20181108-Farsight-Denver Int'l Airport-Bank run in China (Bank of Zigong)
Farsight (Denver Internatioanl Airport)
Target cue: Denver International Airport: Most secret and/or transportation related facilities at the airport or underneath the airport.
Princess Jeanee-
She did describe the airport with air fields, large structure. Inside of the structure - lots of people, flying objects, busy, public place. But within this structure there are very secret rooms. She was inside one of them. It’s brown and dark. With little people figurings ( around 1 foot tall?) line up on the table. Weird bars on the wall. Boxes and containers lying around. Kinda creepy. This room is very secretive, very few people know about it.
Melina Hall-
Some large flying object with rows inside, people sitting on them. This flying object is going down fast , seems like being pulled by magnetic force. Another visual, three men with baggy uniforms in this cramped space underneath the ground. Last visual, there is dark, large underground area and there are structures in this area. There are broken man-made stuff on the ground. This is an area of broken things and damaged structure.
Kahmia Dunson-
She feels she is in this empty space, open land, a couple of structure, a few people, watch tower, a few planes in the sky. There is nothing is happening. Feel like a military camp.
Courtney’s recap:
The Denver International Airport is not an airport.
The remote viewers saw non-surface structure landed on the airport on regular basis. There are hidden area underneath the airport where things are stored. There are cabinets and containers. They look like janitorial containers or lockers.
The Money GPS (Bank Run in China – Bank of Zigong (自貢市):
In what the Epoch Times warns could be the "sign of an impending financial crisis", a small local bank in the southwestern Chinese city of Zigong just suffered a bank run. Shareholders of Bank of Zigong in Sichuan Province absconded with 40 billion yuan ($5.78 billion), through loans issued to shell companies that they had created, according to a Nov. 2 post in a Chinese social-media account, and a report by Da Zhong, a state-run news website. The loans were long overdue, resulting in huge losses for the bank. Even though the post was deleted within 20 minutes by internet censors, the news spread like wildfire and scores of bank customers rushed to dozens of bank branches in Zigong City to retrieve their deposits, while long lines of people could be seen from photos of the scene and uploaded by netizens...
More ominously, Twitter user Cao Ji, a former professor in Shanghai, who now does academic research in Taiwan said that "if there is a bank run at the Bank of Zigong, this means a financial crisis in China will begin from these local small banks."
Incidents such as this one demonstrate just how brittle China's banking system truly is, if the mere speculation of capital or liquidity insufficiency is able to prompt a vicious bank run. And while the large, state-owned banks are sufficiently capitalized, the risk is that either any of the remaining shadow banking institutions or small, undercapitalized regional banks are swept away before the government can respond, resulting in a mass financial crisis....
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