Painful
reminder: All money is a debt to the International
bankers
Cyprus: Your
Money is Their Money
March 18, 2013
The first
thing we should all learn from this is that your money is not yours. The
second thing is don't put any of 'their' money in 'their' banks. Keep it
in your mattress and make them work for it just like you did.
by Bernard
Grover "Money
Grows on Cyprus Trees" Edited by henrymakow.com
What would you
do if you found
that your money was not yours? What if you found out that you were 10% poorer
than when you went to bed?
If you live on
a sleepy little island in the corner of the Mediterranean Sea, that is exactly
what happened to you.
Yielding to
pressure from the IMF and the EU, the Cypriot government agreed to steal nearly
7% of all Cyprus bank deposits up to 100,000 euro, and almost 10% of all
deposits over that amount, and hand it over to the banksters. (gasp!
shock!)
Why? Because
the government of Cyprus had been arm-twisted into buying Greek bonds as part of
an earlier bailout scheme. When Greece defaulted on the bonds, the banksters
wanted their
money back. Damn the little guy and his hard work and desire to save for some
future reward.
The first
thing we should all learn from this is that your money is not yours. The second
thing is don't put any of 'their' money in 'their' banks. Keep it in your
mattress and make them work for it just like you did.
CYPRUS
It's no small
irony that Cyprus always has been a major cog in what Joseph Farrell calls "the
international bankster class" operations. In his book, Babylon's
Banksters, Farrell traces the history of money and banking from the dawn of
recorded history.
What the whole
thing comes down to is that the euro, like most of the world's currencies, is
private money created by private banks. When they want some of it back, they are
well within their theoretical rights to take back their 'property', which they
only lent to you and me (at interest, of course). We mere mortals, having agreed
to use their property to conduct our daily activities, have wittingly or not
agreed to their terms. It's a simple, if rather obscure, contractual
arrangement.
What causes me
no end of head-slapping is that we just don't seem to get it. We are shocked
when we realize that our 'money' really belongs to someone else and we have just
been allowed to use it, like borrowing the neighbor's lawn mower or
something.
A lot of
conspiracy theorists talk about a 'one world currency' and how 'They' are
driving us into it. Little do they know that a single global currency would not
serve the bankster purposes. Since the beginning of our history, 'They' have
fostered incompatible currencies and then sat back and reaped gobs of wealth by
being the only group able to convert one to another. If there were a single
global currency, it would put a major dent in their
operations.
Rather, they
want to simplify the math and create two or three (trilateral) currencies, which
would need to be traded and converted in the course of commerce. It's little
more than a carefully hidden private tax on business
dealings.
As Farrell
points out, even in the earliest times, the West used gold bullion, while the
East used silver. Thus, the traders in the middle reaped a tidy profit
converting them back and forth. And just like Sparta (then) and Libya (now),
anyone who didn't play their game got a good ass-whuppin'.
Back to
Cyprus. The Cypriots really don't have the right to be angry in strictly legal
terms. They consented to use private paper to conduct their business
transactions. Furthermore, they didn't raise a fuss when the IMF/EU arm-twisted
their government into buying up a bunch of worthless Greek bonds. Now, when the
chickens come home to roost, they are upset. Sorry Charlie, 'shoulda seen that
one coming.'
The only way
out would be to follow the Icelandic model and repudiate the debt, sever all
ties with the IMF/EU and throw the banksters in jail.
One caveat:
they had better arm every Cypriot to the teeth and be ready for an invasion.
That's the bankster ace in the hole. They always have ready 'enforcers' for just
those kinds of situations. The one thing Iceland had going for it is that there
ain't much there to fight for, other than some principles.
Cyprus, on the
other hand, has always been a key trading post between the Occident and Orient.
Right now, Cyprus is a key base for launching attacks on Syria, Lebanon and
other points of interest to the Zionists. It must remain within the Western
hegemony.
BACKLASH?
What is worth
watching is how the Cypriots react. Most likely, there will be some rioting and
hording, but eventually folks will knuckle under or lose food and energy
imports. If they continue to stand up to the banksters, then the island will be
invaded by...say, the Muslim Brotherhood from Syria. Either way, the banksters
seemingly hold the winning hand.
Really, the
only way out of this mess is a tripartite attack on the bankster class:
widespread democratization of hyper-dimensional energy (i.e.-zero-point energy);
complete and utter rejection of GMO foods; and, the issuance of
publicly-controlled currency in whatever form.
Short of that,
we are all well on our way to the Cypriot model. The banksters have already
seized north of $8 trillion in the US, and similar reclamations of private
property are running apace worldwide. Cyprus is only the latest and
currently most visible example.
The most
likely outcome is that people will generally roll over and take it. Why? We've
all been trained by religion to wait for some outside force to come in and clean
things up for us. This mentality has been carefully fostered by the banksters
over centuries to keep us all complacent and docile. In other words, Karl Marx
was right on that score.
From the
bankster pov, the ideal response will be that of the US, where folks stirred for
a moment, grumbled, then went directly back to sleep. Instead of becoming angry,
we will all run to the churches to listen to the bankster prophets tell us that
our savior is coming...just wait (another 2,000 years)!
And so it
goes...history repeats and rhymes and no one does anything really constructive
to fix things. It is said that we use roughly 10% of our brains' capacity, which
happens to be the same amount of money being confiscated by the IMF from the
Cypriots. Maybe we are using the wrong 10%.
Bernard
Grover is a freelance writer/producer/director living in Jakarta, Indonesia. His
work has appeared in film, broadcast and major publications on- and off-line.
Bernard publishes the Life on the Far Side blog
and produces Radio Far
Side.
Makow
Comment: I
am not as cynical as Grover. People will not fail to learn this lesson and the
banking system will be irreparably damaged.
Review
of Farrell's Babylon's Banksters
1 comment:
Don't trust what Grover said. He is very negative minded person and I know Grover very well than others person. I know how he run his life, minds, and spirit.
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