What the world needs is more leaders who care more about their - TopicsExpress



          

What the world needs is more leaders who care more about their countries, regions, populations, and environments than themselves and the heinous Zionist war now revealed being waged against EVERY government, business, religion, country, and population on the planet! Just like the heinous Zionist hijacking of the U.S.A.: “They created the Federal Reserve and that’s truly who runs the country, because if you go by what Deep Throat said in Watergate: “Follow the money.” And the Federal Reserve prints the money, so they’re the boss. If you make the money – you’re the boss. Politicians are nothing but puppets, it’s the Federal Reserve that runs the United States of America – not your government.” ~ Former Navy Seal and Minnesota Governor Jesse Ventura. “Let me issue and control a nation’s money and I care not who writes the laws.” Mayer Amschel Rothschild (1744-1812), founder of the House of Rothschild. “The few who understand the system will either be so interested in its profits or be so dependent upon its favours that there will be no opposition from that class, while on the other hand, the great body of people, mentally incapable of comprehending the tremendous advantage that capital derives from the system, will bear its burdens without complaint, and perhaps without even suspecting that the system is inimical to their interests.” The Rothschild brothers of London to their New York Associates. Its been so successful in Israel and the U.S. that its now being duplicated against governments, countries, and populations around the globe. The film Life and Debt features a number of interviews with former Jamaican Prime Minister Michael Manley in which he critiques the system of International Financial Institution loans for enslaving the island nation with 4.6 billion dollars of debt, poverty, and foreign exploitation. He is particularly critical of required structural adjustments as an attack on the sovereignty of many former colonial nations and suggests the U.S. created and controlled World Bank and IMF system is akin to imperialism or neocolonialism by the United States. The documentary Debtocracy asserts that the current debt of Greece is due to new loans that were issued to pay older debts and the austerity measures demanded by the U.S. controlled International Monetary Fund and the European Central Bank, which will result in an even higher debt, equal to 167% of the countrys GDP in 2013. The film says Argentina is dubbed the mirror image of Greece at the opposite end of the world in terms of its economic collapse, and an example of what might happen to Greece if it continues to follow the same neoliberal policies that the International Monetary Fund had implemented in Argentina and are currently being implemented in Greece. The documentary suggests the case of Ecuador as an alternative government reaction to the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank, sensitive to social justice, that saves the people from having to pay for a loan that didnt benefit them. In 2006, the Prime Minister of Ecuador, Rafael Correa reacted to the huge public debt that the country had, with a series of actions designed to protect the rights of the people of Ecuador. First, Correa decided that the funds from the natural resources of the country (exploitation of oil) would be used for public policy, and not for the payment of the debt. Second, Correa decided that only 20% of the annual budget should be used for the debt, instead of 50%. Third, he organized a committee to analyze the public debt. Despite the obstacles and the reactions to this, the committee was able to complete the analysis of the debt, and to find that it was illegal on the basis that the loans taken were used for projects that benefited only a few, the governments signed the contracts without informing the people, and the bankers were aware of this. In the end, Ecuador was able to save about $7 billion. He closed the U.S. Manta military base, hailed as a victory for Ecuadorian national sovereignty, and the granted of asylum to WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange. He told the United States Washington must let him open a military base in Miami if the United States wants to keep a military base in Ecuador. President Correa is often described as echoing the policies of former Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, especially in anti-US rhetoric, frequently decrying the “imperial” influence of the United States throughout Latin America. Shortly after first taking office in 2007, Ecuadoran President Rafael Correa purged Ecuadors military of officers deemed to have close relations with U.S. counterparts. He also ended an agreement with Washington that allowed U.S. drug interdiction flights to be based at an Ecuadorean airfield and expelled a U.S. ambassador. President Rafael Correa publicly complained in January 2014 that Washington had too many military officers in Ecuador, claiming there were 50, and said they had been infiltrated in all sectors. In April 2014, he ordered that all 20 Defense Department employees in the U.S. Embassy’s military group leave the country by month’s end. The 49-year-old economist has reduced poverty and increased stability and the overall standard of living in Ecuador during his presidency, winning popularity amongst the country’s poorest as well as the educated middle class.
Posted on: Fri, 23 Jan 2015 19:51:29 +0000

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