Speaking to the Treasury Select Committee today, Bilderberger Mervyn King said he was surprised that the anger towards banks has not been greater.
Has King heard of mind control?
Mind control comes in many forms.
There is hard mind control, in the form of electromagnetics, such as microwaves from TV and radio transmission and mobile phones, and chemicals, such as fluoride and mercury.
And there is soft mind control, in the form of propaganda and education (or to be more precise non-education).
Perhaps we are all not as aware of the minute details of the banking system as King, but those of us who are are ****ing furious!
We know the Nazi nature of the banks.
We know they don't want their biggest secrets known, that the money does not exist and they produce money out of thin air.
We know they want human population drastically reduced.
Perhaps King can enlighten us with what was discussed at the Bilderberg meeting he has attended. He has already expressed his disdain for the current banking system, telling an audience in New York last year that the system we have at the moment, the one that has led us to the current financial crisis, is the worst of all systems.
Perhaps King can go on a lecture tour of the UK telling the muggins British taxpayer the minute details of the banking system so that the muggins British taxpayer goes supernova.
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From http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/economics/8355475/Anger-at-the-banks-is-justified-Mervyn-King-says.html
Anger at the banks is justified, Mervyn King says
The Governor of the Bank of England, Mervyn King, has expressed "surprise" that the public is not more angry with the bankers who caused the recession.
By Philip Aldrick, Economics Editor 6:14PM GMT 01 Mar 2011
In some of his strongest language yet, Mervyn King today claimed the fall in households' living standards was the fault of the financial services sector and he expressed sympathy that innocent families paying the price.
"The people whose jobs were destroyed were in no way responsible for the excesses of the financial sector and the crisis that followed," he told MPs on the Treasury Select Committee.
In most aspects, he said, the economy had been on a sound footing before the crisis. Previous downturns were often caused by inefficiencies or weak management and were useful opportunities to improve systems. "None of that applied in this crisis," he said. "We had quite a successfully operating economy."
The people who are now suffering "did not get bonuses of the scale people in the financial sector got". The financial crisis may have occurred two years ago but, as austerity measures kick in, "the cost is now being felt", he said.
It remains "a big political problem", he added: "I'm surprised the real anger hasn't been greater than it has."
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