The removal of Bannon is the end of even a facade
of populism. This is now the Goldman Sachs
Presidency with a thin-skinned, unthinking
authoritarian as a figurehead. Meanwhile, guess
who’s still there in addition to the Goldman
executives? Weed obsessed, civil asset forfeiture
supporting Jefferson Sessions. The Trump
administration just bacame ten times more
dangerous than it was before. With the coup
successful, Trump no longer needs to be impeached.
Here’s another prediction. Watch the corporate
media start to lay off Trump a bit more going
forward. Rather than hysterically demonize him
for every little thing, corporate media will
increasingly give him more of the benefit of the
doubt. After all, a Presidency run by Goldman
Sachs and generals is exactly what they like.
Trump finally came out of the closet as the
anti-populist oligarch he is, and the results won’t be pretty.
http://www.911forum.org.uk/board/viewtopic.php?p=175895#175895
Mike Krieger Fumes Over Bannon Firing: "This Is
Now The Goldman Sachs Presidency"
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2017-08-19/mike-krieger-furious-over-bannon-firing-now-goldman-sachs-presidency
by Tyler Durden Aug 19, 2017 3:20 PM
Authored by Mike Krieger via Liberty Blitzkrieg blog
https://libertyblitzkrieg.com/2017/08/18/donald-trump-finally-comes-out-of-the-closet/
The firing of Steve Bannon is in my opinion the
most significant event to happen during the Trump
administration thus far. Moreover, it will have
massive reverberations across the U.S. political
spectrum for years and years to come. I wasn’t
planning on writing today, but this news is so
incredibly significant I find myself with little choice.
Taking a step back, part of the reason I was
immediately able to see through the Trump con was
due to my upbringing in New York City. The guy
was constantly in the news my entire life, so I
had a pretty decent understanding of where he was
really coming from and what makes him tick. The
mindset of your typical NYC-based billionaire
real estate developer is filled with all sorts of
perspectives and priorities, but thoughts of populism are not amongst them.
Trump used populism to get elected, and then as
soon as he won, immediately appointed some of the
most destructive oligarchs imaginable to run his
administration. The reason I warned about this
incessantly at the time, is because I learned the
lesson from the Obama administration. People =
policy, and the people Trump was elevating were
almost unanimously awful. Irrespective of what
you think of Bannon, him being out means Wall
Street and the military-industrial complex is now
100% in control of the Trump administration.
Prepare for an escalation of imperial war around
the world and an expansion of brutal oligarchy.
The removal of Bannon is the end of even a facade
of populism. This is now the Goldman Sachs
Presidency with a thin-skinned, unthinking
authoritarian as a figurehead. Meanwhile, guess
who’s still there in addition to the Goldman
executives? Weed obsessed, civil asset forfeiture
supporting Jefferson Sessions. The Trump
administration just bacame ten times more
dangerous than it was before. With the coup
successful, Trump no longer needs to be impeached.
Follow
Michael Krieger @LibertyBlitz
The media took Donald Trump, cut his balls off,
and handed them to Goldman Sachs.
Mission accomplished.
7:17 PM - Aug 18, 2017
5 5 Replies 25 25 Retweets 51 51 likes
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Here’s another prediction. Watch the corporate
media start to lay off Trump a bit more going
forward. Rather than hysterically demonize him
for every little thing, corporate media will
increasingly give him more of the benefit of the
doubt. After all, a Presidency run by Goldman
Sachs and generals is exactly what they like.
Trump finally came out of the closet as the
anti-populist oligarch he is, and the results won’t be pretty.
Corporate media got the scalp it wanted, so the
hysterical criticisms of him will die down. This
is not to say I think the media will become
pro-Trump, it just means the obsessive and
aggressive propaganda will be dialed back
considerably. Trump is now inline, and he will be
rewarded by the establishment for that. He will
learn that the more he gets with the program, the
easier his life will be and the more secure his
power. He is merely being conditioned, and my
forecast is that Trump will gladly embrace the
worst parts of the establishment going forward.
Why? Because Trump’s true worldview fits in way
more with Goldman Sachs and the
military-industrial complex than with populism.
It always has. The whole thing was just an act to
get elected. Firing Bannon is just Trump coming
home to who he always was. A ruthless oligarch.
Now I’m going to make a few predictions about the
political environment going forward. First, I
think right-populism or the “new right,” is
deeply damaged and this presents a huge
opportunity for left-leaning populists if they
are smart about it. Let’s begin by discussing why
this is so problematic for the “new right.”
At this point, something has become undeniable.
Trump voters who supported him based on the idea
that he would bring forth an agenda of economic
populism got played. I understand that many other
people just voted for him as a middle finger to
the system, but for the true believers who
thought he had their backs, it’s now long past
the time to pack up your bags. I don’t say this
out of pleasure, I genuinely hoped he would push
forth an agenda of economic populism, but now we
know for certain this is never going to happen. That much is pretty undeniable.
Nevertheless, just because something is
undeniable, doesn’t mean it won’t be denied. Too
many people have invested way too much in Trump
to admit they got played. Sure, there will be
outrage for a few days and people will swear to
be “off the Trump train,” but as soon as the next
wedge social issue gets played up by the media,
they’ll be right back onboard. I expect excuses
from “new right” leaders to come within a few
days, or weeks at the most. Remember, many people
built up their entire careers and public profiles
by cheerleading Trump into office. Most of these
people are egomaniacs. What does an egomaniac do
when confronted with information that they got
something wrong? Do they publicly admit their
error and give credit to those who voiced
skepticism, or will they figure out a way to
change the subject in order to maintain their
relevance and position amongst their fans? I think you know the answer.
As such, right-populism is at a crossroads and
this is what I expect to happen. The same people
who so passionately convinced people to get on
the “Trump train” will be far more concerned with
maintaining as much of their social media status
as possible, versus doing what’s right for the
country. There are enough unthinking fans out
there to allow this to happen. That said, the
movement will be harmed immensely because enough
intelligent people will see that many of these
new right pundits aren’t who they say they are.
The credibility gap will widen and widen, as it
should. Trump was a fake and if you were so
easily tricked by Trump, why should we trust you on any other subject?
Right-populism is now very much discredited, as
its leader has been shown to be nothing more than
a narcissistic con-man. This will not be an easy
hole to dig out of, yet with some deep
reflection, my hope is a new right populism can
emerge that is more in tune with Rand Paul than
Donald Trump. That’d be nice, but I have my doubts.
As such, an enormous opportunity has opened up
for left-leaning economic populism. I already
predicted this wave in a piece a few weeks ago
titled,Politics of the Next 4 Years – Part 1
(Rise of the ‘Dirtbag Left’). Here’s some of what I wrote:
This faction of leftism is waging war against
Clinton neoliberal frauds and Trump’s fake
populism at the exact same time. Not an easy
thing to do, but I think there’s a huge and
growing unsatisfied demand for such a perspective.
A lot of you will discount the appeal of this
movement because many of its most high-profile
members are unabashed socialists. This is a big
mistake. Remember, Donald Trump won the
Presidency not because he was especially great or
loved, but because his opponent was terrible, he
talked in populist terms, and people just wanted
to give a middle finger to the political
establishment and corporate media. If that’s
right, what’s to stop a movement from winning
power if it promises to flip the bird to both
Trump and Clinton while also making you laugh? Not much.
I think the “DirtBag Left” will catch the Trump
team completely off guard over the next few
years. The reason Trump’s prospects look pretty
good right now for a second term is because
there’s no real organized opposition to him. By
real organized opposition, I mean a movement
driven by actual ideas and passion that is also
working on a plan to run a competitive candidate
in 2020. The current “resistance” consists of
Hillary donors, neocons, the corporate media and
elements of the deep state. While Trump complains
about this opposition constantly, he doesn’t
realize how good he has it. The American public
hates those factions more than they hate Trump,
and nobody wants to vote for that discredited garbage in 2020.
If the genuine left is smart, it will take a step
back and see this for the gigantic opening it is.
Lots of Trump voters are now up for grabs, and if
they can come up with a genuine message of
economic populism that avoids the typical leftist
pitfalls — such as supporting misguided young
people dressing up like ninjas, carrying flags
and hurling rocks at people trying to give a talk
— the opportunity to create a populist movement
of immense national significance is there. People
across the country are craving it, but they want
nothing to do with antifa, political correctness,
or aggression against free speech. Noam Chomsky
gets it, and I hope others heed his words.
As such, here’s what I would recommend to any
burgeoning populist movement wanting to unite the
country against oligarchy, as opposed to just
becoming a leftist echo chamber. It is the exact
same thing I suggested to Trump, but he obviously didn’t listen.
Election 2016 has been extremely bittersweet for
me. On the positive side, through both the Bernie
Sanders and Donald Trump grassroots movements, we
have seen clear proof that a huge number of
Americans accurately understand that the current
system is totally rigged and simply not working
for them. These people didn’t migrate toward
these two candidates for some tweaks to the
system here and there, their supporters want full scale paradigm level change.
As such, rather than dwelling on the differences
between these two populist movements, let’s
consider some of the areas where they overlap.
1. Trade — Opposition to NAFTA and current
“trade” deals such as TPP, TTIP, and TISA have
been central to both the Sanders and Trump campaigns.
2. War and militarism — Whether you believe Trump
is sincere or not, opposition to Obama/Clinton
interventionist overseas wars were key talking
points for both Trump and Sanders.
3. The system is rigged — The painful
acknowledgment that the U.S. economic system is a
rigged scam that fails to reward hard work, and
is more akin to a parasitic, predatory oligarchy
with very limited social mobility, has been a key
campaign theme for both Trump and Sanders. The
economy is increasingly dominated by
near-monoploy giants who relentlessly push for
more power and more profits irrespective of the
cost to society, whether that cost be war, poverty or social unrest.
4. Money in politics — The rigged economic system
described above aggregates wealth into an
increasingly small number of hands. Those hands
then buy off politicians and rig the political
process. A rigged economy and rigged political
system perpetually feeds itself and endlessly
grows at the expense of the public like a
terminal cancer. Both Trump and Sanders emphasized this problem.
5. Rule of law is dead — Sanders focused on Wall
Street bankers, while Trump focused on Hillary
and her inner circle of cronies, but the overall
point is the same. Rich and powerful oligarchs
are above the law. We all know this, but
Washington D.C. refuses to do anything about.
Populism isn’t dead in America, but right
populism as it exists today is. I just hope the
next iteration is a lot more genuine, and a lot more sane.
So much emphasis is placed on select Jewish
participation in Bormann companies that when
Adolf Eichmann was seized and taken to Tel Aviv
to stand trial, it produced a shock wave in the
Jewish and German communities of Buenos Aires.
Jewish leaders informed the Israeli authorities
in no uncertain terms that this must never happen
again because a repetition would permanently
rupture relations with the Germans of Latin
America, as well as with the Bormann
organization, and cut off the flow of Jewish
money to Israel. It never happened again, and the
pursuit of Bormann quieted down at the request of
these Jewish leaders. He is residing in an
Argentinian safe haven, protected by the most
efficient German infrastructure in history as
well as by all those whose prosperity depends on his well-being.
<http://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=http%3A%2F%2Fspitfirelist.com%2Fbooks%2Fmartin-bormann-nazi-in-exile%2F&h=eAQErj17O>http://spitfirelist.com/books/martin-bormann-nazi-in-exile/
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Please consider seriously the reason why these elite institutions are not discussed in the mainstream press despite the immense financial and political power they wield?
There are sick and evil occultists running the Western World. They are power mad lunatics like something from a kids cartoon with their fingers on the nuclear button! Armageddon is closer than you thought. Only God can save our souls from their clutches, at least that's my considered opinion - Tony
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