Friday, February 05, 2016

I ESCAPED FROM ALEX JONES' CAVE. YOU CAN TOO.

I had to giggle at this latest video from Alex Jones about Bernie Sanders and Plato's Cave:


The title of the video may have been proved by comparing what Bernie Sanders earns against a calculator from CNN Money which shows that the threshold of the top 1% is $400k while Jones states that Sanders earns over $500k. I don't know what Sanders' sources of income are.

But it was the last statement of the video that got me giggling, in which Jones asks, "Are you still inside the cave?", referring to Plato's Cave.

For years I was a prisoner in Jones' Cave. I was chained to my desk listening to and/or watching his show. I paid my membership fees.

But then I began to seriously look at President Andrew Jackson.

For those new to conspiracy theory, two of the major conspiracy books are The Creature from Jekyll Island by G Edward Griffin (which Jones still flogs on Infowars), and Secrets of the Federal Reserve by Eustace Mullins. Both of these books portray Andrew Jackson as a man of the people and a hero for destroying the Second Bank of the United States (BUS2). Jones loves Jackson that much that he would frequently play The Battle of New Orleans by Johnny Horton which is about how Andrew Jackson beat the British at New Orleans in 1814.

but for years something niggled in the back of my mind about Jackson, that we were not being told everything. And the same goes for Mullins.

Then three years ago I followed up some of the references in Secrets of the Federal Reserve, in which Mullins extols the virtues of Jackson. With one reference in particular, 28 Years on Wall Street by Henry Clews, Mullins takes liberties. I covered this in A FLAW. Mullins writes:
...Henry Clews, the famous banker, in his book, Twenty-eight Years in Wall Street, states that the Panic of 1837 was engineered because the charter of the Second Bank of the United States had run out in 1836.

But Clews does not write this. Clews instead says that under Nicholas Biddle the Second Bank of the United States was doing a good job. Clews also mocks the team of Jackson and Jackson's British handler, Martin van Buren for their dire management of the American economy, including Jackson's specie circular. I would advise that you read A FLAW to give an insight into the cover up of British agent Andrew Jackson.

But the real Andrew Jackson is exposed in the most excellent work of Michael Kirsch at LPAC/EIR. Kirsch has written several papers on Jackson, which prove that Jackson was a tool of the British, and he appointed some rather unsavoury characters to help him destroy the Second Bank of the United States. Why would the British want that? Well, as Clews states, the Second Bank of the United States was doing a good job of building the American economy which was becoming a threat to the British Empire and their imperial slavery. This is why the British engineered The Civil War 1861-65.

But as stated, G Edward Griffin also portrays Jackson in a good light with his vivid description of Jackson's battle with Nicholas Biddle. But perhaps Griffin needs to read the works of Michael Kirsch to understand the plot. Griffin tries to show that Jackson was a man of the people because after touring the nation with his sloganeering about the bank, Jackson won the election. But on closer inspection, the voting results suggest that Jackson may have won not through his campaign against the bank but because Jackson had promised to kick the native Americans off their ancestral lands. What is the evidence for this? The top seven states who voted overwhelmingly for Jackson were states that eventually formed the Confederacy, but more importantly, they all stood to benefit from Jackson's promise to forcibly remove native Americans from their ancestral lands so that slaveholders could build plantations so that their slaves could work from dawn until dusk and provide a good living for their white supremacist masters! The other states were much less enthusiastic about Jackson (except for Pennsylvania for some reason).

Thus, Jackson was the Godfather of the Confederacy. If Jackson had not promised to kick the native Americans off their ancestral lands in Georgia, Tennessee, etc, then we may not have had the US Civil War.

But this may not bother Jones too much. His ancestors were generals in the Confederate Army, and he allowed Pastor Chuck Baldwin onto his show to tell lies about General Robert E Lee to support his argument as to why the Confederate Battle Flag should be raised.

And in addition to this whitewash of Jackson, I also discovered that:
1. at one point Jackson owned 300 slaves on his plantation, The Hermitage;
2. Jackson instigated The Trail of Tears, the forced removal of the Cherokee, even though a Cherokee had saved Jackson's life, prompting Jackson to (falsely) declare eternal friendship between the USA and the Cherokee;
3. Jackson believed in slavery that much that he organised a raid on Spanish territory, without permission from the US Government, in order to recapture slaves who had escaped their slavery and found sanctuary at Negro Fort, paying $50 for each slave recaptured, and killing 300 of them (the clown!);
4. but above all, it was Jackson who appointed the Rothschilds as agents for the US Government in Europe, thus giving them their big break in America, which the Rothschilds have used to eventually become Kings of America thanks to the Federal Reserve.

And not only that, I could hardly believe my eyes when I saw Jones state that he believes in the Jewish State of Israel.

All this is publicly available.

So I thought: why did he not bother to look all this up (he was fond of that phrase when I used to listen). And if he is so wrong on Jackson then what else is he so wrong about? Donald Gump? Muslims? Capitalism?

It took me a few years to escape from Alex Jones' Cave, but I did it.




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