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Sunday, November 08, 2015

WHY DID ENGLAND NOT MAKE HER POSITION CLEAR?

On this Remembrance Sunday I am once again watching the film Oh! What a lovely war.

The film blames Kaiser Wilhelm II and Count Berchtold of Austria-Hungary for the war.

It would be much more accurate to blame Bethmann-Hollweg, as I pointed out over the summer months this year.

However, in the film there is one question asked of England: during the July Crisis why did England not make her position clear?

That is THE key question, yet it is a question that is glossed over in the popular rush to blame Germany.

The BBC docudrama 37 Days surprised me by dropping several hints, albeit subtle, that Sir Edward Grey was very manipulative of foreign nations, but it still did not the point the finger at King George V who, after having told Wilhelm that he wanted Great Britain to stay out of any war, ordered Sir Edward Grey to get Great Britain into any war.

And the reason why Great Britain engineered the war was because Germany and the USA, although not having anywhere near the empire of Great Britain, had overtaken Great Britain as the dominant economic powers in the world, and they were also collaborating with Russia to implement the American System of Economics as well as developing land-based trade routes through railway that the British could not control through their control of the seas and the powerful British navy.

So Great Britain threw a wobbler and set nation against nation to destroy themselves.

The plan was that the world would be so exhausted and devastated that they would demand a world government to stop future wars, which would benefit the victors, i.e. Great Britain, by removing any future military threat, which the world government would put down through American military might.

But the United States did not vote to join the resulting world government, which doomed The League of Nations to failure.

This then led to the British and their anglophile Hofjuden of Wall Street to finance the creation of two extreme opposites: Soviet Russia and Nazi Germany. With these two political ideologies in such close geographical proximity a second world war was guaranteed. The result of WW2 was The United Nations.

But all this could have been avoided if Great Britain had early on in July made clear her position that Belgium was a red line. But Grey was very vague on the subject of Belgium, which along with King George's statement of intention of neutrality to Wilhelm, led Wilhelm to believe that Great Britain and her vast empire did not intend to become involved.

So he invaded Belgium.

It was very foolish of Wilhelm, who had some idea that Germany was about to be surrounded in a war designed to destroy Germany.

But he was tricked into a trap set by Great Britain, and advised and manipulated by German traitors like the Rothschild cousin Bethmann-Hollweg.




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