PayPal

StatCounter

Saturday, October 24, 2020

AMERICAN GAMBIT

© MMXX V.1.0.0
by Morley Evans

THE AMERICAN GAMBIT

1). The United States creates a war between leading military powers.

2). The United States remains neutral while selling food and weapons.

3). The United States enters the war on one side and tips the balance after belligerents have exhausted themselves.

4). The United States takes credit for ending the war and restores peace on its terms.

5). The United States begins collecting what it has loaned to the belligerents to pay for American food and weapons.

This is a variation on the British colonial template to create unrest and restore order with the British in control of the unruly uncivilized natives who would kill themselves were it not for civilized Christians helping.

This was done in World Wars I & II. During the interwar period, the Washington Navel Agreement reduced the Royal Navy while the Secretary of the Navy, Franklin Roosevelt, built up the U.S. Navy. The British disarmed after WW I. The British spent everything they had to buy American food and materiel in WWI. In WW II, Winston Churchill transferred gold and securities to Montréal to buy American goods. When that was gone, American banks loaned more. In WW II, the Soviet Union was loaned money to buy American materiel. Food was supplied free of charge, according to a Russian source. 

The Soviet debt was substantially reduced at Yalta when Stalin said the communists could not pay it. Germany and Japan grew rich after the war, thanks to American support, while the main American ally shrivelled and blew away as a poodle of Washington. The British had been sucked dry.

World Wars I & II replaced the British as world hegemon with the United States ascending the throne. The wars completed the American War of Independence that began in 1776. Was that the plan or was it an accident? Franklin Roosevelt told us, "In politics, nothing is an accident." That comes from The Great Manipulator, himself. Skilled politicians themselves, Stalin and Churchill had nothing on Roosevelt. Let's give credit where credit is due.

In the movie, East of Eden, Cal had made a fortune buying beans at a fire-sale price from desperate California farmers and selling them for an exorbitant price to desperate British buyers. Cal's father thought that was immoral. He told Cal to return the money he stole. That sums it up.


No comments: