Wednesday, February 16, 2022

Where is Henry Kissinger in All This?

Editor's note: Since Canada's Justin Trudeau has a "high admiration for China" probably because it's China's bizarre communist social credit system (a blackwashing of C.H. Douglas's Social Credit economics) and related technological surveillance (a technological apocalypse more like it) systems that will be grafted onto Canadians, we should probably ask where is Henry Kissinger in all this? It was Steve Bannon who called out Henry Kissinger for being the "mouthpiece and the prop for the CCP." The "world is on fire" so make sure to drop in on Henry Kissinger to find out where he is presently hiding out. Could be located somewhere in consultation with Schwab as Canada is unraveling for them. What did Henry Kissinger say? "Power is the ultimate aphrodisiac." It has become apparent that Trudeau is on an aphrodisiac being a "young global leader" of Klaus Schwab and Schwab himself is a protégé of Kissinger. Whatever kind of a world Klaus Schwab and Henry Kissinger have in mind it will fail miserably beginning in Canada.
________

Source: Yahoo News

New book casts Henry Kissinger as "agent of Chinese influence"
By Bethany Allen-Ebrahimian | Wednesday February 16, 2022

U.S. elites have used ties to China to grow rich — and by doing so, they have helped Beijing grow more powerful, a new book argues.

Why it matters: Curbing the Chinese Communist Party's political influence in the U.S. and abroad requires closer scrutiny of how elites in democratic countries behave.

Get market news worthy of your time with Axios Markets. Subscribe for free.

Instead of supporting free speech and democratic principles, many U.S. institutions now bend over backwards to please Beijing, Isaac Stone Fish, founder and CEO of consulting firm Strategy Risks, writes in "America Second: How America's Elites Are Making China Stronger."
• "The arc of the moral universe remains long, but now it bends toward accommodation," Stone Fish writes.

• This accommodation is the result of some of America's most famous and powerful people being enmeshed in profound conflicts of interest in their dealings with Beijing.
Details: Stone Fish carefully chronicles these conflicts of interest, starting with former national security adviser and secretary of state Henry Kissinger.
• Kissinger's decades-long career as a consultant and private power broker between U.S. companies and Chinese government officials turned the renowned statesman into what is best described as "an agent of Chinese influence," Stone Fish writes.

• To help companies gain greater access to China's markets, Kissinger worked behind the scenes to push for better U.S. relations with China, which often meant the U.S. relaxed its demands for improved human rights commitments and other basic standards.

• A Kissinger representative did not respond to an Axios request for comment.
Stone Fish also tackles Grindr, Boeing, Hollywood and U.S. universities — and emphasizes that racism and xenophobia against Chinese Americans is not only wrong but also counterproductive in the struggle to contain Beijing's influence.

Please go to Yahoo News to read more.
_______
  

Steve Bannon calling out Henry Kissinger in Kissinger's participation in being the "mouthpiece and the prop from the beginning behind the CCP."  



All of this is based on medical data because data is the new commodity:



Americans can do better with this economic system and we don't need the Chinese or Schwab's outfit to implement it:




No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.

Looking into our circumstances...