How the World Really Works | Martin Armstrong

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Who is Martin Armstrong?

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You’ll have to google it.

Ha - no, I won’t. I’m not going to watch some random 'splain the world to me if you can’t even be bothered to give me a short synopsis of his qualifications to do such ‘splainin’. Sorry.

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I don’t care if you watch it or not and don’t have to give you anything.

Economic forecaster. Self taught. Self made. Computer model predictions.

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Martin Armstrong is a hedge fund billionaire and bitter enemies with the WEF and the US Federales. He’s also a stone cold genius that built the worlds first quantum computer that he calls Socrates. Socrates runs on AI that Marty developed personally.
He maintains that everything in the universe runs in a cycle and Socrates can determine those cycles and consequently predict the future. And this is what got him in trouble with the intelligence communities. In the late 90’s, knock knock Mr. Armstrong for national security reasons we want your computer. He said no. So they confiscated everything that he had. He wouldn’t cooperate so 11 years solitary confinement in the same detention center where they kept Jeffery Epstein.
Roughly 2008 about 150 members of congress were demanding that Martin Armstrong be brought to Washington to explain to congress how to get the economy going again. They were told that he was in prison and never charged with a crime. Those members of congress got Sotomeyer on the Supreme Court to sign a piece of paper and got him out. They made him plead guilty to a felony that he didn’t commit but after all those years I’d have done the same.
In 2012 the Germans made a movie about him called the Forecaster. It’s never been shown in the US as someone bought the movie rights and refuse to show it, but that movie made him a household name everywhere in the world but the US.
His public blog, Martin Armstrong blog, is a daily must read and I’m surprised that all of you don’t know about it. I haven’t missed reading his blog a day in 10 years. All of you should take the time to go back and read as much of his blog as you can stand.
My business partner knows him and his children. He’s the real deal. He still puts on two conferences every year somewhere in the world in the spring and the fall. At every conference two rows are occupied by the world’s central bankers. You can tell them by their suits. He has north of a billion dollars in subscribers every year that tune in to Socrate’s daily, monthly, quarterly and annual forecasts.
He’s an amazing man that’s on our side. And cheers to you all.

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Here’s link to the movie…

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Don’t forget the silver platter…

Your description set me thinking in three directions:

  1. This man sounds like Hari Seldon of Isaac Asimov’s Foundation series. I hope he factors in wild cards like the Mule into his calculations lol.

  2. I’ve read a number of books by Anatoly Fomenko, who says quite convincingly that history as we know it was written by Jesuits in the 1600s. In order to make the Catholic Church look older than it really was, in the histories they wrote they duplicated large swaths of historical events from the Middle Ages and reset them further in the past. This had the effects of hiding what really happened before their time, and of lengthening history. I also wonder how it affects prediction algorithms developed in our time. Perhaps this is why we believe history repeats itself, lol.

  3. An idea came to me while smoking one day: What if we are bored immortal beings who come to Earth to act out a novel. When our part is over, we die and leave for a while until we pick another role and return. The novel would have to keep changing to hold our interest, and we would have to submit to a memory wipe before returning or it wouldn’t be any fun. Granted this is not a very original idea, but I dabble in novel writing and frequently think in terms of story arcs and character interactions and motivations, so it was entertaining to me. It also makes you feel like a member of the human race when the vectors of your individual mind lead you to the same opinion as someone you admire (Shakespeare).

Thanks, @aurajenn . Trying to limit the random new pundits I spend time on - it’s good to know what claim people have to being attention-worthy.

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