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Friday, June 06, 2014

THE CLARK REVELATIONS

Today is the 70th anniversary of the D-Day Landings in Northern France which led to the Nazis being pushed back to Berlin by the Allies from the West and by the Soviet Union from the East. Most media outlets will be covering this today.

But yesterday it was different.

Yesterday, on Rothschild Today, it was Snowden Day, a tribute to Ed Snowden and his revelations.

What revelations?

That is a good question.

For the word 'revelation' implies something heavenly, Godly and earth-changing.

But when was the last time you saw a march for freedom from NSA/GCHQ spying? I don't remember seeing one at all. Or hearing of one, not in the DFQ anyway.

But if sex was banned...

Perhaps I shouldn't cite the following article, because it is in The Guardian, but then again perhaps I should, because the article may be taking the piss out of us all. The article asks the question : what has changed?

Here is what yet another article on Snowden and his 'revelations' confirms:
But exactly one year on, the NSA’s greatest wound so far has been its PR difficulties. The agency, under public pressure, has divested itself of exactly one activity, the bulk collection of US phone data. Yet while the NSA will not itself continue to gather the data directly, the major post-Snowden legislative fix grants the agency wide berth in accessing and searching large volumes of phone records, and even wider latitude in collecting other kinds of data.

[source : Edward Snowden, a year on: reformers frustrated as NSA preserves its power, The Guardian, http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/jun/05/edward-snowden-one-year-nsa-surveillance-reform, 5th June 2014]

This is yet another article to add to the many on the result, one year on, of the Snowden revelations.

Change?

What change?

What was illegal is now legal, and in some cases the NSA has even more power.

Yet Rothschild Today is proclaiming Snowden to be a God while videos of General Wesley Clark are ignored. In this Rothschild Today is imitating The Guardian!! (and yes, that's the same The Guardian that employs rabid Russophobe Luke Harding who was banned from Russia due to his inflammatory anti-Russia rants).

I am convinced of the following :
1. if sex was banned there would be marches in the streets, pitchforks, riots, looting, police helicopters shot out of the sky;
2. if RT dedicated a day to the 'revelations' of General Wesley Clark then the wars would be over in 2 to 3 months. MPs, Senators would be quoting Clark in Congress, in the Marsten House, etc. Neighbour would indeed speak unto neighbour about the plan for totaler krieg on seven nations in five years. War is over, would be the joyous cry.

So how about it RT.

How about a day for The Clark Revelations.



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