We are going Zimbabwe way

Blocking the anus will not cure diarrhoea. [MEDIA=twitter]1336550001774895104[/MEDIA]

William Samoei Ruto the sugoi thief was busy stealing billions during this period. Usitubebe mandazi wewe Itumbi errand boy

Hey tuko pambaya. Tumekuwa pambaya. We over borrowed and the money swindled

Jubilee mbois

Tuchome serikali

This is the legacy Uhuru is fighting so hard to leave behind.

Get paid in $ or €.

Ama KCr

Watu wa nunue mbitcoin.

The whole economic system is bound to crash spectacularly, very soon. $270 trillion…that’s the collective debt owed by world governments which tells us there’s no getting out of this mess. Hello “THE GREAT RESET.”

One World Government coming soon to a place near you

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[SIZE=5]Hehehe Australian dollar ndio imepanda in value sio ati ni kshs imeenda chini.[/SIZE]

[SIZE=7]Australian dollar set to rise into year end[/SIZE]

Sarah TurnerReporter
Oct 1, 2020 – 5.15pm
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The third quarter of 2020 was tricky for the Australian dollar but it is set to climb into the end of the year, even as the first US presidential debate appeared to bring a Joe Biden win closer.

The currency rose 3.8 per cent to US71.70¢ over the September quarter, but the relatively modest advance hid some hefty intra quarter gyrations.

It crossed over the US74¢ mark in late August, encouraging strategists at the major Australian banks to pencil in a move to US80¢ by the end of next year.

A weak US dollar, a strong performance from Wall Street, robust demand from China for iron ore and a local central bank that to date has introduced less easing than other central banks, all combined to lift the currency from a low of US57¢ at the depths of the COVID-19 crisis in March.

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[SIZE=7]Aussie dollar hits 15-month high: What this means for your money[/SIZE]
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Jessica Yun
24 July 2020, 3:52 am
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(Source: Getty)
There’s a bit of buzz around the Aussie dollar at the moment, which has broken above the US$0.70 mark for the first time in a while.
On Thursday the AUD hit 71.41 US cents, the highest it’s been all year.

But prior to the recent uptick, the dollar had been falling for years. It was most recently hamstrung by Australia’s weak economy – which was already weak before the twin bushfire and coronavirus crises – as well as rising trade tensions between China and the US.
And while the economy is in an even worse position than this time last year, with the budget deficit slated to hit $281 billion across 2019-20 and 2020-21, a higher Australian dollar is a bit of good news for some (but bad news for others).