Are we as a society being kept from discussing the big issues?

As I don't read papers or watch TV, the Today's News forum is my first stop for actual news.
I comment a lot on subjects which interest me.
As a heretical/ Gnostic/ esoteric Christian, I find lots to talk about on the Religion forum and the one about Hidden Knowledge.
I've usually got my five eggs on Useless Media as well.
I'm just getting into the People's Voice, some of the programs are struggling by trial and error, but hopefully it will all be worth while and wake some sleeping zombies up.
 
As I don't read papers or watch TV, the Today's News forum is my first stop for actual news.
I comment a lot on subjects which interest me.
As a heretical/ Gnostic/ esoteric Christian, I find lots to talk about on the Religion forum and the one about Hidden Knowledge.
I've usually got my five eggs on Useless Media as well.
I'm just getting into the People's Voice, some of the programs are struggling by trial and error, but hopefully it will all be worth while and wake some sleeping zombies up.

Great stuff!

Yeah i think the existence of the peoples voice will kind of force mainstream journalists to watch it because they will want to know the inside scoop

This will then shame them because they will want to be doing proper journalism and until now they have not really had a platform to do that from because they are constrained by their editors who are in turn told what to do by the newspapers proprietor who inevitably is super rich because it costs at least £20 million to set up a conventional newspaper and a lot more to buy one; anyone with that amount of wealth diversifies and inevitably ends up tied into the oligarchic business network

So i hope there will be a flow of information from mainstream journalists to the peoples voice even if done secretly in whistleblower fashion as an outlet for all the things mainstream journalists want to say but can't

I hope the peoples voice goes from strength to strength

also whenever there is a false flag attack they will be able to get their cameras there to hopefully catch any anomolous behaviours on film and to interview eyewitnesses before the authorities get to them and silence them
 
@Skarekrow

Its crazy the level of corruption isn't it? Its all just coming out now as well like something is purging the system

i think part of the reason for what you've just posted are that the united states was usurped by a corporation which has called itself the United States Corporation

Something similar has happed in the UK i think. I heard someone once say that the UK government is actually a corporation registered in Companies House and that the only reason it dissolves every 5 years is to avoid tax

Here's an article about the US Corporation

http://www.activistpost.com/2013/11/prepare-for-whats-coming-largest.html
The United States exists in two forms: The original united States that was in operation until 1860; a collection of sovereign Republics in the union. Under the original Constitution the States controlled the Federal Government; the Federal Government did not control the States and had limited authority.

The original united States of America has been usurped by a separate and different United States Corporation formed in 1871, which only controls the District of Columbia and it’s territories, and which is actually a corporation (the United States Corporation) that acts as our current government. The United States Corporation operates under Corporate/Commercial Law rather than Common/Private Law. In the original Constitution and Declaration of Independence, it refers to “these united States”. The word “united” was an adjective describing the noun States. That is why the lower case on united. When the United States Corporation was formed in 1871, the united was changed to United because the United States as a corporation was now a noun.

The original Constitution was never removed; it has simply been dormant since 1871. It is still intact to this day. This fact was made clear by Supreme Court Justice Marshall Harlan (Downes v. Bidwell, 182, U.S. 244 1901) by giving the following dissenting opinion: “Two national governments exist; one to be maintained under the Constitution, with all its restrictions; the other to be maintained by Congress outside and Independently of that Instrument.”

http://www.republicoftheunitedstates.org/what-is-the-republic/history/
 
That is just damn insanity!
I usually don’t promote websites on here or anywhere for that matter...but you can find some really great reporting and articles on the same website I have been pulling those previously posted articles from - http://www.alternet.org/
I can’t say I agree with all they say 100% of the time....sometimes they just enjoy blowing things out of proportion....I’m sure you are smart enough to see through that though.
The articles on things like the economy and the 1% are spot-on though!
 
That is just damn insanity!
I usually don’t promote websites on here or anywhere for that matter...but you can find some really great reporting and articles on the same website I have been pulling those previously posted articles from - http://www.alternet.org/
I can’t say I agree with all they say 100% of the time....sometimes they just enjoy blowing things out of proportion....I’m sure you are smart enough to see through that though.
The articles on things like the economy and the 1% are spot-on though!

Great thanks!

Yeah Washington DC is its own political enclave within the wider united states. It has its own legal status.

District of Columbia.....this has something to do with a certain god but its escaped my mind at the moment. Columbia is important to the puppetmasters. they also have it in their film intros:

Columbia-Pictures-Movie-Studio-logo-wallpaper.webp

Notice the cloud behind columbia forming a pyramid? Columbias torch then forms the eye at the top of the pyramid

Paramount used to hide the subconscious image of the pyramid in the form of Denali:

read-the-memo-just-sent-to-110-employees-fired-at-paramount.webp

Within the UK capital London there is another enclave with its own legal status called 'The City of London' which is run by the city of london Corporation which has its own police force. Its also known as 'the square mile' and it is home to the banking district.

The banking district of london is a tax haven and many corporations operate through it. Many of the recent banking scandals eg the london whale have all run through the city of london

It is protected from the police. The UK police cannot investigate fraud in the city of london without permission from the Secretary of State who always denies permission

I'll come back to the city of london but first onto the third enclave: the vatican city

The vatican city is its own legal enclave with its own authorities and police force. It also has its own bank which is also used by corporations and the mafia to gain tax breaks

In washington DC there was a sex scandal involving abuse against minors and also rent boys being shown aroud the whitehouse at midnight. this story even made it into the mainstream media

The vatican has also been embroiled in child sex abuse scandals and the last pope resigned because of his involvement in child abuse

The city of london has ties to the british isle of jersey which is just off the northern coast of france. This island is also used as a tax haven by the corporations. This island has been rocked recently by sex abuse allegations with a particular focus on a childrens home called Haute de la garenne where bones were found by the policeman sent to investigate. The local authorities there who also have their own police blocked his investigation at every turn and eventually he was taken off the case by the british government who are terrified that the sex abuse will be traced right back up the chain to the british government and royal family

So what we have is 3 enclaves across the NATO countries that are not accountable to the countries they are in and who operate above the law

Washington DC is the administrative centre of the parallel 'shadow' government (ie the secret society network/oligarchs of which the central bankers are a part, but often referred to as ''the new world order'') and also is home to the HQ's of all the intelligence agencies (known as the 'alphabet agencies' eg FBI, NSA, CIA), London is the banking centre of the NWO and the Vatican is the religious centre of the NWO

What we have seen with the banking crisis is NO one being arrested. What we see with child abuse scandals is them being swept under the carpet. We also find out about new corruption in the upper tier of our society ALL THE TIME

We also find more and more connections between this corporate cabal and drug running, arms dealing and oil

So what we essentially have at the top of our society is a psychopathic criminal class running a global mafia ring which involves people trafficking, murder, extortion, terrorism and ritualistic child sex abuse...black magick....or to put it another way: satanic
 
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@muir (and whomever else...lol)
Top 10 greediest people in America!


Butchers, bakers, and candlestick makers. You won’t find any of them in this latest annual list of America’s most avaricious. You will find wheelers and dealers and even a candy store heiress.
The headlines haven’t been particularly kind to America’s most relentlessly greedy over the past year. In just the last month alone, the world’s two most visible religious leaders — Pope Francis and the Dalai Lama — have once again dramatically denounced our global concentration of income and wealth. And the world’s most powerful political leader, Barack Obama, has chimed in, too.
The impact on America’s super rich — and super-rich wannabees? Not much. They haven’t even deigned to slow their grabbing.
At Too Much, the Institute for Policy Studies weekly on excess and inequality, we’ve been taking names. Lots of them. The greediest of them all? We think we can make a good case for the ten below. We hope you’ll find some useful insights from our choices — and maybe even some fresh new incentive to help make our world a more equal place.
10. Angela Spaccia: Pint-Sized Pilfering
We start this year’s top ten with garden-variety greed, the sort that inevitably grows in the shadows of escalating grand fortunes. In that shade, people in positions of modest power and authority regularly — and clumsily — try to emulate the avaricious high and mighty they see all around them.
In Bell, a small Los Angeles County working class community, that modest power and authority once belonged to Angela Spaccia. As Bell’s assistant city manager for a seven-year span that ended in 2010, Spaccia helped stuff hundreds of thousands of dollars into the pockets of the city’s top officials, including herself. Spaccia in one year alone took in $564,000.
Prosecutors eventually caught up with Spaccia and her pals. Her boss, the Bell city manager, cut a plea deal in October to 69 corruption charges. He pulled in $1.18 million in his most lucrative year. Spaccia chose to go to trial instead, claiming she did nothing illegal.
“Everyone’s greedy,” her defense attorney argued in November. “There’s no crime in taking too much money.”
Jurors disagreed. Last week, they found Spaccia guilty on multiple counts of criminal behavior, including one misappropriation of public funds designed to pump $15.5 million in pension checks to Spaccia and her boss.
9. Dylan Lauren: Sweet Squeezer
They don’t come more suave and sophisticated than Dylan Lauren, the only child of billionaire designer Ralph Lauren. Or more ambitious either.
Not for Dylan the empty heiress life. Over a decade ago, she opened up her own business, a luxury candy emporium on Manhattan’s Upper East Side where moldings atop display cabinets mimic dripping chocolate and a cocktail bar offers Gummy Bear martinis.
“Dylan’s Candy Bar” would go on to become wildly successful, expanding into Miami Beach, Los Angeles, and the Hamptons, all the prime watering holes for America’s super rich.
Things today could hardly be peachier for the young Lauren. She has by her side a totally smitten hedge fund manager husband. Maybe even better, the 39-year-old has realized the life’s dream she’s had ever since she first saw Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory at the ripe old age of six.
“I just wanted,” as Dylan gushed recently, “to live in a world full of candy.”
Dylan’s employees, meanwhile, would be satisfied with a world where they could just make ends meet. Workers at her Manhattan flagship store have been protesting their meager $8.50 hourly compensation and management policies that make sure employees never work enough hours to qualify for overtime pay.
The New York workers are seeking full-time weekly set schedules and a hourly wage at $13.99, the price of a Dylan’s Candy Bar pound of candy.
Earlier this month, in a pouring rain, the workers demonstrated to make their case, carrying lollipops that read, “Dylan, we’re not suckers.” Their chant: “Dylan, Dylan, Candy Queen, you’re filthy rich, so share your green!”
8. Michael Duke: Low Wages All the Time
This may well be Walmart CEO Michel Duke’s last hurrah in America’s most greedy. He’ll be stepping down as CEO early in 2014, after an embarrassing final year at Walmart’s summit.
The crowning embarrassment? At the company’s 2013 annual meeting, a glitzy affair that management packs with “loyal” employees, one Walmart worker actually won cheers when she denounced Duke’s $20.7 million 2012 paycheck.
Researchers have calculated that Duke is essentially making $6,898 an hour, 779 times the $8.86 average Walmart wage.
In the nation’s capital this fall, city council members tried to up that worker average. They passed a bill that would have required Walmart stores in D.C. to pay at least $12.50 an hour. Duke reacted swiftly. He had his company threaten to pull up stakes if the bill became law.
Washington’s mayor promptly panicked and vetoed the measure.
Duke took a PR pounding for that threat and still another pounding when the Demos think tank in New York revealed that the $7.6 billion Duke had Walmart spend last year buying back company shares, if redirected to worker compensation, could have raised Walmart’s lowest wages by $5.83 an hour — and ensured all the company’s workers at least $25,000 for full-time work.
Poor Michael Duke won’t have to face any more pounding come his retirement this February. He won’t face any financial worries either. Duke is sitting on $113.2 million in retirement assets, thanks to a tax loophole that lets corporate execs annually set aside unlimited sums, tax-free, into their retirement accounts.
Duke’s retirement stash, notes the Institute for Policy Studies, “could yield him a monthly retirement check of $669,169.” The average Walmart worker 401(k), by contrast, will generate a monthly retirement check of $89.
7. Art Pope: A Backroom Bully Goes Public
In North Carolina these days, few people think Francis first when they hear “Pope.” A different Pope has been dominating headlines here, an exceedingly deep pocket who owes his fortune to a discount store chain his daddy built.
In the run-up to the 2012 elections, this Art Pope invested over $40 million of his personal wealth to gerrymander how North Carolinians cast their votes.
The gerrymandering worked. This year opened with the state sporting — for the first time ever — a conservative GOP governor, Supreme Court majority, and legislature all at the same time. The state budget director? Pope himself.
Pope’s budget priorities would soon start wreaking havoc with the lives of North Carolina’s most vulnerable. In a state with America’s fifth-highest jobless rate, lawmakers indebted to Pope and his millions slashed top weekly jobless benefits and denied 170,000 long-term jobless special federal aid.
North Carolina’s conservatives didn’t stop there. They put in place, notes one Duke University analyst, an agenda that cuts education and social programs, shifts the tax burden “toward the less affluent,” and restricts voting rights.
North Carolinians have responded to this rich people-friendly legislative onslaught with spirited demonstrations. The latest protest: an “ educational picket campaign” outside the discount stores the Pope family owns.
Art Pope, notes state NAACP president William Barber, has brought a “cynical and sinister form of wealth and power manipulation” to North Carolina.
Pope has put his stores “deliberately and publicly in communities of low wealth,” exploited people in these communities with low wages, and then employed his resulting wealth “to push and promote policies,” sums up Reverend Barber, that undercut the quality of average people’s lives.
6. Tim Cook: Lost Even with a Compass
The $100 million club, researchers from the corporate watchdog GMI Ratings revealed this past October, has become a bit less exclusive. Last year, for the first time, America’s ten highest-paid CEOs all realized over $100 million in compensation. High on that list, at $143.8 million: Apple CEO Tim Cook.
Cook’s good fortune came as no surprise to computer industry observers. Apple retail stores,notes Forbes, “take in more money per square foot than any other United States retailer.”
Yet Apple store employees only average $25,000, and Apple can’t seem to afford to compensate its 42,000 retail workers for the time they spend every day waiting to get searched — for stolen goods — before they can leave the store premises. Two former Apple employees have filed a class-action lawsuit to recoup those unpaid wages, estimated at about $1,500 per year.
But give Apple credit. The company remains an equal-opportunity exploiter. The company mistreats workers both at home and abroad. Workers at Apple’s offshore suppliers continue to work in factories that, says the Economic Policy Institute, “reflect some of the worst practices of the industrial era.”
Apple, details EPI analyst Isaac Shapiro, “has not met commitments to ensure that workers in its supply chain receive retroactive compensation for working unpaid overtime” or “ensured promised wage increases.”
Apple CEO Cook’s response to critiques like this?
“Apple,” he told reporters before U.S. Senate testimony this past spring, “has a very strong moral compass.”
5. Ron Packard: The ABCs of Avarice
Some of us look at school buildings and see students learning. Ron Packard looks at schools and sees himself becoming fabulously richer — if he could only empty the buildings.
Packard runs K12 Inc., a for-profit company that specializes in “virtual” education. K12 Inc. operates online “schools” that supply lessons to kids sitting in front of computers, a business endeavor that Packard pronounces a noble step toward “educational liberty.”
“Kids have been shackled to their brick-and-mortar school down the block for too long,” he has declared.
An army of corporate lobbyists has been spreading this message over the past five years, backed by the right-wing American Legislative Exchange Council, and more than three dozen states have now enacted legislation that lets companies like K12 Inc. grab students — and tax dollars.
K12 Inc. currently has nearly 130,000 students in its “virtual learning” empire, with only one problem. Compared to their traditional school peers, K12 Inc. students are not doing much learning. Critics are, understandably, blasting the K12 Inc. business model as a giant scam.
In that model, heavy K12 Inc. advertising on kid-centric media like Nickelodeon gets kids enrolled for the company’s offerings. State government education officials, after their annual student “head count,” then pay K12 Inc. for each kid signed up. But after the head count, many of the “virtual” students drop out. K12 Inc. doesn’t mind. The company gets to keep the money.
Lots of it, enough to reward Packard over $19 million in personal compensation the last five years. Not bad, notes the Center for Media and Democracy, for a former Goldman Sachs executive “who started K12 Inc. with a $10 million investment from convicted junk-bond king Michael Milken.”
4. Lloyd Blankfein: An Appetite for Aluminum
Five years ago, Wall Street’s Goldman Sachs tottered near disaster, as did every other major U.S. bank.
America’s taxpayers came to the rescue. Goldman CEO Lloyd Blankfein soon had at his disposal $814 billion in near zero interest loans from the Federal Reserve and $10 billion from the Treasury Department.
Blankfein has made the most of this generous support. Forbes calculates his total compensation for the last five years at $159.5 million. Blankfein currently holds over a quarter-billion dollars worth of Goldman shares in his personal portfolio.
How have Blankfein and Goldman Sachs done so nicely the past five years? We learned a good bit about that in 2013. The juiciest revelations came over the summer when the New York Times exposed a commodity speculation scheme that Goldman “ intentionally created” to drive up the global price of aluminum.
This scheming, the Times estimates, has cost consumers $5 billion since 2010.
Blankfein has shared, at tax time, precious little of the profits from Goldman’s speculative ventures, thanks in large part to Goldman’s dozens of offshore tax havens. In 2010, these tax havens cut Goldman’s tax bill by $3.32 billion.
Blankfein is putting his share of those tax savings to something less than productive social use. News reports have him down as an advance buyer in the new $1 billion Faena Miami Beach, an 18-story oceanfront luxury tower set to open next year. The tower’s 47 residences are going for up to $50 million each.
3. Jim McNerney: Middle Class Manslaughter
The U.S. manufacturing giant Boeing, analyst Harold Meyerson observed last week, has only one global rival in the large-scale passenger-plane market, the European conglomerate Airbus.
Workers at these two aerospace giants turn out to make about the same compensation. But executives at Boeing make more.
Question: Given these realities, what should Boeing do to compete more effectively? The answer from Boeing CEO Jim McNerney: Cut Boeing worker wages, benefits, and pensions!
Earlier this fall, McNerney gave his Seattle area workers an ultimatum: Either accept a contract “extension” that would leave them paying more for health care and getting less in retirement — and force new hires to work 10 extra years at substandard wages — or Boeing would go elsewhere to manufacture its new 777x passenger jetliner.
Boeing gave Washington State’s political leaders a similar ultimatum: Either fork over new subsidies and tax breaks or see your state lose jobs by the thousands. Washington lawmakers caved almost instantly. They voted Boeing the largest subsidy deal in U.S. history, over half a billion annually for the next 16 years, over double the state’s annual funding for the University of Washington.
Boeing’s workers didn’t cave. They rejected the Boeing ultimatum, and McNerney, who pulled in $27.5 million in take-home last year after $23 million the year before, is now parsing subsidy offers from half a dozen other states.
How does this story end? Maybe with the “ Walmartization of aerospace.”
“This,” as Seattle author Timothy Egan puts it, “is how the middle class dies.”
2. David Novak: Fast-Food Glutton
At first glance, corporate CEO David Novak doesn’t need a subsidy from anybody. The fast-food empire Novak oversees, Yum! Brands, amassed $1.59 billion in profits last year.
And Yum — think Pizza Hut, Taco Bell, and KFC — is doing pretty well by Novak, too. He pocketed $94 million worth of “performance pay,” notes an Institute for Policy Studies analysis, in just 2011 and 2012 alone.
But Novak and Yum are collecting subsidies anyway — and plenty of them. One comes directly from the U.S. tax code. Current tax law lets corporations deduct executive “performance” pay off their taxable income. This sweet subsidy saved Yum $33 million the last two years on Novak’s ample compensation.
Average Americans are actually subsidizing Novak and Yum at much higher levels than this single tax break suggests. In fact, taxpayers are subsidizing Yum’s entire fast-food business.
Workers at fast food giants like Yum simply don’t make enough to make ends meet for their families. So how do these workers get by? They depend on taxpayer-financed social safety net programs, from food stamps to Medicaid.
Overall, researchers noted in 2013, American taxpayers “are spending nearly $7 billion a year to supplement the wages of fast-food workers.”
And how are fast-food executives like David Novak spending the profits this generous taxpayer support makes possible? They’re having their companies, for starters, buy back shares of company stock off the open market, a strategy designed solely to bump up their share prices.
Higher share prices, in the meantime, produce higher “performance pay” awards for execs like Novak.
If Novak had plowed the vast millions that Yum spent last year on share buybacks into worker pay, estimate researchers from Demos, worker wages at Pizza Hut, Taco Bell, and KFC would have jumped by as much as $3 per hour.
1. Larry Ellison: An Awesome Arrogance
Drum roll, please. Our 2013 greediest of them all: Larry Ellison, the longtime chief exec at business software kingpin Oracle.
Ellison currently owns a quarter of Oracle, a chunk that makes the 69-year-old the ninth richest individual in the world. His total net worth sat last week at $38.6 billion.
Enough? Not for Ellison. Last year, the software kingpin had Oracle award him $96.2 million in compensation. Unhappy shareholders considered those millions a tad excessive. In a nonbinding 2012 say-on-pay vote, an Oracle shareholder majority turned thumbs-down on Ellison’s pay package.
Ellison, of course, gave none of that $96.2 million back. This year, he had Oracle hand him another $76.9 million. Unhappy shareholders again expressed their displeasure, making Oraclejust the 12th company in U.S. corporate history to have its shareholders go on record against their CEO’s pay in consecutive years.
No frustrated shareholder better try getting any of Ellison’s latest paycheck back. Oracle spends $1.5 million a year on security personnel to protect him. And why not? Ellison, as Oracle general counsel Dorian Daley gushes, rates as Oracle’s “most critical strategic visionary.”
Ellison pays dearly to surround himself with such fawning adulation. His two top executive underlings collected $43.6 million each in compensation in Oracle’s fiscal 2013.
Ellison’s billions, to be sure, buy him more than office sycophants. This past year Ellison hosted global yachting’s premiere race, the America’s Cup, in San Francisco Bay. Each race’s host sets the race’s rules. Ellison’s rules limited the field to ultra-expensive — and ultra-dangerous — catamarans.
One sailor died in training runs for the race.
Whose yacht eventually won? Guess.
 
LMAO!!
[video]http://www.thedailyshow.com/watch/tue-december-17-2013/the-best-and-the-rightest[/video]
 
Chileans have rejected Reaganomics, and it’s time we followed their lead. Back in the early 1970s, Chile was one of the most progressive countries in South America.
Its democratically elected socialist president, Salvador Allende, nationalized big businesses and gave every Chilean access to free healthcare and higher education. GDP went up and income inequality went down, and for the first time ever, working-class Chileans had a chance to live out their version of the American dream.
But not everyone was happy with President Allende’s Chilean New Deal. Behind his back, the United States and the country’s corporate and military elite were conspiring to sabotage his reforms and destroy the economy. Although Allende’s policies were successful, Chile still needed foreign loans to survive, so the Nixon administration got the International Monetary Fund to suspend all aid. This decimated the economy and stunted the progress Allende had made over his first few years in office.
The Chilean elite’s sabotage campaign turned into outright treason on Sept. 11, 1973 when, with the help of the CIA, General Augusto Pinochet overthrew Allende’s government and ushered in 17 years of military rule. Pinochet’s dictatorship was one of the most brutal in Latin American history. Dissidents were jailed, tortured and executed. People were thrown out of helicopters into the ocean. Others were taken to the national soccer stadium in Santiago where they were shot at point blank range by firing squads.
The memories of Pinochet’s brutality are so raw that to this day many Chileans refuse to attend soccer matches at the national stadium, believing that to do so dishonors the dead.
Pinochet’s cruelty to his opponents was matched only by his equally cruel devotion to austerity-style economics. Soon after he took power, the general invited Milton Friedman’s Chicago Boys to “reform” Chile’s economy. They privatized industries and slashed government spending. Inflation reached as high as 341 percent, GDP decreased by 15 percent and Chile’s trade deficit ballooned to a whopping $280 million. Unemployment jumped to 10 percent, and in some parts of the country climbed as high as 22 percent.
Of course, that didn’t really matter to the Chicago Boy, because as Chilean economist Orlano Letelier noted, “They [had] succeeded… in their broader purpose: to secure the economic and political power of a small dominant class by effecting a massive transfer of wealth from the lower and middle classes to a select group of monopolists and financial speculators.”
Like Reagan in the United States, Pinochet gutted progressive reforms and ushered in a new era of dominance by the super-rich and the corporate elite.
Pinochet’s military government eventually fell in 1990 and democracy was restored, but the legacy of his time in power is still felt today. Inequality is still high and education is too expensive for many Chileans to afford. Not surprisingly, the country’s outgoing right-wing president, Sebastian Pinera, did little to change this. That’s why on Sunday, Chileans elected socialist Michele Bachelet as president. Like Allende before her, Bachelet promises free higher education and wants to raise taxes on the rich.
Coming on the heels of Chile’s first right-wing president since Pinochet, Bachelet’s election is a significant one. Chileans have, once and for all, it appears, said goodbye to the legacy of Pinochet and the policies of the Chicago Boys. To put it bluntly, they’ve rejected Reaganomics. It’s about time we did the same.
 
[video=youtube_share;pFYb4gKEFl4]http://youtu.be/pFYb4gKEFl4[/video]
 
The CIA was involved in the 'dissapearing' of any opponents to the fascist Chilean government and the US government under reagan provided support

They murdered 60,000 people in Operation Condor: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Condor
 
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Media dissinformation:

[video=youtube;7EkeT0XvlvE]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7EkeT0XvlvE#t=147[/video]
 
I'm not sure.

I mean, yes, obviously. But so long as a person believes that these topics are beyond their comprehension, they will be, and decisions regarding these topics will be made without consulting them. Their ego will be stroked by allowing them to think that they have played some small part in it when, really, they have taken full responsibility with very little gain.

A 'big' issue is relative to your awareness but there is some element of society that knows better than to make 'small' issues by almost anyones' standards the staple diet of the population doing exactly that. It is not that these smaller issues are valueless, but our society places far too much emphasis on them and they do make it more difficult (and sometimes impossible) to comprehend the 'bigger' issues. You cannot serve God and Mammon etc.
 
@Cornerstone

The fed is now tapering

This means interest rates will rise and the economic downturn i have been predicting here for a long time now is now going to go ahead full steam

On one hand this is terrible as the economy will struggle and people will suffer but on the other hand this is a shake up. Its like when the crisis happened in 2008 suddenly everyone became an amateur economist!

As the economy bombs more people will begin to ask questions. People will abandon the fluff and they will start engaging with the big issues
 
[video=youtube;0IGJk4EHRJs]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0IGJk4EHRJs[/video]

Yet, this can be resolved w/o ritual bloodletting.
 
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Another general has been fired by the US government!

This one is also in charge of nuclear missiles. Why are all the generals in charge of nuclear missiles being fired? Who are they replacing them with?

Here's a story in todays newspaper about the latest firing

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/w...-button--and-a-foot-in-his-mouth-9018886.html

here's a clip about other officers being fired:

[video=youtube;GodOiBp1mLo]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GodOiBp1mLo[/video]

This is a massive story! I hope this is getting air time in the US and that the US public know that the people who look after their nucelar weapons are being replaced!!!
 
[video=youtube;0IGJk4EHRJs]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0IGJk4EHRJs[/video]

Yet, this can be resolved w/o ritual bloodletting.

He says they are powered electro magnetically. I think there is a lot going on in the elctro magnetic realm that we are not consciously aware of
 
Another general has been fired by the US government!

This one is also in charge of nuclear missiles. Why are all the generals in charge of nuclear missiles being fired? Who are they replacing them with?

Here's a story in todays newspaper about the latest firing

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/w...-button--and-a-foot-in-his-mouth-9018886.html

here's a clip about other officers being fired:

[video=youtube;GodOiBp1mLo]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GodOiBp1mLo[/video]

This is a massive story! I hope this is getting air time in the US and that the US public know that the people who look after their nucelar weapons are being replaced!!!

I think that we're seeing a lot of fallout with the tensions between the shadow gov., the cartels that be, and the rest. After Eisenhower, the thing (that got them all together) got buried in secrecy with security clearances above what the President can see (how in the world is that okay?). IIRC, Clinton was out of the loop with HW's CIA (surprise, surprise). Many inside the cartels were misled themselves. I think JFK was the last to have any sort of idea as to what was going on with MJ-12 or whatever you want to call them. It's no secret that things started going to hell after him.
Some congressmen/senators have been announcing that they're not running for re-election too. Not sure how or if that fits in.

There's just a ridiculous amount of evidence out there from pilots, air traffic control, military, Boeing/Lockheed/gov scientists... The ridicule mechanism of disinfo has been well honed since Bluebook... 'Free' energy has probably been out there for decades.

Saucers were made by Nazis toward the end of the war, of course they weren't the ones doing 90 degree turns while going 2.5k mph. Some think that the Nazis were the first to come in contact with ETs and to start reverse-engineering alien tech (and then there's Operation Paperclip).
 
He says they are powered electro magnetically. I think there is a lot going on in the elctro magnetic realm that we are not consciously aware of

I wouldn't be too surprised at this point, the Steorn guy has gotten the usual death threats and treatment. It looks like more than one type of free energy has been suppressed.

Still, I think it's really important to move forward from all of this peaceably. I'm not opposed to sending them off to Mars or Io though.
 
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I posit that we are not being kept from important discussion because all I have read and commented on FB about the past few days is the importance of a hillbilly Christian on t.v. who likes vaginas more than mens anuses. This is what technology has brought us too, and to think it all started with that biracial couple Lucy and Ricky! SYCK!
 
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