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Monday, May 8, 2017

Genocide and Control of Oil




The word "Pogrom" is a Russian noun that means "to destroy, to wreak havoc, to demolish violently." 

"Divide and conquer" is a deliberate plan to retain power and control by using a strategy to cause those in subordinate positions to engage in conflicts with one another in an effort to weaken and prevent any unified effort to remove the status quo from their power position. 

"The globalist-internationalists intentionally instigated both World War I and II as well as every major rise and fall of the stock market. The German militarization that led directly to WWI, the Bolshevik Revolution that violently evolved into both the Soviet and eventual Chinese Communist regimes along with Hitler’s rise to power (compliments of the likes of globalist George H.W. Bush’s father Prescott) were all examples of how the ruling elite directly funds and willfully creates conflict amongst competing powers, thereby covertly consolidating and expanding their own power base."

The Armenian Genocide (1915-1918) is mistakenly thought to have been motivated by Turkish Nationalism. However, the deaths of 1.5 million Christian Armenians was not about any nationalism, rather it resulted from the control of the oil at Baku. 

The Holodomor in the Ukraine (1932-1933) is estimated to have killed 7-10 million Ukrainians by a man-made famine, in other words, they starved to death as a result of the Bolsheviks confiscating all the wheat and food in the Ukraine. In the summer of 1932, Stalin implemented a decree that called for the arrest and execution of any person, including children, found taking as little as a few stalks of wheat or any food item from the field where they worked. The famine was adamantly denied by Soviet authorities (even though as many as 30,000 people a day were dying of starvation, and the view was echoed by some prominent Western journalists such as Walter Duranty.  Duranty reported that there was no death from starvation or famine but there was a widespread mortality from disease due to malnutrition. 

The Nanking Genocide  (1937-1938) was caused by the Japanese Imperial Army who invaded China's capital city of Nanking and proceeded to murder 300,000 of the 600,000 civilians and soldiers. The six weeks of carnage became known as the Rape of Nanking and represented the single worst atrocity during WWII.

The Genocide in Bosnia (1992-1995) resulted in the death of over 100,000 people, which represented 80% of Bosniak. It was considered the worst act of genocide.  Bosnian Serb forces with the backing of the Serb-dominated Yugoslav army launched an offensive attack by bombing Bosnia's capital, Sarajevo.  The International community did little to prevent the systematic atrocities committed against Bosniaks and Croats in Bosnia while they were occurring, although it did actively seek justice against those who committed them.  Despite what is written as to who caused the genocide, Bosnia is rich in oil, mining and metallurgy resulting in the need to divide and conquer the old Ottoman Empire. 

The "Darfur Genocide" refers to the mass slaughter and rape of Darfuri men, women and children in the western region of Sudan in Africa. This genocide began in 2003 and continues today. The war in Sudan is a resource war, fought by surrogates, involving great powers, contending for a finite pool of resources. Taking place in Africa, this is another "invisible war" since the mainstream media in the west are subsidized by the oil industry and down plays it.

Would it come as a surprise to learn that the conflict in Sudan began when Chevron discovered oil in Southern Sudan in 1978?

Consider this; "countries suffering from scarcity of Natural resources are not, as far as can be measured, at a risk of civil war. However, those countries rich in natural resources, are at risk of a war."

The Rwandan genocide of 1994 is said to be one of the United Nations (UN) greatest failures since, after all, the UN was created following the second World War, for the purpose of advancing respect for human rights. 

The Cambodian genocide (1975-1979) began in 1975 when Cambodia fell to the Khmer Rouge (KR) whose leader, Pol Pot launched the genocide that was viewed as the worst in history.  The Khmer Rouge, with extensive support from the CIA, killed 1.5 million Cambodians. 

In 1964, after Vietnam was divided into North and South, several US aircraft carriers were stationed offshore of Vietnam and the 'war' was started.  Explosions in the waters of the South China Sea was a daily occurrence and was part of Operation Linebacker One, where Standard Oil began its ten year oil survey of the seabed off of Vietnam. This allowed Standard Oil to bid on specific lots available that would guarantee them to strike oil. Their extensive undersea seismic research during the war, certainly paid off.