Sunday, May 31, 2020

Yes, yes, yes! George Soros almost gleefully predicted riots in American cities that would be an excuse for strong arm government tactics and a break from annoying American liberties-Jan. 2012, Newsweek

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"“Yes, yes, yes,” he (Soros) says, almost gleefully, predicting riots on US streets, which will be an excuse for strong arm tactics constraining individual liberty, a break with the tradition of the United States.”-Newsweek, Jan. 2012 

1/23/2012, “George Soros on the Coming U.S. Class War," Newsweek.com, John Arlidge 

“You know George Soros. He’s the investor’s investor—the man who still holds the record for making more money in a single day’s trading than anyone. He pocketed $1 billion betting against the British pound on “Black Wednesday” in 1992, when sterling lost 20 percent of its value in less than 24 hours and crashed out of the European exchange-rate mechanism. No wonder Brits call him, with a mix of awe and annoyance, “the man who broke the Bank of England.”… 

[Soros says] Occupy Wall Street…will grow. It has “put on the agenda issues that the institutional left has failed to put on the agenda for a quarter of a century.” [parag. 16] 

As anger rises, riots on the streets of American cities are inevitable.  

Yes, yes, yes,” he says, almost gleefully. The response to the unrest could be more damaging than the violence itself. “It will be an excuse for cracking down and using strong-arm tactics to maintain law and order, which, carried to an extreme, could bring about a repressive political system, a society where individual liberty is much more constrained, which would be a break with the tradition of the United States.””…(parag. 17, 4th parag. from end)


4/24/20, “America Has a Jared Kushner Problem,” American Greatness, Pedro Gonzalez

President Trump’s greatest weakness now is his inability to recognize [or his indifference to the fact] that his son-in-law is the leader of a faction within the White House whose interests come at the expense of the very people who voted for him. 

If President Donald Trump is serious about draining the swamp, he ought to start with his son-in-law, Jared Kushner. 

Kushner raised eyebrows when he strutted into the role of pandemic point man for the White House, alongside his former roommate and a handful of McKinsey and Company management consultants. As Chris Buskirk wrote in these pages, Team McKinsey has “a history of doing little more than helping failing institutions fail in style while growing rich in the process. 

Project Airbridge, Kushner’s planto take the reins of the Federal Emergency Management Agency supply-chain task force and partner with private companiesto fly health care supplies to New York City from China, lived up to the McKinsey style. 

Never mind that the Chinese government, through state-run media, threatened to plunge America into “the mighty sea of coronavirus” as we grappled with the pandemic. Kushner’s solution for a problem caused by China, and exacerbated by our manufacturing dependency on that country, was to turn to Beijing for “help.” Managed decline, brought to you by Kushner and McKinsey & Company. 

Kushner’s record in the public and private sector is long and mediocre.…His immigration plan, shopped to GOP senators in a PowerPoint presentation, was dismissed as “laughably simplistic.” His plan for the Palestinian economy was lampooned by Michael J. Koplow of the Israel Policy Forum as “the Monty Python version of Israeli-Palestinian peace, where no contention is too absurd to be floated.”

Nevertheless, the president looks on as Kushner performs the political equivalent of jamming square pegs in round holes, encouraging him to try and try again. 

Amid the sound and fury of the pandemic, most people didn’t notice that it was a health insurance company closely connected to KushnerOscar Health, that undertook development for a coronavirus website in partnership with the government. Kushner’s younger brother Joshua co-founded Oscar and is a major investor in the company, “and Jared Kushner partially owned or controlled Oscar before he joined the White House,” according to an exclusive report in the Atlantic. Though Oscar did the work free of charge before abruptly shutting down, it rightly raised the hackles of ethics lawyers.

It’s not typical. It’s usually not allowed,” said Jessica Tillipman, an assistant dean at the George Washington University School of Law and an expert on anti-corruption law. “The concern, when you have some free services, is that it makes the government beholden to the company,” Tillipman added. If something is free, it means the consumer is also the product. 

Kushner consistently has played down events, yet, according to Politico, he’s pining for the creation ofnational coronavirus surveillance system. The system is intended to give the government information about patients and treatment in real-time, aiming at Kushner’s goal of providing “informed, data-driven decisions.” 

It would, of course, come at the cost of privacy, harvesting a trove of data in a world where such a resource is lucrative, all while placing Kushner—a man who is “Beijing’s point of interest in the administrationat the center of it all.”…



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Added: Soros-backed projects share a common attribute. With the help of the US political class, they are cancer on the US. If you prefer, genocide. 

8/22/2016, “Our World: Soros’s campaign of global chaos,” Caroline B. Glick, Jerusalem Post 

On the surface, the vast number of groups and people he supports seem unrelated. After all, what does climate change have to do with illegal African immigration to Israel? What does Occupy Wall Street have to do with Greek immigration policies? 

But the fact is that Soros-backed projects share basic common attributes. 

They all work to weaken the ability of national and local authorities in Western democracies to uphold the laws and values of their nations and communities…. 

They do so in the name of democracy, human rights, economic, racial and sexual justice and other lofty terms. 

In other words, their goal is to subvert Western democracies and make it impossible for governments to maintain order or for societies to retain their unique identities and values.”…


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