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World Finance Watch
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<blockquote data-quote="Judge Bean" data-source="post: 24571" data-attributes="member: 42"><p><strong>Re: World Finance Watch</strong></p><p></p><p>My guess is that Bush understands even less of this "technical" material than I do. His (and Cheney's-- Cheney understands more than Bush but less than Cary about all of it) mode of operation is to find just the right "technical stuff" he needs, imbedded in the text like reporters in Iraq, and skew all of the rest to justify what he wants to do. He will make the material say what he wants it to, and what he wants it to say is that the economy exists for the use and enjoyment of the global corporate states.</p><p></p><p>If any of you remember the Carter administration, there was a lot of anti-Arab sentiment among those waiting in long lines at the Texaco. That popular opinion about how the Arabs were exploiting us, and about how the government was letting them do it somehow, was one of the things that forced Carter out, especially when it was capped off by the symbolic event of the hostages.</p><p> </p><p>What really goes on in Washington is that such events are manipulated to gain a political result, which, beginning with Reagan, becomes a corporate political result. Reagan and Thatcher together are probably responsible for creating this new global sovereignty, and surrendering national identity and power to the international cartels. They allowed public opinion to form that identified all of the evil cartels as Arab, even while doing strong business with the likes of Saudi Arabia. </p><p> </p><p>They still want us to believe that the price of oil is set strictly by foreignors. It is not. Nor is it set strictly by the forces of supply and demand. The globalists set supply, demand, and price, and these factors can be manipulated for local political purposes. They are able to write off entire countries, such as Iran and Iraq, knowing that the overwhelming economic forces they have set up in the world will eventually bring them back to the fold.</p><p> </p><p>The war in Iraq is waged to bring Iraq back into the global system. The U.S., led by brutes, determined that no niceties were required to accomplish this. The Bush policy is to just march in and grab what you want: it ought to be compared to the "Indian policy" of the 1800s. Those people don't know what they've got, it's just lying there going to waste, their silly tinpot leaders are just in the way. When we took this policy to Latin America, it worked OK there, too, for the most part.</p><p> </p><p>How much power is gained for the globalist internationalist sovereign corporations depends upon how well public opinion can be molded by manipulation of the price per gallon. You might notice that in the U.S. the price goes up in time to make it seem that the proper candidate has lowered it in time for the election; that it rises after the election again, and is due to come down when the government needs the support of the people.</p><p> </p><p>You can correlate the "public approval" of the president to the price of gas, and the president will call the polls inconclusive and changeable when he doesn't need concrete approval with a pending election. Right now, the gas is through the roof and Bush's approval is through the floor. When the 2006 elections draw near, we will be paying $1.65 a gallon again.</p><p> </p><p>Cary your stuff is fabulous, and I don't want to detract from it with a bunch of politics. I do want to bring up the idea of expoitation of public opinion at the gas pump. Also, if the "technical" stuff doesn't support what Bush wants to do, he will call it "bad science," or, I suppose, "bad economics."</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Judge Bean, post: 24571, member: 42"] [b]Re: World Finance Watch[/b] My guess is that Bush understands even less of this "technical" material than I do. His (and Cheney's-- Cheney understands more than Bush but less than Cary about all of it) mode of operation is to find just the right "technical stuff" he needs, imbedded in the text like reporters in Iraq, and skew all of the rest to justify what he wants to do. He will make the material say what he wants it to, and what he wants it to say is that the economy exists for the use and enjoyment of the global corporate states. If any of you remember the Carter administration, there was a lot of anti-Arab sentiment among those waiting in long lines at the Texaco. That popular opinion about how the Arabs were exploiting us, and about how the government was letting them do it somehow, was one of the things that forced Carter out, especially when it was capped off by the symbolic event of the hostages. What really goes on in Washington is that such events are manipulated to gain a political result, which, beginning with Reagan, becomes a corporate political result. Reagan and Thatcher together are probably responsible for creating this new global sovereignty, and surrendering national identity and power to the international cartels. They allowed public opinion to form that identified all of the evil cartels as Arab, even while doing strong business with the likes of Saudi Arabia. They still want us to believe that the price of oil is set strictly by foreignors. It is not. Nor is it set strictly by the forces of supply and demand. The globalists set supply, demand, and price, and these factors can be manipulated for local political purposes. They are able to write off entire countries, such as Iran and Iraq, knowing that the overwhelming economic forces they have set up in the world will eventually bring them back to the fold. The war in Iraq is waged to bring Iraq back into the global system. The U.S., led by brutes, determined that no niceties were required to accomplish this. The Bush policy is to just march in and grab what you want: it ought to be compared to the "Indian policy" of the 1800s. Those people don't know what they've got, it's just lying there going to waste, their silly tinpot leaders are just in the way. When we took this policy to Latin America, it worked OK there, too, for the most part. How much power is gained for the globalist internationalist sovereign corporations depends upon how well public opinion can be molded by manipulation of the price per gallon. You might notice that in the U.S. the price goes up in time to make it seem that the proper candidate has lowered it in time for the election; that it rises after the election again, and is due to come down when the government needs the support of the people. You can correlate the "public approval" of the president to the price of gas, and the president will call the polls inconclusive and changeable when he doesn't need concrete approval with a pending election. Right now, the gas is through the roof and Bush's approval is through the floor. When the 2006 elections draw near, we will be paying $1.65 a gallon again. Cary your stuff is fabulous, and I don't want to detract from it with a bunch of politics. I do want to bring up the idea of expoitation of public opinion at the gas pump. Also, if the "technical" stuff doesn't support what Bush wants to do, he will call it "bad science," or, I suppose, "bad economics." [/QUOTE]
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