacturing powerhouse, creates a fresh economic and financial landscape.
With Russia's fertilizers, grains, wheat, and soy, along with its metals and timbers soon also to be paid in rubles, at any moment pegged to gold, a new world trading reality takes shape.
But the West, with its paper money, and feeble manufacturers with its lack of gas and oil, lies at Russia's feet.
The day of rubles for gas, April 1st, 2022, marks the end of globalization.
Larry Fink, the symbol of Jewish global power, says so.
The Russian invasion of Ukraine has put an end to the globalization we've experienced over the past three decades.
No longer dominating global finance.
Now that regional payment arrangements and national currencies are occurring, Fink and his fellow Jews are seeking other means of control.
Gobbling up local real estate.
Grabbing home foreclosures on the cheap.
Leasing local enterprises and small factories.
Fink and friends keep the Goya on their spreadsheet.
But once Ukraine ceases as the grand chessboard's buffer, when Russia ends its military op, which Larry Fink fully comprehends, a Jew empty spreadsheet pops up.
Gazprom admits German economist Yanis Kluge will enjoy record earnings this year.
The spot market has quintupled, he says, and the exchange rate for rubles grows stronger.
The Russian state will reap windfall revenues from production taxes and export duties that turns America-EU sanctions into soap bubbles.
Eat your words, bitch.
We are joined now by the State Department's Undersecretary for Political Affairs, Victoria Nuland.
She was also ambassador to NATO under the second Bush administration, so she knows this subject area very well.
With a face like that, she could take out an entire Russia battalion.
Ambassador, I know that the U.S. government does not want to detail what the sanctions will be against Putin and Russia if there's an invasion.
However, I am curious to know why you are confident sanctions will work or could work in this scenario, given they have not been successful in prior conflicts.
I'm thinking of Crimea. Tony, what we are preparing this time with the European Union and other allies and partners around the world, including the UK and Canada, will be absolutely crushing financially for Russia and in terms of Russia's ability to grow its economy and modernize going forward.
It will also throw Russia back into isolation for a very, very long time.
When Needleman brags about isolating Russia from the international community, What community is she talking about?
Last I checked, Russia's on good terms with two-thirds of the rest of the world.
Every round of crashing sanctions that Noodleman throws at Russia simply boosts Russia's production, spurs self-sufficiency, and creates demand for the ruble.
Russians say thank you.
Pile on those sanctions.
We're in a dead heat.
Take a front row seat.
Putin rolls the ruble wheel and the western losers suffer five stages of grief.