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Monday, 24 June 2019

Daniel Estulin on Bilderberg

Mentions its origins in 12th Century Europe and the "Venetian Black Nobility". Mainly seems to be various groups of arse-bandits on horseback, wearing tights.


Estulin says there are none in China or Russia, but that seems very unlikely: they are everywhere like a plague of fucking rats. See British Empire in China and Russian tradition of the Knights Hospitaller. See also https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Order_of_Saint_John_(Bailiwick_of_Brandenburg)#Order_of_Saint_John_in_the_Netherlands, as well as https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Order_of_Saint_John_(Bailiwick_of_Brandenburg) and https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Order_of_St_John_in_Sweden. This is where you look if you want to find out about Wellington's deal with Napoleon after Waterloo, and numerous other gross injustices commited over fucking centuries of corruption: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knights_Hospitaller.


At 2 mins 30 secs Estulin says that Iran is not a real issue, but that is very unlikely. Iran was effectively a colony run by Burmah Oil Company, or Anglo Persian Oil Company, until Mossadeq's election, but in the 1953 coup d'etat when the Shah of Iran took control the arse-bandits on horseback got a foothold there too. The Shah regarded himself as being the latter-day king of the Persian Empire, see Persepolis and the Persian Empire .

The MEK have turned about like a playground roundabout. From this November 2018 Guardian article Terrorists, cultists – or champions of Iranian democracy? The wild wild story of the MEK:
Widely regarded as a cult, the MEK was once designated as a terrorist organisation by the US and UK, but its opposition to the Iranian government has now earned it the support of powerful hawks in the Trump administration, including national security adviser John Bolton and the secretary of state, Mike Pompeo.
... 
The MEK grew out of Iran’s Liberation Movement, an Islamic-democratic “loyal opposition” established in 1961 by the supporters of Mohammad Mossadegh, the prime minister ousted in a 1953 coup orchestrated by Britain and the US. The movement called for national sovereignty, freedom of political activity and the separation of mosque and state
...
 Of the 11 members of the MEK central committee tried in 1972, nine were immediately executed and one remained in jail. When Rajavi emerged from prison in 1979, three weeks before the Iranian revolution, he was the undisputed leader of Iran’s most deadly underground rebel group.
... 
The MEK played an important role in the 1979 revolution, seizing the imperial palace and doing much of the fighting to neutralise the police and the army. Two days after the revolution, Massoud Rajavi, who was 30, met the 77-year-old supreme leader. The two did not hit it off. “I met Khomeini,” Rajavi told a journalist in 1981. “He held out his hand for me to kiss, and I refused. Since then, we’ve been enemies.”
What is the solution? Education.






But disobedience does not mean putting oneself above the law:


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