💰👁😲Jun 18 | Millions Sent to The “Wrong” Black Lives Matter and Libs Furious😲👁💰

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What Are the Libs Up to Now?
 
Ha, hilarious!

Millions of dollars have been mistakenly raised for a Black Lives Matter organization that is not at all associated with the mainstream anti-police movement.

According to the outlet's estimations, The Black Lives Matter Foundation raised at least $4.35 M in the first weeks of June.

The foundation is a Santa Clarita, California–based charitable organization "that has one paid employee and lists a UPS store as its address," BuzzFeed reports. The founder, Robert Ray Barnes, is a 67-year-old L.A.-based music producer.
BLM
The Black Lives Matter Foundation, unlike the mainstream Black Lives Matter movement (The Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation, Inc.), has the express goal of "bringing the community and police closer together."

"I don't have anything to do with the Black Lives Matter Global Network. I never met them; never spoke to them. I don't know them; I have no relationship with them," Barnes, who is black, told BuzzFeed. "Our whole thing is having unity with the police department."

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The Trump Agenda
The Congressional Budget Office (CBO), a nonpartisan watchdog group, offered high praise for the Trump administration on Tuesday, saying under its guidance, federal agencies delivered coronavirus aid "incredibly quickly," preventing catastrophic effects to the economy during the COVID-19 crisis.

CBO Director Phillip L. Swagel said Capitol Hill moved speedily to approve aid for businesses and more than 100 million Americans, which was swiftly approved by President Trump. Then the Treasury Department moved "quickly and effectively" to process stimulus payments to Americans and business owners, the CBO said.
trump

Swagel worked in the Obama administration during the 2008 financial crisis, when Congress also approved several economic stimulus packages. The CBO director said that aid went out quickly back then, but this time the response was even faster.

"The IRS and those other agencies deserve a lot of credit," he said in a virtual forum sponsored by the Peter G. Peterson Foundation. The CBO's praise differs greatly from reports from the mainstream media and Democrats that the Trump administration was not up to the task and that federal agencies could not handle the demand to stem damage from the pandemic.
Market Intel
 
Sixteen of the world's leading energy executives met virtually at an unprecedented meeting Tuesday night to talk about how big oil will navigate its biggest crisis in recent history while confronting the coronavirus pandemic.

"Each one of us has had to guide our respective organizations through these difficult times," said UAE Minister of State Dr. Sultan Ahmed Al Jaber, who is also CEO of Abu Dhabi National Oil Company Group.

He was speaking at the gathering as part of the Abu Dhabi CEO Roundtable series, where the chiefs of oil, gas, and petrochemical companies met to discuss critical issues the industry faces.
market intel

"We are seeing encouraging signs of a rebalancing oil market and the beginnings of economic recovery," Dr Sultan told the industry titans, while highlighting the sector's critical role in enabling economies to recover and re-open following the pandemic.

"I believe that there have been and there will continue to be valuable lessons we can all share with each other across a range of critical issues, but most importantly, on how to ensure the safety and the well-being of our people, the resilience of our business, and the long term growth of our industry," he added. A senior official who attended the meeting told CNBC that most executives agreed "the worst is behind us" and were "hopeful of a stronger second half."

The meeting came as the International Energy Agency said global oil demand will rebound next year, but a return to pre-crisis levels could take a number of years.

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More News Coming Up
 

Less than a week after U.S. fighter jets intercepted Russian bombers in back-to-back flights off the coast of Alaska, U.S. F-22 Raptors scrambled once again Tuesday to conduct two intercepts of Tu-95 bombers in the same area, according to officials at North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD).

The F-22s, accompanied by KC-135 Stratotankers and an E-3 Airborne Warning and Control System, intercepted the Russian aircraft entering the Alaskan Air Defense Identification Zone, which stretches roughly 200 miles off Alaska's coast.
dear
NORAD said the first formation of Russian aircraft consisted of two Tu-95 strategic "Bear" bombers escorted by two Su-35 Flanker-E fighter jets, and was supported by an A-50 airborne early warning and control aircraft.

"For the eighth time this year, Russian military aircraft have penetrated our Canadian or Alaskan Air Defense Identification Zones and each and every time NORAD forces were ready to meet this challenge," said Gen. Terrence J. O'Shaughnessy, NORAD Commander.
All the best,

William Judd
 
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