Fire and Iceland
Despite all the media cacophony about how we Americans need to be "team players" in a global world, the media is eerily silent (for the most part) about the same pattern of economic crises striking not just the U.S., but the world. The only medium I have come across with any clarity about this is Alex Jones' website. Other countries are seeing financial crises, as well, and these crises are not necessarily because of the United States' influence on the global market. When you look at it, it looks strikingly like a very well-planned agenda of divide and conquer.
Iceland, the UK, and other countries have seen their own home mortgage crises, their own devaluing of their currency, their own financial collapses, their own bailouts, and now their own people protesting government looting of the people:
Last Saturday, protesters angry over the 50 percent devaluation of the Krona and the impending third worldization of their small country clashed with police. “Police clashed with hundreds of protesters outside a police building Saturday, and several demonstrators were sent to the hospital with injuries,” reported the Associated Press. “Police used pepper spray after protesters tried to break down a door of the police building in the Icelandic capital. The demonstrators demanded that a fellow protester being held by police since Friday be allowed to go home.”
According to the Associated Press, the “demonstrators blame the government for having failed to adequately oversee the banking industry.” In fact, many Icelanders blame the government not for overseeing the banking industry but working in a cahoots with it to loot the country. Iceland’s politicos are no different than their counterparts in Europe and the United States: they are sock puppets for the global elite who are determined to crash the global economy country by country and buy up goodies for pennies on the dollar.
I have strongly believed that our "bailouts" serve no one but the Federal Reserve Bank, with its system that has a chokehold on the people of the United States. Other countries have a similar banking system; and it is rarely reported that the national banks are to some degree controlled by the same group of men who oversee the World Bank system (the "international bankers").
Regarding my statement that the Federal Reserve Bank has a chokehold on the people of the United States, by this I mean that our government is looting us, the taxpayers, to support the continuation of a burdensome economic system of perpetual debt (the Keynesian economic theory that debt equals wealth) established by the Federal Reserve Bank. This system has made American citizens slaves to said system; our federal and local governments owe so much, and this, coupled with the personal consumer debt, makes us slaves to pay off debts that will never be paid off (due precisely to Federal Reserve Bank policy). Think: what if the government did not bail out anyone, and allowed the entire system to come crashing down? Certainly our economy would suffer, but it would be short-term, like a tooth extraction-- we should suffer now to eliminate the festering abcess by eliminating the rotten tooth. Our entire economy is just a house of cards. Better to suffer a little severe pain now and get it over with, than to prolong the teeth-gnashing agony until the mortal collapse.
Americans are slaves into the existing system (and so are citizens of other countries with these same policies). Our entire system from the top down (federal government, states, counties, towns, communitites, families, and individuals) are in debt. There are a few families here and there, a few towns here and there that are not in debt, but when the rubber meets the road, your debtlessness or my debtlessness won't matter-- there's so much of it among so many tiers that when the entire system goes swirling down the toilet, it will suck everything with it. There's no way out of this system, because the philosophy behind it is that debt equals wealth. You can run an economy for only so long under that premise, because sooner or later, everyone will be in debt to everyone else. If there is no secure monetary standard, from whence does our system get its value? It will eventually collapse and it will be a very painful collapse-- and the longer we continue the system, the more painful it will be when it does collapse.
We really are at the mercy of the Federal Reserve, and have been for almost a century. All the taxes we pay go straight to the Federal Reserve, to pay for the interest that our government has incurred from its debt; our government gave control of our currency to the Federal Reserve, and the Federal Reserve charges us interest for the honor of allowing the Federal Reserve to print and use our own "money." It's a crackpot scheme. And yet, collapse or no collapse, the Federal Reserve reaps the profits and the power because they created the system and they own the debts (and the debtors). It is in their vested interest to encourage collapse and chaos, so that the U.S. joins all the nations of the world to be forced to seek stability from the World Bank (which, when chaos hits, will determine the value for a new monetary standard). And in such a case, what will nations have to offer the World Bank for the stability? Do you think the World Bank is going to bail out the nations, out of the goodness of their hearts? What resources do we have to barter, or to rely upon should we resist? What sovereignty will we have left to lean on it if we change our mind?
So, what's happening in Iceland now? It's a microcosm of what is to come. The International Monetary Fund is coming in to bailout the bailouts. Of course, they won't do it for free. They want something-- they want to own the economy and therefore the resources of Iceland, which means that the citizens of Iceland become perpetual slaves to the international bankers. Icelandic slave labor is the bartering chip that the government offers, to pay off the debts that will never get paid off, ever. The IMF will see to it, because it is the IMF that benefits from the perpetual debt. And it is uncanny that these collapses are coinciding with the shift in economic factors such as manufacturing. The United States, for example, has all but shifted its entire manufacturing industry to Asia. So when our economy comes crashing down, we will have no infrastructure to support us; we will be at the mercy of the world bankers who have gobbled up the resources of the nations. It's a coup d etat, but on a much larger scale. For a loaf of bread and a tank of gas, we'll toss out our Constitution and our inalienable rights endowed by our Creator. Some people (even people I know) are proposing we exchange our sovereignty and natural rights for immediate material comforts. It all goes back to the philosophy, the worldview, if you wish, of the two main groups: those who realize God through His Son has given us inalienable rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness; and those who believe there is nothing beyond impersonal matter and energy, and therefore humans must live for the moment.
It is both marvelous and frightening to watch as this unfolds. Marvelous because the schemers are working so quickly and so arrogantly right under our noses, almost ready to sew everything up into their bag. Frightening because I abhor humanism and slavery; and I happen to consider myself an abolitionist.
I also refer you to St. John the Evangelist. Oh, I'm sure he was exaggerating when he said, "And he causes all, both small and great, rich and poor, slave and free, to receive a mark on their right hand or on their foreheards, and that no one may buy or sell except one who has the mark or the name of the beast or the number of his name." Revelation 13:16-17
After all, how could he know? That's just a fable, right, created by Christians who only want to squelch your sexual morays, right? And what's the big deal if we get a "mark"? What's a little liberty in exchange for some much-needed security? Hey, we need food and shelter, right?









2 comments :
Well done, Cato. We are facing an entirely "new world order" and most Americans are oblivious. We have become so obsessed with instant gratification that we can't see farther than the next reality TV show. When the coup is finished, and it starts impacting people personally, that's when they'll start screaming.
By then it will be much too late, of course.
I just saw them trying to enter my house but I swatted them away. Shoo, shoo!
I agree with akaGaGa. We're cooked; done; caput.
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