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On 31 December 2011, The Economist, read by top people worldwide, mentions Ron Paul.
Among the Directors of The Economist are Sir David Bell, a trustee of Common Purpose, and Lynn Forester de Rothschild.
The Economist's opposition to Ron Paul suggests that Ron Paul must be one of the good guys?
Ron Paul and wife
According to The Economist (The Republicans Into Iowa):
"The best organised campaign, by all accounts, is that of Mr Paul...
"His unstinting advocacy of much smaller government and sounder money goes down well with local Republicans.
"His calls for an end to foreign entanglements and the legalisation of drugs are popular with the young.
Ron Paul
"At an event on the campus of the University of Northern Iowa in Cedar Falls, throngs of giddy students leap to their feet when he appears and drown out most of his rambling stump speech with rapturous applause...
"But his isolationist foreign policy makes many Republicans wary.
"It puts off evangelicals in particular, according to Steve Deace, a prominent Christian radio host, for fear that it might undermine Israel’s special place in God’s scheme."
According to The Economist, recent polls show Obama an average of two points ahead of Mitt Romney, eight points ahead Ron Paul and nine points ahead of Newt Gingrich.
Book signing
The columnist 'Lexington' has written about 'Ron Paul's big moment' (in The Economist)
According to Lexington:
Ron Paul, the 76-year-old libertarian from Texas, has "a worldview so wacky and a programme so radical that he was recently discounted as a no-hoper.
"Even if he wins in quirky Iowa, Ron Paul will never be America’s president.
"But .... a substantial number like a man who wants to abolish the Federal Reserve, introduce a new currency to compete with the dollar, eliminate five departments of the federal government within a year, pull out of the United Nations and close all America’s foreign bases, which he likens to 'an empire'...
"During the candidates' debates of 2011, Mr Paul won plaudits for integrity...
"Mr Paul insists on the rule of law and civil liberties and due process for all...
"Mr Paul has no great love for the Jewish state, even though this hurts him with the evangelical voters of Iowa.
"He opposed the Iraq war from the start and wants America to shun expensive foreign entanglements that make the rest of the world resent it...
Ron Paul
"Born in 1935, he remembers the tail-end of the Depression..."
He has "a preoccupation with the money supply and a lifelong conviction that governments must be prevented from debasing the currency.
"Not all of Mr Paul’s positions are unpopular. Like other conservatives, he defends the God-given right to keep and bear arms... He is pro-life, which he believes begins at conception. He champions home-schooling.
"But only he combines a general dislike of the overweening federal government with a particular, obsessive hatred of what he considers the corrupt system of money at its secret heart..."
He "has come to see the operations of the Fed - indeed the entire banking system, with its reliance on paper money no longer backed by gold - as a dangerous confidence trick.
"The Fed has 'ominous powers that Congress barely understands,' he says. 'Trillions of dollars can be created and injected into the economy with no obligation by the Fed to reveal who benefits.'
"Though ending the Fed would take time, this is his panacea: it would end dollar depreciation, remove America’s ability to fund endless wars and stop the growth of government...
"He has served a dozen terms in the House of Representatives, failing to find allies for his radical measures.
"He cannot expect actually to win the nomination, let alone become president.
"His real aim appears to be didactic: he wants the widest possible hearing for his ideas...
"Though the nomination may be out of his reach, he has dedicated supporters and the ability to raise lots of money through small donations.
"That could ... perhaps give him enough delegates to shape August’s nominating convention in Tampa.
"Or he could run as a third-party candidate.
"But that would help Barack Obama..."It is true that in recent years Mr Paul has stuck to his core principles: sound money, small government, individual liberty and bringing the troops home...
"In the end, Mr Paul’s obsession with the Fed is an anti-government conspiracy theory.
"And in America, anti-government conspiracy theories attract a lot of wingnuts..."
Photo by Jason Bell - Official Website
On 31 December 2011, The Economist, read by top people worldwide, mentions Ron Paul.
Among the Directors of The Economist are Sir David Bell, a trustee of Common Purpose, and Lynn Forester de Rothschild.
The Economist's opposition to Ron Paul suggests that Ron Paul must be one of the good guys?
Ron Paul and wifeAccording to The Economist (The Republicans Into Iowa):
"The best organised campaign, by all accounts, is that of Mr Paul...
"His unstinting advocacy of much smaller government and sounder money goes down well with local Republicans.
"His calls for an end to foreign entanglements and the legalisation of drugs are popular with the young.
Ron Paul"At an event on the campus of the University of Northern Iowa in Cedar Falls, throngs of giddy students leap to their feet when he appears and drown out most of his rambling stump speech with rapturous applause...
"But his isolationist foreign policy makes many Republicans wary.
"It puts off evangelicals in particular, according to Steve Deace, a prominent Christian radio host, for fear that it might undermine Israel’s special place in God’s scheme."
According to The Economist, recent polls show Obama an average of two points ahead of Mitt Romney, eight points ahead Ron Paul and nine points ahead of Newt Gingrich.
Book signingThe columnist 'Lexington' has written about 'Ron Paul's big moment' (in The Economist)
According to Lexington:
Ron Paul, the 76-year-old libertarian from Texas, has "a worldview so wacky and a programme so radical that he was recently discounted as a no-hoper.
"Even if he wins in quirky Iowa, Ron Paul will never be America’s president.
"But .... a substantial number like a man who wants to abolish the Federal Reserve, introduce a new currency to compete with the dollar, eliminate five departments of the federal government within a year, pull out of the United Nations and close all America’s foreign bases, which he likens to 'an empire'...
"During the candidates' debates of 2011, Mr Paul won plaudits for integrity...
"Mr Paul insists on the rule of law and civil liberties and due process for all...
"Mr Paul has no great love for the Jewish state, even though this hurts him with the evangelical voters of Iowa.
"He opposed the Iraq war from the start and wants America to shun expensive foreign entanglements that make the rest of the world resent it...
Ron Paul"Born in 1935, he remembers the tail-end of the Depression..."
He has "a preoccupation with the money supply and a lifelong conviction that governments must be prevented from debasing the currency.
"Not all of Mr Paul’s positions are unpopular. Like other conservatives, he defends the God-given right to keep and bear arms... He is pro-life, which he believes begins at conception. He champions home-schooling.
"But only he combines a general dislike of the overweening federal government with a particular, obsessive hatred of what he considers the corrupt system of money at its secret heart..."
He "has come to see the operations of the Fed - indeed the entire banking system, with its reliance on paper money no longer backed by gold - as a dangerous confidence trick.
"The Fed has 'ominous powers that Congress barely understands,' he says. 'Trillions of dollars can be created and injected into the economy with no obligation by the Fed to reveal who benefits.'
"Though ending the Fed would take time, this is his panacea: it would end dollar depreciation, remove America’s ability to fund endless wars and stop the growth of government...
"He has served a dozen terms in the House of Representatives, failing to find allies for his radical measures.
"He cannot expect actually to win the nomination, let alone become president.
"His real aim appears to be didactic: he wants the widest possible hearing for his ideas...
"Though the nomination may be out of his reach, he has dedicated supporters and the ability to raise lots of money through small donations.
"That could ... perhaps give him enough delegates to shape August’s nominating convention in Tampa.
"Or he could run as a third-party candidate.
"But that would help Barack Obama..."It is true that in recent years Mr Paul has stuck to his core principles: sound money, small government, individual liberty and bringing the troops home...
"In the end, Mr Paul’s obsession with the Fed is an anti-government conspiracy theory.
"And in America, anti-government conspiracy theories attract a lot of wingnuts..."
Photo by Jason Bell - Official Website

Isolationism is what we are now. the world hates us. Ron Paul is a non-interventionalist and would prefer with befriending and trading with nations instead of bombing millions of innocent civilians in the name "liberation" from their resources.
ReplyDeleteWingnut - Anyone that believes that it is in the best interest of the American People to pay interest to a group of Private Bankers, (The Federal Reserve) to print money that the Federal Government is more than capable of doing INTEREST FREE. Radical? I think not! ;-)
ReplyDeleteRon Paul is the ONLY true conservative and true liberal - an eclectic individual among all the Republic and Democratic (Obama) cadidates. He has the best interests for Americans at his heart.
ReplyDeleteAll the other Republic candidates are the pseudo conservative warmongering Israel first traitors. (Yes, they are traitors to Americans; they are traitors to humanity). As for Obama, he is a pseudo liberal warmonger. He is doing a good job for his imperialist masters for meddling foreign countries internal affairs.
I definitely will vote for Ron Paul. I will not waste my vote to any pseudo conservative or
"It (RP's "isolationist" foreign policy) puts off evangelicals in particular, according to Steve Deace, a prominent Christian radio host, for fear that it might undermine Israel’s special place in God’s scheme."
ReplyDeleteIt's amazing... if you are not for endless preemptive interventionist military excursions all over the globe, you are an isolationist. There is no middle ground, just the pejorative accusation of isolationist.
The last time I checked we had an admitted $15 trillion dollars of debt, and Obama is calling for another immediate $1.2 trillion. Do the math, figure out what YOUR share of this debt is, and then tell me we can afford to continue this profligate spending on war as American children starve and our infrastructure crumbles..
And Israel? I think its time they found a way to live in harmony with their neighbors, and stopped relying on the blood and treasure of American citizens to act as their military bully boy.
ron paul dosnt need everyone to agree, just 51%
ReplyDeleteThe same people who own and run the Economist own and run the Federal Reserve and through their sponsorship of Israel have created an enormous network of support for their worldwide criminal activity. Most Jews believe the Holocaust story that has been spun by these very people, and believe that they are besieged by people who hate them without reason.
ReplyDeleteThe political machinery that ordinary Jews support in the United States for the defense of Israel from another imagined Holocaust does not just happen to come in handy to subvert the entire polity in the service of the sponsors of Israel - politicians who are bought to support Israel are after all bought.
The people who own and run the Economist also own most of the corporations and organizations that run election machinery in America.
They own and run not just the Economist, but all the mass media in the United States.
They are enraged and terrified to see how far Ron Paul has got. Their media are going all-out to diss him, but it seems not to be working.
Look for an all-out attempt to steal Iowa and New Hampshire from Ron Paul, beginning with the fake vote count being set up in Iowa. If that does not work, they will try to kill him.
97 senators voted for unlimited arrest, seizure and death of any American they don't like and you want to talk trash about Ron Paul; one of barely over a hundred out of 500 plus Congressman/women who voted NO for the NDAA bill?
ReplyDeleteWelcome to the new Zionist run reservation called the Untied States of Israhell. You know why people can't see the resembelance between the US of I now and post WWII Germany? Because they taught you that nightmare in black and white the first time and it seems like an alternate reality that never really happened in current history. 150 years untouched by WAR destruction on her front door; Babylonian whore. Your pimp wants his money and his Richard sucked while your cockold hubby Lord England begs for sailors to drip from your porthole like cottage cheese into his yellow stained-moustached-mouth.
Good bye harlot.
Ghana Serapis
Ron Paul is sound on economics and has not threatened to wipe away social security. The "lobby" has chosen his election as a major battle for their continuing supremacy of the US political environment. The "lobby" will be the big losers if Paul wins. The gainers will be the American people who will again believe in their government to act independently. This may be the most important political battle in the last 60 years. Who runs America?
ReplyDeleteThe one thing that i remember the most clearly over the past 39-40 years of my school days at Brandeis University in1970's are my student adviser's words that when he was growing up that his grand parents and parents used the term "‘goyishe kup,’" meaning that the "Non-Jews are Stupid"
ReplyDeleteLater in life I learned that the exact translation of "GOYISHE KUP" means that the "Cattle are STUPID"..
I remember him recalling whatt his father told him when he was growing up in Eastern Europe. One of them being that when his father was in high school he and a group of friends would skip school early on Fridays and go over to his friend's father's butcher shop. That they would buy at cost any cows , that had not been butchered by the end of the day on Friday before the begining of shabat . They would take the cow home and wash it and then the boys would procede to "beat the udders of the cows so that they would swell up and turn pink" so as to sell them to the "GOYISHE KUP" as milk producing cows.
The part that I remember him asking me if the East Europeans are so naive, so gullible and so stupid to buy old "non milk producing cows" from a bunch of young Jewish Boys.
So thinking of it now I agree with the Jewish saying that the "GOYISHE KUP" are indeed" Stupid" as they believe that a Bunch of Arab Muslim Kids who were not able to Fly a Cessna Airplane took it upon themselves to FLY a Boing Jumbo Jet outwitting the US Military and Civilian authorities. The "Jewish Lightning Insurance Scam" of the 1960's is still alive and well has been put to good use by Larry Silverstein with the help of his sayanim jews made a financial killing in imploding wtc by putting 15 million down and comming out with 7 billion dollars for buidings that no one wanted to buy because it would have cost a billion dollars to remove the asbestos from. Then on top of that the people in America actually believe that they actually decide who is elected President or for that that actual VOTE is really counted and makes a difference in deciding who represents them in the White House and congress. http://www.bollyn.com/index.php
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rVTXbARGXso http://www.911missinglinks.com/ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DxnpujfanUM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GeggPSL3gQs
Yeh I agree that the AmericanNon-Jews are indeed American "GOYISHE KUP" or "STUPID CATTLE"!
The Israeli Defense Firm That Tallies The Iowa Caucus
By Christopher Bollyn
1-1-8
The Iowa caucus is only a few days away and the nation's attention will be directed to the results, which signify the beginning of the U.S. presidential race. But does anyone watch who tallies the results of the Iowa caucus?
The Iowa caucus results were tallied in 2004 by a company that is headed by a man whose company was bought by Elron Electronics, the Israeli defense firm. I suspect that it will be the same this year. Don't expect to see any grassroots political activists doing the tally in Iowa. The Israeli defense establishment takes care of that part of the American "democratic" election process.
VOXEO
In the summer of 2004, I first learned that a foreign and out-of-state company using Interactive Voice Response (IVR) technology tallied the Iowa caucus results.
The system used to tally the 2004 Iowa caucus results was provided by a company called Voxeo, which was apparently based in Orlando, Florida. (Yellow flag goes up in the mind of those familiar with Orlando and electronic vote fraud history