Ron Paul: CIA runs the U.S. government

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Re: Ron Paul: CIA runs the U.S. government

Postby exojuridik » Sat Jan 23, 2010 8:00 am

Nordic wrote:
exojuridik wrote:This whole argument that holds the CIA as the ultimate threat to the republic seems to prove to much. Were that the case they must be indistinguishable from the corporations and private interests who are actually profiting from the totalitarian future being created. And were that the case there seems to be little need for the CIA in the first place as the malefactors of great wealth are doing just fine robbing the planet blind in plain sight. IOW - what need is there for a rent-seeking, bureaucratic middle-man when the PTB are getting whatever they want anyway. What power could the CIA wield that a well-connected billionaire could not. l



Well, in fact, what you're suggesting IS the way it is. Wall Street and the CIA go hand-in-hand, and always have. I figured everybody here was aware of this, but maybe not.

Here's a little something I wrote some time ago about Buzzy Krongard:

http://www.dailykos.com/storyonly/2007/9/7/03944/94402

It's a good place to start.

Tenet created Krongard's position at the CIA. The put-options on American Airlines were embarrassingly traced back to Krongard's Wall Street firm. Check it out. It's the tip of the iceberg. The CIA used to only recruit from the Ivy Leagues and Wall Street.


Thanks for the facts - I'll check it out. However, my main point wasn't that the CIA is disconnected from the Wall Street capitalists but rather that if the CIA is a Wall street puppet show means that it isn't the fearsome entity that its painted to be - in this case, its just an access point for outside interests to gain access to governmental power.

My point is that the degree to which these outside influences use the CIA, they are actually inhibited by its governmental status. Yes, any political agency is a tool for those that wield actual power - however, all public institutions demand certain protocols to be observed and appearences to be maintained. Any abuse of authority becomes an ultra vires act which creates the very liability, government bureaucrats seek to minimize. This acts as a least a little buffer to what an agency might try to get away with - not that there aren't many skeletons to hide or that in 1963 certain elements within the CIA might have engaged in a little domestic coup d'etat.

My point is that inte(ra)gency divisions within any institution serve to act as a natural limitation to its ultra vires activities. afterall, you always risk a Decembrist uprising if your actions step on the wrong toes and shock the conscience of the rank and file members.

Private, non-governmental actors have no such limitations and are therefore, in my mind, the true source our our current nightmare. They are greed unbound by decency or shame or nominal oversight. They can operate behind corporate shields and have access to every (extra)legal weapon at their disposal. These motherfuckers are the puppet-masters of the politicians and military commanders by sheer virtue of their wealth and connections. And no doubt the CIA regularly does their bidding but no more than everyone else does. The oligarchs can define the game and the limits of the possible. And they use pasties like Dr. Ron just like they use everyone else visible in the public arena. In this case, he seems particularly useful as an anti-government spokesperson who, with his politically impossible ideas, will divert attention from the true sources of our collective woes. They can't go wrong. Paulie justs adds to the chorus of anti-government sentiment that prevents the citizens from having any chance of taking on the unregulated multinational corporations. The only entity powerful enough to do this the U.S. federal government i.e. The Enemy in the minds of Republicans and libertarians. oh well, I guess fragmented anarchy is our only choice.

Yet, even were the paulies and the palinites successful in defeating the scourge of the federal gubmint, it would only be because the true powers would find it advantageous. If I was a billionaire, I would certainly foster whatever anti-governemt sentiment I could, as even with the worst case outcomes, I could be assured of my relative position of power in the new world (dis)order.

The main thing that disturbs me about the idolization of this (non-football playing) ex-Pittsburgher is the fact that all fucking politicians are tools - yes, even Kucinich, Nadar and RP. The smart ones like Kucinich actually realize this and make the best choices they can regarding the limitations of their position. Others like Nadar and Paul don't seem to get that they are being played as the outsider for all they're worth.

And anyways, this is RI where I would except cynicism about Ghandi himself even as he was standing against the depredations of the British empire. Had he been doing his thing today, I'm sure there would be a sizable minority here accusing him of being an intelligence asset (or, wait, was he !?). So what's with all this paulian praise - if he ain't compromised now, he will be by the time he acquires enough power to do anything.

That is, unless Paul has come here to dispense with the Old Laws and is offering a new covenant to unify mankind - in which case, render unto Rome . . .
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Re: Ron Paul: CIA runs the U.S. government

Postby Gouda » Sat Jan 23, 2010 8:02 am

23 wrote:
when Kucinich, Nader, and McKinney put their arms around Dr. Paul towards the end of the campaign...

I think this says more about the sad state and weakness of the left in the US than about the merits of Paul. It is desperation of sorts. And Counterpunchers pushing Paul is not surprising in the least.
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Re: Ron Paul: CIA runs the U.S. government

Postby 23 » Sat Jan 23, 2010 10:36 am

Gouda wrote:23 wrote:
when Kucinich, Nader, and McKinney put their arms around Dr. Paul towards the end of the campaign...

I think this says more about the sad state and weakness of the left in the US than about the merits of Paul. It is desperation of sorts. And Counterpunchers pushing Paul is not surprising in the least.


Re. left versus right versus middle:

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Re: Ron Paul: CIA runs the U.S. government

Postby exojuridik » Sat Jan 23, 2010 11:13 am

23 wrote:
Gouda wrote:23 wrote:
when Kucinich, Nader, and McKinney put their arms around Dr. Paul towards the end of the campaign...

I think this says more about the sad state and weakness of the left in the US than about the merits of Paul. It is desperation of sorts. And Counterpunchers pushing Paul is not surprising in the least.

Re. left versus right versus middle:





well that settles that . . . as the Right has long known, Cash always resolves political disagreements.
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Re: Ron Paul: CIA runs the U.S. government

Postby 23 » Sat Jan 23, 2010 11:28 am

exojuridik wrote:
23 wrote:
Gouda wrote:23 wrote:
when Kucinich, Nader, and McKinney put their arms around Dr. Paul towards the end of the campaign...

I think this says more about the sad state and weakness of the left in the US than about the merits of Paul. It is desperation of sorts. And Counterpunchers pushing Paul is not surprising in the least.

Re. left versus right versus middle:





well that settles that . . . as the Right has long known, Cash always resolves political disagreements.


Ever wonder who the real beneficiaries are from keeping the chasm between left and right nice and wide?

Political tribalism rarely serves the tribes.

But the chieftains, now there's another story.
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Re: Ron Paul: CIA runs the U.S. government

Postby exojuridik » Sat Jan 23, 2010 11:41 am

Ever wonder who the real beneficiaries are from keeping the chasm between left and right nice and wide?

Political tribalism rarely serves the tribes.

But the chieftains, now there's another story.


Normally, I would agree that the left/right dichotomy benefits a certain class of political insiders and the status quo ta boot, but here the issue rests on whether we should have a central government at all - and, well, its a good question, but I don't see any alternative at this stage of the game. Thus, presupposing the existence of said united states, I propose we work on educating people on how to use the government to advance the collective self-interest of a species that currently numbers 7 billion on a planet whose once verdant biosphere has been taxed to the breaking point.
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Re: Ron Paul: CIA runs the U.S. government

Postby 23 » Sat Jan 23, 2010 12:07 pm

exojuridik wrote:
Ever wonder who the real beneficiaries are from keeping the chasm between left and right nice and wide?

Political tribalism rarely serves the tribes.

But the chieftains, now there's another story.


Normally, I would agree that the left/right dichotomy benefits a certain class of political insiders and the status quo ta boot, but here the issue rests on whether we should have a central government at all - and, well, its a good question, but I don't see any alternative at this stage of the game. Thus, presupposing the existence of said united states, I propose we work on educating people on how to use the government to advance the collective self-interest of a species that currently numbers 7 billion on a planet whose once verdant biosphere has been taxed to the breaking point.


As a quasi-educator (homeschooler), I find myself consistently urging my daughter to look for similarities between her and the people that she crosses paths with, instead of their differences.

I propose that that is the foundation for "advancing collective self-interests".
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Re: Ron Paul: CIA runs the U.S. government

Postby American Dream » Sat Jan 23, 2010 12:14 pm

We need as much solidarity between ordinary people as possible, but we also need principles. Ron Paul's principles on individual liberty are pretty good. Unfortunately, his principles with regards to political economy are really, really lacking...
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Re: Ron Paul: CIA runs the U.S. government

Postby Blue » Sat Jan 23, 2010 12:26 pm

American Dream wrote:This article is a couple of years old but it does convey some concerns about Ron Paul:


Don't Believe the Hype (Ron Paul is Not Your Savior)

November 14, 2007

By Aura Bogado




Paul and the Christian Right

Paul opposes the separation of Church and State. Yes, you read correctly, he opposes it. He says there is a war on religion, and that "Through perverse court decisions and years of cultural indoctrination, the elitist, secular Left has managed to convince many in our nation that religion must be driven from public view." We should remember that when writing about the First Amendment of the Constitution (which clearly states that "government will make no law respecting an establishment of religion"), Thomas Jefferson coined the term "separation of Church and State". If Paul's theocratic concepts were instituted, we would have Old Testament displays at the nation's courthouses, and Christian prayers would be part of each child's school day.

His religious conservatism seems to inform his views on topics as elementary as evolution when it comes to education. When asked if he would encourage presenting so-called facts to contradict the theory of evolution in schools, he answered yes. This "alternative view" on the theory of evolution means teaching the concept of intelligent design- a pseudoscience which real scientists dismiss as another attempt to once again introduce creationism into public classrooms. No thank you. Intelligent design may have its place in church, on the street or at home, but in terms of science, it doesn't propose any hypotheses which can be tested through experiment; it's simply not science. Teachers should certainly not be forced to teach right-wing conservative Christian ideals about God in any classroom. When I take a biology course, I go to learn about accepted theory. When I want to hear about God, I'll go to church.

Paul also says that abortion is the tool by which the State achieves "a program of mass murder". A staunch pro-lifer who writes books on the topic in his spare time, he thinks States should decide the matter (read: allow states to overturn decisions like Roe v. Wade to allow new laws to protect the rights of what the Christian right calls "unborn people"). Under Paul's proposal, States could conceivably pass laws that bar women from obtaining abortions, including in cases of rape or incest, and even when the woman's life is at risk. Any person that values the right of any woman to choose what she will and will not do with her own body should take caution - Paul is to the extreme right of the political spectrum on this issue. I understand that Presidents do not decide abortion policy, but we have yet to see what Bush's Supreme Court appointments will yield in terms of abortion rights in the years to come. Any presidential candidate that would move to allow States to eradicate women's rights doesn't deserve the attention and praise he's getting from the Left.


Aura Bogado is a writer and radio producer. She blogs at tothecurb.wordpress.com

From: Z Net - The Spirit Of Resistance Lives

URL: http://www.zmag.org/znet/viewArticle/17406


Thanks for posting that AD. Funny how the males who support Paul think his pro-life views are just wedge issue fluff. Guess what? Half the population doesn't consider autonomy over their own bodies to be a wedge issue. It's a pretty significant viewpoint which relegates women as broodmares at worst and second class citizens at best.
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Re: Ron Paul: CIA runs the U.S. government

Postby Sweejak » Sat Jan 23, 2010 1:25 pm

We need as much solidarity between ordinary people as possible, but we also need principles. Ron Paul's principles on individual liberty are pretty good. Unfortunately, his principles with regards to political economy are really, really lacking...


Hamsher of FDL is calling for solidarity, Antiwar.com, Sheehan and others are too. Is anyone going to DC this spring?

AD, I'm undecided, still, on some of the elements of libertarianism or the progressive idea of even the possibility of "good government". I don't know if these things can really exist. I think the very pragmatic idea of balance of powers is a key feature of the US system, so, even if Paul were to become president what makes you think that he would be able to single handedly bring about his ideas in full? There is nothing in his record that show he will do something unconstitutional, so I wouldn't expect rule by signing statements.

The old article is countered if you go to Paul's own words. He's a politician, can you trust him? Nobody on this board thinks a politician is going to be our savior, I don't think even the Obama voters here thought so.
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Re: Ron Paul: CIA runs the U.S. government

Postby American Dream » Sat Jan 23, 2010 1:40 pm

Sweejak wrote
if Paul were to become president what makes you think that he would be able to single handedly bring about his ideas in full?


I don't actually think "he would be able to single handedly bring about his ideas in full". That is why I believe we need critical thinking, and a coherent analysis- including especially, a class analysis, in order to analyze what a Ron Paul presidency would really mean.

It seems to me that the billionaires would rule as much or more then they do now- to the detriment of the rest of us, no matter how much legalized dope Americans had access to...
"If you don't stand for something, you will fall for anything."
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Re: Ron Paul: CIA runs the U.S. government

Postby JackRiddler » Sat Jan 23, 2010 1:44 pm

exojuridik wrote:My point is that the degree to which these outside influences use the CIA, they are actually inhibited by its governmental status. Yes, any political agency is a tool for those that wield actual power - however, all public institutions demand certain protocols to be observed and appearences to be maintained. Any abuse of authority becomes an ultra vires act which creates the very liability, government bureaucrats seek to minimize. This acts as a least a little buffer to what an agency might try to get away with - not that there aren't many skeletons to hide or that in 1963 certain elements within the CIA might have engaged in a little domestic coup d'etat.

My point is that inte(ra)gency divisions within any institution serve to act as a natural limitation to its ultra vires activities. afterall, you always risk a Decembrist uprising if your actions step on the wrong toes and shock the conscience of the rank and file members.

Private, non-governmental actors have no such limitations and are therefore, in my mind, the true source our our current nightmare. They are greed unbound by decency or shame or nominal oversight. They can operate behind corporate shields and have access to every (extra)legal weapon at their disposal.


You know, I think we agree on most everything you've written with regard to private as opposed to public power in the present system. I think of it like this:

Capital is the State.

Corporations govern their own fiefdoms and operations. Banks and investors move money at will, the only "free market" competition is between national and local governments competing for their favor.

The US Government is the largest single pool of capital, amassed from taxation and unlimited credit (ultimately backed by its ability to blow up shit around the world and/or print more money). Of course, it also writes and enforces law. Thus it is very powerful.

Beyond the imperial core of the Pentagon/Intel (a.k.a. the national security state) and the automatic expenditures of Social Security, however, government capital is available on a self-service basis to the private interests best-positioned to buy the lawmakers and bureaucrats. Laws are almost entirely written by corporate lobbies, or else by the national security state.

Public budgets do attend to certain voting clienteles, but almost always through the filter of first assuring private profit for the far more important campaign-financing clienteles. (e.g., some hungry district gets jobs thanks to a dam project, funds for the poor go through corrupt front groups, most of the uninsured may happen to get medical coverage in a package that is actually corporate welfare for insurance companies, etc. etc.)

I differ with you in this: "the CIA" (as a shorthand for the "intelligence community" and especially its black-budget universe) is not a "public institution." Its budgets are hidden. Its associations are hidden. Its agents may pose as employees of any other government agency (most often the State Department or the Pentagon), or of private companies and front groups. Its front groups and contractors can and do operate as independent businesses with their own, independent, off-budget revenue streams (in drugs, transport, arms dealing, or anything else). Some of these private budget streams are fully legal. Intel officials can and regularly do turn away investigations of their operations by the "real" law enforcement agencies on all levels. They are known to have committed countless crimes here and around the world, and almost none of them have ever been prosecuted, and very few even met career setbacks (unless you think losing your "CIA" job and then getting 20 times the money at a private CIA "contractor" is a setback).

The lack of accountability and justice guarantees a culture of impunity. The intel community is not even an "it," but a very large hidden industry harboring many actors. They conduct both officially sanctioned (but secret) operations as well as side operations via private contractors, foreign intel allies ("Safari Group" or "Operation Condor" arrangements), satellites, front groups. All are compartmentalized and largely unaware of what the others are doing. All identify themselves with national security and thus feel complete sanction to do whatever they happen to consider necessary in the nation's defense. The resources and actions are unaccountable and easily elude every form of government oversight.

This area of our society's power structures has all of the advantages of private secret organizations AND of being the state, without the disadvantages of either. They can completely make up their account books (unlike most private businesses) and they can appear to be completely unrelated to the government and therefore immune to public control (unlike other government agencies).

This set-up generates power. We are even regularly reminded that the job of the CIA necessarily IS to commit crimes - in other countries - and to associate with criminals or, as the common phrase goes, "unsavory characters."

Naturally this set-up also attracts already powerful interests. who want to make use of these tools - hence the long-running associations of Wall Street and CIA, narcotics trade and CIA, organized crime and CIA, arms dealing and CIA, war plotters and CIA, all the world's kleptocracies and dictatorships and CIA.

That's why the nexus of power is there, as Paul implies, and always will be as long as we tolerate a permanent secret branch of government.

That being said, Paul's statement is actually kind of simplistic and lame. He doesn't even specify which "coup" he means. He attracts special attention because he's in Congress and has a big fan base who will eat up any easy-to-comprehend red meat rhetoric he offers up and pronounce it wise and courageous, even if they never heard of Danny Casolaro or Gary Webb or Cele Castillo or others who have really risked themselves to expose the actionable operations of the beast (sadly to little effect other than the enlightenment of a small segment of the people to date).

23 wrote:Ever wonder who the real beneficiaries are from keeping the chasm between left and right nice and wide?

Political tribalism rarely serves the tribes.

But the chieftains, now there's another story.


How we define these terms is all the difference. To me the "left" starts with an analysis based in the actual structure of the political economy and the material interests of the existing classes, before moving on to ideology and future visions. Anything else isn't actually leftist, even if labeled as such.

Given that, my answer to your question is that the chasm between "left" and "right" has benefited the right, above all. The "chieftains" (the ruling classes) have overwhelmingly been of those movements known as right and supported the right. I don't want to hear bullshit about a George Soros or two, and I'm not impressed with the occasional financing of a liberal-seeming project by a Rockefeller Foundation, because the majority of rich fuckers stand and have always stood with the likes of Murdoch, Scaife, Milton Friedman, the Christian Zionists, the hardline Cold Warriors, et al.

For the most part in this country, the ideology of the "right" is a collection of manufactured fears based in neuroses about threats to one's perceived identities (like being "white" or "American" or "male" or "Christian" or "pro-life" or, for a good laugh, an "individualist" against the "collectivists" or "unionists"). Conflicts are synthesized out of these partial identities (in many cases patently false identities) in an effort to divide and conquer the laboring classes and the dispossessed.

Often these conflicts are absurdly abstracted from anything real. You can see where the immigration question relates to petty, small-minded competition for economic rewards. That's an example where the players hate other players instead of the game, but the game actually exists.

But what difference would it make to the brainwashed anti-abortion fanatics if they left women to rule over their own bodily processes? They are no different than the Taliban in their permanent uproar about naked women in other countries. or about Buddha statues from thousands of years ago.

The same applies to a host of other complete bullshit "issues" like flag burning, "War on Christmas," the totalitarian Pledge of Allegiance, the existence of a few black men in the corridors of power, etc. etc.

Meanwhile, most of the apparently apolitical media hysterias also come out of right-wing and/or puritan neuroses (despite the enormous doses of hypocrisy involved). Thus issues like the choices of consenting adults to fuck (or the accidental exposure of a female nipple on television), or the existence of individual murderers seem to matter a lot more than the choice of other adults to rob trillions of dollars from millions of people, or the daily murder of countless individuals through the routine functioning of war and the present economic system. At least, based on the media blather devoted to each of these.

Without the right-wing nonsense of people identifying with imperialist action as something "we" do ("we" went into Vietnam, "we" are having troubles in Pakistan, "our" armed forces, "our" flag, blah blah) and without the patently insane tendencies that see an enemy in groups like Mexican workers or over-educated "elite" academics, the vast majority of people in this country would long ago have come together in a "leftist" popular front (based on their real material interests and in solidarity with the people like them around the world).

Now you may point to some "leftists" who talk the same way, and that's the real fakery. Some of the right-wingers are currently identified as such, while others are called Democrats, liberals, even socialists and Marxists. There's your top-level divide-and-conquer scam, right there.

The ambient politics in this country is overwhelmingly, transparently right-wing. That's why it's so important to keep up mythologies about the "liberal media" or the hidden power of an "internationalist" global elite.

If you're apolitical and not actively seeking your education outside the bounds of what's automatically offered up to you, you are absorbing enormous amounts of right-wing dogshit sprinkled with copious but mostly bogus doses of "tolerance," "diversity" and "political correctness" largely designed to create Pavlovian reactions among right-wing dittoheads.

.
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Re: Ron Paul: CIA runs the U.S. government

Postby Sweejak » Sat Jan 23, 2010 1:46 pm

I don't have any doubts that the Right/Left divide are the two walls of the cattle chute we are being herded down, that they are so incredibly easy to manipulate especially in the cultural populism way, and the Left isn't immune to that by a long shot even as they presume they are above all that. It's a big part of why the charge of elitism has some legs, of course mirrored charges going the other way work too.

I'm also sure that fake and forged versions of "solidarity" are in the works too.

To be honest, while I have hopes, I don't see anything seriously good happening on the political spectrum in my lifetime.

Lavelle does a pretty good job in this video, it's about neo-fedalism. Wow, there is that 'revolution' word again.
http://rt.com/About_Us/Programmes/Cross ... 40331.html
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Re: Ron Paul: CIA runs the U.S. government

Postby Sweejak » Sat Jan 23, 2010 2:00 pm

American Dream wrote:Sweejak wrote
if Paul were to become president what makes you think that he would be able to single handedly bring about his ideas in full?


I don't actually think "he would be able to single handedly bring about his ideas in full". That is why I believe we need critical thinking, and a coherent analysis- including especially, a class analysis, in order to analyze what a Ron Paul presidency would really mean.

It seems to me that the billionaires would rule as much or more then they do now- to the detriment of the rest of us, no matter how much legalized dope Americans had access to...


Where were all of Paul's corporate donations? Obomber pretended to have a miraculous grass roots donation stream, but Paul's was far superior. The corporations hated Paul and the Republican Party hated him more than they did Democrats. I saw it numerous times. Paul and Kucinich work together on policy. I wonder if they can, why can't we. And look, these are extreme times, we can pound on each other later.

You know who I would like to see hash out the ideological stuff, FDR, Industrial Capitalism promoting Tarpley who can really hit it well with the working classes and... well, I don't know on the libertarian end. But for me that is where the ideological tension is.

As regards the separation of powers, Jefferson was right, especially after what the supremes did a few days ago.
Hey look we got them all together now, the Supremes and the Corporations. Kill them, kill them NOW!

A few years after Jefferson's unsuccessful attempt to incorporate this
amendment into the Bill of Rights, the fourth Chief Justice of the US
Supreme Court, John Marshall, unilaterally asserted the Court's right to
judicial review in the seminal case of Marbury v. Madison in 1803. In
practice this meant that the Supreme Court would have sole and unchecked
power to determine what the Constitution meant. Jefferson was aghast.


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Re: Ron Paul: CIA runs the U.S. government

Postby Nordic » Sat Jan 23, 2010 4:30 pm

Just found this over at cryptogon this morning:

http://www.kitco.com/ind/Dougherty/jan222010.html

Now, this guy is writing this for Kitco, so there's a vested interest in selling gold. At the same time, this guy seems genuinely passionate about that which he's writing, and he certainly isn't wrong about anything that I can find. His thesis isn't "left" or "right", it's just recognizing corruption when he sees it.

And it's a pretty frightening, yet exhilirating, take on the situation:

The enslavement of the American people has been orchestrated by a pernicious Master Class that has taken the United States by the throat. This Master Class is now choking the nation to death as it accelerates its master plan to plunder the people’s dwindling remaining assets. The Master Class comprises politicians, the Wall Street money elite, the Federal Reserve, high-end government (including military) officials, government lobbyists and their paymasters, military suppliers and media oligarchs. The interests and mindset of the Master Class are so totally divorced from those of the average American citizen that it is utterly tone deaf and blind to the justifiable rage sweeping the nation. Its guiding ethics of greed, plunder, power, control and violence are so alien to mainstream American culture and thought that the Master Class might as well be an enemy invader from Mars. But the Master Class here, it is real and it is laying waste to America. To the members of the Master Class, the people are not fellow-citizens; they are instruments of labor, servitude and profit. At first, the Master Class viewed the citizens as serfs; now that they have raped and destroyed the national economy, while in the process amassing unprecedented wealth and power for themselves, they see the people as nothing more than slaves.

America’s public finances are now so completely dysfunctional and chaotic that something far worse than debt enslavement and monetary implosion, terrible curses unto themselves, looms on the horizon: namely, a Master Class-sponsored American dictatorship.

Throughout history, the type of situation in which America now finds itself has been a fertility factory for tyranny. The odds of an outright overthrow of the people by the Washington and Wall Street Axis, or more broadly, the Master Class are increasing dramatically. The fact that so few people believe an American dictatorship is possible is exactly why it is becoming likely.

Dictatorships have blighted history and ruined lives since the beginning of civilization. In recent times alone, tyrants such as Hitler, Stalin, Lenin, Ceausescu, Amin, Hussein, Mussolini, Tojo, Kim, Pinochet, Milosevic, Tito, Batista, Peron, Pol Pot, Mugabe, Marcos, Somoza, Mengistu, Bokassa, Sese Seko, Franco, Ho Chi Minh, Mao, and Castro have power-sprayed blood onto the screen of time and ravaged mankind with murder, torture and human oppression. A full catalog of history’s tyrants would require a book of hundreds of pages. In the past 100 years alone, over 200 million human beings have been annihilated by wars, ethnic cleansings and government assassinations. Just when we think that civilization has been able to rise above tyranny’s inhumanity and disgrace, a new dictator appears on the scene to start the process all over again. Every time this happens, fear and submission paralyze the vast majority of the affected masses, leading them to “follow orders” and lick autocracy’s blood-stained boots.

History has proven to tyrants that oppression works. In fact, it is easy to control a populace, once you control the money, markets, military (including police), media and minions (the recipients of welfare, social security, free health care, government jobs and the like, who are dependent upon the state and likely to be compliant). This is exactly where the United States is today.

Recent American events paint an ominous picture of a Master Class that is now in total control.

When 90% of the American people vehemently rejected the $700,000,000,000.00 ($700 billion) TARP bailout plan, the Master Class put it on a fast track and approved it anyway.

When a clear majority of the American people said no to a government takeover of Chrysler and GM, the Master Class poured billions of taxpayer dollars into those corporate sinkholes and took them over anyway.

When the people said no to multi-trillion dollar crony bailouts for the bankers and insurers whose corruption had caused global financial mayhem, the government pledged to those elite insiders more than $13,000,000,000,000.00 ($13 trillion) of the people’s money anyway.

When the people expressed astonishment and anger that Wall Street planned to pay itself record 2009 bonuses, in the midst of America’s worst-ever fiscal and financial crisis caused by them, Wall Street stuffed its pockets with taxpayer-supported bonus money anyway.

When the people said no to a proposed $40,000,000,000.00 ($40 billion) bailout of AIG and its elite trading partners such as Goldman Sachs (an amount that subsequently exploded to $180,000,000,000.00+ ($180+ billion)), the Master Class went underground, covertly misappropriated taxpayer money and made the payoffs anyway.

When Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were nationalized at enormous taxpayer expense, the government approved $6,000,000.00 individual pay packages in 2009 (150 times the average American wage) for the CEOs of both failed companies anyway.


Talk about "identifying the problem". That's exactly it. Exactly it.

Right above this chunk that I quoted he states:

The people no longer have elected representatives; they have elected traitors.


Abso-fucking-lutely.
"He who wounds the ecosphere literally wounds God" -- Philip K. Dick
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