Vatic Note: THIS is a MUST read..... Remember, Rockefellers are khazars, and were trained by Rothschild in Europe to be their American bankers and controllers. They already were energy kings in both America (Rockefeller) and in Europe (Rothschild).
So the next grab for power and wealth was the banking industry and international corporations. Fascism if you will. Make no mistake about it. These two bankers are definitely fascists. When you read this below that they did to innocent people, it will make nazi's look like choir boys compared to them.
This below about Rockefeller will give you a clue about how these robber barons intend to rape and pillage our economy and our personal wealth in the future NWO, as they have in the past. You have no idea, til you read this, just how barbaric and savage these so called elite really are.
They almost got away with it back in the 20's, but this time, there is way too much awareness now for it to work ever again. STudy what happened in Colorado back then by reading the story of what these Robber barons did to unarmed women and children during a strike on Rockefellers mines.
It was called the
"Ludlow Massacre", and that is what you can expect if they achieve their new world order. They are cowards and only killed unarmed women, children and old people... and since they want the old peoples social security fund, I suspect it would be prudent to do something about this before they get it from us.
This below is one of the most detailed and best write ups of what conditions were like for those miners hired by the robber barons and how they were treated by them. Its a total picture of the horrifically horrible working conditions for anyone at that time and the police state actions in favor of big business and against the helpless and powerless.
Shining the Light on the Rockefellers: Upton Sinclair's Non-Violent Reform Strategy
http://www.is.wayne.edu/MNISSANI/RevolutionarysToolkit/UptonSinclairShiningTheLightOnTheRockefellersStrategy.htm
There are a thousand hacking at the branches of evil to one who is striking at the root.--Henry David Thoreau
Introduction
In his From Dictatorship to Democracy, Gene Sharp observes:
"Most
people in democratic opposition groups do not understand the need for strategic
planning or are not accustomed or trained to think strategically. This is a difficult task.
Constantly harassed by the dictatorship, and overwhelmed by immediate
responsibilities, resistance leaders often do not have the safety or time to
develop strategic thinking skills."
One
example of this is the predisposition of resistance leaders to interact directly with their immediate oppressors�the
police, the army, the state legislators perhaps�never realizing that these
people are simply the pawns of tycoons.
Often, these tycoons live 1000s
of miles away
from, say, the strike location or colonization target. Both history and logic
forcefully suggest that local interactions�despite their intuitive appeal�are
counterproductive.� Reformers must shine
the light�or aim the guns�at the far-away architects of oppression, not at their
nearby inconsequential and replaceable minions.�
The violent
version of this strategy, which goes at least as far back as the 11th
century, had been astoundingly successful.� To the best of my knowledge, its peaceful version (for those of us who still believe in non-violence) goes back at least as far back as 1914, to the Ludlow Massacre and to Upton Sinclair's
ingenious attempts
to force the corporate newspapers to cover it.�
The rest of this posting consists of three long
quotes.� The first, taken from Wikipedia,
gives the semi-official background of the Ludlow Massacre.�
The second, taken from the best media book ever written in English (and
for some strange reason, hardly ever cited by dissident media scholars), Upton Sinclair�s
The Brass Check.
These masterfully-written
fragments explain and illustrate the selective targeting of remote
puppeteers. The third part, again taken from Sinclair's book, shines the
light on the Rockefellers' tactic of discrediting their opponents
(besides their better-known tactics of murdering, starving, intimidating, or
incarcerating them). These tactics are not merely of historical interest,
for the Rockefellers and Rothschilds apply them today on a much larger scale
than they did a century ago.
Children of Ludlow miners just before the
Rockefellers decided to kill or scar them forever
"The Ludlow Massacre was an attack by the Colorado National Guard
and Colorado Fuel & Iron Company camp guards on a tent colony of 1,200
striking coal miners and their families at Ludlow, Colorado on April 20,
1914.�
The massacre resulted in the
violent deaths of between 19 and 25 people; sources vary but all sources
include two women and eleven children, asphyxiated and burned to death under a
single tent.� By 7:00 p.m., the camp was
in flames, and the militia descended on it and began to search and loot the
camp. Louis Tikas had remained in the camp the entire day and was still there
when the fire started. Tikas and two other men were captured by the militia.
Tikas and Lt. Karl Linderfelt, commander of one of two Guard companies, had
confronted each other several times in the previous months. While two
militiamen held Tikas, Linderfelt broke a rifle butt over his head. Tikas and
the other two captured miners were later found shot dead.
Tikas had been shot
in the back. Their bodies lay along the Colorado and Southern Railway
tracks for three days in full view of passing trains. The militia officers
refused to allow them to be moved until a local of a railway union demanded the
bodies be taken away for burial.
"At its peak in 1910, the coal mining industry of Colorado employed
15,864 people, accounting for 10 percent of those employed in the state.
Colorado's coal industry was dominated by a handful of operators. The largest,
Colorado Fuel and Iron, was the largest coal operator in the west, as well as
one of the nation's most powerful corporations, at one point employing 7,050
individuals and controlling 71,837 acres (290.71 km2) of coal land."
CF&I
was purchased by John D. Rockefeller in 1902, and nine years later he turned
his controlling interest in the company to his son, John D. Rockefeller, Jr.,
who managed the company from his offices at 26 Broadway in New York.
"Colliers in Colorado were at constant risk for explosion, suffocation,
and collapsing mine walls. In 1912, the death rate in Colorado's mines was
7.055 per 1,000 employees, compared to a national rate of 3.15.Between 1884 and
1912, mining accidents claimed the lives of more than 1,700 Coloradans".
Historian Philip S. Foner has described company towns as 'feudal
domain[s], with the company acting as lord and master. . . . The 'law' consisted
of the company rules. Curfews were imposed. Company guards -- brutal thugs armed
with machine guns and rifles loaded with soft-point bullets -- would not admit
any 'suspicious' stranger into the camp and would not permit any miner to
leave.' Furthermore, miners who raised the ire of the company were liable
to find themselves and their families summarily evicted from their homes.