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RE: Google is up to something Changes answer to world debt within 24 hours

in #google7 years ago

Also, before anyone gets up in arms about this, let's do our due diligence. Simply Googling "world debt" brought up the same article as you've posted images of here. !

Site Screenshot from 1.9.2017, 0228 EST

If you just click the article, scroll up to above the text that you've pictured here, it says that,

"According to the IIF, $68 trillion, the largest chunk, belongs to non-financial companies."

Now, I'm not even attempting to claim that this is a reasonable statement. Nor am I claiming to know anything about economics. I am, however, saying that there is a completely reasonable, non-"doom and gloom" analysis of what happened with Google showing you these results.

Here is the article for those interested in becoming a little saddened, disheartened, or confused about what this even means

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I was wondering if perhaps these results were determined and differentiated by the previous searches, obviously they are two different sections of the same video but after searching sequestration I got the second result the same one which you are receiving. Now I am getting only this one,

Global debt hit an all-time high of $233 trillion (£169 trillion) in the third quarter of 2017, according to the Institute of International Finance (IIF). That's a $16 trillion increase on debt levels at the end of 2016 and more than three times the size of the global economy.4 days ago

This selection is more of a statement of the facts than implying the debt as collectively belonging to the world at large.

The video where this text is coming from is very misleading propaganda, and not factual.