• āđ€āļĄāļ·āđˆāļ­āđāļ­āļ”āļĄāļīāļ™āđāļ™āļ°āļ™āļģāļĨāļđāļāļ„āđ‰āļē āļ—āļēāļ™āļ­āļĒāđˆāļēāļ‡āđ„āļĢāđƒāļŦāđ‰āđ€āļŦāđ‡āļ™āļœāļĨāļĨāļąāļžāļ˜āđŒ āđƒāļ™āļāļēāļĢāļĨāļ”āđ„āļ‚āļĄāļąāļ™āđāļĨāļ° āļŸāļ·āđ‰āļ™āļŸāļđāļĢāļ°āļšāļšāđ€āļœāļēāļœāļĨāļēāļ 😋😘#āđ€āļ—āļĢāļ™āļ”āđŒāļ§āļąāļ™āļ™āļĩāđ‰ #āļŠāđāļĨāļŠ #slash #āđāļˆāļ‡āļ–āļąāđˆāļ§āļŠāļąāļ§āļĢāđŒāļ›āđ‰āļēāļš #āļŠāļēāļĢāļ°āļ­āļēāļĢāļĄāļ“āđŒāļ”āļĩāđāļŪāļ›āļ›āļĩāđ‰āļ—āļļāļāļ§āļąāļ™ #āļĨāļ”āđ„āļ‚āļĄāļąāļ™ #āļĨāļ”āļ™āđ‰āļģāļŦāļ™āļąāļ #āļŸāļ·āđ‰āļ™āļŸāļđāļĢāļ°āļšāļšāđ€āļœāļēāļœāļĨāļēāļ #āļ§āļąāļĒāđ€āļāļĐāļĩāļĒāļ“ #happyandhealthy #ugoyourhealth #simplyugo
    āđ€āļĄāļ·āđˆāļ­āđāļ­āļ”āļĄāļīāļ™āđāļ™āļ°āļ™āļģāļĨāļđāļāļ„āđ‰āļē āļ—āļēāļ™āļ­āļĒāđˆāļēāļ‡āđ„āļĢāđƒāļŦāđ‰āđ€āļŦāđ‡āļ™āļœāļĨāļĨāļąāļžāļ˜āđŒ āđƒāļ™āļāļēāļĢāļĨāļ”āđ„āļ‚āļĄāļąāļ™āđāļĨāļ° āļŸāļ·āđ‰āļ™āļŸāļđāļĢāļ°āļšāļšāđ€āļœāļēāļœāļĨāļēāļ 😋😘#āđ€āļ—āļĢāļ™āļ”āđŒāļ§āļąāļ™āļ™āļĩāđ‰ #āļŠāđāļĨāļŠ #slash #āđāļˆāļ‡āļ–āļąāđˆāļ§āļŠāļąāļ§āļĢāđŒāļ›āđ‰āļēāļš #āļŠāļēāļĢāļ°āļ­āļēāļĢāļĄāļ“āđŒāļ”āļĩāđāļŪāļ›āļ›āļĩāđ‰āļ—āļļāļāļ§āļąāļ™ #āļĨāļ”āđ„āļ‚āļĄāļąāļ™ #āļĨāļ”āļ™āđ‰āļģāļŦāļ™āļąāļ #āļŸāļ·āđ‰āļ™āļŸāļđāļĢāļ°āļšāļšāđ€āļœāļēāļœāļĨāļēāļ #āļ§āļąāļĒāđ€āļāļĐāļĩāļĒāļ“ #happyandhealthy #ugoyourhealth #simplyugo
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  • Morosil āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļŠāļēāļĢāļŠāļāļąāļ”āļˆāļēāļāļŠāđ‰āļĄāļŠāļĩāđāļ”āļ‡āļŠāļēāļĒāļžāļąāļ™āļ˜āļļāđŒ Moro red oranges (Citrus sinensis) āļˆāļēāļāļ›āļĢāļ°āđ€āļ—āļĻāļ­āļīāļ•āļēāļĨāļĩ ðŸ‡ŪðŸ‡đ
    Morosil āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļŠāđ‰āļĄāļŠāļēāļĒāļžāļąāļ™āļ˜āļļāđŒāļ—āļĩāđˆāđāļ•āļāļ•āđˆāļēāļ‡āļˆāļēāļāļŠāļēāļĒ āļžāļąāļ™āļ˜āļļāđŒāļ­āļ·āđˆāļ™ āļ•āļēāļĄāļ‡āļēāļ™āļ—āļ”āļŠāļ­āļšāļ—āļēāļ‡āļ§āļīāļ—āļĒāļēāļĻāļēāļŠāļ•āļĢāđŒ
    *āļĨāļ”āļ‚āļ™āļēāļ”āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āđ€āļ‹āļĨāļĨāđŒāđ„āļ‚āļĄāļąāļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļŠāļ°āļŠāļĄāđƒāļ™āļĢāđˆāļēāļ‡āļāļēāļĒāđƒāļŦāđ‰āđ€āļĨāđ‡āļāļĨāļ‡ āļ—āļģāđƒāļŦāđ‰āļŠāļąāļ”āļŠāđˆāļ§āļ™āļ•āđˆāļēāļ‡āļ•āđˆāļēāļ‡āđ€āļĨāđ‡āļāļĨāļ‡
    *āļāļĢāļ°āļ•āļļāđ‰āļ™āđƒāļŦāđ‰āļ™āļģāđ„āļ‚āļĄāļąāļ™āđ„āļ›āđƒāļŠāđ‰āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļžāļĨāļąāļ‡āļ‡āļēāļ™āļĄāļēāļāļ‚āļķāđ‰āļ™
    *āļ­āļļāļ”āļĄāđ„āļ›āļ”āđ‰āļ§āļĒāļŠāļēāļĢāļ•āđ‰āļēāļ™āļ­āļ™āļļāļĄāļđāļĨāļ­āļīāļŠāļĢāļ°

    #slash #qualityiseverything
    #āļŠāļĨāļēāļĒāđ„āļ‚āļĄāļąāļ™ #āļŠāļļāļ‚āļ āļēāļžāļ”āļĩ #morosil
    #āļĨāļ”āđ„āļ‚āļĄāļąāļ™ #āļŠāļąāļšāđ„āļ‚āļĄāļąāļ™ #simplyugo #ugonutrition
    Morosil āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļŠāļēāļĢāļŠāļāļąāļ”āļˆāļēāļāļŠāđ‰āļĄāļŠāļĩāđāļ”āļ‡āļŠāļēāļĒāļžāļąāļ™āļ˜āļļāđŒ Moro red oranges (Citrus sinensis) āļˆāļēāļāļ›āļĢāļ°āđ€āļ—āļĻāļ­āļīāļ•āļēāļĨāļĩ ðŸ‡ŪðŸ‡đ Morosil āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļŠāđ‰āļĄāļŠāļēāļĒāļžāļąāļ™āļ˜āļļāđŒāļ—āļĩāđˆāđāļ•āļāļ•āđˆāļēāļ‡āļˆāļēāļāļŠāļēāļĒ āļžāļąāļ™āļ˜āļļāđŒāļ­āļ·āđˆāļ™ āļ•āļēāļĄāļ‡āļēāļ™āļ—āļ”āļŠāļ­āļšāļ—āļēāļ‡āļ§āļīāļ—āļĒāļēāļĻāļēāļŠāļ•āļĢāđŒ *āļĨāļ”āļ‚āļ™āļēāļ”āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āđ€āļ‹āļĨāļĨāđŒāđ„āļ‚āļĄāļąāļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļŠāļ°āļŠāļĄāđƒāļ™āļĢāđˆāļēāļ‡āļāļēāļĒāđƒāļŦāđ‰āđ€āļĨāđ‡āļāļĨāļ‡ āļ—āļģāđƒāļŦāđ‰āļŠāļąāļ”āļŠāđˆāļ§āļ™āļ•āđˆāļēāļ‡āļ•āđˆāļēāļ‡āđ€āļĨāđ‡āļāļĨāļ‡ *āļāļĢāļ°āļ•āļļāđ‰āļ™āđƒāļŦāđ‰āļ™āļģāđ„āļ‚āļĄāļąāļ™āđ„āļ›āđƒāļŠāđ‰āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļžāļĨāļąāļ‡āļ‡āļēāļ™āļĄāļēāļāļ‚āļķāđ‰āļ™ *āļ­āļļāļ”āļĄāđ„āļ›āļ”āđ‰āļ§āļĒāļŠāļēāļĢāļ•āđ‰āļēāļ™āļ­āļ™āļļāļĄāļđāļĨāļ­āļīāļŠāļĢāļ° #slash #qualityiseverything #āļŠāļĨāļēāļĒāđ„āļ‚āļĄāļąāļ™ #āļŠāļļāļ‚āļ āļēāļžāļ”āļĩ #morosil #āļĨāļ”āđ„āļ‚āļĄāļąāļ™ #āļŠāļąāļšāđ„āļ‚āļĄāļąāļ™ #simplyugo #ugonutrition
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  • Deutsche Telekom āđ„āļ”āđ‰āđ€āļ›āļīāļ”āļ•āļąāļ§āđ‚āļ›āļĢāđ€āļˆāļ„āđƒāļŦāļĄāđˆāļ—āļĩāđˆāļ™āđˆāļēāļ—āļķāđˆāļ‡ āļŠāļ·āđˆāļ­āļ§āđˆāļē "NeoCircuit Router" āđ‚āļ›āļĢāđ€āļˆāļ„āļ™āļĩāđ‰āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ„āļ§āļēāļĄāļžāļĒāļēāļĒāļēāļĄāđƒāļ™āļāļēāļĢāļĨāļ”āļ‚āļĒāļ°āļ­āļīāđ€āļĨāđ‡āļāļ—āļĢāļ­āļ™āļīāļāļŠāđŒ āđ‚āļ”āļĒāļ™āļģāļŠāļīāđ‰āļ™āļŠāđˆāļ§āļ™āļˆāļēāļāļŠāļĄāļēāļĢāđŒāļ—āđ‚āļŸāļ™āđ€āļāđˆāļēāļĄāļēāļ›āļĢāļ°āļāļ­āļšāļāļąāļ™āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āđ€āļĢāļēāđ€āļ•āļ­āļĢāđŒāđƒāļŦāļĄāđˆ āļ•āļąāļ§āđ€āļĢāļēāđ€āļ•āļ­āļĢāđŒāļ™āļĩāđ‰āđƒāļŠāđ‰āđ‚āļ›āļĢāđ€āļ‹āļŠāđ€āļ‹āļ­āļĢāđŒ āļŠāļīāļ›āļŦāļ™āđˆāļ§āļĒāļ„āļ§āļēāļĄāļˆāļģ āđāļĨāļ°āļāļēāļĢāđ€āļŠāļ·āđˆāļ­āļĄāļ•āđˆāļ­āļ—āļēāļ‡āļāļēāļĒāļ āļēāļžāļˆāļēāļāļŠāļĄāļēāļĢāđŒāļ—āđ‚āļŸāļ™āđ€āļāđˆāļē āļ‹āļķāđˆāļ‡āļĄāļĩāļ­āļąāļ•āļĢāļēāļāļēāļĢāļ™āļģāļāļĨāļąāļšāļĄāļēāđƒāļŠāđ‰āđƒāļŦāļĄāđˆāļŠāļđāļ‡āļ–āļķāļ‡ 70%

    Dr. Henning Never āļœāļđāđ‰āļˆāļąāļ”āļāļēāļĢāđ‚āļ›āļĢāđ€āļˆāļ„āļ‚āļ­āļ‡ Deutsche Telekom āđ€āļŠāļ·āđˆāļ­āļ§āđˆāļē NeoCircuit Router āļ™āļĩāđ‰āļˆāļ°āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļāđ‰āļēāļ§āļŠāļģāļ„āļąāļāđƒāļ™āļāļēāļĢāļžāļąāļ’āļ™āļēāļāļēāļĢāđƒāļŠāđ‰āļ—āļĢāļąāļžāļĒāļēāļāļĢāļ­āļĒāđˆāļēāļ‡āļĒāļąāđˆāļ‡āļĒāļ·āļ™ āļ™āļ­āļāļˆāļēāļāļ™āļĩāđ‰ Bertrand Pascual āļˆāļēāļ Sagemcom āļĒāļąāļ‡āđ€āļŠāļĢāļīāļĄāļ§āđˆāļēāļāļēāļĢāļ™āļģāđ‚āļ›āļĢāđ€āļ‹āļŠāđ€āļ‹āļ­āļĢāđŒāļˆāļēāļāļŠāļĄāļēāļĢāđŒāļ—āđ‚āļŸāļ™āļĄāļēāđƒāļŠāđ‰āđƒāļ™āļ­āļļāļ›āļāļĢāļ“āđŒāļ­āļ·āđˆāļ™ āđ† āļ™āļąāđ‰āļ™āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļāļēāļĢāļ›āļĢāļ°āļŦāļĒāļąāļ”āļ—āļĢāļąāļžāļĒāļēāļāļĢāđāļĨāļ°āļ—āļģāđƒāļŦāđ‰āļĄāļĩāļ„āļ§āļēāļĄāļ„āļļāđ‰āļĄāļ„āđˆāļēāļ—āļēāļ‡āļāļēāļĢāđ€āļ‡āļīāļ™

    āļāļēāļĢāđ€āļ›āļīāļ”āļ•āļąāļ§āļ‚āļ­āļ‡ NeoCircuit Router āļˆāļ°āļĄāļĩāļ‚āļķāđ‰āļ™āđƒāļ™āļ‡āļēāļ™ Mobile World Congress 2025 āļ—āļĩāđˆāļšāļēāļĢāđŒāđ€āļ‹āđ‚āļĨāļ™āđˆāļēāđƒāļ™āļ§āļąāļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆ 3 āļĄāļĩāļ™āļēāļ„āļĄ āļŦāļēāļāđ‚āļ›āļĢāđ€āļˆāļ„āļ™āļĩāđ‰āļ–āļđāļāļ™āļģāļĄāļēāđƒāļŠāđ‰āļ­āļĒāđˆāļēāļ‡āđāļžāļĢāđˆāļŦāļĨāļēāļĒ āļ„āļēāļ”āļ§āđˆāļēāļˆāļ°āļŠāđˆāļ§āļĒāļĨāļ”āļ•āđ‰āļ™āļ—āļļāļ™āļāļēāļĢāļœāļĨāļīāļ•āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļ­āļĒāđˆāļēāļ‡āļ™āđ‰āļ­āļĒ 20% āđ€āļĄāļ·āđˆāļ­āđ€āļ—āļĩāļĒāļšāļāļąāļšāļāļēāļĢāļœāļĨāļīāļ•āļŠāļīāđ‰āļ™āļŠāđˆāļ§āļ™āđƒāļŦāļĄāđˆāļ—āļąāđ‰āļ‡āļŦāļĄāļ” āđāļĨāļ°āļ™āļĩāđˆāļāđ‡āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ­āļĩāļāļŦāļ™āļķāđˆāļ‡āļ‚āļąāđ‰āļ™āļ•āļ­āļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļŠāļģāļ„āļąāļāđƒāļ™āļāļēāļĢāļŠāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļŠāļĢāļīāļĄāļāļēāļĢāļ™āļģāļ—āļĢāļąāļžāļĒāļēāļāļĢāļĄāļēāđƒāļŠāđ‰āđƒāļŦāļĄāđˆāđƒāļ™āļ§āļ‡āļāļēāļĢāļ­āļīāđ€āļĨāđ‡āļāļ—āļĢāļ­āļ™āļīāļāļŠāđŒ

    https://www.techradar.com/pro/europes-largest-telco-wants-to-slash-the-cost-of-your-router-by-reusing-your-old-smartphone-and-i-think-it-is-genius
    Deutsche Telekom āđ„āļ”āđ‰āđ€āļ›āļīāļ”āļ•āļąāļ§āđ‚āļ›āļĢāđ€āļˆāļ„āđƒāļŦāļĄāđˆāļ—āļĩāđˆāļ™āđˆāļēāļ—āļķāđˆāļ‡ āļŠāļ·āđˆāļ­āļ§āđˆāļē "NeoCircuit Router" āđ‚āļ›āļĢāđ€āļˆāļ„āļ™āļĩāđ‰āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ„āļ§āļēāļĄāļžāļĒāļēāļĒāļēāļĄāđƒāļ™āļāļēāļĢāļĨāļ”āļ‚āļĒāļ°āļ­āļīāđ€āļĨāđ‡āļāļ—āļĢāļ­āļ™āļīāļāļŠāđŒ āđ‚āļ”āļĒāļ™āļģāļŠāļīāđ‰āļ™āļŠāđˆāļ§āļ™āļˆāļēāļāļŠāļĄāļēāļĢāđŒāļ—āđ‚āļŸāļ™āđ€āļāđˆāļēāļĄāļēāļ›āļĢāļ°āļāļ­āļšāļāļąāļ™āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āđ€āļĢāļēāđ€āļ•āļ­āļĢāđŒāđƒāļŦāļĄāđˆ āļ•āļąāļ§āđ€āļĢāļēāđ€āļ•āļ­āļĢāđŒāļ™āļĩāđ‰āđƒāļŠāđ‰āđ‚āļ›āļĢāđ€āļ‹āļŠāđ€āļ‹āļ­āļĢāđŒ āļŠāļīāļ›āļŦāļ™āđˆāļ§āļĒāļ„āļ§āļēāļĄāļˆāļģ āđāļĨāļ°āļāļēāļĢāđ€āļŠāļ·āđˆāļ­āļĄāļ•āđˆāļ­āļ—āļēāļ‡āļāļēāļĒāļ āļēāļžāļˆāļēāļāļŠāļĄāļēāļĢāđŒāļ—āđ‚āļŸāļ™āđ€āļāđˆāļē āļ‹āļķāđˆāļ‡āļĄāļĩāļ­āļąāļ•āļĢāļēāļāļēāļĢāļ™āļģāļāļĨāļąāļšāļĄāļēāđƒāļŠāđ‰āđƒāļŦāļĄāđˆāļŠāļđāļ‡āļ–āļķāļ‡ 70% Dr. Henning Never āļœāļđāđ‰āļˆāļąāļ”āļāļēāļĢāđ‚āļ›āļĢāđ€āļˆāļ„āļ‚āļ­āļ‡ Deutsche Telekom āđ€āļŠāļ·āđˆāļ­āļ§āđˆāļē NeoCircuit Router āļ™āļĩāđ‰āļˆāļ°āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļāđ‰āļēāļ§āļŠāļģāļ„āļąāļāđƒāļ™āļāļēāļĢāļžāļąāļ’āļ™āļēāļāļēāļĢāđƒāļŠāđ‰āļ—āļĢāļąāļžāļĒāļēāļāļĢāļ­āļĒāđˆāļēāļ‡āļĒāļąāđˆāļ‡āļĒāļ·āļ™ āļ™āļ­āļāļˆāļēāļāļ™āļĩāđ‰ Bertrand Pascual āļˆāļēāļ Sagemcom āļĒāļąāļ‡āđ€āļŠāļĢāļīāļĄāļ§āđˆāļēāļāļēāļĢāļ™āļģāđ‚āļ›āļĢāđ€āļ‹āļŠāđ€āļ‹āļ­āļĢāđŒāļˆāļēāļāļŠāļĄāļēāļĢāđŒāļ—āđ‚āļŸāļ™āļĄāļēāđƒāļŠāđ‰āđƒāļ™āļ­āļļāļ›āļāļĢāļ“āđŒāļ­āļ·āđˆāļ™ āđ† āļ™āļąāđ‰āļ™āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļāļēāļĢāļ›āļĢāļ°āļŦāļĒāļąāļ”āļ—āļĢāļąāļžāļĒāļēāļāļĢāđāļĨāļ°āļ—āļģāđƒāļŦāđ‰āļĄāļĩāļ„āļ§āļēāļĄāļ„āļļāđ‰āļĄāļ„āđˆāļēāļ—āļēāļ‡āļāļēāļĢāđ€āļ‡āļīāļ™ āļāļēāļĢāđ€āļ›āļīāļ”āļ•āļąāļ§āļ‚āļ­āļ‡ NeoCircuit Router āļˆāļ°āļĄāļĩāļ‚āļķāđ‰āļ™āđƒāļ™āļ‡āļēāļ™ Mobile World Congress 2025 āļ—āļĩāđˆāļšāļēāļĢāđŒāđ€āļ‹āđ‚āļĨāļ™āđˆāļēāđƒāļ™āļ§āļąāļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆ 3 āļĄāļĩāļ™āļēāļ„āļĄ āļŦāļēāļāđ‚āļ›āļĢāđ€āļˆāļ„āļ™āļĩāđ‰āļ–āļđāļāļ™āļģāļĄāļēāđƒāļŠāđ‰āļ­āļĒāđˆāļēāļ‡āđāļžāļĢāđˆāļŦāļĨāļēāļĒ āļ„āļēāļ”āļ§āđˆāļēāļˆāļ°āļŠāđˆāļ§āļĒāļĨāļ”āļ•āđ‰āļ™āļ—āļļāļ™āļāļēāļĢāļœāļĨāļīāļ•āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļ­āļĒāđˆāļēāļ‡āļ™āđ‰āļ­āļĒ 20% āđ€āļĄāļ·āđˆāļ­āđ€āļ—āļĩāļĒāļšāļāļąāļšāļāļēāļĢāļœāļĨāļīāļ•āļŠāļīāđ‰āļ™āļŠāđˆāļ§āļ™āđƒāļŦāļĄāđˆāļ—āļąāđ‰āļ‡āļŦāļĄāļ” āđāļĨāļ°āļ™āļĩāđˆāļāđ‡āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ­āļĩāļāļŦāļ™āļķāđˆāļ‡āļ‚āļąāđ‰āļ™āļ•āļ­āļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļŠāļģāļ„āļąāļāđƒāļ™āļāļēāļĢāļŠāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļŠāļĢāļīāļĄāļāļēāļĢāļ™āļģāļ—āļĢāļąāļžāļĒāļēāļāļĢāļĄāļēāđƒāļŠāđ‰āđƒāļŦāļĄāđˆāđƒāļ™āļ§āļ‡āļāļēāļĢāļ­āļīāđ€āļĨāđ‡āļāļ—āļĢāļ­āļ™āļīāļāļŠāđŒ https://www.techradar.com/pro/europes-largest-telco-wants-to-slash-the-cost-of-your-router-by-reusing-your-old-smartphone-and-i-think-it-is-genius
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    āļ‹āļĩāļžāļĩāļĒāļđ Xeon 6 'Granite Rapids' āļ‚āļ­āļ‡ Intel āđ€āļ„āļĒāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ‹āļĩāļžāļĩāļĒāļđāļ—āļĩāđˆāđāļžāļ‡āļ—āļĩāđˆāļŠāļļāļ”āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļšāļĢāļīāļĐāļąāļ— āđāļ•āđˆāļ•āļ­āļ™āļ™āļĩāđ‰āļĢāļēāļ„āļēāļ–āļđāļāļĨāļ‡āļĄāļēāļ āļāļēāļĢāļĨāļ”āļĢāļēāļ„āļēāļ™āļĩāđ‰āđ„āļĄāđˆāđ„āļ”āđ‰āļ›āļĢāļ°āļāļēāļĻāļ­āļĒāđˆāļēāļ‡āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ—āļēāļ‡āļāļēāļĢ āđāļ•āđˆāļĄāļĩāļāļēāļĢāļ›āļĢāļąāļšāđƒāļ™āļāļēāļ™āļ‚āđ‰āļ­āļĄāļđāļĨāļ­āļ­āļ™āđ„āļĨāļ™āđŒāļ‚āļ­āļ‡ Intel āļ—āļĩāđˆ ark.intel.com āļ‹āļķāđˆāļ‡āļŦāļĄāļēāļĒāļ„āļ§āļēāļĄāļ§āđˆāļēāļāļēāļĢāđ€āļ›āļĨāļĩāđˆāļĒāļ™āđāļ›āļĨāļ‡āļĢāļēāļ„āļēāļ™āļĩāđ‰āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ—āļēāļ‡āļāļēāļĢ

    āļāļēāļĢāļĨāļ”āļĢāļēāļ„āļēāļ™āļĩāđ‰āļĄāļĩāļ•āļąāđ‰āļ‡āđāļ•āđˆ $1,585 āļŠāļģāļŦāļĢāļąāļš Xeon 6975P āļ—āļĩāđˆāļĄāļĩ 96 āļ„āļ­āļĢāđŒ āđ„āļ›āļˆāļ™āļ–āļķāļ‡ $5,340 āļŠāļģāļŦāļĢāļąāļš Xeon 6980P āļ—āļĩāđˆāļĄāļĩ 128 āļ„āļ­āļĢāđŒ āļŠāļēāļĄāđƒāļ™āļŦāđ‰āļēāļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļ‹āļĩāļžāļĩāļĒāļđ Xeon 6 'Granite Rapids' āļĄāļĩāļĢāļēāļ„āļēāļ–āļđāļāļĨāļ‡ 30% āđƒāļ™āļ‚āļ“āļ°āļ—āļĩāđˆāļŠāļ­āļ‡āļĢāļļāđˆāļ™āļĄāļĩāļāļēāļĢāļĨāļ”āļĢāļēāļ„āļēāļĨāļ‡ 13% (6972P) āđāļĨāļ° 20% (6952P)

    āļāļēāļĢāļĨāļ”āļĢāļēāļ„āļēāļ™āļĩāđ‰āļ—āļģāđƒāļŦāđ‰āļ‹āļĩāļžāļĩāļĒāļđ Xeon 6 āļ‚āļ­āļ‡ Intel āļĄāļĩāļ„āļ§āļēāļĄāļŠāļēāļĄāļēāļĢāļ–āđƒāļ™āļāļēāļĢāđāļ‚āđˆāļ‡āļ‚āļąāļ™āļĄāļēāļāļ‚āļķāđ‰āļ™āļŠāļģāļŦāļĢāļąāļšāļœāļđāđ‰āđƒāļŦāđ‰āļšāļĢāļīāļāļēāļĢāļ„āļĨāļēāļ§āļ”āđŒāļ—āļĩāđˆāļ•āđ‰āļ­āļ‡āļāļēāļĢāļ›āļĢāļ°āļŠāļīāļ—āļ˜āļīāļ āļēāļžāļ•āđˆāļ­āļ‹āđ‡āļ­āļāđ€āļāđ‡āļ• āļ„āļ­āļĢāđŒāļ•āđˆāļ­āļ‹āđ‡āļ­āļāđ€āļāđ‡āļ• āļ›āļĢāļ°āļŠāļīāļ—āļ˜āļīāļ āļēāļžāļ•āđˆāļ­āļ§āļąāļ•āļ•āđŒ āđāļĨāļ°āļ•āđ‰āļ™āļ—āļļāļ™āļĢāļ§āļĄāđƒāļ™āļāļēāļĢāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āđ€āļˆāđ‰āļēāļ‚āļ­āļ‡ (TCO) āļ­āļĒāđˆāļēāļ‡āđ„āļĢāļāđ‡āļ•āļēāļĄ TCO āļ­āļēāļˆāđ„āļĄāđˆāđƒāļŠāđˆāļˆāļļāļ”āđāļ‚āđ‡āļ‡āļ‚āļ­āļ‡ Granite Rapids āđ€āļĄāļ·āđˆāļ­āđ€āļ—āļĩāļĒāļšāļāļąāļš AMD's Genoa āđ€āļ™āļ·āđˆāļ­āļ‡āļˆāļēāļāļ‹āļĩāļžāļĩāļĒāļđ EPYC 9654 āļ‚āļ­āļ‡ AMD āļĄāļĩāļžāļĨāļąāļ‡āļ‡āļēāļ™āļāļēāļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆ 360W āđƒāļ™āļ‚āļ“āļ°āļ—āļĩāđˆ Xeon 6972P āļ‚āļ­āļ‡ Intel āđƒāļŠāđ‰āļžāļĨāļąāļ‡āļ‡āļēāļ™āļ–āļķāļ‡ 500W

    āļāļēāļĢāļĨāļ”āļĢāļēāļ„āļēāļ™āļĩāđ‰āļ­āļēāļˆāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļŠāļąāļāļāļēāļ“āļ§āđˆāļē Intel āđ„āļĄāđˆāļžāļ­āđƒāļˆāļāļąāļšāļˆāļģāļ™āļ§āļ™āļŦāļ™āđˆāļ§āļĒāļ—āļĩāđˆāļ‚āļēāļĒāđ„āļ”āđ‰āđāļĨāļ°āļ•āđ‰āļ­āļ‡āļāļēāļĢāđ€āļžāļīāđˆāļĄāļĒāļ­āļ”āļ‚āļēāļĒ āļ­āļĩāļāđ€āļŦāļ•āļļāļœāļĨāļŦāļ™āļķāđˆāļ‡āļ­āļēāļˆāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ„āļ§āļēāļĄāļ•āļąāđ‰āļ‡āđƒāļˆāļ‚āļ­āļ‡ Intel āļ—āļĩāđˆāļˆāļ°āļŦāļĒāļļāļ”āļŦāļĢāļ·āļ­āļŠāļ°āļĨāļ­āļāļēāļĢāđ€āļ•āļīāļšāđ‚āļ•āļ‚āļ­āļ‡ AMD āđƒāļ™āļ•āļĨāļēāļ”āļ‹āļĩāļžāļĩāļĒāļđāļŠāļģāļŦāļĢāļąāļšāļĻāļđāļ™āļĒāđŒāļ‚āđ‰āļ­āļĄāļđāļĨ

    https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/cpus/intel-quietly-slashes-prices-of-xeon-6-cpus-by-up-to-usd5-340
    āļ•āļ­āļ™āļ™āļĩāđ‰ Intel āļāļģāļĨāļąāļ‡āļĨāļ”āđāļĨāļ āđāļˆāļāđāļ–āļĄāđƒāļ™āļ—āļļāļāļĢāļ°āļ”āļąāļšāđ€āļĨāļĒāļˆāļĢāļīāļ‡āđ† Intel āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļĨāļ”āļĢāļēāļ„āļēāļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļ‹āļĩāļžāļĩāļĒāļđ Xeon 6 'Granite Rapids' āļ­āļĒāđˆāļēāļ‡āđ€āļ‡āļĩāļĒāļšāđ† āļŦāļĨāļąāļ‡āļˆāļēāļāđ€āļ›āļīāļ”āļ•āļąāļ§āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļ›āļĢāļ°āļĄāļēāļ“āļŠāļĩāđˆāđ€āļ”āļ·āļ­āļ™ āļāļēāļĢāļĨāļ”āļĢāļēāļ„āļēāļ™āļĩāđ‰āļĄāļĩāļ„āļ§āļēāļĄāļŠāļģāļ„āļąāļāļĄāļēāļ āđ€āļ™āļ·āđˆāļ­āļ‡āļˆāļēāļāļĢāļļāđˆāļ™āđ€āļĢāļ·āļ­āļ˜āļ‡āļ•āļ­āļ™āļ™āļĩāđ‰āļĄāļĩāļĢāļēāļ„āļēāļĨāļ”āļĨāļ‡āļ–āļķāļ‡ $5,340 āļ—āļģāđƒāļŦāđ‰āļ‹āļĩāļžāļĩāļĒāļđ Xeon 6 āļ‚āļ­āļ‡ Intel āļĄāļĩāļĢāļēāļ„āļēāļ–āļđāļāļāļ§āđˆāļēāđ‚āļ›āļĢāđ€āļ‹āļŠāđ€āļ‹āļ­āļĢāđŒ EPYC 'Genoa' āļ‚āļ­āļ‡ AMD āļ—āļąāđ‰āļ‡āđƒāļ™āđāļ‡āđˆāļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļ•āļąāļ§āđ€āļĨāļ‚āđāļĨāļ°āļĢāļēāļ„āļēāļ•āđˆāļ­āļ„āļ­āļĢāđŒ āļ‹āļĩāļžāļĩāļĒāļđ Xeon 6 'Granite Rapids' āļ‚āļ­āļ‡ Intel āđ€āļ„āļĒāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ‹āļĩāļžāļĩāļĒāļđāļ—āļĩāđˆāđāļžāļ‡āļ—āļĩāđˆāļŠāļļāļ”āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļšāļĢāļīāļĐāļąāļ— āđāļ•āđˆāļ•āļ­āļ™āļ™āļĩāđ‰āļĢāļēāļ„āļēāļ–āļđāļāļĨāļ‡āļĄāļēāļ āļāļēāļĢāļĨāļ”āļĢāļēāļ„āļēāļ™āļĩāđ‰āđ„āļĄāđˆāđ„āļ”āđ‰āļ›āļĢāļ°āļāļēāļĻāļ­āļĒāđˆāļēāļ‡āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ—āļēāļ‡āļāļēāļĢ āđāļ•āđˆāļĄāļĩāļāļēāļĢāļ›āļĢāļąāļšāđƒāļ™āļāļēāļ™āļ‚āđ‰āļ­āļĄāļđāļĨāļ­āļ­āļ™āđ„āļĨāļ™āđŒāļ‚āļ­āļ‡ Intel āļ—āļĩāđˆ ark.intel.com āļ‹āļķāđˆāļ‡āļŦāļĄāļēāļĒāļ„āļ§āļēāļĄāļ§āđˆāļēāļāļēāļĢāđ€āļ›āļĨāļĩāđˆāļĒāļ™āđāļ›āļĨāļ‡āļĢāļēāļ„āļēāļ™āļĩāđ‰āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ—āļēāļ‡āļāļēāļĢ āļāļēāļĢāļĨāļ”āļĢāļēāļ„āļēāļ™āļĩāđ‰āļĄāļĩāļ•āļąāđ‰āļ‡āđāļ•āđˆ $1,585 āļŠāļģāļŦāļĢāļąāļš Xeon 6975P āļ—āļĩāđˆāļĄāļĩ 96 āļ„āļ­āļĢāđŒ āđ„āļ›āļˆāļ™āļ–āļķāļ‡ $5,340 āļŠāļģāļŦāļĢāļąāļš Xeon 6980P āļ—āļĩāđˆāļĄāļĩ 128 āļ„āļ­āļĢāđŒ āļŠāļēāļĄāđƒāļ™āļŦāđ‰āļēāļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļ‹āļĩāļžāļĩāļĒāļđ Xeon 6 'Granite Rapids' āļĄāļĩāļĢāļēāļ„āļēāļ–āļđāļāļĨāļ‡ 30% āđƒāļ™āļ‚āļ“āļ°āļ—āļĩāđˆāļŠāļ­āļ‡āļĢāļļāđˆāļ™āļĄāļĩāļāļēāļĢāļĨāļ”āļĢāļēāļ„āļēāļĨāļ‡ 13% (6972P) āđāļĨāļ° 20% (6952P) āļāļēāļĢāļĨāļ”āļĢāļēāļ„āļēāļ™āļĩāđ‰āļ—āļģāđƒāļŦāđ‰āļ‹āļĩāļžāļĩāļĒāļđ Xeon 6 āļ‚āļ­āļ‡ Intel āļĄāļĩāļ„āļ§āļēāļĄāļŠāļēāļĄāļēāļĢāļ–āđƒāļ™āļāļēāļĢāđāļ‚āđˆāļ‡āļ‚āļąāļ™āļĄāļēāļāļ‚āļķāđ‰āļ™āļŠāļģāļŦāļĢāļąāļšāļœāļđāđ‰āđƒāļŦāđ‰āļšāļĢāļīāļāļēāļĢāļ„āļĨāļēāļ§āļ”āđŒāļ—āļĩāđˆāļ•āđ‰āļ­āļ‡āļāļēāļĢāļ›āļĢāļ°āļŠāļīāļ—āļ˜āļīāļ āļēāļžāļ•āđˆāļ­āļ‹āđ‡āļ­āļāđ€āļāđ‡āļ• āļ„āļ­āļĢāđŒāļ•āđˆāļ­āļ‹āđ‡āļ­āļāđ€āļāđ‡āļ• āļ›āļĢāļ°āļŠāļīāļ—āļ˜āļīāļ āļēāļžāļ•āđˆāļ­āļ§āļąāļ•āļ•āđŒ āđāļĨāļ°āļ•āđ‰āļ™āļ—āļļāļ™āļĢāļ§āļĄāđƒāļ™āļāļēāļĢāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āđ€āļˆāđ‰āļēāļ‚āļ­āļ‡ (TCO) āļ­āļĒāđˆāļēāļ‡āđ„āļĢāļāđ‡āļ•āļēāļĄ TCO āļ­āļēāļˆāđ„āļĄāđˆāđƒāļŠāđˆāļˆāļļāļ”āđāļ‚āđ‡āļ‡āļ‚āļ­āļ‡ Granite Rapids āđ€āļĄāļ·āđˆāļ­āđ€āļ—āļĩāļĒāļšāļāļąāļš AMD's Genoa āđ€āļ™āļ·āđˆāļ­āļ‡āļˆāļēāļāļ‹āļĩāļžāļĩāļĒāļđ EPYC 9654 āļ‚āļ­āļ‡ AMD āļĄāļĩāļžāļĨāļąāļ‡āļ‡āļēāļ™āļāļēāļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆ 360W āđƒāļ™āļ‚āļ“āļ°āļ—āļĩāđˆ Xeon 6972P āļ‚āļ­āļ‡ Intel āđƒāļŠāđ‰āļžāļĨāļąāļ‡āļ‡āļēāļ™āļ–āļķāļ‡ 500W āļāļēāļĢāļĨāļ”āļĢāļēāļ„āļēāļ™āļĩāđ‰āļ­āļēāļˆāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļŠāļąāļāļāļēāļ“āļ§āđˆāļē Intel āđ„āļĄāđˆāļžāļ­āđƒāļˆāļāļąāļšāļˆāļģāļ™āļ§āļ™āļŦāļ™āđˆāļ§āļĒāļ—āļĩāđˆāļ‚āļēāļĒāđ„āļ”āđ‰āđāļĨāļ°āļ•āđ‰āļ­āļ‡āļāļēāļĢāđ€āļžāļīāđˆāļĄāļĒāļ­āļ”āļ‚āļēāļĒ āļ­āļĩāļāđ€āļŦāļ•āļļāļœāļĨāļŦāļ™āļķāđˆāļ‡āļ­āļēāļˆāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ„āļ§āļēāļĄāļ•āļąāđ‰āļ‡āđƒāļˆāļ‚āļ­āļ‡ Intel āļ—āļĩāđˆāļˆāļ°āļŦāļĒāļļāļ”āļŦāļĢāļ·āļ­āļŠāļ°āļĨāļ­āļāļēāļĢāđ€āļ•āļīāļšāđ‚āļ•āļ‚āļ­āļ‡ AMD āđƒāļ™āļ•āļĨāļēāļ”āļ‹āļĩāļžāļĩāļĒāļđāļŠāļģāļŦāļĢāļąāļšāļĻāļđāļ™āļĒāđŒāļ‚āđ‰āļ­āļĄāļđāļĨ https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/cpus/intel-quietly-slashes-prices-of-xeon-6-cpus-by-up-to-usd5-340
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    Intel quietly slashes prices of Xeon 6 CPUs by up to $5,340
    They are still more expensive than AMD's competing EPYC, though.
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  • āđ€āļĢāļīāđˆāļĄāļ™āļąāļšāļŦāļ™āļķāđˆāļ‡!
    "āļāļĢāļĩāļ™āđāļĨāļ™āļ”āđŒāļ­āļēāļˆāļāļĨāļēāļĒāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āđ€āļ­āļāļĢāļēāļŠāđ„āļ”āđ‰ āđāļ•āđˆāļˆāļ°āđ„āļĄāđˆāđƒāļŠāđˆāļĢāļąāļāļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļŠāļŦāļĢāļąāļ"
    āļĨāļēāļĢāđŒāļŠ āļĨāđ‡āļ­āļāđ€āļāđ‰ āļĢāļēāļŠāļĄāļļāļŠāđ€āļ‹āļ™ (Lars Løkke Rasmussen) āļĢāļąāļāļĄāļ™āļ•āļĢāļĩāļ§āđˆāļēāļāļēāļĢāļāļĢāļ°āļ—āļĢāļ§āļ‡āļ•āđˆāļēāļ‡āļ›āļĢāļ°āđ€āļ—āļĻāđ€āļ”āļ™āļĄāļēāļĢāđŒāļ

    āļŦāļĨāļąāļ‡āļˆāļēāļāđ‚āļ”āļ™āļąāļĨāļ”āđŒ āļ—āļĢāļąāļĄāļ›āđŒ āļ§āđˆāļēāļ—āļĩāđˆāļ›āļĢāļ°āļ˜āļēāļ™āļēāļ˜āļīāļšāļ”āļĩāļŠāļŦāļĢāļąāļ āļ›āļāļīāđ€āļŠāļ˜āļ—āļĩāđˆāļˆāļ°āļ•āļąāļ”āļ„āļ§āļēāļĄāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āđ„āļ›āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļ—āļĩāđˆāļˆāļ°āđƒāļŠāđ‰āļāļģāļĨāļąāļ‡āđ€āļ‚āđ‰āļēāļ„āļ§āļšāļ„āļļāļĄāđ€āļāļēāļ°āļ­āļēāļĢāđŒāļāļ•āļīāļ āļĢāļąāļāļĄāļ™āļ•āļĢāļĩāļ•āđˆāļēāļ‡āļ›āļĢāļ°āđ€āļ—āļĻāđ€āļ”āļ™āļĄāļēāļĢāđŒāļāļāļĨāđˆāļēāļ§āđ€āļĄāļ·āđˆāļ­āļ§āļąāļ™āļžāļļāļ˜āļ§āđˆāļē āļāļĢāļĩāļ™āđāļĨāļ™āļ”āđŒ āļ‹āļķāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āđ€āļāļēāļ°āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ­āļļāļ”āļĄāđ„āļ›āļ”āđ‰āļ§āļĒāđāļĢāđˆāļ˜āļēāļ•āļļāđāļĨāļ°āļĄāļĩāļ„āļ§āļēāļĄāļŠāļģāļ„āļąāļāđ€āļŠāļīāļ‡āļĒāļļāļ—āļ˜āļĻāļēāļŠāļ•āļĢāđŒ āļ‹āļķāđˆāļ‡āļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāļ āļēāļĒāđƒāļ•āđ‰āļāļēāļĢāļ›āļāļ„āļĢāļ­āļ‡āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āđ€āļ”āļ™āļĄāļēāļĢāđŒāļ āļ­āļēāļˆāļāļĨāļēāļĒāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āđ€āļ­āļāļĢāļēāļŠāđ„āļ”āđ‰ āļŦāļēāļāļ›āļĢāļ°āļŠāļēāļŠāļ™āļ•āđ‰āļ­āļ‡āļāļēāļĢ
    "āđāļ•āđˆāļĄāļąāļ™āđ„āļĄāđˆāļ™āđˆāļēāļˆāļ°āļāļĨāļēāļĒāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļĢāļąāļāļŦāļ™āļķāđˆāļ‡āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļŠāļŦāļĢāļąāļ"
    (but it is unlikely to become a U.S. state)
    āđ€āļĢāļīāđˆāļĄāļ™āļąāļšāļŦāļ™āļķāđˆāļ‡! "āļāļĢāļĩāļ™āđāļĨāļ™āļ”āđŒāļ­āļēāļˆāļāļĨāļēāļĒāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āđ€āļ­āļāļĢāļēāļŠāđ„āļ”āđ‰ āđāļ•āđˆāļˆāļ°āđ„āļĄāđˆāđƒāļŠāđˆāļĢāļąāļāļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļŠāļŦāļĢāļąāļ" āļĨāļēāļĢāđŒāļŠ āļĨāđ‡āļ­āļāđ€āļāđ‰ āļĢāļēāļŠāļĄāļļāļŠāđ€āļ‹āļ™ (Lars Løkke Rasmussen) āļĢāļąāļāļĄāļ™āļ•āļĢāļĩāļ§āđˆāļēāļāļēāļĢāļāļĢāļ°āļ—āļĢāļ§āļ‡āļ•āđˆāļēāļ‡āļ›āļĢāļ°āđ€āļ—āļĻāđ€āļ”āļ™āļĄāļēāļĢāđŒāļ āļŦāļĨāļąāļ‡āļˆāļēāļāđ‚āļ”āļ™āļąāļĨāļ”āđŒ āļ—āļĢāļąāļĄāļ›āđŒ āļ§āđˆāļēāļ—āļĩāđˆāļ›āļĢāļ°āļ˜āļēāļ™āļēāļ˜āļīāļšāļ”āļĩāļŠāļŦāļĢāļąāļ āļ›āļāļīāđ€āļŠāļ˜āļ—āļĩāđˆāļˆāļ°āļ•āļąāļ”āļ„āļ§āļēāļĄāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āđ„āļ›āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļ—āļĩāđˆāļˆāļ°āđƒāļŠāđ‰āļāļģāļĨāļąāļ‡āđ€āļ‚āđ‰āļēāļ„āļ§āļšāļ„āļļāļĄāđ€āļāļēāļ°āļ­āļēāļĢāđŒāļāļ•āļīāļ āļĢāļąāļāļĄāļ™āļ•āļĢāļĩāļ•āđˆāļēāļ‡āļ›āļĢāļ°āđ€āļ—āļĻāđ€āļ”āļ™āļĄāļēāļĢāđŒāļāļāļĨāđˆāļēāļ§āđ€āļĄāļ·āđˆāļ­āļ§āļąāļ™āļžāļļāļ˜āļ§āđˆāļē āļāļĢāļĩāļ™āđāļĨāļ™āļ”āđŒ āļ‹āļķāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āđ€āļāļēāļ°āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ­āļļāļ”āļĄāđ„āļ›āļ”āđ‰āļ§āļĒāđāļĢāđˆāļ˜āļēāļ•āļļāđāļĨāļ°āļĄāļĩāļ„āļ§āļēāļĄāļŠāļģāļ„āļąāļāđ€āļŠāļīāļ‡āļĒāļļāļ—āļ˜āļĻāļēāļŠāļ•āļĢāđŒ āļ‹āļķāđˆāļ‡āļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāļ āļēāļĒāđƒāļ•āđ‰āļāļēāļĢāļ›āļāļ„āļĢāļ­āļ‡āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āđ€āļ”āļ™āļĄāļēāļĢāđŒāļ āļ­āļēāļˆāļāļĨāļēāļĒāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āđ€āļ­āļāļĢāļēāļŠāđ„āļ”āđ‰ āļŦāļēāļāļ›āļĢāļ°āļŠāļēāļŠāļ™āļ•āđ‰āļ­āļ‡āļāļēāļĢ "āđāļ•āđˆāļĄāļąāļ™āđ„āļĄāđˆāļ™āđˆāļēāļˆāļ°āļāļĨāļēāļĒāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļĢāļąāļāļŦāļ™āļķāđˆāļ‡āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļŠāļŦāļĢāļąāļ" (but it is unlikely to become a U.S. state)
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  • 26 Types of Punctuation Marks & Typographical Symbols

    We use words in writing. Shocking, I know! Do you know what else we use in writing? Here is a hint: they have already appeared in this paragraph. In addition to words, we use many different symbols and characters to organize our thoughts and make text easier to read. All of these symbols come in two major categories: punctuation marks and typographical symbols. These symbols have many different uses and include everything from the humble period (.) to the rarely used caret symbol (^). There may even be a few symbols out there that you’ve never even heard of before that leave you scratching your head when you see them on your keyboard!

    What is punctuation?

    Punctuation is the act or system of using specific marks or symbols in writing to separate different elements from each other or to make writing more clear. Punctuation is used in English and the other languages that use the Latin alphabet. Many other writing systems also use punctuation, too. Thanks to punctuation, we don’t have to suffer through a block of text that looks like this:

    - My favorite color is red do you like red red is great my sister likes green she always says green is the color of champions regardless of which color is better we both agree that no one likes salmon which is a fish and not a color seriously.

    Punctuation examples

    The following sentences give examples of the many different punctuation marks that we use:

    - My dog, Bark Scruffalo, was featured in a superhero movie.
    - If there’s something strange in your neighborhood, who are you going to call?
    - A wise man once said, “Within the body of every person lies a skeleton.”
    - Hooray! I found everything on the map: the lake, the mountain, and the forest.
    - I told Ashley (if that was her real name) that I needed the copy lickety-split.

    What is a typographical symbol?

    The term typographical symbol, or any other number of phrases, refers to a character or symbol that isn’t considered to be a punctuation mark but may still be used in writing for various purposes. Typographical symbols are generally avoided in formal writing under most circumstances. However, you may see typographic symbols used quite a bit in informal writing.

    Typographical symbol examples

    The following examples show some ways that a writer might use typographical symbols. Keep in mind that some of these sentences may not be considered appropriate in formal writing.

    - The frustrated actor said she was tired of her co-star’s “annoying bull****.”
    - For questions, email us at anascabana@bananacabanas.fake!
    - The band had five #1 singles on the American music charts during the 1990s.
    - My internet provider is AT&T.

    Punctuation vs. typographical symbols

    Punctuation marks are considered part of grammar and often have well-established rules for how to use them properly. For example, the rules of proper grammar state that a letter after a period should be capitalized and that a comma must be used before a coordinating conjunction.

    Typographical symbols, on the other hand, may not have widely accepted rules for how, or even when, they should be used. Generally speaking, most grammar resources will only allow the use of typographical symbols under very specific circumstances and will otherwise advise a writer to avoid using them.

    Types of punctuation and symbols

    There are many different types of punctuation marks and typographical symbols. We’ll briefly touch on them now, but you can learn more about of these characters by checking out the links in this list and also each section below:

    Period
    Question mark
    Exclamation point
    Comma
    Colon
    Semicolon
    Hyphen
    En dash
    Em dash
    Parentheses
    Square brackets
    Curly brackets
    Angle brackets
    Quotation marks
    Apostrophe
    Slash
    Ellipses
    Asterisk
    Ampersand
    Bullet point
    Pound symbol
    Tilde
    Backslash
    At symbol
    Caret symbol
    Pipe symbol

    Period, question mark, and exclamation point

    These three commonly used punctuation marks are used for the same reason: to end an independent thought.

    Period (.)

    A period is used to end a declarative sentence. A period indicates that a sentence is finished.

    Today is Friday.

    Unique to them, periods are also often used in abbreviations.

    Prof. Dumbledore once again awarded a ludicrous amount of points to Gryffindor.

    Question mark (?)

    The question mark is used to end a question, also known as an interrogative sentence.

    Do you feel lucky?

    Exclamation point (!)

    The exclamation point is used at the end of exclamations and interjections.

    Our house is haunted!
    Wow!

    Comma, colon, and semicolon

    Commas, colons, and semicolons can all be used to connect sentences together.

    Comma (,)

    The comma is often the punctuation mark that gives writers the most problems. It has many different uses and often requires good knowledge of grammar to avoid making mistakes when using it. Some common uses of the comma include:

    Joining clauses: Mario loves Peach, and she loves him.
    Nonrestrictive elements: My favorite team, the Fighting Mongooses, won the championship this year.
    Lists: The flag was red, white, and blue.
    Coordinate adjectives: The cute, happy puppy licked my hand.

    Colon (:)

    The colon is typically used to introduce additional information.

    The detective had three suspects: the salesman, the gardener, and the lawyer.

    Like commas, colons can also connect clauses together.

    We forgot to ask the most important question: who was buying lunch?

    Colons have a few other uses, too.

    The meeting starts at 8:15 p.m.
    The priest started reading from Mark 3:6.

    Semicolon (;)

    Like the comma and the colon, the semicolon is used to connect sentences together. The semicolon typically indicates that the second sentence is closely related to the one before it.

    I can’t eat peanuts; I am highly allergic to them.
    Lucy loves to eat all kinds of sweets; lollipops are her favorite.

    Hyphen and dashes (en dash and em dash)

    All three of these punctuation marks are often referred to as “dashes.” However, they are all used for entirely different reasons.

    Hyphen (-)

    The hyphen is used to form compound words.

    I went to lunch with my father-in-law.
    She was playing with a jack-in-the-box.
    He was accused of having pro-British sympathies.

    En dash (–)

    The en dash is used to express ranges or is sometimes used in more complex compound words.

    The homework exercises are on pages 20–27.
    The songwriter had worked on many Tony Award–winning productions.

    Em dash (—)

    The em dash is used to indicate a pause or interrupted speech.

    The thief was someone nobody expected—me!
    “Those kids will—” was all he managed to say before he was hit by a water balloon.
    Test your knowledge on the different dashes here.

    Parentheses, brackets, and braces

    These pairs of punctuation marks look similar, but they all have different uses. In general, the parentheses are much more commonly used than the others.

    Parentheses ()

    Typically, parentheses are used to add additional information.

    I thought (for a very long time) if I should actually give an honest answer.
    Tomorrow is Christmas (my favorite holiday)!
    Parentheses have a variety of other uses, too.

    Pollution increased significantly. (See Chart 14B)
    He was at an Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) meeting.
    Richard I of England (1157–1199) had the heart of a lion.

    Square brackets []

    Typically, square brackets are used to clarify or add information to quotations.

    According to an eyewitness, the chimpanzees “climbed on the roof and juggled [bananas].”
    The judge said that “the defense attorney [Mr. Wright] had made it clear that the case was far from closed.”

    Curly brackets {}

    Curly brackets, also known as braces, are rarely used punctuation marks that are used to group a set.

    I was impressed by the many different colors {red, green, yellow, blue, purple, black, white} they selected for the flag’s design.

    Angle brackets <>

    Angle brackets have no usage in formal writing and are rarely ever used even in informal writing. These characters have more uses in other fields, such as math or computing.

    Quotation marks and apostrophe

    You’ll find these punctuation marks hanging out at the top of a line of text.

    Quotation marks (“”)

    The most common use of quotation marks is to contain quotations.

    She said, “Don’t let the dog out of the house.”
    Bob Ross liked to put “happy little trees” in many of his paintings.

    Apostrophe (‘)

    The apostrophe is most often used to form possessives and contractions.

    The house’s back door is open.
    My cousin’s birthday is next week.
    It isn’t ready yet.
    We should’ve stayed outside.

    Slash and ellipses

    These are two punctuation marks you may not see too often, but they are still useful.

    Slash (/)

    The slash has several different uses. Here are some examples:

    Relationships: The existence of boxer briefs somehow hasn’t ended the boxers/briefs debate.
    Alternatives: They accept cash and/or credit.
    Fractions: After an hour, 2/3 of the audience had already left.

    Ellipses (…)

    In formal writing, ellipses are used to indicate that words were removed from a quote.

    The mayor said, “The damages will be … paid for by the city … as soon as possible.”
    In informal writing, ellipses are often used to indicate pauses or speech that trails off.

    He nervously stammered and said, “Look, I … You see … I wasn’t … Forget it, okay.”

    Typographical symbols

    Typographical symbols rarely appear in formal writing. You are much more likely to see them used for a variety of reasons in informal writing.

    Asterisk (*)

    In formal writing, especially academic and scientific writing, the asterisk is used to indicate a footnote.

    Chocolate is the preferred flavor of ice cream.*
    *According to survey data from the Ice Cream Data Center.

    The asterisk may also be used to direct a reader toward a clarification or may be used to censor inappropriate words or phrases.

    Ampersand (&)

    The ampersand substitutes for the word and. Besides its use in the official names of things, the ampersand is typically avoided in formal writing.

    The band gave a speech at the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame.

    Bullet Point (•)

    Bullet points are used to create lists. For example,

    For this recipe you will need:

    • eggs
    • milk
    • sugar
    • flour
    • baking powder

    Pound symbol (#)

    Informally, the pound symbol is typically used to mean number or is used in social media hashtags.

    The catchy pop song reached #1 on the charts.
    Ready 4 Halloween 2morrow!!! #spooky #TrickorTreat
    Tilde (~)

    Besides being used as an accent mark in Spanish and Portuguese words, the tilde is rarely used. Informally, a person may use it to mean “about” or “approximately.”

    We visited São Paulo during our vacation.
    I think my dog weighs ~20 pounds.

    Backslash (\)

    The backslash is primarily used in computer programming and coding. It might be used online and in texting to draw emoticons, but it has no other common uses in writing. Be careful not to mix it up with the similar forward slash (/), which is a punctuation mark.

    At symbol (@)

    The at symbol substitutes for the word at in informal writing. In formal writing, it is used when writing email addresses.

    His email address is duckduck@goose.abc.

    Caret symbol (^)

    The caret symbol is used in proofreading, but may be used to indicate an exponent if a writer is unable to use superscript.

    Do you know what 3^4 (34) is equal to?

    Pipe symbol (|)

    The pipe symbol is not used in writing. Instead, it has a variety of functions in the fields of math, physics, or computing.

    Copyright 2024, AAKKHRA, All Rights Reserved.
    26 Types of Punctuation Marks & Typographical Symbols We use words in writing. Shocking, I know! Do you know what else we use in writing? Here is a hint: they have already appeared in this paragraph. In addition to words, we use many different symbols and characters to organize our thoughts and make text easier to read. All of these symbols come in two major categories: punctuation marks and typographical symbols. These symbols have many different uses and include everything from the humble period (.) to the rarely used caret symbol (^). There may even be a few symbols out there that you’ve never even heard of before that leave you scratching your head when you see them on your keyboard! What is punctuation? Punctuation is the act or system of using specific marks or symbols in writing to separate different elements from each other or to make writing more clear. Punctuation is used in English and the other languages that use the Latin alphabet. Many other writing systems also use punctuation, too. Thanks to punctuation, we don’t have to suffer through a block of text that looks like this: - My favorite color is red do you like red red is great my sister likes green she always says green is the color of champions regardless of which color is better we both agree that no one likes salmon which is a fish and not a color seriously. Punctuation examples The following sentences give examples of the many different punctuation marks that we use: - My dog, Bark Scruffalo, was featured in a superhero movie. - If there’s something strange in your neighborhood, who are you going to call? - A wise man once said, “Within the body of every person lies a skeleton.” - Hooray! I found everything on the map: the lake, the mountain, and the forest. - I told Ashley (if that was her real name) that I needed the copy lickety-split. What is a typographical symbol? The term typographical symbol, or any other number of phrases, refers to a character or symbol that isn’t considered to be a punctuation mark but may still be used in writing for various purposes. Typographical symbols are generally avoided in formal writing under most circumstances. However, you may see typographic symbols used quite a bit in informal writing. Typographical symbol examples The following examples show some ways that a writer might use typographical symbols. Keep in mind that some of these sentences may not be considered appropriate in formal writing. - The frustrated actor said she was tired of her co-star’s “annoying bull****.” - For questions, email us at anascabana@bananacabanas.fake! - The band had five #1 singles on the American music charts during the 1990s. - My internet provider is AT&T. Punctuation vs. typographical symbols Punctuation marks are considered part of grammar and often have well-established rules for how to use them properly. For example, the rules of proper grammar state that a letter after a period should be capitalized and that a comma must be used before a coordinating conjunction. Typographical symbols, on the other hand, may not have widely accepted rules for how, or even when, they should be used. Generally speaking, most grammar resources will only allow the use of typographical symbols under very specific circumstances and will otherwise advise a writer to avoid using them. Types of punctuation and symbols There are many different types of punctuation marks and typographical symbols. We’ll briefly touch on them now, but you can learn more about of these characters by checking out the links in this list and also each section below: Period Question mark Exclamation point Comma Colon Semicolon Hyphen En dash Em dash Parentheses Square brackets Curly brackets Angle brackets Quotation marks Apostrophe Slash Ellipses Asterisk Ampersand Bullet point Pound symbol Tilde Backslash At symbol Caret symbol Pipe symbol Period, question mark, and exclamation point These three commonly used punctuation marks are used for the same reason: to end an independent thought. Period (.) A period is used to end a declarative sentence. A period indicates that a sentence is finished. Today is Friday. Unique to them, periods are also often used in abbreviations. Prof. Dumbledore once again awarded a ludicrous amount of points to Gryffindor. Question mark (?) The question mark is used to end a question, also known as an interrogative sentence. Do you feel lucky? Exclamation point (!) The exclamation point is used at the end of exclamations and interjections. Our house is haunted! Wow! Comma, colon, and semicolon Commas, colons, and semicolons can all be used to connect sentences together. Comma (,) The comma is often the punctuation mark that gives writers the most problems. It has many different uses and often requires good knowledge of grammar to avoid making mistakes when using it. Some common uses of the comma include: Joining clauses: Mario loves Peach, and she loves him. Nonrestrictive elements: My favorite team, the Fighting Mongooses, won the championship this year. Lists: The flag was red, white, and blue. Coordinate adjectives: The cute, happy puppy licked my hand. Colon (:) The colon is typically used to introduce additional information. The detective had three suspects: the salesman, the gardener, and the lawyer. Like commas, colons can also connect clauses together. We forgot to ask the most important question: who was buying lunch? Colons have a few other uses, too. The meeting starts at 8:15 p.m. The priest started reading from Mark 3:6. Semicolon (;) Like the comma and the colon, the semicolon is used to connect sentences together. The semicolon typically indicates that the second sentence is closely related to the one before it. I can’t eat peanuts; I am highly allergic to them. Lucy loves to eat all kinds of sweets; lollipops are her favorite. Hyphen and dashes (en dash and em dash) All three of these punctuation marks are often referred to as “dashes.” However, they are all used for entirely different reasons. Hyphen (-) The hyphen is used to form compound words. I went to lunch with my father-in-law. She was playing with a jack-in-the-box. He was accused of having pro-British sympathies. En dash (–) The en dash is used to express ranges or is sometimes used in more complex compound words. The homework exercises are on pages 20–27. The songwriter had worked on many Tony Award–winning productions. Em dash (—) The em dash is used to indicate a pause or interrupted speech. The thief was someone nobody expected—me! “Those kids will—” was all he managed to say before he was hit by a water balloon. Test your knowledge on the different dashes here. Parentheses, brackets, and braces These pairs of punctuation marks look similar, but they all have different uses. In general, the parentheses are much more commonly used than the others. Parentheses () Typically, parentheses are used to add additional information. I thought (for a very long time) if I should actually give an honest answer. Tomorrow is Christmas (my favorite holiday)! Parentheses have a variety of other uses, too. Pollution increased significantly. (See Chart 14B) He was at an Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) meeting. Richard I of England (1157–1199) had the heart of a lion. Square brackets [] Typically, square brackets are used to clarify or add information to quotations. According to an eyewitness, the chimpanzees “climbed on the roof and juggled [bananas].” The judge said that “the defense attorney [Mr. Wright] had made it clear that the case was far from closed.” Curly brackets {} Curly brackets, also known as braces, are rarely used punctuation marks that are used to group a set. I was impressed by the many different colors {red, green, yellow, blue, purple, black, white} they selected for the flag’s design. Angle brackets <> Angle brackets have no usage in formal writing and are rarely ever used even in informal writing. These characters have more uses in other fields, such as math or computing. Quotation marks and apostrophe You’ll find these punctuation marks hanging out at the top of a line of text. Quotation marks (“”) The most common use of quotation marks is to contain quotations. She said, “Don’t let the dog out of the house.” Bob Ross liked to put “happy little trees” in many of his paintings. Apostrophe (‘) The apostrophe is most often used to form possessives and contractions. The house’s back door is open. My cousin’s birthday is next week. It isn’t ready yet. We should’ve stayed outside. Slash and ellipses These are two punctuation marks you may not see too often, but they are still useful. Slash (/) The slash has several different uses. Here are some examples: Relationships: The existence of boxer briefs somehow hasn’t ended the boxers/briefs debate. Alternatives: They accept cash and/or credit. Fractions: After an hour, 2/3 of the audience had already left. Ellipses (…) In formal writing, ellipses are used to indicate that words were removed from a quote. The mayor said, “The damages will be … paid for by the city … as soon as possible.” In informal writing, ellipses are often used to indicate pauses or speech that trails off. He nervously stammered and said, “Look, I … You see … I wasn’t … Forget it, okay.” Typographical symbols Typographical symbols rarely appear in formal writing. You are much more likely to see them used for a variety of reasons in informal writing. Asterisk (*) In formal writing, especially academic and scientific writing, the asterisk is used to indicate a footnote. Chocolate is the preferred flavor of ice cream.* *According to survey data from the Ice Cream Data Center. The asterisk may also be used to direct a reader toward a clarification or may be used to censor inappropriate words or phrases. Ampersand (&) The ampersand substitutes for the word and. Besides its use in the official names of things, the ampersand is typically avoided in formal writing. The band gave a speech at the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. Bullet Point (•) Bullet points are used to create lists. For example, For this recipe you will need: • eggs • milk • sugar • flour • baking powder Pound symbol (#) Informally, the pound symbol is typically used to mean number or is used in social media hashtags. The catchy pop song reached #1 on the charts. Ready 4 Halloween 2morrow!!! #spooky #TrickorTreat Tilde (~) Besides being used as an accent mark in Spanish and Portuguese words, the tilde is rarely used. Informally, a person may use it to mean “about” or “approximately.” We visited São Paulo during our vacation. I think my dog weighs ~20 pounds. Backslash (\) The backslash is primarily used in computer programming and coding. It might be used online and in texting to draw emoticons, but it has no other common uses in writing. Be careful not to mix it up with the similar forward slash (/), which is a punctuation mark. At symbol (@) The at symbol substitutes for the word at in informal writing. In formal writing, it is used when writing email addresses. His email address is duckduck@goose.abc. Caret symbol (^) The caret symbol is used in proofreading, but may be used to indicate an exponent if a writer is unable to use superscript. Do you know what 3^4 (34) is equal to? Pipe symbol (|) The pipe symbol is not used in writing. Instead, it has a variety of functions in the fields of math, physics, or computing. Copyright 2024, AAKKHRA, All Rights Reserved.
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    Pachäree Wõng
    November20, 2024
    Sausalito, California.
    🐍 🐍 🐍 āļ‡āļđ āļ‡āļđ āļ‡āļđ ❗ ❓ ⚠ (āļ‚āļ™ āļ„āļīāļ‡ āļĨāļļāļ) āļ āļēāļĐāļēāđ€āļŦāļ™āļ·āļ­ āđāļ›āļĨāļ§āđˆāļē...āļ‚āļ™ (āļĄāļąāļ™) āļĨāļļāļ āđ€āļŠāļĩāļĒāļ‡āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āđ€āļĢāļē..āđ€āļŠāļĩāļĒāļ‡āļ”āļąāļ‡ āļŸāļąāļ‡āļŠāļąāļ”āđ€āļˆāļ™ āļ—āļģāđƒāļŦāđ‰āļ„āļļāļ“āļŠāļēāļĄāļĩ āļĢāļĩāļšāļŦāļĒāļīāļšāđ€āļ„āļĢāļ·āđˆāļ­āļ‡āļĄāļ·āļ­ āļĄāļēāļˆāļąāļšāļ‡āļđ 🐍 āđƒāļŠāđˆāļāļĢāļ°āļŠāļ­āļš āļ­āļĒāđˆāļēāļ‡āļĢāļ§āļ”āđ€āļĢāđ‡āļ§ āđƒāļŦāđ‰āļ„āļ™āļ‡āļēāļ™āļ™āļģāđ„āļ›āļ›āļĨāđˆāļ­āļĒ..āđāļĨāđ‰āļ§ āđ€āļ„āļĢāļ·āđˆāļ­āļ‡āļĄāļ·āļ­ āļˆāļąāļšāļ‡āļđ (āļ­āļĒāđˆāļēāļ‡āļ‡āđˆāļēāļĒ) āļĢāļēāļ„āļēāļ–āļđāļ āđƒāļŠāđ‰āļ‡āļēāļ™āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļœāļĨāļ”āļĩāļˆāļąāļ‡ āļ—āļĩāđˆāđ„āļĢāđˆ āļ—āļģāđƒāļŠāđ‰āđ€āļ­āļ‡ āļĄāļĩ 2 āđāļšāļš 👆 #āđāļšāļšāļ—āļĩāđˆ 1 : #āđāļšāļšāļ•āļēāļ‚āļ­ āđ€āļŦāļĄāļēāļ°āļŠāļģāļŦāļĢāļąāļšāļ‡āļđāđ„āļĄāđˆāļĄāļĩāļžāļīāļĐ āļ—āļģāļˆāļēāļāđ€āļŦāļĨāđ‡āļāļŠāļ›āļĢāļīāļ‡ āļ‚āļ™āļēāļ” Ø 5/16"X65" āļ™āļģāļĄāļēāđ€āļœāļēāđ„āļŸāļ—āļĩāđˆāļ›āļĨāļēāļĒāđāļĨāđ‰āļ§āļ”āļąāļ”āļ‚āļķāđ‰āļ™āļĢāļđāļ›(āļ•āļēāļĄāļ āļēāļž) āļˆāļ°āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļ„āļ§āļēāļĄāļĒāļēāļ§āļĢāļ§āļĄ 52"āļžāļ­āļ”āļĩ #āļ§āļīāļ˜āļĩāđƒāļŠāđ‰ āđ€āļāļĩāđˆāļĒāļ§ āđāļĨāđ‰āļ§āļāļ”āļŦāļąāļ§ āđƒāļŠāđˆāļāļĢāļ°āļŠāļ­āļš. āļŦāļĢāļ·āļ­ āļ”āļąāļ”āđāļ›āļĨāļ‡āļˆāļēāļ #āđāļ›āļĢāļ‡āļĨāļđāļāļāļĨāļīāđ‰āļ‡āļ—āļēāļŠāļĩ āļ–āļ­āļ”āļĨāļđāļāļāļĨāļīāđ‰āļ‡āļ­āļ­āļ..āļˆāļ°āđ„āļ”āđ‰āđāļāļ™āđ€āļŦāļĨāđ‡āļāļ—āļĩāđˆāļĄāļĩāļĢāļđāļ›āļĢāđˆāļēāļ‡āļ„āļĨāđ‰āļēāļĒ #āļ‚āļ­āđ€āļāļĩāđˆāļĒāļ§āļ‡āļđ āļ™āļģāļĄāļēāļ•āđˆāļ­āļ”āđ‰āļēāļĄāđƒāļŦāđ‰āđ„āļ”āđ‰ 54 āļ™āļīāđ‰āļ§ āļ•āļēāļĄāļĄāļēāļ•āļĢāļāļēāļ™..āđƒāļŠāđ‰āļ‡āļēāļ™āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļ”āļĩ āđ€āļŠāđˆāļ™āļāļąāļ™. ✌ #āđāļšāļšāļ—āļĩāđˆ 2 : #āđāļšāļšāļšāđˆāļ§āļ‡āļ„āļĨāđ‰āļ­āļ‡āļ‡āļđ āđ€āļŦāļĄāļēāļ°āļŠāļģāļŦāļĢāļąāļšāļ‡āļđāļĄāļĩāļžāļīāļĐ āđāļĨāļ°āļ‡āļđāļ—āļąāđˆāļ§āđ„āļ› āđƒāļŠāđ‰āļ—āđˆāļ­āļĢāđ‰āļ­āļĒāļŠāļēāļĒāđ„āļŸ āļ‚āļ™āļēāļ” Ø 3/4"X52" āđāļĨāļ°āđ€āļŠāļ·āļ­āļāđ„āļ™āļĨāđˆāļ­āļ™ Ø 5/16"X75" āđ€āļˆāļēāļ°āļĢāļđ āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ›āļĨāļēāļĒāļĨāđˆāļēāļ‡ āļĢāđ‰āļ­āļĒāđ€āļŠāļ·āļ­āļ(āļ•āļēāļĄāļ āļēāļž)āđāļĨāđ‰āļ§āļĢāđ‰āļ­āļĒāđ€āļŠāļ·āļ­āļ..āļ‚āļķāđ‰āļ™āļ›āļĨāļēāļĒāļšāļ™ #āļ§āļīāļ˜āļĩāđƒāļŠāđ‰ āļ„āļĨāđ‰āļ­āļ‡āļ„āļ­āļ‡āļđ āđāļĨāđ‰āļ§āļ”āļķāļ‡āđ€āļŠāļ·āļ­āļāļ›āļĨāļēāļĒāļ”āđ‰āļēāļ™āļšāļ™ āļĢāļąāļ”āļ„āļ­āļ‡āļđ āđƒāļŠāđˆāļāļĢāļ°āļŠāļ­āļš. . . ***āļ˜āļĢāļĢāļĄāļŠāļēāļ•āļīāļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļ‡āļđāļ—āļļāļāļ•āļąāļ§āļŠāļēāļĒāļ•āļēāđ„āļĄāđˆāļ”āļĩ*** āđƒāļˆ āđ€āļĒāđ‡āļ™ āđ€āļĒāđ‡āļ™ . . Pachäree Wõng November20, 2024 Sausalito, California.
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  • ðŸ§ĩāđ€āļ­āđ‡āļĄāļĄāļēāļ™āļđāđ€āļ­āļĨ āļĄāļēāļ„āļĢāļ‡ – āļĨāļđāļāļĻāļīāļĐāļĒāđŒāļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļ•āļĢāļ°āļāļđāļĨāļĢāļ­āļ˜āļŠāđŒāđ„āļŠāļĨāļ”āđŒāļāļĨāļēāļĒāļĄāļēāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ›āļĢāļ°āļ˜āļēāļ™āļēāļ˜āļīāļšāļ”āļĩāļāļĢāļąāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļĻāļŠ?

    āļ›āļĢāļ°āļ˜āļēāļ™āļēāļ˜āļīāļšāļ”āļĩāļāļĢāļąāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļĻāļŠ @EmmanuelMacron āļœāļđāđ‰āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļĢāļąāļšāļ‰āļēāļĒāļēāļ§āđˆāļē “āļ›āļĢāļ°āļ˜āļēāļ™āļēāļ˜āļīāļšāļ”āļĩāļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļ„āļ™āļĢāļ§āļĒ,” āđ„āļ”āđ‰āđƒāļŦāđ‰āļāļēāļĢāļŠāļ™āļąāļšāļŠāļ™āļļāļ™āļāļēāļĢāļ‚āļķāđ‰āļ™āļ āļēāļĐāļĩāđāļāđˆāļšāļļāļ„āļ„āļĨāļ—āļĩāđˆāļĄāļĩāļāļēāļ™āļ°āļĢāđˆāļģāļĢāļ§āļĒāđāļĨāļ°āļšāļĢāļīāļĐāļąāļ—āļ‚āļ™āļēāļ”āđƒāļŦāļāđˆ āļ™āļīāļ§āļĒāļ­āļĢāđŒāļāđ„āļ—āļĄāđŒāļŠ āļāļĨāđˆāļēāļ§āļ§āđˆāļē āļ›āļĢāļ°āļ˜āļēāļ™āļēāļ˜āļīāļšāļ”āļĩ “āļ„āļąāļ”āļ„āđ‰āļēāļ™āļāļēāļĢāļ‚āļķāđ‰āļ™āļ āļēāļĐāļĩāļ­āļĒāđˆāļēāļ‡āđāļ‚āđ‡āļ‡āļāļĢāđ‰āļēāļ§,” āđāļ•āđˆ āļĄāļīāđ€āļŠāļĨ āļšāļēāļĢāđŒāđ€āļ™āļĩāļĒāļĢāđŒ āļ™āļēāļĒāļāļĢāļąāļāļĄāļ™āļ•āļĢāļĩāļāļĢāļąāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļĻāļŠāļāļĨāđˆāļēāļ§āļ§āđˆāļē āđ„āļĄāđˆāļĄāļĩāļ—āļēāļ‡āđ€āļĨāļ·āļ­āļāļ­āļ·āđˆāļ™āđƒāļ™āļāļēāļĢāđāļāđ‰āļ›āļąāļāļŦāļēāļāļēāļĢāļ‚āļēāļ”āļ”āļļāļĨāļ‡āļšāļ›āļĢāļ°āļĄāļēāļ“āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ‚āļĒāļēāļĒāļ•āļąāļ§āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļāļĢāļąāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļĻāļŠ

    👇āļĄāļēāļ„āļĢāļ‡āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļĢāļąāļšāļ‰āļēāļĒāļēāļ™āļĩāđ‰āļĄāļēāđ„āļ”āđ‰āļ­āļĒāđˆāļēāļ‡āđ„āļĢ, āđāļĨāļ°āđ€āļ‚āļēāđ€āļāļĩāđˆāļĒāļ§āļ‚āđ‰āļ­āļ‡āļāļąāļšāļ•āļĢāļ°āļāļđāļĨāļ˜āļ™āļēāļ„āļēāļĢāļŠāļ·āđˆāļ­āļ”āļąāļ‡ āļĢāļ­āļ˜āļŠāđŒāđ„āļŠāļĨāļ”āđŒ āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļ­āļĒāđˆāļēāļ‡āđ„āļĢ? 👇
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    â—ŧïļ āđ€āļ­āđ‡āļĄāļĄāļēāļ™āļđāđ€āļ­āļĨ āļĄāļēāļ„āļĢāļ‡ āđ€āļ„āļĒāļ—āļģāļ‡āļēāļ™āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ™āļēāļĒāļ˜āļ™āļēāļ„āļēāļĢāđ€āļžāļ·āđˆāļ­āļāļēāļĢāļĨāļ‡āļ—āļļāļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ˜āļ™āļēāļ„āļēāļĢ Rothschild & Cie Banque āļĢāļ°āļŦāļ§āđˆāļēāļ‡āļ›āļĩ āđ’āđāđāđ˜ āļ–āļķāļ‡ āđ’āđāđ‘āđ’ āļŦāļĨāļąāļ‡āļˆāļēāļāđ„āļ”āđ‰āļĢāļąāļšāļāļēāļĢāļ„āļąāļ”āđ€āļĨāļ·āļ­āļāđƒāļ™āļŠāđˆāļ§āļ‡āļ›āļĨāļēāļĒāļ›āļĩ āđ’āđāđāđ˜, āļĄāļēāļ„āļĢāļ‡āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļĢāļąāļšāļāļēāļĢāđ€āļĨāļ·āđˆāļ­āļ™āļ•āļģāđāļŦāļ™āđˆāļ‡āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļŦāļļāđ‰āļ™āļŠāđˆāļ§āļ™āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļ˜āļ™āļēāļ„āļēāļĢāđƒāļ™āļ›āļĩ āđ’āđāđ‘āđ āļĄāļēāļ„āļĢāļ‡āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļĢāļąāļšāđ€āļ‡āļīāļ™āđ€āļ”āļ·āļ­āļ™āļ›āļĢāļ°āļĄāļēāļ“ āđ’.āđ™ āļĨāđ‰āļēāļ™āļĒāļđāđ‚āļĢ āđƒāļ™āļ‚āļ“āļ°āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ—āļģāļ‡āļēāļ™āđƒāļŦāđ‰āļāļąāļšāļ•āļĢāļ°āļāļđāļĨ Rothschild, āļ•āļēāļĄāļĢāļēāļĒāļ‡āļēāļ™āļ‚āļ­āļ‡ Financial Times
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    â—ŧïļ āđƒāļ™āļŠāđˆāļ§āļ‡āļŦāļēāđ€āļŠāļĩāļĒāļ‡āļŠāļīāļ‡āļ•āļģāđāļŦāļ™āđˆāļ‡āļ›āļĢāļ°āļ˜āļēāļ™āļēāļ˜āļīāļšāļ”āļĩāļ›āļĩ āđ’āđāđ‘āđ—, āļĄāļēāļ„āļĢāļ‡āļ–āļđāļāļ•āļģāļŦāļ™āļīāļ§āđˆāļēāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™ "āļœāļđāđ‰āļŠāļĄāļąāļ„āļĢāļĢāļąāļšāđ€āļĨāļ·āļ­āļāļ•āļąāđ‰āļ‡āđƒāļ™āļŠāļēāļ‚āļēāļāļēāļĢāđ€āļ‡āļīāļ™" āđ€āļ‚āļēāļĨāļ‡āļŠāļĄāļąāļ„āļĢāđƒāļ™āļāļēāļ™āļ°āļœāļđāđ‰āļŠāļĄāļąāļ„āļĢāļ­āļīāļŠāļĢāļ°āđƒāļ™āļžāļĢāļĢāļ„āļāļēāļĢāđ€āļĄāļ·āļ­āļ‡āļ—āļĩāđˆāđ€āļžāļīāđˆāļ‡āļˆāļąāļ”āļ•āļąāđ‰āļ‡āļ‚āļķāđ‰āļ™āđƒāļŦāļĄāđˆ āđāļ•āđˆāļŠāļēāļĄāļēāļĢāļ–āļĢāļ°āļ”āļĄāļ—āļļāļ™āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļ­āļĒāđˆāļēāļ‡āļĢāļ§āļ”āđ€āļĢāđ‡āļ§āļ–āļķāļ‡ āđ‘āđ“ āļĨāđ‰āļēāļ™āļĒāļđāđ‚āļĢ āđ€āļ‡āļīāļ™āļ—āļļāļ™āļŠāđˆāļ§āļ™āđƒāļŦāļāđˆāļĄāļēāļˆāļēāļāđ€āļ„āļĢāļ·āļ­āļ‚āđˆāļēāļĒāļ˜āļ™āļēāļ„āļēāļĢ, āļ™āļąāļāļāļēāļĢāđ€āļ‡āļīāļ™, āđāļĨāļ°āļ™āļąāļāļ˜āļļāļĢāļāļīāļˆāļ—āļĩāđˆāļĄāļĩāļ­āļīāļ—āļ˜āļīāļžāļĨ, āļ•āļēāļĄāļĢāļēāļĒāļ‡āļēāļ™āļ‚āļ­āļ‡ Mediapart, āļ‹āļķāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļŠāļ·āđˆāļ­āļŠāļ·āļšāļŠāļ§āļ™āļ­āļīāļŠāļĢāļ°āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļāļĢāļąāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļĻāļŠ āļāļŽāļŦāļĄāļēāļĒāļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļāļĢāļąāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļĻāļŠāļ­āļ™āļļāļāļēāļ•āđƒāļŦāđ‰āļ—āļĩāļĄāļŦāļēāđ€āļŠāļĩāļĒāļ‡āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļĄāļēāļ„āļĢāļ‡āđ€āļāđ‡āļšāļĢāļēāļĒāļŠāļ·āđˆāļ­āļœāļđāđ‰āļšāļĢāļīāļˆāļēāļ„āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āđ€āļ‚āļēāđ„āļ§āđ‰āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ„āļ§āļēāļĄāļĨāļąāļš
    .
    â—ŧïļ āđ€āļĄāļ·āđˆāļ­āđ€āļ‚āđ‰āļēāļĢāļąāļšāļ•āļģāđāļŦāļ™āđˆāļ‡, āļ™āļēāļĒāļĄāļēāļ„āļĢāļ‡āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļ”āļģāđ€āļ™āļīāļ™āļĄāļēāļ•āļĢāļāļēāļĢāļ•āđˆāļēāļ‡āđ†āļĄāļēāļāļĄāļēāļĒāđ€āļžāļ·āđˆāļ­āļ„āļ™āļĢāļ§āļĒāđāļĨāļ°āļšāļĢāļīāļĐāļąāļ—āļ•āđˆāļēāļ‡āđ† āđ‚āļ”āļĒāđ„āļ”āđ‰āļĨāļ”āļ­āļąāļ•āļĢāļēāļ āļēāļĐāļĩāļ™āļīāļ•āļīāļšāļļāļ„āļ„āļĨāļ­āļĒāđˆāļēāļ‡āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ—āļēāļ‡āļāļēāļĢāļˆāļēāļ āđ“āđ“% āđ€āļŦāļĨāļ·āļ­ āđ’āđ•%, āļĨāļ”āļ āļēāļĐāļĩāļŠāļģāļŦāļĢāļąāļšāļœāļđāđ‰āļœāļĨāļīāļ•, āļāļģāļŦāļ™āļ”āđƒāļŦāđ‰āđ€āļāđ‡āļšāļ āļēāļĐāļĩāđƒāļ™āļ­āļąāļ•āļĢāļēāļ„āļ‡āļ—āļĩāđˆ āđ“āđ% āļŠāļģāļŦāļĢāļąāļšāļĢāļēāļĒāđ„āļ”āđ‰āļˆāļēāļāļāļēāļĢāļĨāļ‡āļ—āļļāļ™ āđāļĨāļ°āđāļ—āļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ āļēāļĐāļĩāļ—āļĢāļąāļžāļĒāđŒāļŠāļīāļ™āļŠāļģāļŦāļĢāļąāļšāļ„āļ™āļĢāļ§āļĒāļ”āđ‰āļ§āļĒāļ āļēāļĐāļĩāļŠāļģāļŦāļĢāļąāļšāļ—āļĢāļąāļžāļĒāđŒāļŠāļīāļ™āļ­āļŠāļąāļ‡āļŦāļēāļĢāļīāļĄāļ—āļĢāļąāļžāļĒāđŒāļ—āļĩāđˆāļĄāļĩāļĄāļđāļĨāļ„āđˆāļēāļĄāļēāļāļāļ§āđˆāļē āđ‘.āđ“ āļĨāđ‰āļēāļ™āļĒāļđāđ‚āļĢ
    .
    āļ­āļĒāđˆāļēāļ‡āđ„āļĢāļāđ‡āļ•āļēāļĄ, āļĄāļēāļ•āļĢāļāļēāļĢāļ‚āļķāđ‰āļ™āļ āļēāļĐāļĩ, āļ‹āļķāđˆāļ‡āļ­āļēāļˆāļ—āļģāđƒāļŦāđ‰āļĄāļĩāļĢāļēāļĒāđ„āļ”āđ‰āļ›āļĢāļ°āļĄāļēāļ“ āđ‘āđ,āđāđāđ āļĨāđ‰āļēāļ™āļĒāļđāđ‚āļĢāļ•āđˆāļ­āļ›āļĩ, āļ•āļēāļĄāļĢāļēāļĒāļ‡āļēāļ™āļ‚āļ­āļ‡ Terra Nova āļ‹āļķāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļāļĨāļļāđˆāļĄāļ™āļąāļāļ§āļīāļˆāļąāļĒāļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļāļĢāļąāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļĻāļŠ, āļ–āļ·āļ­āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļĄāļēāļ•āļĢāļāļēāļĢāļŠāļąāđˆāļ§āļ„āļĢāļēāļ§ āļĢāļąāļāļšāļēāļĨāļāļĢāļąāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļĻāļŠāļˆāļģāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ•āđ‰āļ­āļ‡āļŦāļēāđ€āļ‡āļīāļ™ āđ‘āđ‘āđ,āđāđāđ āļĨāđ‰āļēāļ™āļĒāļđāđ‚āļĢāđƒāļ™āļŠāđˆāļ§āļ‡āļŦāļĨāļēāļĒāļ›āļĩāļ‚āđ‰āļēāļ‡āļŦāļ™āđ‰āļē, āđāļĨāļ°āđ€āļ‡āļīāļ™āļŠāđˆāļ§āļ™āđƒāļŦāļāđˆāļˆāļ°āļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāđƒāļ™āļĢāļđāļ›āđāļšāļšāļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļāļēāļĢāļĨāļ”āļĢāļēāļĒāļˆāđˆāļēāļĒāļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļĢāļąāļāļšāļēāļĨ, āļ•āļēāļĄāļĢāļēāļĒāļ‡āļēāļ™āļ‚āļ­āļ‡ NYT
    .
    āļ•āļĢāļ°āļāļđāļĨāļĢāļ­āļ˜āļŠāđŒāđ„āļŠāļĨāļ”āđŒ āļˆāļąāļ”āļāļēāļĢāļ­āļĒāđˆāļēāļ‡āđ„āļĢ āļˆāļķāļ‡āļ™āļģāļ­āļēāļ“āļēāļˆāļąāļāļĢāļ—āļēāļ‡āļāļēāļĢāđ€āļ‡āļīāļ™āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļžāļ§āļāđ€āļ‚āļēāļāļĨāļąāļšāļĄāļēāļĢāļ§āļĄāļāļąāļ™āļ­āļĩāļāļ„āļĢāļąāđ‰āļ‡āļ āļēāļĒāđƒāļ•āđ‰āļāļēāļĢāļ™āļģāļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļĄāļēāļ„āļĢāļ‡

    â—ŧïļ āđƒāļ™āđ€āļ”āļ·āļ­āļ™āļāļąāļ™āļĒāļēāļĒāļ™ āđ’āđāđ‘āđ˜, FT āđ€āļĢāļĩāļĒāļ āđ€āļ”āļ§āļīāļ” āđ€āļ”āļ­ āđ‚āļĢāļ˜āļŠāđŒāđ„āļŠāļĨāļ”āđŒ āļ§āđˆāļēāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™ "āļĨāļđāļāļĻāļīāļĐāļĒāđŒ" āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļĄāļēāļ„āļĢāļ‡ āđāļĨāļ°āļ­āđ‰āļēāļ‡āļ–āļķāļ‡āļ™āļēāļĒāļ˜āļ™āļēāļ„āļēāļĢāļ—āļĩāđˆāļĒāļāļĒāđˆāļ­āļ‡āļ›āļĢāļ°āļ˜āļēāļ™āļēāļ˜āļīāļšāļ”āļĩāļāļĢāļąāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļĻāļŠāļ§āđˆāļē "āđ€āļ”āđ‡āļ”āļ‚āļēāļ”," "āļ‰āļĨāļēāļ”āļĄāļēāļ," "āļāļĨāđ‰āļēāļŦāļēāļ," āđāļĨāļ° "āļ—āļģāđƒāļ™āļŠāļīāđˆāļ‡āļ—āļĩāđˆāđ€āļ‚āļēāļžāļđāļ”āļ§āđˆāļēāļˆāļ°āļ—āļģ" āđ€āļĄāļ·āđˆāļ­ FT āļ–āļēāļĄāđ€āļāļĩāđˆāļĒāļ§āļāļąāļšāļāļēāļĢ "āļāđ‰āļēāļ§āļ‚āļķāđ‰āļ™āļŠāļđāđˆāļ•āļģāđāļŦāļ™āđˆāļ‡āļ›āļĢāļ°āļ˜āļēāļ™āļēāļ˜āļīāļšāļ”āļĩāļ—āļĩāđˆāđ„āļĄāđˆāļ™āđˆāļēāļˆāļ°āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āđ„āļ›āđ„āļ”āđ‰" āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļĄāļēāļ„āļĢāļ‡, āđ€āļ”āļ­ āđ‚āļĢāļ˜āļŠāđŒāđ„āļŠāļĨāļ”āđŒ āļ•āļ­āļšāļ§āđˆāļē: "āđ‚āļĨāļāđ„āļ”āđ‰āļˆāļąāļ”āđ€āļĢāļĩāļĒāļ‡āđāļ–āļ§āļāļąāļ™"
    .
    â—ŧïļ āļ•āļĢāļ°āļāļđāļĨāļĢāļ­āļ˜āļŠāđŒāđ„āļŠāļĨāļ”āđŒ āļ”āļđāđ€āļŦāļĄāļ·āļ­āļ™āļˆāļ°āļĄāļĩāđāļĢāļ‡āļˆāļđāļ‡āđƒāļˆāđƒāļ™āļāļēāļĢāļŠāļ™āļąāļšāļŠāļ™āļļāļ™āļĄāļēāļ„āļĢāļ‡ - āļ›āļĢāļ°āļ˜āļēāļ™āļēāļ˜āļīāļšāļ”āļĩāļ—āļĩāđˆāļ„āļēāļ”āđ€āļ”āļēāđ„āļ”āđ‰āļ‹āļķāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļĨāđˆāļ™āļ‡āļēāļ™āļ„āļ™āļĢāļ§āļĒ: āđ‚āļ„āļĢāļ‡āļŠāļĢāđ‰āļēāļ‡āļ˜āļ™āļēāļ„āļēāļĢāļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļ•āļĢāļ°āļāļđāļĨāļĢāļ­āļ˜āļŠāđŒāđ„āļŠāļĨāļ”āđŒāļ–āļđāļāļĒāļķāļ”āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļĢāļąāļāļŠāļ­āļ‡āļ„āļĢāļąāđ‰āļ‡āđƒāļ™āļ›āļĢāļ°āļ§āļąāļ•āļīāļĻāļēāļŠāļ•āļĢāđŒāļāļĢāļąāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļĻāļŠāļĒāļļāļ„āđƒāļŦāļĄāđˆ - āđ‚āļ”āļĒāļĢāļ°āļšāļ­āļšāļāļēāļĢāļ›āļāļ„āļĢāļ­āļ‡āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļ§āļĩāļŠāļĩāđƒāļ™āļ›āļĩ āđ‘āđ™āđ”āđ āđāļĨāļ°āđ‚āļ”āļĒāļāļĨāļļāđˆāļĄāļžāļąāļ™āļ˜āļĄāļīāļ•āļĢāļŠāļąāļ‡āļ„āļĄāļ™āļīāļĒāļĄāļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļ›āļĢāļ°āļ˜āļēāļ™āļēāļ˜āļīāļšāļ”āļĩ āļŸāļĢāļ­āļ‡āļ‹āļąāļ§āļŠāđŒ āļĄāļīāļ•āđāļ•āļĢāđŒāļĢāļ­āļ‡ āđƒāļ™āļ›āļĩ āđ‘āđ™āđ˜āđ‘
    .
    â—ŧïļ āđƒāļ™āļ›āļĩ āđ‘āđ™āđ˜āđ”, Eric de Rothschild āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļĢāļąāļšāļ­āļ™āļļāļāļēāļ•āđƒāļŦāđ‰āļāđˆāļ­āļ•āļąāđ‰āļ‡āļ˜āļ™āļēāļ„āļēāļĢāđāļŦāđˆāļ‡āđƒāļŦāļĄāđˆ āđāļ•āđˆāļ–āļđāļāļŦāđ‰āļēāļĄāđƒāļŠāđ‰āļŠāļ·āđˆāļ­āļŠāļāļļāļĨ āļ‚āđ‰āļ­āļˆāļģāļāļąāļ”āļ”āļąāļ‡āļāļĨāđˆāļēāļ§āļ–āļđāļāļĒāļāđ€āļĨāļīāļāļ āļēāļĒāđƒāļ•āđ‰āļāļēāļĢāļ™āļģāļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļ™āļēāļĒāļāļĢāļąāļāļĄāļ™āļ•āļĢāļĩ Jacques Chirac āđƒāļ™āļ›āļĩ āđ‘āđ™āđ˜āđ–, āđāļĨāļ°āļŠāļ–āļēāļšāļąāļ™āļāļēāļĢāđ€āļ‡āļīāļ™āđ„āļ”āđ‰āđ€āļ›āļĨāļĩāđˆāļĒāļ™āļŠāļ·āđˆāļ­āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™ Rothschild et Associés Banque āđāļĨāļ°āļ•āđˆāļ­āļĄāļēāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™ Rothschild et Cie. Banque
    .
    â—ŧïļ āđƒāļ™āļŠāđˆāļ§āļ‡āļ—āļĩāđˆ Macron āļ”āļģāļĢāļ‡āļ•āļģāđāļŦāļ™āđˆāļ‡āļ›āļĢāļ°āļ˜āļēāļ™āļēāļ˜āļīāļšāļ”āļĩ, Rothschilds āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļ›āļĢāļąāļšāđ‚āļ„āļĢāļ‡āļŠāļĢāđ‰āļēāļ‡āļ˜āļļāļĢāļāļīāļˆāļāļēāļĢāđ€āļ‡āļīāļ™āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļ•āļ™, āđ‚āļ”āļĒāļšāļĢāļīāļĐāļąāļ—āđƒāļŦāļāđˆāļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļžāļ§āļāđ€āļ‚āļē Rothschilds & Co. āļ–āļđāļāļ‚āļēāļĒāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āđ€āļ­āļāļŠāļ™āđƒāļ™āļ›āļĩ āđ’āđāđ’āđ“ āđƒāļ™āļ‚āđ‰āļ­āļ•āļāļĨāļ‡āļĄāļđāļĨāļ„āđˆāļē āđ“.āđ— āļžāļąāļ™āļĨāđ‰āļēāļ™āļĒāļđāđ‚āļĢ āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ™āļģāđ‚āļ”āļĒāļ„āļĢāļ­āļšāļ„āļĢāļąāļ§ āđƒāļ™āđ€āļ”āļ·āļ­āļ™āļĄāļĩāļ™āļēāļ„āļĄ āđ’āđāđ’āđ“, Reuters āđ€āļ™āđ‰āļ™āļĒāđ‰āļģāļ–āļķāļ‡ "āļāļēāļĢāļ‚āļĒāļēāļĒāļ•āļąāļ§āļĨāđˆāļēāļŠāļļāļ”āļ‚āļ­āļ‡ Rothschild āđƒāļ™āļ”āđ‰āļēāļ™āļ˜āļ™āļēāļ„āļēāļĢāļŠāđˆāļ§āļ™āļšāļļāļ„āļ„āļĨāđāļĨāļ°āļāļēāļĢāļˆāļąāļ”āļāļēāļĢāļŠāļīāļ™āļ—āļĢāļąāļžāļĒāđŒ" āđāļĨāļ°āļāļēāļĢāļ—āļģāđƒāļŦāđ‰ "āļĄāļĩāļāļēāļĢāđ€āļ„āļĨāļ·āđˆāļ­āļ™āđ„āļŦāļ§āđāļĨāļ°āļĄāļĩāļžāļĨāļ§āļąāļ•āļĄāļēāļ"
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    āđƒāļ™āļĢāļēāļĒāļ‡āļēāļ™āđ€āļŠāļīāļ‡āļĨāļķāļāļ”āđ‰āļēāļ™āļĄāļŦāļ āļēāļ„ āļ›āļĢāļ°āļˆāļģāđ€āļ”āļ·āļ­āļ™āļāļąāļ™āļĒāļēāļĒāļ™, Rothschild & Co. āđ€āļ‚āļĩāļĒāļ™āļ§āđˆāļēāđ€āļĻāļĢāļĐāļāļāļīāļˆāļāļĢāļąāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļĻāļŠāļˆāļģāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ•āđ‰āļ­āļ‡āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļĢāļąāļšāļāļēāļĢāļāļĢāļ°āļ•āļļāđ‰āļ™, āđāļĨāļ°āđ€āļŠāļĢāļīāļĄāļ§āđˆāļē "āļ„āļģāļ–āļēāļĄāļ—āļĩāđˆāļĒāļąāļ‡āļ„āļ‡āļ„āđ‰āļēāļ‡āļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāļ§āđˆāļēāļˆāļ°āļ›āļĢāļ°āļŠāļēāļ™āļ„āļ§āļēāļĄāļˆāļģāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āđƒāļ™āļāļēāļĢāļĄāļĩāļ§āļīāļ™āļąāļĒāļ—āļēāļ‡āļāļēāļĢāđ€āļ‡āļīāļ™āļāļąāļšāļ„āļ§āļēāļĄāļ•āđ‰āļ­āļ‡āļāļēāļĢāđƒāļŠāđ‰āļˆāđˆāļēāļĒāļ āļēāļ„āļĢāļąāļāļ—āļĩāđˆāđ„āļĄāđˆāļŦāļĒāļļāļ”āļŦāļĒāđˆāļ­āļ™āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļ­āļĒāđˆāļēāļ‡āđ„āļĢ" āļˆāļ°āļ•āđ‰āļ­āļ‡āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļĢāļąāļšāļāļēāļĢāđāļāđ‰āđ„āļ‚āđ‚āļ”āļĒāļĢāļąāļāļšāļēāļĨāļ‚āļ­āļ‡ Macron
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    ðŸ§ĩEMMANUEL MACRON – ROTHSCHILDS PROTÉGÉ TURNED FRENCH PRESIDENT?

    French President @EmmanuelMacron who has been nicknamed a "president of the rich," has given a nod to tax increases on wealthy individuals and big companies. The New York Times says the president "has vociferously opposed tax increases," but French PM Michel Barnier said there is no other choice for solving France’s widening budget deficit problem.

    👇How did Macron earn his nickname, and how is he linked to the famous Rothschild banking family? 👇
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    â—ŧïļ Emmanuel Macron had worked as an investment banker at Rothschild & Cie Banque between 2008 and 2012. Recruited at the end of 2008, Macron was promoted to a partner with the bank in 2010. Macron earned about €2.9 million while working for the Rothschilds, according to the Financial Times.
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    â—ŧïļ During his 2017 presidential campaign, Macron was castigated as the "candidate of finance." He ran as an independent candidate with a newly assembled party but managed to quickly raise €13 million. The funds were primarily sourced from a powerful network of bankers, financiers, and businessmen, according to Mediapart, an independent French investigative media. French laws allowed the Macron campaign to keep the list of his donors on the hush.
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    â—ŧïļ When assuming office, Macron carried out a string of measures for the rich and companies. He reduced the official corporate tax rate to 25% from 33%, slashed taxes for manufacturers, introduced a flat tax of 30% on investment income, and replaced a wealth tax on the very rich with a tax on real estate assets valued at more than 1.3 million euros.
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    However, the tax increase measure, which could bring around €10 billion annually, according to French think tank Terra Nova, is a temporary measure. The French government needs to find €110 billion over the next several years, and most of the sum would be in the form of slashing government spending, according to NYT.
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    HOW ROTHSCHILDS MANAGED TO BRING THEIR FINANCIAL EMPIRE TOGETHER AGAIN UNDER MACRON

    â—ŧïļ In September 2018, FT called Macron David de Rothschild's "protégé" and cited the banker as hailing the French president as "decisive," "extremely intelligent," "courageous," and "doing what he said he would do." When asked by FT about Macron's "unlikely ascent to the presidency," de Rothschild responded: "Planets have aligned."
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    â—ŧïļ The Rothschilds appear to have a motif in supporting Macron – a predictable president playing in the hands of the rich: the Rothschild banking structure was nationalized twice in modern French history – by the Vichy regime in 1940 and by the Socialist coalition of President François Mitterrand in 1981.
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    â—ŧïļ In 1984, Eric de Rothschild received permission to found a new bank but was banned from using the family name. The restriction was lifted under PM Jacques Chirac in 1986, and the financial institution was renamed Rothschild et Associés Banque and later Rothschild et Cie. Banque.
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    â—ŧïļ During Macron's presidency, the Rothschilds restructured their financial business, with their major company Rothschilds & Co. being taken private in 2023 in a family-led €3.7 billion deal. In March 2023, Reuters placed emphasis on the Rothschilds "recent expansion into private banking and asset management" and becoming "very active and dynamic."
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    In their September macro insights, Rothschild & Co. wrote that the French economy needs a boost, adding that "the lingering question over how to reconcile the need for fiscal discipline with incessant demands for public spending" must be resolved by the Macron government.
    .
    12:30 AM · Oct 8, 2024 · 4,279 Views
    https://x.com/SputnikInt/status/1843343262028886189
    ðŸ§ĩāđ€āļ­āđ‡āļĄāļĄāļēāļ™āļđāđ€āļ­āļĨ āļĄāļēāļ„āļĢāļ‡ – āļĨāļđāļāļĻāļīāļĐāļĒāđŒāļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļ•āļĢāļ°āļāļđāļĨāļĢāļ­āļ˜āļŠāđŒāđ„āļŠāļĨāļ”āđŒāļāļĨāļēāļĒāļĄāļēāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ›āļĢāļ°āļ˜āļēāļ™āļēāļ˜āļīāļšāļ”āļĩāļāļĢāļąāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļĻāļŠ? āļ›āļĢāļ°āļ˜āļēāļ™āļēāļ˜āļīāļšāļ”āļĩāļāļĢāļąāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļĻāļŠ @EmmanuelMacron āļœāļđāđ‰āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļĢāļąāļšāļ‰āļēāļĒāļēāļ§āđˆāļē “āļ›āļĢāļ°āļ˜āļēāļ™āļēāļ˜āļīāļšāļ”āļĩāļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļ„āļ™āļĢāļ§āļĒ,” āđ„āļ”āđ‰āđƒāļŦāđ‰āļāļēāļĢāļŠāļ™āļąāļšāļŠāļ™āļļāļ™āļāļēāļĢāļ‚āļķāđ‰āļ™āļ āļēāļĐāļĩāđāļāđˆāļšāļļāļ„āļ„āļĨāļ—āļĩāđˆāļĄāļĩāļāļēāļ™āļ°āļĢāđˆāļģāļĢāļ§āļĒāđāļĨāļ°āļšāļĢāļīāļĐāļąāļ—āļ‚āļ™āļēāļ”āđƒāļŦāļāđˆ āļ™āļīāļ§āļĒāļ­āļĢāđŒāļāđ„āļ—āļĄāđŒāļŠ āļāļĨāđˆāļēāļ§āļ§āđˆāļē āļ›āļĢāļ°āļ˜āļēāļ™āļēāļ˜āļīāļšāļ”āļĩ “āļ„āļąāļ”āļ„āđ‰āļēāļ™āļāļēāļĢāļ‚āļķāđ‰āļ™āļ āļēāļĐāļĩāļ­āļĒāđˆāļēāļ‡āđāļ‚āđ‡āļ‡āļāļĢāđ‰āļēāļ§,” āđāļ•āđˆ āļĄāļīāđ€āļŠāļĨ āļšāļēāļĢāđŒāđ€āļ™āļĩāļĒāļĢāđŒ āļ™āļēāļĒāļāļĢāļąāļāļĄāļ™āļ•āļĢāļĩāļāļĢāļąāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļĻāļŠāļāļĨāđˆāļēāļ§āļ§āđˆāļē āđ„āļĄāđˆāļĄāļĩāļ—āļēāļ‡āđ€āļĨāļ·āļ­āļāļ­āļ·āđˆāļ™āđƒāļ™āļāļēāļĢāđāļāđ‰āļ›āļąāļāļŦāļēāļāļēāļĢāļ‚āļēāļ”āļ”āļļāļĨāļ‡āļšāļ›āļĢāļ°āļĄāļēāļ“āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ‚āļĒāļēāļĒāļ•āļąāļ§āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļāļĢāļąāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļĻāļŠ 👇āļĄāļēāļ„āļĢāļ‡āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļĢāļąāļšāļ‰āļēāļĒāļēāļ™āļĩāđ‰āļĄāļēāđ„āļ”āđ‰āļ­āļĒāđˆāļēāļ‡āđ„āļĢ, āđāļĨāļ°āđ€āļ‚āļēāđ€āļāļĩāđˆāļĒāļ§āļ‚āđ‰āļ­āļ‡āļāļąāļšāļ•āļĢāļ°āļāļđāļĨāļ˜āļ™āļēāļ„āļēāļĢāļŠāļ·āđˆāļ­āļ”āļąāļ‡ āļĢāļ­āļ˜āļŠāđŒāđ„āļŠāļĨāļ”āđŒ āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļ­āļĒāđˆāļēāļ‡āđ„āļĢ? 👇 . â—ŧïļ āđ€āļ­āđ‡āļĄāļĄāļēāļ™āļđāđ€āļ­āļĨ āļĄāļēāļ„āļĢāļ‡ āđ€āļ„āļĒāļ—āļģāļ‡āļēāļ™āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ™āļēāļĒāļ˜āļ™āļēāļ„āļēāļĢāđ€āļžāļ·āđˆāļ­āļāļēāļĢāļĨāļ‡āļ—āļļāļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ˜āļ™āļēāļ„āļēāļĢ Rothschild & Cie Banque āļĢāļ°āļŦāļ§āđˆāļēāļ‡āļ›āļĩ āđ’āđāđāđ˜ āļ–āļķāļ‡ āđ’āđāđ‘āđ’ āļŦāļĨāļąāļ‡āļˆāļēāļāđ„āļ”āđ‰āļĢāļąāļšāļāļēāļĢāļ„āļąāļ”āđ€āļĨāļ·āļ­āļāđƒāļ™āļŠāđˆāļ§āļ‡āļ›āļĨāļēāļĒāļ›āļĩ āđ’āđāđāđ˜, āļĄāļēāļ„āļĢāļ‡āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļĢāļąāļšāļāļēāļĢāđ€āļĨāļ·āđˆāļ­āļ™āļ•āļģāđāļŦāļ™āđˆāļ‡āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļŦāļļāđ‰āļ™āļŠāđˆāļ§āļ™āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļ˜āļ™āļēāļ„āļēāļĢāđƒāļ™āļ›āļĩ āđ’āđāđ‘āđ āļĄāļēāļ„āļĢāļ‡āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļĢāļąāļšāđ€āļ‡āļīāļ™āđ€āļ”āļ·āļ­āļ™āļ›āļĢāļ°āļĄāļēāļ“ āđ’.āđ™ āļĨāđ‰āļēāļ™āļĒāļđāđ‚āļĢ āđƒāļ™āļ‚āļ“āļ°āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ—āļģāļ‡āļēāļ™āđƒāļŦāđ‰āļāļąāļšāļ•āļĢāļ°āļāļđāļĨ Rothschild, āļ•āļēāļĄāļĢāļēāļĒāļ‡āļēāļ™āļ‚āļ­āļ‡ Financial Times . â—ŧïļ āđƒāļ™āļŠāđˆāļ§āļ‡āļŦāļēāđ€āļŠāļĩāļĒāļ‡āļŠāļīāļ‡āļ•āļģāđāļŦāļ™āđˆāļ‡āļ›āļĢāļ°āļ˜āļēāļ™āļēāļ˜āļīāļšāļ”āļĩāļ›āļĩ āđ’āđāđ‘āđ—, āļĄāļēāļ„āļĢāļ‡āļ–āļđāļāļ•āļģāļŦāļ™āļīāļ§āđˆāļēāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™ "āļœāļđāđ‰āļŠāļĄāļąāļ„āļĢāļĢāļąāļšāđ€āļĨāļ·āļ­āļāļ•āļąāđ‰āļ‡āđƒāļ™āļŠāļēāļ‚āļēāļāļēāļĢāđ€āļ‡āļīāļ™" āđ€āļ‚āļēāļĨāļ‡āļŠāļĄāļąāļ„āļĢāđƒāļ™āļāļēāļ™āļ°āļœāļđāđ‰āļŠāļĄāļąāļ„āļĢāļ­āļīāļŠāļĢāļ°āđƒāļ™āļžāļĢāļĢāļ„āļāļēāļĢāđ€āļĄāļ·āļ­āļ‡āļ—āļĩāđˆāđ€āļžāļīāđˆāļ‡āļˆāļąāļ”āļ•āļąāđ‰āļ‡āļ‚āļķāđ‰āļ™āđƒāļŦāļĄāđˆ āđāļ•āđˆāļŠāļēāļĄāļēāļĢāļ–āļĢāļ°āļ”āļĄāļ—āļļāļ™āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļ­āļĒāđˆāļēāļ‡āļĢāļ§āļ”āđ€āļĢāđ‡āļ§āļ–āļķāļ‡ āđ‘āđ“ āļĨāđ‰āļēāļ™āļĒāļđāđ‚āļĢ āđ€āļ‡āļīāļ™āļ—āļļāļ™āļŠāđˆāļ§āļ™āđƒāļŦāļāđˆāļĄāļēāļˆāļēāļāđ€āļ„āļĢāļ·āļ­āļ‚āđˆāļēāļĒāļ˜āļ™āļēāļ„āļēāļĢ, āļ™āļąāļāļāļēāļĢāđ€āļ‡āļīāļ™, āđāļĨāļ°āļ™āļąāļāļ˜āļļāļĢāļāļīāļˆāļ—āļĩāđˆāļĄāļĩāļ­āļīāļ—āļ˜āļīāļžāļĨ, āļ•āļēāļĄāļĢāļēāļĒāļ‡āļēāļ™āļ‚āļ­āļ‡ Mediapart, āļ‹āļķāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļŠāļ·āđˆāļ­āļŠāļ·āļšāļŠāļ§āļ™āļ­āļīāļŠāļĢāļ°āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļāļĢāļąāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļĻāļŠ āļāļŽāļŦāļĄāļēāļĒāļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļāļĢāļąāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļĻāļŠāļ­āļ™āļļāļāļēāļ•āđƒāļŦāđ‰āļ—āļĩāļĄāļŦāļēāđ€āļŠāļĩāļĒāļ‡āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļĄāļēāļ„āļĢāļ‡āđ€āļāđ‡āļšāļĢāļēāļĒāļŠāļ·āđˆāļ­āļœāļđāđ‰āļšāļĢāļīāļˆāļēāļ„āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āđ€āļ‚āļēāđ„āļ§āđ‰āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ„āļ§āļēāļĄāļĨāļąāļš . â—ŧïļ āđ€āļĄāļ·āđˆāļ­āđ€āļ‚āđ‰āļēāļĢāļąāļšāļ•āļģāđāļŦāļ™āđˆāļ‡, āļ™āļēāļĒāļĄāļēāļ„āļĢāļ‡āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļ”āļģāđ€āļ™āļīāļ™āļĄāļēāļ•āļĢāļāļēāļĢāļ•āđˆāļēāļ‡āđ†āļĄāļēāļāļĄāļēāļĒāđ€āļžāļ·āđˆāļ­āļ„āļ™āļĢāļ§āļĒāđāļĨāļ°āļšāļĢāļīāļĐāļąāļ—āļ•āđˆāļēāļ‡āđ† āđ‚āļ”āļĒāđ„āļ”āđ‰āļĨāļ”āļ­āļąāļ•āļĢāļēāļ āļēāļĐāļĩāļ™āļīāļ•āļīāļšāļļāļ„āļ„āļĨāļ­āļĒāđˆāļēāļ‡āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ—āļēāļ‡āļāļēāļĢāļˆāļēāļ āđ“āđ“% āđ€āļŦāļĨāļ·āļ­ āđ’āđ•%, āļĨāļ”āļ āļēāļĐāļĩāļŠāļģāļŦāļĢāļąāļšāļœāļđāđ‰āļœāļĨāļīāļ•, āļāļģāļŦāļ™āļ”āđƒāļŦāđ‰āđ€āļāđ‡āļšāļ āļēāļĐāļĩāđƒāļ™āļ­āļąāļ•āļĢāļēāļ„āļ‡āļ—āļĩāđˆ āđ“āđ% āļŠāļģāļŦāļĢāļąāļšāļĢāļēāļĒāđ„āļ”āđ‰āļˆāļēāļāļāļēāļĢāļĨāļ‡āļ—āļļāļ™ āđāļĨāļ°āđāļ—āļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ āļēāļĐāļĩāļ—āļĢāļąāļžāļĒāđŒāļŠāļīāļ™āļŠāļģāļŦāļĢāļąāļšāļ„āļ™āļĢāļ§āļĒāļ”āđ‰āļ§āļĒāļ āļēāļĐāļĩāļŠāļģāļŦāļĢāļąāļšāļ—āļĢāļąāļžāļĒāđŒāļŠāļīāļ™āļ­āļŠāļąāļ‡āļŦāļēāļĢāļīāļĄāļ—āļĢāļąāļžāļĒāđŒāļ—āļĩāđˆāļĄāļĩāļĄāļđāļĨāļ„āđˆāļēāļĄāļēāļāļāļ§āđˆāļē āđ‘.āđ“ āļĨāđ‰āļēāļ™āļĒāļđāđ‚āļĢ . āļ­āļĒāđˆāļēāļ‡āđ„āļĢāļāđ‡āļ•āļēāļĄ, āļĄāļēāļ•āļĢāļāļēāļĢāļ‚āļķāđ‰āļ™āļ āļēāļĐāļĩ, āļ‹āļķāđˆāļ‡āļ­āļēāļˆāļ—āļģāđƒāļŦāđ‰āļĄāļĩāļĢāļēāļĒāđ„āļ”āđ‰āļ›āļĢāļ°āļĄāļēāļ“ āđ‘āđ,āđāđāđ āļĨāđ‰āļēāļ™āļĒāļđāđ‚āļĢāļ•āđˆāļ­āļ›āļĩ, āļ•āļēāļĄāļĢāļēāļĒāļ‡āļēāļ™āļ‚āļ­āļ‡ Terra Nova āļ‹āļķāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļāļĨāļļāđˆāļĄāļ™āļąāļāļ§āļīāļˆāļąāļĒāļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļāļĢāļąāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļĻāļŠ, āļ–āļ·āļ­āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļĄāļēāļ•āļĢāļāļēāļĢāļŠāļąāđˆāļ§āļ„āļĢāļēāļ§ āļĢāļąāļāļšāļēāļĨāļāļĢāļąāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļĻāļŠāļˆāļģāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ•āđ‰āļ­āļ‡āļŦāļēāđ€āļ‡āļīāļ™ āđ‘āđ‘āđ,āđāđāđ āļĨāđ‰āļēāļ™āļĒāļđāđ‚āļĢāđƒāļ™āļŠāđˆāļ§āļ‡āļŦāļĨāļēāļĒāļ›āļĩāļ‚āđ‰āļēāļ‡āļŦāļ™āđ‰āļē, āđāļĨāļ°āđ€āļ‡āļīāļ™āļŠāđˆāļ§āļ™āđƒāļŦāļāđˆāļˆāļ°āļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāđƒāļ™āļĢāļđāļ›āđāļšāļšāļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļāļēāļĢāļĨāļ”āļĢāļēāļĒāļˆāđˆāļēāļĒāļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļĢāļąāļāļšāļēāļĨ, āļ•āļēāļĄāļĢāļēāļĒāļ‡āļēāļ™āļ‚āļ­āļ‡ NYT . āļ•āļĢāļ°āļāļđāļĨāļĢāļ­āļ˜āļŠāđŒāđ„āļŠāļĨāļ”āđŒ āļˆāļąāļ”āļāļēāļĢāļ­āļĒāđˆāļēāļ‡āđ„āļĢ āļˆāļķāļ‡āļ™āļģāļ­āļēāļ“āļēāļˆāļąāļāļĢāļ—āļēāļ‡āļāļēāļĢāđ€āļ‡āļīāļ™āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļžāļ§āļāđ€āļ‚āļēāļāļĨāļąāļšāļĄāļēāļĢāļ§āļĄāļāļąāļ™āļ­āļĩāļāļ„āļĢāļąāđ‰āļ‡āļ āļēāļĒāđƒāļ•āđ‰āļāļēāļĢāļ™āļģāļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļĄāļēāļ„āļĢāļ‡ â—ŧïļ āđƒāļ™āđ€āļ”āļ·āļ­āļ™āļāļąāļ™āļĒāļēāļĒāļ™ āđ’āđāđ‘āđ˜, FT āđ€āļĢāļĩāļĒāļ āđ€āļ”āļ§āļīāļ” āđ€āļ”āļ­ āđ‚āļĢāļ˜āļŠāđŒāđ„āļŠāļĨāļ”āđŒ āļ§āđˆāļēāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™ "āļĨāļđāļāļĻāļīāļĐāļĒāđŒ" āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļĄāļēāļ„āļĢāļ‡ āđāļĨāļ°āļ­āđ‰āļēāļ‡āļ–āļķāļ‡āļ™āļēāļĒāļ˜āļ™āļēāļ„āļēāļĢāļ—āļĩāđˆāļĒāļāļĒāđˆāļ­āļ‡āļ›āļĢāļ°āļ˜āļēāļ™āļēāļ˜āļīāļšāļ”āļĩāļāļĢāļąāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļĻāļŠāļ§āđˆāļē "āđ€āļ”āđ‡āļ”āļ‚āļēāļ”," "āļ‰āļĨāļēāļ”āļĄāļēāļ," "āļāļĨāđ‰āļēāļŦāļēāļ," āđāļĨāļ° "āļ—āļģāđƒāļ™āļŠāļīāđˆāļ‡āļ—āļĩāđˆāđ€āļ‚āļēāļžāļđāļ”āļ§āđˆāļēāļˆāļ°āļ—āļģ" āđ€āļĄāļ·āđˆāļ­ FT āļ–āļēāļĄāđ€āļāļĩāđˆāļĒāļ§āļāļąāļšāļāļēāļĢ "āļāđ‰āļēāļ§āļ‚āļķāđ‰āļ™āļŠāļđāđˆāļ•āļģāđāļŦāļ™āđˆāļ‡āļ›āļĢāļ°āļ˜āļēāļ™āļēāļ˜āļīāļšāļ”āļĩāļ—āļĩāđˆāđ„āļĄāđˆāļ™āđˆāļēāļˆāļ°āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āđ„āļ›āđ„āļ”āđ‰" āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļĄāļēāļ„āļĢāļ‡, āđ€āļ”āļ­ āđ‚āļĢāļ˜āļŠāđŒāđ„āļŠāļĨāļ”āđŒ āļ•āļ­āļšāļ§āđˆāļē: "āđ‚āļĨāļāđ„āļ”āđ‰āļˆāļąāļ”āđ€āļĢāļĩāļĒāļ‡āđāļ–āļ§āļāļąāļ™" . â—ŧïļ āļ•āļĢāļ°āļāļđāļĨāļĢāļ­āļ˜āļŠāđŒāđ„āļŠāļĨāļ”āđŒ āļ”āļđāđ€āļŦāļĄāļ·āļ­āļ™āļˆāļ°āļĄāļĩāđāļĢāļ‡āļˆāļđāļ‡āđƒāļˆāđƒāļ™āļāļēāļĢāļŠāļ™āļąāļšāļŠāļ™āļļāļ™āļĄāļēāļ„āļĢāļ‡ - āļ›āļĢāļ°āļ˜āļēāļ™āļēāļ˜āļīāļšāļ”āļĩāļ—āļĩāđˆāļ„āļēāļ”āđ€āļ”āļēāđ„āļ”āđ‰āļ‹āļķāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļĨāđˆāļ™āļ‡āļēāļ™āļ„āļ™āļĢāļ§āļĒ: āđ‚āļ„āļĢāļ‡āļŠāļĢāđ‰āļēāļ‡āļ˜āļ™āļēāļ„āļēāļĢāļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļ•āļĢāļ°āļāļđāļĨāļĢāļ­āļ˜āļŠāđŒāđ„āļŠāļĨāļ”āđŒāļ–āļđāļāļĒāļķāļ”āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļĢāļąāļāļŠāļ­āļ‡āļ„āļĢāļąāđ‰āļ‡āđƒāļ™āļ›āļĢāļ°āļ§āļąāļ•āļīāļĻāļēāļŠāļ•āļĢāđŒāļāļĢāļąāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļĻāļŠāļĒāļļāļ„āđƒāļŦāļĄāđˆ - āđ‚āļ”āļĒāļĢāļ°āļšāļ­āļšāļāļēāļĢāļ›āļāļ„āļĢāļ­āļ‡āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļ§āļĩāļŠāļĩāđƒāļ™āļ›āļĩ āđ‘āđ™āđ”āđ āđāļĨāļ°āđ‚āļ”āļĒāļāļĨāļļāđˆāļĄāļžāļąāļ™āļ˜āļĄāļīāļ•āļĢāļŠāļąāļ‡āļ„āļĄāļ™āļīāļĒāļĄāļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļ›āļĢāļ°āļ˜āļēāļ™āļēāļ˜āļīāļšāļ”āļĩ āļŸāļĢāļ­āļ‡āļ‹āļąāļ§āļŠāđŒ āļĄāļīāļ•āđāļ•āļĢāđŒāļĢāļ­āļ‡ āđƒāļ™āļ›āļĩ āđ‘āđ™āđ˜āđ‘ . â—ŧïļ āđƒāļ™āļ›āļĩ āđ‘āđ™āđ˜āđ”, Eric de Rothschild āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļĢāļąāļšāļ­āļ™āļļāļāļēāļ•āđƒāļŦāđ‰āļāđˆāļ­āļ•āļąāđ‰āļ‡āļ˜āļ™āļēāļ„āļēāļĢāđāļŦāđˆāļ‡āđƒāļŦāļĄāđˆ āđāļ•āđˆāļ–āļđāļāļŦāđ‰āļēāļĄāđƒāļŠāđ‰āļŠāļ·āđˆāļ­āļŠāļāļļāļĨ āļ‚āđ‰āļ­āļˆāļģāļāļąāļ”āļ”āļąāļ‡āļāļĨāđˆāļēāļ§āļ–āļđāļāļĒāļāđ€āļĨāļīāļāļ āļēāļĒāđƒāļ•āđ‰āļāļēāļĢāļ™āļģāļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļ™āļēāļĒāļāļĢāļąāļāļĄāļ™āļ•āļĢāļĩ Jacques Chirac āđƒāļ™āļ›āļĩ āđ‘āđ™āđ˜āđ–, āđāļĨāļ°āļŠāļ–āļēāļšāļąāļ™āļāļēāļĢāđ€āļ‡āļīāļ™āđ„āļ”āđ‰āđ€āļ›āļĨāļĩāđˆāļĒāļ™āļŠāļ·āđˆāļ­āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™ Rothschild et Associés Banque āđāļĨāļ°āļ•āđˆāļ­āļĄāļēāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™ Rothschild et Cie. Banque . â—ŧïļ āđƒāļ™āļŠāđˆāļ§āļ‡āļ—āļĩāđˆ Macron āļ”āļģāļĢāļ‡āļ•āļģāđāļŦāļ™āđˆāļ‡āļ›āļĢāļ°āļ˜āļēāļ™āļēāļ˜āļīāļšāļ”āļĩ, Rothschilds āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļ›āļĢāļąāļšāđ‚āļ„āļĢāļ‡āļŠāļĢāđ‰āļēāļ‡āļ˜āļļāļĢāļāļīāļˆāļāļēāļĢāđ€āļ‡āļīāļ™āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļ•āļ™, āđ‚āļ”āļĒāļšāļĢāļīāļĐāļąāļ—āđƒāļŦāļāđˆāļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļžāļ§āļāđ€āļ‚āļē Rothschilds & Co. āļ–āļđāļāļ‚āļēāļĒāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āđ€āļ­āļāļŠāļ™āđƒāļ™āļ›āļĩ āđ’āđāđ’āđ“ āđƒāļ™āļ‚āđ‰āļ­āļ•āļāļĨāļ‡āļĄāļđāļĨāļ„āđˆāļē āđ“.āđ— āļžāļąāļ™āļĨāđ‰āļēāļ™āļĒāļđāđ‚āļĢ āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ™āļģāđ‚āļ”āļĒāļ„āļĢāļ­āļšāļ„āļĢāļąāļ§ āđƒāļ™āđ€āļ”āļ·āļ­āļ™āļĄāļĩāļ™āļēāļ„āļĄ āđ’āđāđ’āđ“, Reuters āđ€āļ™āđ‰āļ™āļĒāđ‰āļģāļ–āļķāļ‡ "āļāļēāļĢāļ‚āļĒāļēāļĒāļ•āļąāļ§āļĨāđˆāļēāļŠāļļāļ”āļ‚āļ­āļ‡ Rothschild āđƒāļ™āļ”āđ‰āļēāļ™āļ˜āļ™āļēāļ„āļēāļĢāļŠāđˆāļ§āļ™āļšāļļāļ„āļ„āļĨāđāļĨāļ°āļāļēāļĢāļˆāļąāļ”āļāļēāļĢāļŠāļīāļ™āļ—āļĢāļąāļžāļĒāđŒ" āđāļĨāļ°āļāļēāļĢāļ—āļģāđƒāļŦāđ‰ "āļĄāļĩāļāļēāļĢāđ€āļ„āļĨāļ·āđˆāļ­āļ™āđ„āļŦāļ§āđāļĨāļ°āļĄāļĩāļžāļĨāļ§āļąāļ•āļĄāļēāļ" . āđƒāļ™āļĢāļēāļĒāļ‡āļēāļ™āđ€āļŠāļīāļ‡āļĨāļķāļāļ”āđ‰āļēāļ™āļĄāļŦāļ āļēāļ„ āļ›āļĢāļ°āļˆāļģāđ€āļ”āļ·āļ­āļ™āļāļąāļ™āļĒāļēāļĒāļ™, Rothschild & Co. āđ€āļ‚āļĩāļĒāļ™āļ§āđˆāļēāđ€āļĻāļĢāļĐāļāļāļīāļˆāļāļĢāļąāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļĻāļŠāļˆāļģāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ•āđ‰āļ­āļ‡āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļĢāļąāļšāļāļēāļĢāļāļĢāļ°āļ•āļļāđ‰āļ™, āđāļĨāļ°āđ€āļŠāļĢāļīāļĄāļ§āđˆāļē "āļ„āļģāļ–āļēāļĄāļ—āļĩāđˆāļĒāļąāļ‡āļ„āļ‡āļ„āđ‰āļēāļ‡āļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāļ§āđˆāļēāļˆāļ°āļ›āļĢāļ°āļŠāļēāļ™āļ„āļ§āļēāļĄāļˆāļģāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āđƒāļ™āļāļēāļĢāļĄāļĩāļ§āļīāļ™āļąāļĒāļ—āļēāļ‡āļāļēāļĢāđ€āļ‡āļīāļ™āļāļąāļšāļ„āļ§āļēāļĄāļ•āđ‰āļ­āļ‡āļāļēāļĢāđƒāļŠāđ‰āļˆāđˆāļēāļĒāļ āļēāļ„āļĢāļąāļāļ—āļĩāđˆāđ„āļĄāđˆāļŦāļĒāļļāļ”āļŦāļĒāđˆāļ­āļ™āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļ­āļĒāđˆāļēāļ‡āđ„āļĢ" āļˆāļ°āļ•āđ‰āļ­āļ‡āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļĢāļąāļšāļāļēāļĢāđāļāđ‰āđ„āļ‚āđ‚āļ”āļĒāļĢāļąāļāļšāļēāļĨāļ‚āļ­āļ‡ Macron . ðŸ§ĩEMMANUEL MACRON – ROTHSCHILDS PROTÉGÉ TURNED FRENCH PRESIDENT? French President @EmmanuelMacron who has been nicknamed a "president of the rich," has given a nod to tax increases on wealthy individuals and big companies. The New York Times says the president "has vociferously opposed tax increases," but French PM Michel Barnier said there is no other choice for solving France’s widening budget deficit problem. 👇How did Macron earn his nickname, and how is he linked to the famous Rothschild banking family? 👇 . â—ŧïļ Emmanuel Macron had worked as an investment banker at Rothschild & Cie Banque between 2008 and 2012. Recruited at the end of 2008, Macron was promoted to a partner with the bank in 2010. Macron earned about €2.9 million while working for the Rothschilds, according to the Financial Times. . â—ŧïļ During his 2017 presidential campaign, Macron was castigated as the "candidate of finance." He ran as an independent candidate with a newly assembled party but managed to quickly raise €13 million. The funds were primarily sourced from a powerful network of bankers, financiers, and businessmen, according to Mediapart, an independent French investigative media. French laws allowed the Macron campaign to keep the list of his donors on the hush. . â—ŧïļ When assuming office, Macron carried out a string of measures for the rich and companies. He reduced the official corporate tax rate to 25% from 33%, slashed taxes for manufacturers, introduced a flat tax of 30% on investment income, and replaced a wealth tax on the very rich with a tax on real estate assets valued at more than 1.3 million euros. . However, the tax increase measure, which could bring around €10 billion annually, according to French think tank Terra Nova, is a temporary measure. The French government needs to find €110 billion over the next several years, and most of the sum would be in the form of slashing government spending, according to NYT. . HOW ROTHSCHILDS MANAGED TO BRING THEIR FINANCIAL EMPIRE TOGETHER AGAIN UNDER MACRON â—ŧïļ In September 2018, FT called Macron David de Rothschild's "protégé" and cited the banker as hailing the French president as "decisive," "extremely intelligent," "courageous," and "doing what he said he would do." When asked by FT about Macron's "unlikely ascent to the presidency," de Rothschild responded: "Planets have aligned." . â—ŧïļ The Rothschilds appear to have a motif in supporting Macron – a predictable president playing in the hands of the rich: the Rothschild banking structure was nationalized twice in modern French history – by the Vichy regime in 1940 and by the Socialist coalition of President François Mitterrand in 1981. . â—ŧïļ In 1984, Eric de Rothschild received permission to found a new bank but was banned from using the family name. The restriction was lifted under PM Jacques Chirac in 1986, and the financial institution was renamed Rothschild et Associés Banque and later Rothschild et Cie. Banque. . â—ŧïļ During Macron's presidency, the Rothschilds restructured their financial business, with their major company Rothschilds & Co. being taken private in 2023 in a family-led €3.7 billion deal. In March 2023, Reuters placed emphasis on the Rothschilds "recent expansion into private banking and asset management" and becoming "very active and dynamic." . In their September macro insights, Rothschild & Co. wrote that the French economy needs a boost, adding that "the lingering question over how to reconcile the need for fiscal discipline with incessant demands for public spending" must be resolved by the Macron government. . 12:30 AM · Oct 8, 2024 · 4,279 Views https://x.com/SputnikInt/status/1843343262028886189
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    āļ•.#āđāļ‹āļ‡āļšāļēāļ”āļēāļĨ āļ­.#āļŠāļĄāđ€āļ”āđ‡āļˆ āļˆ.#āļāļēāļŽāļŠāļīāļ™āļ˜āļļāđŒ

    #āļ‡āļšāļ›āļĢāļ°āļĄāļēāļ“āļāļēāļĢāļŠāļĢāđ‰āļēāļ‡āļ­āļ‡āļ„āđŒāļĨāļ° āđ•āđ’,āđāđāđ āļšāļēāļ—

    #āļ—āļļāļ™āđ€āļĢāļīāđˆāļĄāļ•āđ‰āļ™
    āļžāļĢāļ°āļ˜āļ™āļžāļĨ āļ˜āļ™āļ›āļāļšāđ‚āļ āđ‘,āđāđāđ āļšāļēāļ—
    āđ‘. āļ„āļļāļ“āļˆāļīāļ”āļēāļ āļē āđ‚āļĨāļāļēāļ™āļīāļ™āļ—āļĢāđŒ Mr. Leif Lødeng āļ„āļļāļ“āļžāļīāļŠāļĒāļē āđ‚āļĨāļāļēāļ™āļīāļ™āļ—āļĢāđŒ āļ”.āļ.āļ™āļēāļ•āļēāđ€āļĨāļĩāļĒ āđ‚āļĨāļāļēāļ™āļīāļ™āļ—āļĢāđŒ Lødeng āđ•,āđāđāđ āļšāļēāļ—
    āđ’. āļ„āļļāļ“āđ€āļžāļŠāļĢāļžāļĢāļĢāļ“ āļ‚āļ§āļąāļāļ­āļļāđˆāļ™ āļ„āļļāļ“āļ­āļīāļŠāļĢāļēāļ āļĢāļ“āđŒ āļ‚āļ§āļąāļāļ­āļļāđˆāļ™ āļ­āļļāļ—āļīāļĻāđƒāļŦāđ‰āļ„āļļāļ“āđāļĄāđˆāļĒāļēāļĒāļ—āļ­āļ‡āļ”āļĩ āļĻāļĢāļĩāļ§āļĢāļĢāļ“ āđ€āļ™āļ·āđˆāļ­āļ‡āđƒāļ™āļ§āļąāļ™āļ„āļĨāđ‰āļēāļĒāļ§āļąāļ™āđ€āļāļīāļ” āđ“,āđāđāđ āļšāļēāļ—
    āđ“. āļ„āļļāļ“āļ§āļĢāļ™āļļāļŠ āļ—āļ™āļ‡āļ•āļ™ MR. Kenneth Eide , Alexender Eide, Tomine Eide āđ‘,āđāđāđ āļšāļēāļ—
    āđ”. āļ„āļļāļ“ Somporn Stein āđāļĨāļ°āļ„āļĢāļ­āļšāļ„āļĢāļąāļ§ āđ‘,āđāđāđ āļšāļēāļ—
    āđ•. āļ„āļļāļ“āļ—āļ­āļ‡āļŠāļļāļ‚ āļ›āļēāļ™āļŠāļ­āļēāļ” āđāļĨāļ°āļ„āļĢāļ­āļšāļ„āļĢāļąāļ§ āđ‘,āđāđāđ āļšāļēāļ—
    āđ–. āļ„āļļāļ“ Jumnien Langer āđāļĨāļ°āļ„āļĢāļ­āļšāļ„āļĢāļąāļ§ āđ‘,āđāđāđ āļšāļēāļ—
    āđ—. āļ„āļļāļ“āđ€āļŦāļĄāļžāļĢāļĢāļ“ āļ§āļēāļ”āļĢāļąāļāļŠāļīāļ• āđ•āđāđ āļšāļēāļ—
    āđ˜. āļ„āļļāļ“āļŠāļģāļĢāļēāļ āļ„āļļāļ“āđ„āļžāļĢāļīāļ™ āđ€āļžāļĩāļĒāļĢāļēāļŠ āđāļĨāļ°āļ„āļĢāļ­āļšāļ„āļĢāļąāļ§ āđ“āđāđ āļšāļēāļ—
    āđ™. āļ„āļļāļ“āļāļļāļĨāļ™āļąāļ™āļ—āđŒ āļĄāļĩāđāļ—āļ™ āđ”āđ‘ āļšāļēāļ—
    #āļĢāđˆāļ§āļĄāļšāļļāļāļĢāđˆāļ§āļĄāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āđ€āļˆāđ‰āļēāļ āļēāļžāļŠāļĢāđ‰āļēāļ‡āļ­āļ‡āļ„āđŒāļžāļĢāļ°āļ•āļēāļĄāļāļģāļĨāļąāļ‡āļĻāļĢāļąāļ—āļ˜āļēāđ„āļ”āđ‰āļ—āļĩāđˆāļšāļąāļāļŠāļĩ

    āļžāļĢāļ°āļ˜āļ™āļžāļĨ āļ˜āļ™āļ›āļāļšāđ‚āļ
    āļ˜āļ™āļēāļ„āļēāļĢāļāļĢāļļāļ‡āđ„āļ—āļĒ
    6310390643

    #āļ›āļ“āļīāļ˜āļēāļ™āļ„āļ·āļ­āļˆāļ°āļŠāļĢāđ‰āļēāļ‡āļŠāļĄāđ€āļ”āđ‡āļˆāļ­āļ‡āļ„āđŒāļžāļĢāļ°āļ›āļāļĄāļšāļĢāļĄāļ„āļĢāļđāļˆāļąāļāļĢāļžāļĢāļĢāļ”āļīāđŒāļ—āļĢāļ‡āđ€āļ„āļĢāļ·āđˆāļ­āļ‡

    #āļ–āļ§āļēāļĒāđƒāļŦāđ‰āļāļąāļšāļ§āļąāļ”āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ‚āļēāļ”āđāļ„āļĨāļ™āļžāļĢāļ°āļ›āļĢāļ°āļ˜āļēāļ™āđƒāļ™āļ–āļīāđˆāļ™āļ—āļļāļĢāļāļąāļ™āļ”āļēāļĢ

    #āļˆāļ°āļŠāļĢāđ‰āļēāļ‡āļ–āļ§āļēāļĒāđ„āļ›āļˆāļ™āļāļ§āđˆāļēāļŠāļĩāļ§āļīāļ•āļˆāļ°āļŦāļēāđ„āļĄāđˆ

    #āļ‚āļ­āļ­āļ™āļļāđ‚āļĄāļ—āļ™āļēāļŠāļēāļ˜āļļāļāļąāļšāļ—āđˆāļēāļ™āļœāļđāđ‰āļĄāļĩāļšāļļāļāļ—āļļāļāļ—āđˆāļēāļ™
    #āļ‚āļ­āđ€āļŠāļīāļāļœāļđāđ‰āđƒāļāđˆāļšāļļāļāļ—āļļāļāļ—āđˆāļēāļ™āļĢāđˆāļ§āļĄāļšāļļāļāļŠāļĢāđ‰āļēāļ‡āļžāļĢāļ°āļ›āļĢāļ°āļ˜āļēāļ™āļ–āļ§āļēāļĒāđƒāļ™āļ–āļīāđˆāļ™āļ—āļļāļĢāļāļąāļ™āļ”āļēāļĢ #āļŠāļĄāđ€āļ”āđ‡āļˆāļ­āļ‡āļ„āđŒāļžāļĢāļ°āļ›āļāļĄāļšāļĢāļĄāļ„āļĢāļđāļˆāļąāļāļĢāļžāļĢāļĢāļ”āļīāđŒāļ—āļĢāļ‡āđ€āļ„āļĢāļ·āđˆāļ­āļ‡āļŦāļ™āđ‰āļēāļ•āļąāļāļŠāļĩāđˆāļĻāļ­āļāļ­āļ‡āļ„āđŒāļ—āļĩāđˆāļŦāļ #āļ–āļ§āļēāļĒāđƒāļŦāđ‰āļ—āļĩāđˆāļžāļąāļāļŠāļ‡āļ†āđŒāļ—āļĢāļąāļžāļĒāđŒāđ€āļˆāļĢāļīāļāđ‚āļ›āļĢāđˆāļ‡āđāļ„ #āļšāđ‰āļēāļ™āđ‚āļ›āđˆāļ‡āļ™āļāđāļ‹āļ§ āļ•.#āđāļ‹āļ‡āļšāļēāļ”āļēāļĨ āļ­.#āļŠāļĄāđ€āļ”āđ‡āļˆ āļˆ.#āļāļēāļŽāļŠāļīāļ™āļ˜āļļāđŒ #āļ‡āļšāļ›āļĢāļ°āļĄāļēāļ“āļāļēāļĢāļŠāļĢāđ‰āļēāļ‡āļ­āļ‡āļ„āđŒāļĨāļ° āđ•āđ’,āđāđāđ āļšāļēāļ— #āļ—āļļāļ™āđ€āļĢāļīāđˆāļĄāļ•āđ‰āļ™ āļžāļĢāļ°āļ˜āļ™āļžāļĨ āļ˜āļ™āļ›āļāļšāđ‚āļ āđ‘,āđāđāđ āļšāļēāļ— āđ‘. āļ„āļļāļ“āļˆāļīāļ”āļēāļ āļē āđ‚āļĨāļāļēāļ™āļīāļ™āļ—āļĢāđŒ Mr. Leif Lødeng āļ„āļļāļ“āļžāļīāļŠāļĒāļē āđ‚āļĨāļāļēāļ™āļīāļ™āļ—āļĢāđŒ āļ”.āļ.āļ™āļēāļ•āļēāđ€āļĨāļĩāļĒ āđ‚āļĨāļāļēāļ™āļīāļ™āļ—āļĢāđŒ Lødeng āđ•,āđāđāđ āļšāļēāļ— āđ’. āļ„āļļāļ“āđ€āļžāļŠāļĢāļžāļĢāļĢāļ“ āļ‚āļ§āļąāļāļ­āļļāđˆāļ™ āļ„āļļāļ“āļ­āļīāļŠāļĢāļēāļ āļĢāļ“āđŒ āļ‚āļ§āļąāļāļ­āļļāđˆāļ™ āļ­āļļāļ—āļīāļĻāđƒāļŦāđ‰āļ„āļļāļ“āđāļĄāđˆāļĒāļēāļĒāļ—āļ­āļ‡āļ”āļĩ āļĻāļĢāļĩāļ§āļĢāļĢāļ“ āđ€āļ™āļ·āđˆāļ­āļ‡āđƒāļ™āļ§āļąāļ™āļ„āļĨāđ‰āļēāļĒāļ§āļąāļ™āđ€āļāļīāļ” āđ“,āđāđāđ āļšāļēāļ— āđ“. āļ„āļļāļ“āļ§āļĢāļ™āļļāļŠ āļ—āļ™āļ‡āļ•āļ™ MR. Kenneth Eide , Alexender Eide, Tomine Eide āđ‘,āđāđāđ āļšāļēāļ— āđ”. āļ„āļļāļ“ Somporn Stein āđāļĨāļ°āļ„āļĢāļ­āļšāļ„āļĢāļąāļ§ āđ‘,āđāđāđ āļšāļēāļ— āđ•. āļ„āļļāļ“āļ—āļ­āļ‡āļŠāļļāļ‚ āļ›āļēāļ™āļŠāļ­āļēāļ” āđāļĨāļ°āļ„āļĢāļ­āļšāļ„āļĢāļąāļ§ āđ‘,āđāđāđ āļšāļēāļ— āđ–. āļ„āļļāļ“ Jumnien Langer āđāļĨāļ°āļ„āļĢāļ­āļšāļ„āļĢāļąāļ§ āđ‘,āđāđāđ āļšāļēāļ— āđ—. āļ„āļļāļ“āđ€āļŦāļĄāļžāļĢāļĢāļ“ āļ§āļēāļ”āļĢāļąāļāļŠāļīāļ• āđ•āđāđ āļšāļēāļ— āđ˜. āļ„āļļāļ“āļŠāļģāļĢāļēāļ āļ„āļļāļ“āđ„āļžāļĢāļīāļ™ āđ€āļžāļĩāļĒāļĢāļēāļŠ āđāļĨāļ°āļ„āļĢāļ­āļšāļ„āļĢāļąāļ§ āđ“āđāđ āļšāļēāļ— āđ™. āļ„āļļāļ“āļāļļāļĨāļ™āļąāļ™āļ—āđŒ āļĄāļĩāđāļ—āļ™ āđ”āđ‘ āļšāļēāļ— #āļĢāđˆāļ§āļĄāļšāļļāļāļĢāđˆāļ§āļĄāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āđ€āļˆāđ‰āļēāļ āļēāļžāļŠāļĢāđ‰āļēāļ‡āļ­āļ‡āļ„āđŒāļžāļĢāļ°āļ•āļēāļĄāļāļģāļĨāļąāļ‡āļĻāļĢāļąāļ—āļ˜āļēāđ„āļ”āđ‰āļ—āļĩāđˆāļšāļąāļāļŠāļĩ āļžāļĢāļ°āļ˜āļ™āļžāļĨ āļ˜āļ™āļ›āļāļšāđ‚āļ āļ˜āļ™āļēāļ„āļēāļĢāļāļĢāļļāļ‡āđ„āļ—āļĒ 6310390643 #āļ›āļ“āļīāļ˜āļēāļ™āļ„āļ·āļ­āļˆāļ°āļŠāļĢāđ‰āļēāļ‡āļŠāļĄāđ€āļ”āđ‡āļˆāļ­āļ‡āļ„āđŒāļžāļĢāļ°āļ›āļāļĄāļšāļĢāļĄāļ„āļĢāļđāļˆāļąāļāļĢāļžāļĢāļĢāļ”āļīāđŒāļ—āļĢāļ‡āđ€āļ„āļĢāļ·āđˆāļ­āļ‡ #āļ–āļ§āļēāļĒāđƒāļŦāđ‰āļāļąāļšāļ§āļąāļ”āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ‚āļēāļ”āđāļ„āļĨāļ™āļžāļĢāļ°āļ›āļĢāļ°āļ˜āļēāļ™āđƒāļ™āļ–āļīāđˆāļ™āļ—āļļāļĢāļāļąāļ™āļ”āļēāļĢ #āļˆāļ°āļŠāļĢāđ‰āļēāļ‡āļ–āļ§āļēāļĒāđ„āļ›āļˆāļ™āļāļ§āđˆāļēāļŠāļĩāļ§āļīāļ•āļˆāļ°āļŦāļēāđ„āļĄāđˆ #āļ‚āļ­āļ­āļ™āļļāđ‚āļĄāļ—āļ™āļēāļŠāļēāļ˜āļļāļāļąāļšāļ—āđˆāļēāļ™āļœāļđāđ‰āļĄāļĩāļšāļļāļāļ—āļļāļāļ—āđˆāļēāļ™
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