Crisis Update: This Could Be The Last Election
Assemblies will be used to validate unpopular policies
Britain and France have failed to dislodge the globalists
Who now unveil plans to bypass traditional voters
To ‘shift power and how we take decisions'
Sunak and Macron called snap elections, gave baton to Left to continue project
‘Opposing’ players, each doing their part, in a show of consensus
Globalists install new teams to drive home the 'reset'
Politicians trained by corporations; promoted by state security
U.S. voters may face the same final dance in November
Demand due democratic process or lose it for good
‘It ain't what you do it's the way that you do it, And that's what gets results.’
See also:
Happy 'No Deference' Day - Down those 4th July hotdogs as the war horses charge (Jul 04, 2024)
See Just Following Orders: How Media Creates Conformity - Polarization leads people to side with authority (Jan 28, 2024)
(2,000 words or about 10 minutes of your company.)
Jul 8, 2024
Whether we vote red or blue we seem to get an outcome that aligns with one game plan.
In the EU voters rejected those who hold us hostage with future pandemics, open borders and wars. Yet the same gang remains at the helm.
Elections in Britain and France were an oddity. Citizens were so recently prisoners during Covid, yet they came together, we are told, to defend the prison regime, the torturers and warmongers, against the “far right" anti-globalists.
In France even The Guardian can't hide its puzzlement: "Surprise win for left-wing alliance keeps Le Pen’s far right from power."
Fire in the belly
The French Left seems to have fire in the belly compared to what happened in Britain, which evicted the Conservative Party — for more of the same.
The British elected a blatant globalist, Keir Starmer, who has been an MP for less than a decade, and takes his orders from two proponents of a new world order, Tony Blair and Gordon Brown.
Appearances count for a lot.
Starmer's bland company man image disguises a creature of the security state: the public prosecutor who purged the Labour party of life-long members.
His buttoned-down demeanour is closer to that of Le Pen's National Rally than the flamboyant, aggressive street smarts of the French Left.
That is how globalists hide: the wolf in sheep's clothing, symbol of the Fabians — the hand of liberal capitalism that washes the one of monopoly capitalism.
The heirs of the East India Company practice a form of neo-mercantilism in which it is no longer the nation that regulates commerce but the corporation that uses the state to its end.
This capture by public private partnership is the main issue; unheard in the election campaigns — unless you read Moneycircus so please subscribe.
Jean-Luc Mélenchon heads the largest party within the New Popular Front, La France Insoumise (or unbowed). Historically committed to labour rights and redistribution, he has softened plans to lower the retirement age and agreed to support Ukraine.
He allied with president Emmanuel Macron, a former Rothschild banker, the very essence of the money interest and the owner investors. We shall see if the internationalist Left is different to the globalists in its disdain for the nation state, borders and citizens.
The Great Reset, reset
Britain's Labour has a big majority and no effective opposition. It currently plans to:
abolish the House of Lords upper chamber
replace it with assemblies of diverse people and devolved regions
spend 2.5 per cent of GDP on military and strategy
spend billions on wind and solar
spend billions to double cancer scanners
simplify the process for trans people to legally change gender
That's the Covid response, the Green agenda and war! This, we said in the previous newsletter, is the universal, uniparty, UN agenda that you get regardless of who you vote for.
Good cop, bad cop
The timing of the votes in Britain and France give the game away. British prime minister Rishi Sunak and Macron both called snap elections, leading to a predictable disaster for their own parties — handing the baton to the Left to continue the project. Thereby disguising a unified plan between different players, each doing their part, while maintaining some patina of consensus.
It is the Great Reset, reset. You might even suspect it was planned this way! Labour brings a big majority and no effective opposition — but very revealing language.
It is not about new policies but the way in which unpopular policies will be legitimised.
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