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Post by morningstar on Feb 19, 2014 18:02:01 GMT
What is going on here? These suicides are not coincidences.
Intellihub: 8th international banker to die in a month jumps off building in China
A man who jumped from the JP Morgan building in Hong Kong this week becomes the 8th banker to die mysteriously this month By John Vibes
HONG KONG (INTELLIHUB) — All month we have been reporting on the suspicious string of apparent suicides that have hit the financial industry. Multiple bankers have been found dead in recent weeks, all of them have been ruled suicides despite the fact that little information has been released in some of the cases.
Those who had high profile deaths, like the man who jumped from the top of the JP Morgan HQ building in Europe are highly publicized, but overall, very few details about any of these deaths have been made public. Now this week, another investment banker has jumped from a different JP Morgan HQ, on a different continent, this time in Hong Kong, China.
The fact that many of these deaths seem to be tied to JP Morgan is arousing further suspicion that there is more to this story than meets the eye.
Link to Article: intellihub.com/8th-international-banker-die-month-jumps-building-china/
Related story: Celente - It’s Raining Bankers To Protect The US Dominance Today the top trends forecaster in the world told King World News that there may in fact be over 20 dead bankers at this point, rather than the 7 that are being reported, and all of this is happening in order to protect US world dominance. Link to Article: kingworldnews.com/kingworldnews/KWN_DailyWeb/Entries/2014/2/18_Celente_-_Its_Raining_Bankers_To_Protect_The_US_Dominance.html
Fair Use for Discussion & Educational Purposes.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Feb 19, 2014 18:27:30 GMT
That does it! I am withdrawing my resume......
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Post by shiloh on Feb 19, 2014 19:11:59 GMT
That DOES look awfully suspicious. Are they really jumping from buildings, as in the 1929 crash? Or are they being pushed off the buildings (so to speak)?
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Post by elizabeth on Feb 19, 2014 19:29:09 GMT
Something has to be going on. To the general world, things look dire, I'm so glad I'm a Christian.
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Post by Benjamin on Feb 19, 2014 21:27:31 GMT
Something *is* going on. One of the bankers called his wife just before "committing suicide", and told her he'd be home in five minutes. That's not normal suicidal behaviour.
Couple that with the fact that there seem to be several levels of connections between these men (not only JP Morgan, but there also seems to be some suggestion that they had become aware of large-scale financial fraud), and the waters seem to get even more murky.
I'll be interested to see how it all pans out, but it's not a great precedent.
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Post by morningstar on Feb 19, 2014 22:27:30 GMT
Shiloh, I think your right, someone is pushing these guys off the buildings...and why aren't the reporters in the mainstream media all over this? I just get the feeling that more and more we are being cut off from the rest of the world in regards to what is really happening out there, your certainly not going to hear much on your daily news channels, talk about being fed only what they want you to hear.
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Post by MyWhiteStone on Feb 19, 2014 22:28:53 GMT
Benjamin says, "I'll be interested to see how it all pans out, but it's not a great precedent."
Here's a riddle about precedents: There are eight copycats floating in a wooden tub out in the lake. One jumps out. How many are left?
Answer: zero.
(I think posting this riddle was in bad taste, in retrospect. If anyone is offended about my insensitivity, please forgive me. I'll pray for those men's families' salvation. They must truly be devastated.)
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Post by shiloh on Feb 20, 2014 17:57:06 GMT
No, I understand exactly where you are coming from with that riddle, SG.
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Post by Deleted on Feb 20, 2014 18:06:42 GMT
SG, mine also, sometime the only way to fight back at this bad news is with a little humor.I agree, this is not funny to the families involved.
Sorry if I offended anyone...
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Post by shiloh on Feb 20, 2014 19:17:28 GMT
dpr and SG, I think that's often how many of us deal with disbelief, shock, grief and pain. I think it's a coping/preservation mechanism and I think it's normal. We even do that within my own family. For example, people will come up to me at a funeral at the loss of one of my loved ones and say something that just really IS funny. It breaks the tension and helps the pain at times in my view, anyway.
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Post by MyWhiteStone on Feb 20, 2014 22:08:12 GMT
You know what's cool about this site? I can still get back and edit my post, including the deletion of my contrite request for forgiveness. I won't, but thank you both for cutting me so much slack. I did pray for their families. I am so glad Jesus is soon going to put an end to literally billions of latent tragedies!
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Post by Benjamin on Feb 21, 2014 2:21:29 GMT
I don't know if you've ever watched the TV Show "Scrubs"... but I always found this helpful.
In this particular episode, Dr. Turk has performed surgery on a man who fails to live through the procedure. The widow invites Turk to the funeral, where it becomes alarmingly apparent that Turk doesn't even know the man's name.
Turk, of course, has a mini-crisis, feeling awful because he didn't even know his patient's first name. Carla, Turk's wife, convinces Dr. Cox to step in and "sort him out". This conversation follows:
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Everybody reacts differently in times of grief, pain, confusion - or even just to bad news that we're not really affected by (like in this case). No reaction is "wrong"... just different.
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Post by shelayne on Feb 21, 2014 2:35:49 GMT
Yep, sometimes gallows humor is how we cope.
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Post by morningstar on Feb 21, 2014 2:47:30 GMT
Shelayne...where's baldie??? I like your smile on the avatar..LOL SG.. You didn't offend anyone....I like what you said...don't need to walk on eggshells here, we pretty much know where everyone is coming from when we post remarks...no one has the intent of offending anyone..
Benjamin Quote:
That is so true, have you ever reacted to some bad news with the reply " You've got to be kidding?"...and when you stop and think of that remark...now why would a person kid about maybe someone passing away, or was in a car accident, home robbed, losing a job e.t.c...talk about remarks that just come out without thinking.
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Post by shiloh on Feb 21, 2014 18:06:20 GMT
I know what you mean, Morningstar. I did something like that when one of my sisters called me to tell me our cousin passed away suddenly (he was my age) and I said, "Seriously?" As if she would call me to play a prank on me, start laughing and say, "Nah! I just wanted to hear what your reaction would be." But it just came out of my mouth.
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Post by Benjamin on Feb 22, 2014 3:04:01 GMT
I actually think the way I do because of my work with kids. When children get in trouble, there are lots of different ways they can react. Some cry the second they realise they're in trouble; some take it stoically; some listen intently... while others will smile at you, or laugh, in a manner that seems entirely inappropriate.
The interesting thing, though, is that NONE of those responses are necessarily indicative of the way that the child will actually respond, behaviourally. What they ARE indicative of is the child's personality, their home environment, or how often they receive discipline.
...and what you can't ever do is assume that because a child grins at you when they're getting in trouble, that they're not taking you seriously. Some children just have no idea how else to react.
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Post by shiloh on Feb 22, 2014 10:38:41 GMT
Oh, I completely agree with that, Benjamin. I even remember as a kid laughing but I wasn't laughing inside. Does that make any sense? It seemed innapropriate, even to me as a child but I would do that when nervous about something. Not to get off topic but when you were saying how kids react, I remember this time when we lost our daughter at an amuzement park. Her brother was suppose to watch her and they were in line for a kiddie ride. We were RIGHT there too and turned for a second and she was no longer there. I felt like I was in one of those movies. All sound around me had drowned out and I got a ringing in my ears. My heart was not only in my throat but I could hear my heart beating from shear panic. My husband and I split up to look for her. I was terrified she had been taken by a stranger and she was only 5 years old. Anyway, something told me, "Go to the 'Lost Parents' facility." I RAN there and peered in the window and here that poor little thing was crying and she was trying to color. There was this little boy, a few years older than her , sitting there in a chair across from her, hands behind his head, all relaxed and looking at her like, "What's your PROBLEM?! I'm in here all the time!" So, I run in the door and had to sign a sheet and the lady starts laughing because she saw how completely panicked I was. She said, "She's only been in here for 7 minutes." One of the police at the park took her there. Here, she thought we deserted her, went home and left her at the park alone. That was the most terrrifying feeling me and my husband had ever felt. Those 7 minutes seemed like an eternity to me.
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