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View Full Version : Cameron: North Africa terrorist threat 'could last decades'



DevilPigeon
20th January 2013, 18:11
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How very convenient...

The boogeyman to be perpetuated into the collective consciousness for another generation...

You can just imagine the mindset of the 'controllers' can't you? I imagine this would be a typical set of reminders/to-do they set themselves in their Blackberrys/iPhones:

Monday


Buy milk
Put bins out
Extend pretend global threat another 30 years
Check up at dentist


Tuesday

Etc etc etc...

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-21112189

Tesla_WTC_Solution
20th January 2013, 23:00
britain caused the conflict between palestine and israel much as they caused conflict between norway and pre ww2 germany....

they are pot calling kettle black indeed...

British Pirates! LOL ~Monty Python

p.s. black babies deserve to be protected, asian and arab babies too, and yes, indians, etc...!!!!!

tantalum, blood diamonds, oil, gas, etc. charcoal, those are the reasons the people in Africa have no peace... :drama:

Spiral
20th January 2013, 23:17
Islamic terror in north Africa is an old story, in fact its decades longer than the Al-CIA-Da bollox, that was why Mitterand refused to back the Gulf War, because he had been there on the front line, now there are no politicians with any experience of anything approaching real.

Personally considering the BP element and the "ugly" islamist (re Abu Hamsa etc) leader I think its all another load of made for TV codswallop.

humanalien
21st January 2013, 00:34
Africa has been in war mode for many years. I
really doubt that it will stop any time soon.

The military over there has been killing villagers
for one reason or another, not to mention all the
little rouge criminal types over there, doing the
same thing.

Mark
21st January 2013, 00:41
Beyond the simple racism of an uninformed opinion regarding the source of Africa's wars, lies the future of the War on Terror. This marks a deliberate shift by the Elite from Southwest Asia to North and Central Africa.

After centuries of playing about the edges of the continent, it is time to charge full-force into a central and overt role in controlling the wealth of the birthplace of humanity.

Taurean
21st January 2013, 12:06
What a suprise !

http://www.washingtonsblog.com/2013/01/the-real-reasons-that-germany-is-demanding-that-the-u-s-return-its-gold.html


Postscript: Michael Rivero thinks that the war in Mali is connected:


Mali is one of the world’s largest gold producers. Together with neighboring Ghana they account for 7-8% of world gold output. That makes them a rich prize for nations desperate for real physical gold. So, even as Germany started demanding their gold back from the Bank of France and the New York Federal Reserve, France (aided by the US) decided to invade Mali to fight “Islamists” working for “Al Qaeda.” Of course, “Islamists” has become the catch-all label for people that need to be killed to get them out of the way of the path to riches, and the people being bombed by France (aided by the US) are not “Al Qaeda” but Tawariqs, who have been fighting for their independence for 150 years, long before the CIA created “Al Qaeda”. Left to themselves, the Tawariqs could sell gold to whoever they want for whatever they want, and right now China can outbid the US and France.


"Follow the money" as they say,

ROBBING PETER MALI TO PAY PAUL GERMANY

http://whatreallyhappened.com/WRHARTICLES/robmalipaygermany.php

Operator
21st January 2013, 12:26
"Follow the money" as they say,


Haha, but gold isn't the same as money ...

Gold can be used as money, that's true .... but money never really represented gold.
Gold is limited but money limitless. We found that out the hard way ...

So, now each country no longer trust the other ones and lost faith in the limitless paper.
The race for gold has just started once again.

¤=[Post Update]=¤

And maybe soon we have to replace the word race for (world)war

Taurean
21st January 2013, 12:35
"Gold is Money and Nothing Else"



That is exactly what JP Morgan himself said when he was asked about the role of gold in the financial system by a US congressional subcommittee in 1913. Modern investment portfolio managers may soon come to realise they have been imprudent to continue to ignore gold as a currency. Real wealth is, after all, already shifting rapidly and inevitably away from the West and into the East. That's because the United States has by now irreparably abused its "exorbitant privilege" (as it was once called by Charles De Gaulle) of US dollar hegemony (which was the result of Bretton Woods in 1944).


http://pc.blogspot.co.uk/2009/09/louis-boulanger-is-money-and-nothing.html