명제희
쌍용자동차의 새이름 KG모빌리티 새출발을 응원합니다
기대가 잔뜩 됩니다
안전성을 최우선으로 하는 KG모빌리티 짱~~~

https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=pfbid02AuKidyiRXT9kEQEsLFPo7iqmaQtH1RXXifC47E5eq7KFUv8ofX36EUGwARLEqvu6l&id=100001037906791&mibextid=Nif5oz
열정하나
쌍용자동차 새 이름 ‘KG모빌리티’ 응원합니다. 대한민국 완성차 발전에 많은 힘이 되어주기를 기대합니다.

공유 : https://blog.naver.com/doit79/223010625626
행복한사회
기독교 목적

목사가 가장 나중에 설교하는 것이
가장 중요하고 진실로 밀하고 싶은 것이다.
기독교의 목적은 결국 헌금갈취다.


●기승전결

수단 성경 교리
방법 목시설교 세뇌,기도, 췌면, 착각, 망상, 환영등
싱품 하나님괴 예수
포장 구원 영생 천국 면제부
영업 전도
굉고 오직에수 불신지옥

목적
갈취 헌금강요
착취 무료봉시강요, 노동착취
이용 신도 부흥회와 전도이용

결과
종교단체와 목사
부귀영화, 명예, 권력을 얻기 위한 것이다.
행복한사회
종교사업~~~~^^

종교사업

종교교리는
교회등 종교단체에 유리하게 되어 있고
성경등 교리를 믿고 따르면
그 종교에 종속되어
종이 되고 시키는 데로 하게 된다.

개구리를 넣고 서서히 물을 끓이면
튀어나가지 않듯이
신도를 서서히 세뇌시키면 꼼착없이 말려들고
착각에 빠져 당한다.

종교도 사업이고 기업이고 장사다.

기독교의 경우
성경 교리는 수단이고
목사의 혀놀림 세뇌 췌면 기도 망상 착각 환각
환영 환청 심리지배 구르밍등은 방법이고
하나님과 예수는 상품이고
구원 영생 천국 면제부는 포장이고
전도는 영업이고
예수천국 불신지옥은 광고와 선전일 뿐이다.
결국 돈을 벌기 위한 목적으로
귀신팔이 사업하는 장사다.
특히 기독교는
사람들을 속이고 사기치는 범죄단체다

인간은 나약하다
그래서 신을 만들어 믿는다.
그러나 남의 신을 믿고 의지하면 그들이 만든
그들의 교리를 따르고 지키고 숭배해야 한다.
결국 그들에 종속되고 종이되고 시키는 데로 하고
착취 당하고 노예가 된다.

어자피 신을 믿고 의지하려면
내가 만든 나만의 신을 믿고 의지해야 한다.
그래야 사기당하지 않고 이용당하거나
갈취, 착취당하지 않는다.

사이비, 이단, 미신은
종교단체에서 남의 종교를 공격하기 위해
만든 것이고 상대적인 것이다.
종교와 신은 어자피 사람이 만든 것으로
내가 믿고 의지하면 나의 신과 종교가 되는 것이다.

단) 살아있는 사람을 부족하고 헛점이많고
언제든지 변하고 바뀌고 배신하고 죽고
사라질수 있기 때문에 믿을수 없는 존재다.
절대로 신과 종교의 대상이 될수 없다.

지기들의 종교를 더 퍼트러 영향력을 키우고
돈과 권력을 얻기 위해 다른 종교를 공격하는 수단으로 사이비 이단 미신을 이용하는 것이다.

자동차 기업도 자기들이 만든 차가 최고이고
다른기업 차는 흡집을 내고 나쁘다고 한다,
종교도 기업이고 장사다.
다른 종교와 신을 공격하고 없애야
자기것을 더 퍼트리고 돈을 벌수 있다.

남의 교리에 남의 말에 휘들리고
그 사람들의 말을 믿으면 안된다.
세상에서 가장 믿을수 없는 것은
바로 사람이기 때문이다.

그들은 그들 입장에서 자신들의 이익을 위해
유리하게 말하는 것 뿐이다,
진실이나 현실이나 사실은 아니다.
그냥 신을 이용하여 종교를 만든에 목적을
달성하는 것이다.

종교도 이용하는 자와 이용당하는 지가 있디.
강한자는 이용하고 약한자는 이용당한다.
목사는 이용하고 신도는 이용당한다.
종교단체와 목사는 이익을 얻고 신도는 손해를 본다.
정치인도 국가도 종교를 이용하고
국민은 이용당한다.

종교도 수단이나 매개체에 불가하다.
종교를 이용하여 다를 사람을 이용하고
갈취, 착취하고
부귀영화를 누리는 것이다.
절대로 속으면 안된다.
yaongii79
#KG모빌리티 쌍용자동차의 새로운 이름
기대가 많이 됩니다. 편안하고 안전한 쌍용차를 타보고 싶어요.
욕지도
https://www.wsj.com/articles/feds-jerome-powell-to-address-economic-outlook-with-hiring-surge-in-spotlight-11675781503?mod=Searchresults_pos1&page=1

Fed’s Jerome Powell Braces for Longer Inflation Fight Amid Hiring Surge
Process of lowering inflation to goal of 2% is likely to take ‘quite a bit of time’


Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said the labor market’s surprising strength underscores why bringing inflation down will take longer and require higher interest rates than many investors have been anticipating.

A government report Friday that showed hiring accelerated in January was “certainly strong—stronger than anyone I know expected,” Mr. Powell said Tuesday during a moderated discussion before the Economic Club of Washington, D.C. “It kind of shows you why we think this will be a process that takes a significant period of time.”

Mr. Powell didn’t say whether advance knowledge about Friday’s report would have changed the outcome of officials’ decision earlier in the week to slow rate increases for a second time in as many meetings. They approved lifting the benchmark federal-funds rate by a quarter-percentage point to a range between 4.5% and 4.75%. They raised it by a half point in December and 0.75 point in November.

The process of lowering inflation to the Fed’s goal of 2% “is likely to take quite a bit of time. It’s not going to be, we don’t think, smooth,” Mr. Powell said. “It’s probably going to be bumpy.”

The expectation that inflation “will go away quickly and painlessly…is not the base case,” he added. “The base case for me is that…we’ll have to do more rate increases, and then we’ll have to look around and see whether we’ve done enough.”

The central bank is seeking to slow economic growth to restrain inflation, which has eased recently after hitting a 40-year high last year. “Once again, Jay Powell said, ‘We really, really, really mean it,’” said Michael Farr, chief market strategist at Hightower Advisors.

Fed officials have raised rates by 4.5 percentage points over the past 12 months, the fastest pace since the 1980s, and have projected that the unemployment rate would rise to about 4.6% by the end of this year.

The Labor Department said Friday that employers added a robust 517,000 jobs in January, and the unemployment rate fell to 3.4%, the lowest since 1969. Forecasters surveyed by The Wall Street Journal had estimated that payrolls increased by 187,000 jobs last month, which would have extended a cooling trend in the labor market.

The department not only reported unusually large job growth in January but—more important for the Fed—it revised previous months’ reported gains higher, suggesting that the economy had entered the new year with more momentum than previously thought. Potential glimmers of softening in previous reports, such as a decline in temporary hiring or a drop in hours worked, reversed in January or were revised away.

According to projections released after their policy meeting in December, most Fed officials thought they would raise the fed-funds rate to 5.1% this year, which would imply quarter-point rate increases at their next two meetings, in March and May. More than a third of officials anticipated lifting the rate above 5.25%, which would call for another increase in June. No officials projected cuts this year.

Ahead of Mr. Powell’s remarks Tuesday, investors in interest-rate futures markets expected the Fed to raise rates by a quarter-point each at the Fed’s next two meetings, according to CME Group.

On Tuesday, Mr. Powell repeated his view that the central bank was prepared to raise rates higher if data suggested that economic activity was accelerating in ways that officials hadn’t anticipated.

“We’re going to react to the data,” he said. “So if we continue to get, for example, strong labor market reports or higher inflation reports, it may well be the case that we have to do more and raise rates more than has been priced in.”

Still, the remarks appeared to keep the Fed’s options open because Mr. Powell “didn’t exactly tell us when or how much more data he would need to increase his funds-rate target,” said Mr. Farr.

Signs that aggressive rate increases last year haven’t significantly cooled the labor market could fuel more difficult Fed debates over whether it has done enough to corral high inflation. The January job gains could unsettle officials if other coming reports also point to stronger economic growth. They will see one more employment report before their March meeting.

Overall inflation has been slowing largely because prices of energy and other goods are falling. Large increases in housing costs have slowed, but haven’t yet filtered through to official price gauges.

Mr. Powell has for the past three months justified continued interest-rate increases by noting still-tight labor markets, elevated wage pressures and high inflation for labor-intensive services. “We’re not seeing disinflation there yet, and that’s going to take some time,” he said Tuesday. “We’re going to need to be patient.”

Later, he returned to that component of service-sector inflation failing to slow down this year as one of the most concerning developments facing the Fed. “That’s what I worry about,” he said.

The Fed believes its rate rises work through markets by tightening financial conditions, such as by raising borrowing costs or lowering prices of stocks and other assets.

Investors’ optimism that inflation would be brought down more quickly this year than the Fed expects has led financial conditions to ease in recent weeks. The average 30-year mortgage rate, for example, has fallen by about a percentage point to just above 6% in recent weeks, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.

Last week some investors thought they had detected a shift in Mr. Powell’s views because he declined to push back strongly against investors’ views that the path to bring inflation down this year would be easier than the central bank has signaled is likely. But after Friday’s jobs report, investors began to expect an interest-rate trajectory that is closer to what Fed officials have been suggesting is most likely.

“Late last year Powell and other Fed speakers seemed intent on managing market expectations,” said Michael Feroli, chief U.S. economist at JPMorgan Chase, in a report Tuesday. “More recently, they appear content conveying that they will respond to the data and letting the market take that as fair warning.”

That approach seems sensible given that the Fed is probably closer to its ultimate interest-rate destination compared with last year, he said. “This year, the market shouldn’t expect the same degree of hand holding,” he said.