Egypt 'Revolution'- all the way to Libya 'War'

Anything on the news and elsewhere in the media with evidence of digital manipulation, bogus story-lines and propaganda
Dcopymope
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Re: Egypt Revolution

Post by Dcopymope »

Egypt: Brzezinski, a color revolution and El-Baradei
Obama's calls for the resignation of Mubarak come as no surprise to anyone who's been watching this to any length at all. It's well worth going into who the players are, in this attempted revolution:

1) April 6 and Kifaya kicked off the rebellion, and the Muslim Brotherhood is sustaining it. These are the trademark Brzezinski/Soros puppets that are always used to kick off these 'UN soft power revolutions': NGOs, student groups and leninist vanguards attached to Wall Street foundations (in this case, the Freedom House Foundation, the International Center on Nonviolent Conflict and the International Crisis Group). It's the same MO as in all other color revolutions - for ex., Tunisia, Iran and the Ukraine.

2) The coordinating factor here is the International Crisis Group, a UN front staffed by people such as Brzezinski, Soros, Wesley Clark, Solana, Shimon Peres and, of course, El Baradei. This is the guy who was chosen to take over. The motive here is to install a puppet islamo-socialist regime similar to the ones in Iraq and Afghanistan. Baradei is the guy chosen to bring it in, and the Muslim Brotherhood will be its pillar and its sustaining force.

3) The Muslim Brotherhood (MB) deserves a section of its own here. The MB has always been the prime British intelligence asset in the region, being instrumental during the Nasser affair. It's an incredibly important player in the entire Middle East, given the power of its influence networks; its function has always been to take leadership over the Sunni and get an anti-Shia Jihad going. This divide & rule game has helped keep the region in tension ever since WWII, and is now being played out like never before. For NATO, these MB ghouls are the 'good' radical Muslims: they're ardent Fabian socialists, at their inner circle, and they're the ones who provided the man power and the ground networks to set up the NATO protectorates of Kosovo, Albania, and Bosnia.
The MB was also the breeding ground for characters like Ayman al Zawahiri and many other organizers of Qaeda, during the 80s. There is no reason whatsoever to suppose their cooperation has somehow ended, in the meantime (that cooperation was alive and well in 2001), yet that subject is rarely, if ever discussed, on the mainstream.

The OBJECTIVE. Nothing here is happening by chance. The plans for North Africa and the Middle East are laid out in the Brzezinski/Bernard Lewis/PNAC doctrine. The first stage was to create what Brzezinski called "imperial mobilization" into the region, to establish a permanent international military presence -- that was accomplished with the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. At the same time, as Brzezinski said, in The Grand Chessboard (1997), that imperial mobilization would come hand in hand with the setting up of a police state structure in the west.

The next stage is to completely shred the region, bit by bit, nation by nation. This will be done through these collectivist, islamo-socialist regimes, that are meant to destroy traditional Muslim culture, create civil wars, and even regional wars, in the medium/long run.

In the end the whole area will have been deculturalized, wrecked, and broken up into many mini-states, which will be production hubs run by global agencies such as the IMF and the World Bank, and policed by international forces. In other words, the end of the nation-state, and the coming of a neo-feudalist system, run by international financiers, using international agencies as their enforcement arms.

This, of course, will not happen within a vacuum. During this period, many (real) terror and panic migrations will be exported into Europe, and the economic downturns caused by restlessness in the Middle East (particularly in oil prices) will cause the western economies to further collapse into a poverty, two-class status. These things will allow for the "order out of chaos" projection that was described in the 2006 "Strategic Trends Report", by British military intel.

It's also the "great transition" that the UN and its many institutes harp on about. The complete end of the nation-state and its replacement with global and regional management bodies. Constant crisis and conflict, to allow for that transitional process. Economic, social, cultural standardization, of the entire globe.

In the end, a few decades from now, these boys expect to achieve their system of global governance, whereby local populations will be ruled by continental authorities who will, in turn, report to a worldwide body: a 'world state'. It's just the old project of a world society, of scientific socialism and high-tech feudalism, that was put forth by characters such as Hegel, Bentham, St. Simon and Lenin, and is now being carried out by monopoly capitalists.

People have to go keep wising up to the techniques being used, and denouncing them for what they are.
Here is my rule of thumb for smelling bull shit when it comes to "revolutions" or "protests" of any kind. All I needed to do to confirm for my self that this seemingly sudden upheaval in Egypt (as well as the other protests going on in Libya, Tunisia etc) is a farce is to to look at how this is being sold to us by the mainstream media.

Americans protest against any US policy, they are "anti government radical anarchists" and are more & more treated like trash by law enforcement.

But Iranians protest the Iranian government, they are "freedom fighters".

Egyptians "revolt" against the Anglo-American backed Egyptian government, the Anglo-American establishment supports them, but at the same time they are "not taking sides", meaning the Anglo-American Establishment are playing on both sides of the conflict. House nigga Obama and Biden and crew gave their prepared in advance speeches 'urging' Mubarak to step down and at the same time congratulated the "freedom fighters", as expected, tells me all I need to know.

It’s all perception management. They present every subject in black & white, "this" or "that", take your pick, and if you are only thinking in zeros and ones, or like a drone, like the majority of the public, instead of actually critically thinking outside the box (the TV) they want to keep you in, then they can easily guide your thoughts on any given subject to their desired conclusion.

Thesis -- Antithesis -- Synthesis

Democracy, Hypocrisy? West blamed for Egypt revolt praise as 'bad guy' ally quits
brianv
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Re: Egypt Revolution

Post by brianv »

fbenario
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Re: Egypt Revolution

Post by fbenario »

GREAT find.
simonshack
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Re: Egypt Revolution

Post by simonshack »

brianv wrote:food for thought

http://www.puppet99.com/?p=126
Food for thought indeed, Brian. George Soros seems to pop up quite regularly in these "revolutions" ...
ImageGeorge Soros

In the article, “Georgia revolt carried mark of Soros” (November 26, 2003), the Globe & Mail reported, “[Soros' Open Society Institute] sent a 31-year-old Tbilisi activist named Giga Bokeria to Serbia to meet with members of the Otpor (Resistance) movement and learn how they used street demonstrations to topple dictator Slobodan Milosevic. Then, in the summer, Mr. Soros’s foundation paid for a return trip to Georgia by Otpor activists, who ran three-day courses teaching more than 1,000 students how to stage a peaceful revolution.” Several protest organizers on the streets in Egypt last week were wearing Otpor t-shirts. These t-shirts are given out by Otpor at training sessions. This is only to say that there may be a link here, between Soros and Tunisian protesters.


Image
"Egyptian activists wearing Otpor shirts. Otpor was started by Soros
in Serbia and has trained activists in other colour revolutions"
In fact, that entire article is well worth a read - check it out, folks : http://www.puppet99.com/?p=126
simonshack
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Re: Egypt Revolution

Post by simonshack »

*

AND IT'S LIBYA NOW, FOLKS...

Well - I know, Cluesforum is no news media outlet as such - but I propose this headline for this utter disaster: <_<
BreakingNews***BreakingNews***BreakingNews***BreakingNews***BreakingNews***BreakingNews***BreakingNews***BreakingNews

"LIBYAN DIGITAL REVOLUTION SUFFERS MAJOR RENDERING PROBLEMS"

ImageImage
ImageImage
Image
Frames taken from video published by La Repubblica: http://tv.repubblica.it/dossier/libia-r ... pagefrom=1

You better believe it !
warriorhun
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Re: Egypt Revolution

Post by warriorhun »

Dear simonshack and all,

please consider this: Libya, (just like Iran and Syria) are pretty much sealed off, closed societies, not pro-West. No way will they allow foreigners, let alone western Media news crews roam their countries free, when there is trouble brewing, especially when they know the western Media is deeply involved in the brewing. So, there are no western TV crews in those countries, I recon.
Still, the Media wants to provide images to the Western audience, and to the target countries. So they either do total CGI fakery, like the Libyan video, which I take as a personal insulting of my intelligence by the perpetrators, or faking/altering images of protests, the videos taken in a different country. What is really happening in Libya? I know fuck-all about Libya, but it must tie in nicely with the "Crescent of Arabic Democracy"-plan. What do you think?

I am at a bit of a loss about what is happening in the pro-West Arabic Monarchies. Are they just faked sideshows to continue producing images for the Media saturation? Are the perps really destabilizing those countries-which ties in with the "Crescent"-plan, and on the long run with bringing Islam down- but still looks fucking stupid for me. Are they trying to create liberal democratic systems in all Arabic countries in one go, and maybe a few "Al-Qaeda"-led "islamist extremist states" thrown in for luck? I am at a bit of a loss: what do you recon?

The article of the Muslim banking question was thought inspiring, but I always filter everything through my brain and take "cum grano salis" everything I see on any media, internet included. Reading:
Rafe Haneef, head of Islamic banking in Asia for Citigroup

made me laugh out loud: that means the infiltration of the Islamic banking system is well on the way by the international banking system. The "ISI general transferring money to Mohammad Atta" as in the official story, allegedly used one of these islamic banks, which means it was meant to be electronically tracked, a real muslim up to mischief would have used the Hawala system instead. The Hawala-system http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hawala , which, beside the enourmous business opportunity of taking over the Islamic banking, is one of the main reasons why the Islamic monetary system is targeted.
I realised the enormous importance of the Hawala when last year two Israeli airforce electric reconnaisance airplanes were flying over Budapest-I only know because it was an enormous scandal because they are neither NATO, nor have any agreement with Hungary so they should have been intercepted or shot down by Hungarian air defence, and the Hungarian military and government said it happens regurarly, and they can not see what is wrong with it? They were just, you know, flying: consider them as big birds or whatever, and them sucking up all sorts of electric dataflow is just, you know, unimportant. That day a syrian Hawallada was shot dead on the streets of Budapest, in front of a high ranking policeman: probably tracked by his cell-phone by the airplanes. The Hawala can move enormous amounts of money without electric transfer, and can not be controlled by the international banking system : so they accuse it can be used to finance terrorist activities, so Hawala must be destroyed and Hawallada must be killed.
nonhocapito
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Re: Egypt Revolution - and its domino effect

Post by nonhocapito »

Hey guys, I hate that I cannot be part of this discussion right now since I am too busy these days ---

Anyway, I downloaded the Repubblica.it fake video Simon discovered. It is really a jewel of botched fakery and it needs visibility!
I have re-uploaded it to youtube for everyone, since I have a feeling Repubblica will remove it pretty soon.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oLXlD4BXJZE
brianv
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Re: Egypt Revolution - and its domino effect

Post by brianv »

nonhocapito wrote:Hey guys, I hate that I cannot be part of this discussion right now since I am too busy these days ---

Anyway, I downloaded the Repubblica.it fake video Simon discovered. It is really a jewel of botched fakery and it needs visibility!
I have re-uploaded it to youtube for everyone, since I have a feeling Repubblica will remove it pretty soon.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oLXlD4BXJZE
Even Gary Glitter gets in on the act!!

Image
fbenario
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Re: Egypt Revolution

Post by fbenario »

fbenario wrote:I think the perps decided they had to replace Mubarek, most likely because he is near death from cancer, and the perps didn't want to risk any uncontrolled instability upon his death. They picked his replacement, whether it be Suleiman or El Baradei, and decided to give the Egyptian people the impression that people-power mattered (when in reality it changed nothing, since the dead weight of the Egyptian bureaucracy and military are still in complete control of the country).

Believe me, after the U.S. gave Egypt $50 (?) billion over the last 30 years, there isn't any possibility AT ALL that the U.S. hasn't already long ago picked out the next leader, and is in the process of putting him in power.
So far it look as if I got THAT prediction right.
The Popular Uprising in Egypt: The Military Machine Remains Intact, The Political Status Quo Prevails

The same group of Egyptian generals running Cairo presently also formed the backbone of the Mubarak regime. There has been no real change in government. The military junta represents a continuation of the Mubarak regime. The previous so-called civilian administration and the Egyptian High Council of the Armed Forces are virtually the same body.

The generals would have run Egypt either way, under the so-called civilian government formed by Mubarak before he resigned or the current military government. While the generals rule the Nile Valley, a “controlled opposition” is being manufactured and nurtured by the U.S. and its allies.

http://globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=23278
fbenario
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Re: Egypt Revolution - and its domino effect

Post by fbenario »

Why doesn't America revolt against it's own dictatorship?
Revolution Handbook for Americans

In other words, what starkly differentiates the US from traditional dictatorships is that the fraction of the population most impacted by a corrupt system does not even think or dream in terms of revolution or rebellion. While suffering people in a number of Mideast countries clearly are ready for revolution, Americans have been unready for revolution despite being citizens of a country founded on revolution.

What is most ironic about this American shame is the incredibly high level of gun ownership among Americans, including those most victimized by the corrupt system. They seem to be mentally prepared for a more open form of tyranny against which they would use their guns, but are unready to mount a revolt without guns within the current system. Of course, as Sharp says: “If you fight with violence, you are fighting with your enemy’s best weapon, and you may be a brave but dead hero.” Gun ownership in a perverse way makes nonviolent revolution which Sharp correctly concludes is the best route to successful revolution even more difficult in the US . That is, widespread gun ownership is itself a form of distraction and delusion that perversely sustains the corporate dictatorship. Americans can keep their guns, while the rich elites keep most of the money and wealth of the nation. Greed outsmarts guns.

Those Americans who like me thirst for reforms that restore American democracy should download the free Sharp handbook [on nonviolence] and study its findings. Sharp has said “If people are not afraid of the dictatorship, that dictatorship is in big trouble.” Add this: If people are not aware of the dictatorship, that dictatorship is in great shape."

http://globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=23296
fbenario
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Re: Egypt Revolution

Post by fbenario »

warriorhun wrote:What is really happening in Libya? I know fuck-all about Libya, but it must tie in nicely with the "Crescent of Arabic Democracy"-plan. What do you think?

I am at a bit of a loss about what is happening in the pro-West Arabic Monarchies.
So you're now at a bit of a loss because your 'Crescent of Arabic Democracy' theory doesn't seem to be working. Think it might be because your theory is NOT describing what is going on in any country? As you know, a believable theory has to apply to all the countries involved.

All America wants is control, and that won't happen with democracy. Thus, America doesn't want democracy. (See my post earlier today on this thread about Egypt confirming my prior prediction.)
Dcopymope
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Re: Egypt Revolution - and its domino effect

Post by Dcopymope »

nonhocapito wrote:Hey guys, I hate that I cannot be part of this discussion right now since I am too busy these days ---

Anyway, I downloaded the Repubblica.it fake video Simon discovered. It is really a jewel of botched fakery and it needs visibility!
I have re-uploaded it to youtube for everyone, since I have a feeling Repubblica will remove it pretty soon.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oLXlD4BXJZE
And everyone should download it to their computer in case of the very likely event of this video being removed from YouTube and spread this video on all video sharing websites, as I have seen plenty of YouTube videos that are anti establishment being removed lately.
brianv
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Re: Egypt Revolution - and its domino effect

Post by brianv »

Image

One strange Exif data entry only states "Copyright: Do not Credit Photographer" (Editor)

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/02/22/world ... wanted=all

"Testing one two" tap tap...

Image
Guerrero
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Re: Egypt Revolution - and its domino effect

Post by Guerrero »

LMAO. Wow. Now that's one fancy photoshop job. :lol: .

I still don't know where I am at in all of this. I don't think everything is made up and that there are no protests or uprisings going on. I think there definitely are, and that there could very well be large, powerful machinations manipulating them, but I can't explain some of the fake photos and such. That where I go off the radar.

Also warriorhun made a good point about the mainstream media's reaction to all of this and what they are calling the protesters and the uprisings, like if this were really just the people of the Middle East rising up against the despotic tyrannical regimes and calling for and getting a chance at freedom from oppression, then this would likely threaten any chance at Israeli allies in the replacement govt's and would threaten, of course, all of the foreign economic interests in the region. As a result, these revolts would be portrayed as threating islamic extremist militants, terrorists gaining power, etc. etc.

But since it's not being portrayed that way, but rather we are hearing all those cozy comfy words the US govt just loves to toss around like candy at a parade, such as freedom, democracy, etc., it suggests that there is a dark big hand behind this all. I just haven't gotten clear on to what extent is it being exaggerated or faked....and what would be the point of the exaggeration and fakery.
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