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Do you believe that regardless of political party we are all being made the fool?

Always the fool the citizens are.Do we have freedom?Do we have liberty?Are we at war or not?What backs our currency?Why does one family own all the banksROTHSCHILD OWNED & CONTROLLED BANKS:Afghanistan: Bank of AfghanistanAlbania: Bank of AlbaniaAlgeria: Bank of AlgeriaArgentina: Central Bank of ArgentinaArmenia: Central Bank of ArmeniaAruba: Central Bank of ArubaAustralia: Reserve Bank of AustraliaAustria: Austrian National BankAzerbaijan: Central Bank of Azerbaijan RepublicBahamas: Central Bank of The BahamasBahrain: Central Bank of BahrainBangladesh: Bangladesh BankBarbados: Central Bank of BarbadosBelarus: National Bank of the Republic of BelarusBelgium: National Bank of BelgiumBelize: Central Bank of BelizeBenin: Central Bank of West African States (BCEAO)Bermuda: Bermuda Monetary AuthorityBhutan: Royal Monetary Authority of BhutanBolivia: Central Bank of BoliviaBosnia: Central Bank of Bosnia and HerzegovinaBotswana: Bank of BotswanaBrazil: Central Bank of BrazilBulgaria: Bulgarian National BankBurkina Faso: Central Bank of West African States (BCEAO)Burundi: Bank of the Republic of BurundiCambodia: National Bank of CambodiaCame Roon: Bank of Central African StatesCanada: Bank of Canada – Banque du CanadaCayman Islands: Cayman Islands Monetary AuthorityCentral African Republic: Bank of Central African StatesChad: Bank of Central African StatesChile: Central Bank of ChileChina: The People’s Bank of ChinaColombia: Bank of the RepublicComoros: Central Bank of ComorosCongo: Bank of Central African StatesCosta Rica: Central Bank of Costa RicaCôte d’Ivoire: Central Bank of West African States (BCEAO)Croatia: Croatian National BankCuba: Central Bank of CubaCyprus: Central Bank of CyprusCzech Republic: Czech National BankDenmark: National Bank of DenmarkDominican Republic: Central Bank of the Dominican RepublicEast Caribbean area: Eastern Caribbean Central BankEcuador: Central Bank of EcuadorEgypt: Central Bank of EgyptEl Salvador: Central Reserve Bank of El SalvadorEquatorial Guinea: Bank of Central African StatesEstonia: Bank of EstoniaEthiopia: National Bank of EthiopiaEuropean Union: European Central BankFiji: Reserve Bank of FijiFinland: Bank of FinlandFrance: Bank of FranceGabon: Bank of Central African StatesThe Gambia: Central Bank of The GambiaGeorgia: National Bank of GeorgiaGermany: Deutsche BundesbankGhana: Bank of GhanaGreece: Bank of GreeceGuatemala: Bank of GuatemalaGuinea Bissau: Central Bank of West African States (BCEAO)Guyana: Bank of GuyanaHaiti: Central Bank of HaitiHonduras: Central Bank of HondurasHong Kong: Hong Kong Monetary AuthorityHungary: Magyar Nemzeti BankIceland: Central Bank of IcelandIndia: Reserve Bank of IndiaIndonesia: Bank IndonesiaIran: The Central Bank of the Islamic Republic of IranIraq: Central Bank of IraqIreland: Central Bank and Financial Services Authority of IrelandIsrael: Bank of IsraelItaly: Bank of ItalyJamaica: Bank of JamaicaJapan: Bank of JapanJordan: Central Bank of JordanKazakhstan: National Bank of KazakhstanKenya: Central Bank of KenyaKorea: Bank of KoreaKuwait: Central Bank of KuwaitKyrgyzstan: National Bank of the Kyrgyz RepublicLatvia: Bank of LatviaLebanon: Central Bank of LebanonLesotho: Central Bank of LesothoLibya: Central Bank of Libya (Their most recent conquest)Uruguay: Central Bank of UruguayLithuania: Bank of LithuaniaLuxembourg: Central Bank of LuxembourgMacao: Monetary Authority of MacaoMacedonia: National Bank of the Republic of MacedoniaMadagascar: Central Bank of MadagascarMalawi: Reserve Bank of MalawiMalaysia: Central Bank of MalaysiaMali: Central Bank of West African States (BCEAO)Malta: Central Bank of MaltaMauritius: Bank of MauritiusMexico: Bank of MexicoMoldova: National Bank of MoldovaMongolia: Bank of MongoliaMontenegro: Central Bank of MontenegroMorocco: Bank of MoroccoMozambique: Bank of MozambiqueNamibia: Bank of NamibiaNepal: Central Bank of NepalNetherlands: Netherlands BankNetherlands Antilles: Bank of the Netherlands AntillesNew Zealand: Reserve Bank of New ZealandNicaragua: Central Bank of NicaraguaNiger: Central Bank of West African States (BCEAO)Nigeria: Central Bank of NigeriaNorway: Central Bank of NorwayOman: Central Bank of OmanPakistan: State Bank of PakistanPapua New Guinea: Bank of Papua New GuineaParaguay: Central Bank of ParaguayPeru: Central Reserve Bank of PeruPhilip Pines: Bangko Sentral ng PilipinasPoland: National Bank of PolandPortugal: Bank of PortugalQatar: Qatar Central BankRomania: National Bank of RomaniaRussia: Central Bank of RussiaRwanda: National Bank of RwandaSan Marino: Central Bank of the Republic of San MarinoSamoa: Central Bank of SamoaSaudi Arabia: Saudi Arabian Monetary AgencySenegal: Central Bank of West African States (BCEAO)Serbia: National Bank of SerbiaSeychelles: Central Bank of SeychellesSierra Leone: Bank of Sierra LeoneSingapore: Monetary Authority of SingaporeSlovakia: National Bank of SlovakiaSlovenia: Bank of SloveniaSolomon Islands: Central Bank of Solomon IslandsSouth Africa: South African Reserve BankSpain: Bank of SpainSri Lanka: Central Bank of Sri LankaSudan: Bank of SudanSurinam: Central Bank of SurinameSwaziland: The Central Bank of SwazilandSweden: Sveriges RiksbankSwitzerland: Swiss National BankTajikistan: National Bank of TajikistanTanzania: Bank of TanzaniaThailand: Bank of ThailandTogo: Central Bank of West African States (BCEAO)Tonga: National Reserve Bank of TongaTrinidad and Tobago: Central Bank of Trinidad and TobagoTunisia: Central Bank of TunisiaTurkey: Central Bank of the Republic of TurkeyUganda: Bank of UgandaUkraine: National Bank of UkraineUnited Arab Emirates: Central Bank of United Arab EmiratesUnited Kingdom: Bank of EnglandUnited States: Federal Reserve, Federal Reserve Bank of New YorkVanuatu: Reserve Bank of VanuatuVenezuela: Central Bank of VenezuelaVietnam: The State Bank of VietnamYemen: Central Bank of YemenZambia: Bank of ZambiaZimbabwe: Reserve Bank of ZimbabweThe FED and the IRSVirtually unknown to the general public is the fact that the US Federal Reserve is a privately owned company, siting on its very own patch of land, immune to the US laws.

Why do celebrities revere Che Guevara?

Because most celebrities are willing to go with any trend that appears ‘cool’ without researching for two minutes whether or not this trend is even based on facts. The same goes with their admiration for the so-called ‘symbol of hope and freedom’ Ernesto Che Guevara.(Jay Z sporting a Che Guevara T-shirt)In reality, though, Che Guevara’s views and actions were totally opposite of what these celebrities claim to stand for. Now before anyone starts jumping to conclusions and starts calling me a conservative, a fascist, a Trumpanzee, etc, for my criticism of Guevara, let me be clear that I’m none of those things.Anyway, back to Guevara.To start with, Che was a raging homophobe. For him, gay people were the opposite of his idea of ‘hombre nuevo’ (new man) and he considered them as ‘pervertidos sexuales’ (sexual perverts). Thus, he campaigned to have them incarcerated. He herded them, along with Aro-Cuban priests, Jehovah’s witnesses, and anyone else considered ‘undesirable’, and send them to labour camps. One of the main reasons why they were sent there was that they were considered unfit to serve in the Cuban military. Around 35,000 gay people were put into those camps.In the labour camps where these people were incarcerated, there was a sign that said:El trabajo os hará hombresIt translates to:Work will make you menYou know, the Nazi concentration camps used to have signs ‘Work will set you free’, which kind of gives away the fact that these labour camps, which were Che’s idea, were very much influenced by the Nazis.Also, as per the testimonies of many prisoners, gay people were treated much worse than other inmates and were the last ones to be served meals. If a gay prisoner committed even the slight infraction, he was beaten mercilessly. Torture, rape, and murder were pretty common too.And if being a homophobe wasn’t enough, he was also a mass-murderer who enjoyed killing people. He not only ordered the executions of the members of the former regime, but also of the journalists, businessmen, or anyone that wouldn’t align themselves with his ideas. None of the people executed on Guevara’s orders were given a fair trial because as per Che himself:Para enviar hombres al pelotón de fusilamiento no es necesaria la prueba judicial. Ese procedimiento es un detalle burgués arcaico. ¡Esta es una revolución! Y un revolucionario debe ser una fría máquina de matar motivado por odio puro.Translation:To send men to the firing squad, judicial proof is not necessary. That process is an archaic bourgeois detail. This is a revolution! And a revolutionary should be a cold killing machine, motivated solely by pure hate.The condemned were executed through a firing squad. And if in case anyone survived, Che would personally walk up to them and shoot them in the head.Here’s this other thing that he confessed in a letter to his father:Tengo que confesarte, papá, que realmente me gusta matar.Translation:I have to confess to you, father, that I really like killing.One of the prominent figures to be imprisoned in one of the camps that Che helped set up was Reinaldo Arenas, a Cuban writer and also an openly-gay man. He was arrested for “ideological deviation”. He wrote extensively about the living conditions inside the camps, as in how there was a lack of enough toilets and that beating was pretty common.In 1959, Guevara was put in charge of the La Cabaña, a fortress where political prisoners or those who pissed off the communist government were held. During his stint there, plenty of people were tortured, beaten and killed. Here’s a testimony from a prisoner, describing what he saw:Several men who survived La Cabaña prison recall a night when a 14-year-old boy was shoved into their holding cell. When asked what he did, he gasped that he had tried to defend his father from the firing squad, but was unsuccessful.Moments later, guards dragged the boy out of the cell, and Che Guevara himself ordered the boy to kneel down.The jailed men screamed "assassins!" and watched out of their cell window as Guevara took out his pistol, put the barrel to the back of the boy's neck, and fired.It is the actions like the one above that earned Guevara the nickname “El Carnicero de la Cabaña” (The butcher of La Cabaña).This man didn’t have any compunctions about killing people, and like I said, didn’t give a shit if they were innocent. Like there was a man named Rafael García Muñiz. He had been a policeman for just six months when the revolutionary government came to power. Finding no reason to hide, he reported for duty to the new revolutionary authorities. He was arrested on the spot, sent to La Cabaña prison, and accused of murdering three members of the 26 of July movement. When Che was told about his innocence, he explained he had to die “for having worn Batista’s blue uniform.” At his trial, García was absolved for lack of evidence but quickly sentenced to death in a second trial. Che promptly ratified the sentence and had him executed immediately, without allowing farewells with his family. He was executed on March 18, 1959, and was only 23 years old.Ante la duda, mátalo.Translation: When in doubt, execute.The above is the belief he went by.Even in his address to the UN general assembly in 1964, he said the following:Nosotros tenemos que decir aquí lo que es una verdad conocida, que la hemos expresado siempre ante el mundo: fusilamientos, sí, hemos fusilado, fusilamos y seguiremos fusilando.Translation:What we have to say here is a known truth, something which we’ve always expressed in front of the world: executions, yes, we’ve executed, we execute, we will execute, and we’ll continue executing.Don’t believe me? Hear it from his own mouth:Funny thing is, he’s blaming everything on the ‘imperial capitalists’, saying that it the fault of the US that he’s executing people. What’s funnier is that he further says this:Asesinatos no cometemos sólo fusilamos a los que no simpatizan con nuestras ideas.Which translates to:Murder, we’re not committing. We’re just executing those who don’t sympathize with our ideas.Yeah, right! It’s like a thief saying, “Robbery I’m not committing. I’m just taking money from those who don’t sympathize with my desire to get rich, and refused to give me their stuff.”A real charming fellow, isn’t he?The total number of people he killed is still unknown, as the accounts are still emerging. However, in La Cabaña alone, he executed around 176 people. Imagine how many more he must have killed in his so-called ‘fight for the revolution’. It must at least be a thousand.Communists often say that life in Cuba improved after the revolutionaries took over. However, what actually happened is totally the opposite. You see, industrial and agricultural wages rose significantly in the 1950s and were not far behind wages in Europe. Workers were protected by an 8-hour workday, they were entitled to a month’s annual leave, and mothers were given 6 weeks off before and after childbirth. There were almost 60 different daily newspapers, and Cubans had high levels of car, radio, and telephone ownership.Everything changed when Guevara was handed the roles of Finance Minister and President of the National Bank. He started with nationalizing banks, factories, and businesses to eliminate social inequality, and later removed the protections that workers previously enjoyed. People had to meet specific quotas and had their pay cut if they failed to meet their targets. Those who exceeded their targets only received certificates of commendation.This led to a steep drop in production and increased absenteeism. Cuba now depended on huge money transfers from Moscow and in return, became a beachhead for Soviet nuclear weaponry. In just two years, Che’s policies managed to halve the nation’s sugar harvest.So, no, he wasn’t a very smart person either. He muddled his economy like a mint in a mojito (yup, that’s an ERB reference).I can go on and on with writing more about Guevara’s ‘admirable’ qualities, such as his misogyny (cheated on his wives and referred to many women whom he had sex with as ‘whores’), or how he hated free speech or even artistic liberty, which is evident from his following quote:Hay que acabar con todos los periódicos. Una revolución no se puede lograr con la libertad de prensa.Translation:We have to put an end to all the newspapers. A revolution can’t be achieved with the liberty of the press.But then, this would be beside the point.Having said all this, Che Guevara was hardly a hero that many of his fans, communists, edgy teenagers, and even these celebrities portray him to be. In reality, he was a communist fanatic and a terrorist.So, why do celebrities revere Guevara so much? Well, it’s due to their ignorance, edgy behavior, and also their proclivity to go any lengths for popularity.The last time I wrote something criticizing Guevara, I was abused left and right (political pun not intended) by communists and was told to ‘shut the fuck up and read a history book’. Let's see what happens now.References:Butcher of La CabanaChe Guevera's Forgotten Victims. By Maria C. Werlau. Cuba Archives.El Che Guevara y su odio implacable contra los homosexuales, a los que condenó a trabajos forzados “para curarlos”El “Che” Guevara, un ser homofóbico, asesino y racistaChe Guevara en la ONU, en 1964: “sí, hemos fusilado, fusilamos y seguiremos fusilando”Nobody’s Hero: 9 Inconvenient Truths about Che Guevara

How is Napoleon seen today?

Here are my answers to similar questions:Why was Napoleon Bonaparte important?• Period of unstable revolutionary regimes ended in the seizure of power by Napoleon Bonaparte.• Napoleon first proclaimed himself as first consul and later emperor in 1799• Within a few years France had a civil code and a national bank, and the world had its first secular myth.• He was the man of the revolution but also who the man brought stability.• The figure every man who broke with tradition could identify with.• For the French he was the most successful ruler in history.• He established the apparatus of French institutions as they exist to this day.• He brought stability and prosperity to all except a quarter of a million who did not return from his wars.•And, he destroyed the dream of equality, liberty and fraternity.• The dream of 1789 was gone with Napoleon’s tyranny.• Other European powers formed an alliance, forced Napoleon’s surrender.The Frenchman Montesquieu remarked that those nations are happy whose history is boring to read.To some extend it is true; France is an unhappy country, for its history has been fascinating and turbulent, not boring.No wonder its political systems have invited unending and frequently passionate comments from French and foreign observers alike.Are the French proud of Napoleon? Why?They have all the reasons to be proud of Napoleon.For the French Napoleon Bonaparte is what George Washington, Thomas Jefferson and James Madison is for Americans but rolled in one.In less than fifteen years, Napoleon stabilized and reorganized a France bloodied by Revolution.Not a single realm of the art of governance escaped his creative genius and his desire to control the synthesis of society's deep aspirations.Even if his empire did not survive military defeat, it built a durable work around a few basic principles- national reconciliation, order, and authority.He was the man of the revolution but also the man who brought stability.The figure every man who broke with tradition could identify with.For the French he was the most successful ruler in history.Even today he is everywhere. He established the apparatus of French institutions, as they exist to this day.Within a few years that Napoleon was in power, France had a civil code and a national bank, and the world had its first secular myth.But he did not do it alone. His ministers, consuls of state, and dignitaries were greatest practical thinkers of the day. He knew how to spur them on and give them the means to succeed. Napoleon was the first modern head of state.

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