Catherine wheel
Catherine wheel may refer to:
- Catherine wheel or breaking wheel, an instrument of torturous execution originally associated with Saint Catherine of Alexandria
The banks have been banking, us-the people. Thats why they don't want us to handle cash and independant traders outside the confines of a banking institution. The industry of banking is all about peddling the worth of the population. An individual is given a monetary value. From birth to death (certificate numbers) the individual is a commodity, bought and sold, and invested against and projected with. Whole Nations have become 'stocks and shares' owned by somebody else. Statistics such as 'life expectancy' are used as parameters for investment.
So, why am I saying this now?
Strangely enough, earlier this summer, I was an extra for a Polish Online advert for a bank.
It wasn't paid much, but it sounded interesting, and I always find that there is 'always more' to a situation than meets the eye. So, being an extra is strange enough, but the day was quite weird and it was wired with extra sensory information. It was a surreal day in that we were drafted in to be 'filmed' as we 'play acted' at being 'normal' passers by, supporting the featured artists to be 'normal people' in a normal situation...The big statement here, and further programming by media, is that banking is normal and the result is that we all continue to comply and collude with the implied normality status for people to have their 'normal' lives tied up and stretched out over the wheels of the banking machine...
This was filmed a while ago, so today I went to see if the advert is actually out online yet, which it is not, presumably more manipulation have to be made in editing, to deem it to function in its desired mode, to be seen by for the 'normal' people that it seems the advert is intended.
But I had a look around and found plenty other material relating to the bank instead.
Below, is a site that opens up a glimpse as to how the established banking octopus has normalised the peddling of 'people' as they are stocks and shares....and with national portfolios regarding their investment potential and how to 'read' a nation. They produce documents on 'How to' get their claws firmly tucked into the 'money' potential of that nation via the peddling of people's worth. Now, most people won't be shocked, because this surely is how civilised society is maintained, through banking institutions. But a deeper look sees how the freedom of choice, and the unpredictabilty that allows freedom of choice, is curtailed and corralled. The masses have been corralled into units for energy usage. Workers ants to keep the big machines in operation.
Its not that I am shocked, because we all have levels of identifying with or rebelling against this octopus structure, but seeing this reminds me that this octopus structure remains in power for as long as we believe in its power, and while having carrot sticks of 'machine money' held in front of our faces, most people remain in low pay, and are pinned to the consumer Katherine Wheel that spins and simultaneously sucks the energy out of us. Keeping the vibration in 'slave mode'. This is economics where profit is made off each of our heads, as our consciousness is controlled and manipulated.
I am prompted to make this little outburst as a wake up call, a reminder that the old 3d machines have done enough damage, there is nothing more to be gained by us, from living through it.
Unless of course you are a banker.
We are coming to the harvest, where each fruit is ripe having ' become the full identity of what it is' within this time, in this lifetime.
The greatness in 'harvestable energy that you have become' is down to where you have been banking your energy.
Do you own 'you' and your harvestable 'energetic' goods? Or does the bank?
Are you your own Business, i.e. we are talking the modus operandi of 'how and what you 'WALK' through life.
A modus operandi is someone's habits of working, particularly in the context of business or criminal investigations, but also more generally. It is a Latin phrase, approximately translated as mode of operating.Wikipedia
business
ˈbɪznəs/
noun
- 1.a person's regular occupation, profession, or trade.
"experts who typically conduct their business over the Internet"
synonyms: work, line of work, line, occupation, profession, career, employment, job, day job, position, pursuit, vocation, calling, field, sphere, walk of life, trade, craft;
Soon time for the harvest, September through to October.
The vibration we resonate with defines the upcoming reality baskets, into which the apples (us) will fall.
Michaela.
Ps. I realise that the site posted below is all above board and there's nothing seemingly wrong with the information....but it is a description of human beings as a potential commodity, how they live and and their mortality rates etc, describes a nation in terms of statistic parameters, which are cited purely for the purpose of BUYING into a large chunk of that nation's psyche. To manipulate and 'inform' and 'shape' by marketing and Investments....for profit.
In Banking...there is No Investment out of the goodness of their hearts. Banking is investing to make PROFIT out the people, situations and events.
https://en.portal.santandertrade.com/analyse-markets/poland/reaching-the-consumers
POLAND: REACHING THE CONSUMER
In this page: Consumer Profile | Marketing opportunities
Consumer Profile
- Growing Sectors
- Building (houses/apartments), furnishing/decoration (linked to building), IT (13% growth annual, including 30% for PC sales), hygiene-beauty-cosmetics (5th European market as regards the number of consumers), pharmaceutical products (4.2% growth per year), private medicine, education, consumer staples, travel and tourism, banking and insurance. Poland is one of Europe’s largest and fastest-growing economies, salaries are rising substantially and the population is quite young: all this stimulates strong development in all sectors linked to individual consumption.
- Consumer Behaviour
- The majority of Polish consumers tend to consider various factors at the moment of making a purchase (quality, price, origin), but remain loyal to a brand once they perceive it as reliable and worthy. For the middle and upper classes (whose salaries are almost equivalent to the average in the EU), quality and brand are becoming increasingly important as is service (during and after sales): they are ready to pay extra for well manufactured products promising better quality and more benefits. Many stores stay open very late (10:00 pm) and even 24/7 (even in the countryside). Even if there are many big shopping centres and super and hypermarkets, the Polish consumer likes to do his or her shopping in different general stores and markets or small and medium sizes local shops. Sales and discounts have become very fashionable. Consumers generally prefer ‘Made in Poland’ products, but this is gradually changing thanks to growing popularity of cross-border internet retailing. Even if advertising campaigns are important, the strongest vector for advertising remains word of mouth. The Polish are used to doing their shopping 7 days a week and at any time of day or night. The natural food sector is becoming more and more important as Polish are improving their standard of living and thus taking more care of their health and wellness. As an example, Polish consumers favour fresh fruits and vegetables over packaged and processed products.
- Consumer Profile and Purchasing Power
- Private consumption benefits from rising employment and strong wage growth (Polish GDP per capita was 28.4% of EU GDP per capita in 2005, 38.3% in 2015 and is forecasted to be 46.5% in 2030). There are great discrepancies in salaries (the largest in the EU) based on the region and sector of employment. Consumer behaviour depends on the income level, which is generally lower in rural areas. The low income of Polish people explains why they pay close attention to prices. However, the last decade saw the rising of a consistent middle class, whose income levels are in line with the average European salary. Rising levels of disposable income prompted a robust increase in consumer spending and this is expected to continue in the next few years. According to Euromonitor International’s forecast, the population of Poland is expected to decrease by 1.197 million individuals from 2015 to 2030. The rural population is expected to decline at a fastest rate than the urban. The average age of the Polish population is currently 37. The number of citizens in the 15-64 range will fall from 69.8% in 2015 to 63.6% in 2030. By then, people over 65 years are expected to represent 23% of the country’s population, and this trend is set to alter the consumer landscape.
- Consumer Recourse to Credit
- Resorting to credit is widespread (advertising everywhere for banks and other institutions proposing easy credit on request) and the level of savings is low. Polish consumers resort to credit not only for investment goods, but also for consumer staples and leisure. A trend for a falling number of loans with their growing value due to a higher average loan is observable in Polish consumer credit. According to the Credit Information Bureau (BIK), in 2017 Poles took out some 9 million loans totalling EUR 32 billion, a 5.5% increase compared to the previous year. Mortgage loans achieved the highest growth rate in terms of value, at 11.1% compared to 2016. The value of overdraft limits rose by 6.4% and that of consumer credit increased by 3.5%. Credit cards saw a low growth rate (0.8%). Meanwhile, in December 2017 BIK reported that the value of money borrowed by consumers in the form of credit cards fell by 9% year-on-year.
- Consumers Associations
- UOKIK , Office for competition and consumer protection
SKP , Polish consumer association
Population in Figures
- Total Population:
- 37,970,087
- Urban Population:
- 60.5%
- Rural Population:
- 39.5%
- Density of Population:
- 124 Inhab./km²
- Men (in %)
- 48.4%
- Women (in %)
- 51.7%
- Natural increase:
- -0.04%
- Medium Age:
- 37.0
- Ethnic Origins:
- 97% Polish, 1% Silesian or other German, 2% Belarusian or Ukrainian. (Central Statistical Office)
Population of main metropolitan areas
Name | Population |
---|---|
Warsaw | 3,008,921 |
Katowice | 2,608,651 |
Krakow | 1,357,206 |
Gdansk | 1,098,435 |
Lodz | 947,767 |
Poznan | 941,914 |
Wroclaw | 835,403 |
Lublin | 671,197 |
Source: OECD, 2012 - Latest available data.
Age of the Population
Life Expectancy in Years | |
---|---|
Men: |
73.5
|
Women: |
81.6
|
Source: World Bank, last available data., 2009 - Latest available data.
Distribution of the Population By Age Bracket in % | |
---|---|
Under 5: |
4.9%
|
6 to 14: |
9.9%
|
16 to 24: |
14.0%
|
25 to 69: |
61.3%
|
Over 70: |
9.9%
|
Over 80: |
3.4%
|
Source: United Nations, Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division, Prospects 2010 - Latest available data.
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