3 Crises - Crypto Coin Chiefs Die As Central Bank Bots Ready Digital Currency
Proponents of Fed Now clear the land of competitors
Are the depopulationists being played, one game upon another?
Ukraine’s war is a front for other objectives, but which?
War is the ultimate panacea for pandemic — words that recoil.
Woke and hate speech laws are raised to blind the eyes of the populace.
Bitcoins and crypto entrepreneurs drop dead.
Central bankers lurk, blood-dripping, in the wings. Exaggeration? Read on.
Poland, Lithuania encouraged to look to lands lost to Ukraine.
“It’s time to bring back the Union,” writes Foreign Policy journal.
The decison, the allocation of resources, will be made by the Woke ESGs.
( 3,000 words, or about 14 minutes of your company. Housekeeping: the editor’s skunked — if the text contains errors please come back to the original source.)
Apr 10, 2023
Do the depops know that they are being played, as billionaires ally with governments to scalp farmers and push the population into penury?
Does Bill Gates — who surely pays people to post on Quora about his imaginary IQ when he finished neither high school nor college — have the security clearance to know the inside track of the decline of empire and the coming war with China?
Or is he a plaything, like the little ones on Epstein’s isle? JP Morgan Chase executives and others beyond prosecution.
Gates does seem to know a thing or two: his febrile, balefule tones warned Australians to be ready for the next pandemic, which will be worse than Covid.
But why is he not telling Congress? Why doesn’t Gates blow the whistle on those planning biowarfare? He could be the saviour!
Awaken to the ram’s horn: for it was only a dream; a night’s sheepless tussle in the Democratic version of My Pillow.
We in the West were raised to think that when we sneeze or clear our nose, the rest of the world catches a cold. That has become the inverted geopolitics of Covid.
Three little birds
Russia did not expect to face such a quagmire in Ukraine; bloody, yes, but it likely thought that Ukraine’s leadership would fracture; at the very least that Russia would take the lands of the Donbas and perhaps even install new viceroys as happened in Chechnya. The Kremlin would apply some of the lessons learned from the Commissar of Nationalities, Josef Stalin, and impose a workable co-existence on formerly restless ethnicities.
NATO cultivated the fanaticism of its Ukrainian trainees and imagined that by fanning the flames of ancient blood feuds — a hodgepodge paradoxically combining the symbols of the Galician Waffen SS and the Khazarian tamga — it would punch through the Russian defences.
Both plans ran into the mud, to some degree: into 15-foot deep, rich black earth of southern Russia and Ukraine, naturally rich in ammonia and phosphorous, and now, tragically, fertilized anew.
Interim project
Despite plans for Ukraine’s forces to make a counteroffensive, the discussion of Ukraine’s possible failure is barely hidden.
Foreign Policy journal carries the opinion piece: “It’s time to bring back the Polish-Lithuanian Union,” By Dalibor Rohac, a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute.
We’ve noticed that Polish media has mentioned absorbing Ukrainian land since the start of this conflict. It is hardly the “new plan” that FP claims. It would however solve the problem of the failed state, while creating a more powerful buffer between the European Union and Russia, while counter-balancing the Franco-German axis.
Big project
The larger goal is the globalist competition with China. This requires that the war party remains in control of Washington: thus, by any means necessary, never Trump.
War is not inevitable, but increasingly it seems it would serve as a distraction from economic woes, the impoverishment of the people and monetary constipation. Yet we witness a paradox: the people, who would benefit from war as distraction, are the architects of the same crisis.
The war party, and the interests it serves, from weapons manufacturers, to the controllers of resources, and the owners of the banking system, can hardly wait to rid themselves of welfare and pension claimants, yet that leaves China as the world’s soon-to-be dominant economy.
How do the owner-investors make the jump from the dollar system to another, while preserving their wealth and status?
Home front
Western think tankers focus on the rise of China, thumbing well-worn accounts of the Thucydides Trap. There is yet another bait that risks ensnaring the world powers in a confrontation from which they may not back down.
“The war in Ukraine reminds us what the EU is for,” British academic Timothy Garton Ash writes in The Guardian.
In previous articles he has argued that war with Ukraine delivered the long-desired unification of the West, and that polls show the U.S. and Europe have kindled a sense of purpose, at least against Russians.
Thierry Meyssan has noted the transformation of the European Common Market into a military structure and a reunion of the alumni of the World War II Axis. [1]
What probably caught his attention was Japan PM Kishida’s surprise visit to Ukraine on Mar 21 to meet president Volodymyr Zelensky. It was one day after Xi touched down in Moscow.
As CNN highlighted prominently, Japan is a member of the Quad, a military caucus that includes India, Australia and the U.S. “In the face of China’s growing assertiveness and global reach, Japan and the United States have moved closer in recent years, especially on regional security and intelligence cooperation.”
Japan is offering largesse, $5.5 billion in aid to Ukraine, announced in Feb, and Kishida proposes to invest $75 billion in the Indo-Pacific to counter China’s influence in South and Southeast Asia. The U.S. Ambassador to Tokyo is president Barack Obama’s former chief of staff, Rahm Emmanuel.
Meyssan points to the “Robert Schumann Forum on Security and Defence” held last month, which attracted ministerial-level representatives from southern Africa, the Sahel and north Africa; the Gulf and the Arab League; the Pacific and ASEAN, notably Japan, and of course NATO.
The European Union has armed itself with new powers of surveillance under the pretext of the Covid response, and the Rapid Response Units that cover everything from policy coordination to propaganda.
Means and motive
It is safer to avoid the question of motive. In this case, even if the primary motive is profit, the counter signals are sufficiently grave that they should sound an alarm in anyone who has taken an MBA module in business ethics or a schooling in the liberal arts or even a war studies academic who has taken a primer in the moral foundation of the just war.
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