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Post by cnote on Oct 2, 2023 2:37:53 GMT
On who controls free speech.
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Post by tonyhancock on Oct 2, 2023 14:58:25 GMT
Who controls speech. Whoever in any given jurisdiction controls the money. When you control the money, you get to control the politicians, the media and the major corporations. I say within any given jurisdiction but the BIS, World Bank, IMF, WHO, my mates the WEF call the shots all over the place. These institutions are not run by the member nations. The FED (for now) controls the world's reserve currency. If you want to know who's in charge, find out who you cannot criticise. Or question even. I came across this, recently. wariscrime.com/new/black-hood-censorship/If anyone wants to read it, I suggest they do so slowly and in stages. It's quite a bit to take in, and understand the implications. Overwhelming, if you add thought to the written words. Reds under the bed. They were there. This is why I like old books, if you can get them. Written by people who were there at the time, and didn't blindly follow the official narratives. This is why I think the thing which pissed me off the most was: Still it was not until World War II that the manipulators of the National Democratic Party hit on a really effective way of destroying a large portion of our literary heritage and its high values of morality and patriotism. Since most classics have a steady rather than a rapid sale and are not subject to quick reprints even in normal times, and since many potential readers of these books were not in college, but in the armed forces, few editions of such works were reprinted during the war. At this juncture the government ordered plates to be destroyed on all books not reprinted within four years. The edict was almost a death blow to our culture, for as old books in libraries wear out very few of them can be reprinted at modern costs for printing and binding. Thus, since 1946 the teacher of advanced college English courses has had to choose texts not, as in 1940, from those classics which he prefers but from such classics as are available. The iniquitous practice of destroying plates was reasserted by “Directive M-65, dated May 31, 1951, of the National Production Authority,” which provides that “plates which have not been used for more than four years or are otherwise deemed to be obsolete” must be delivered “to a scrap metal dealer” (letter to the author from Appleton-Century-Crofts, Inc., June 15, 1951). In this connection, Upton Close wrote (Radio Script, August 12, 1951) that he “was a writer on the Orient who stood in the way of the Lattimore-Hiss gang and Marshall’s giving of China to the Communists,” and that such an order “wiped out” all his books on China and Japan.
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Post by cnote on Oct 6, 2023 18:04:37 GMT
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Post by tonyhancock on Oct 7, 2023 14:03:23 GMT
I can't make my mind with either Icke or Musk
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