Tuesday, April 21, 2020

CHINA HAS DECLARED UNRESTRICTED WARFARE ON THE UNITED STATES & THE WORLD

I believe that when China signed the trade deal with Trump, they realized Trump's trade policies would scotch their plans for world dominance. So...
*CHINA HAS DECLARED UNRESTRICTED WARFARE ON THE UNITED STATES & THE WORLD*

1. *They deliberately released the virus*
1a.*They didn't need to genetically alter the virus*. They just found a natural virus and infected their own people to allow the infection to spread in Wuhan.
1b. *The timing is suspicious*. The infection occurs when millions of Chinese go home to celebrate Chinese New Year, festivities, and gathering massive crowds. Perfect grounds for starting an epidemic
2. *The Chinese Communists allowed many of these infected people to take the virus and migrate it back all over the world*.
3. *The Chinese Communists restricted the Wuhan populace to travel to other parts of China and started brutal isolation practices Wuhan*.
4. *Chinese Communists lied about human-to-human transmission*.
5. Lied to CDC, Drs. Fauci & Birx to give wrong information to our leaders and President Trump.
6. *The Chinese Communists cornered the market on PPE.*
6a. Sold the PPE back at inflated prices
6b. Sold PPE with the understanding the country also had to pay for the Chinese Communist communication system (5G) as well.
7. *The Chinese Communists buying assets, i.e., land, businesses, etc. at dirt-cheap prices as the economies of the world that they badly damaged.*
7a.Chinese Communists are shutting down industries they own in other countries to help destroy their economies & people further. i.e., in the US they shut down a huge pork processing factory they owned.

WHAT IS THEIR GOAL?: WORLD DOMINATION
First, by exposing the world with the CCP virus they have weakened & shut down the rest of the world financially, militarily, (we have had carriers knocked out of commission as sure as if they had torpedoed) businesses and the population. They have put themselves in a position to dominate the world financially in the future. If the world does nothing.

Secondly, by insisting that to obtain vitally needed PPE nations are required to purchase 5G communication networks to get that critically important protective equipment That 5G network will relay information back to China.
That, in turn, gives them an incomparable pool of data that will drive and enormously improve their artificial intelligence. They will be the Saudi Arabia of data.

Artificial intelligence the basis of all new technology in the foreseeable future. This would allow the Chinese Communists to become the most technologically advanced in the world. Artificial Intelligence will allow Communist China an unsurpassable technological edge and control of the world's population & nations of the world.

WHAT TO DO?:
It is an *ACT OF WAR*, and the world should treat Chinese Communists the same way the world has been treated with Unrestricted warfare!
As China has inflected this war on the world. The nations damaged by this plague must form a new alliance as we did in WWII.
The world needs to demand reparations from China for the damage they caused and all major currency printers refuse to deal with the Chinese yuan until reparations are made.

The answer is for the world to agree to shut China out financially, withdraw as much business as possible. Returning those businesses to the US or open other supply lines in other more favorable countries (read non-Communist). Close their ties with banking institutions, sanction their officials, etc.

We must in the strongest terms insist that other nations not buy the Chinese Communist 5G network. Do what we must, but we must stop China foisting that 5G network on the world. The United States has to take the lead in getting the world to act together to defeat the Chinese Communists in this war.




Saturday, April 4, 2020

Kissinger calls for One World New Order after Coronavirus - WSJ

The Coronavirus Pandemic Will Forever Alter the World Order

The U.S. must protect its citizens from disease while starting the urgent work of planning for a new epoch.

The USNS Comfort hospital ship travels under the Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge in New York, March 30.

PHOTO: DIMITRIOS KAMBOURIS/GETTY IMAGES
The surreal atmosphere of the Covid-19 pandemic calls to mind how I felt as a young man in the 84th Infantry Division during the Battle of the Bulge. Now, as in late 1944, there is a sense of inchoate danger, aimed not at any particular person, but striking randomly and with devastation. But there is an important difference between that faraway time and ours. American endurance then was fortified by an ultimate national purpose. Now, in a divided country, efficient and farsighted government is necessary to overcome obstacles unprecedented in magnitude and global scope. Sustaining the public trust is crucial to social solidarity, to the relation of societies with each other, and to international peace and stability.
Nations cohere and flourish on the belief that their institutions can foresee calamity, arrest its impact and restore stability. When the Covid-19 pandemic is over, many countries’ institutions will be perceived as having failed. Whether this judgment is objectively fair is irrelevant. The reality is the world will never be the same after the coronavirus. To argue now about the past only makes it harder to do what has to be done.
The coronavirus has struck with unprecedented scale and ferocity. Its spread is exponential: U.S. cases are doubling every fifth day. At this writing, there is no cure. Medical supplies are insufficient to cope with the widening waves of cases. Intensive-care units are on the verge, and beyond, of being overwhelmed. Testing is inadequate to the task of identifying the extent of infection, much less reversing its spread. A successful vaccine could be 12 to 18 months away.
The U.S. administration has done a solid job in avoiding immediate catastrophe. The ultimate test will be whether the virus’s spread can be arrested and then reversed in a manner and at a scale that maintains public confidence in Americans’ ability to govern themselves. The crisis effort, however vast and necessary, must not crowd out the urgent task of launching a parallel enterprise for the transition to the post-coronavirus order.
Leaders are dealing with the crisis on a largely national basis, but the virus’s society-dissolving effects do not recognize borders. While the assault on human health will—hopefully—be temporary, the political and economic upheaval it has unleashed could last for generations. No country, not even the U.S., can in a purely national effort overcome the virus. Addressing the necessities of the moment must ultimately be coupled with a global collaborative vision and program. If we cannot do both in tandem, we will face the worst of each.
Drawing lessons from the development of the Marshall Plan and the Manhattan Project, the U.S. is obliged to undertake a major effort in three domains. First, shore up global resilience to infectious disease. Triumphs of medical science like the polio vaccine and the eradication of smallpox, or the emerging statistical-technical marvel of medical diagnosis through artificial intelligence, have lulled us into a dangerous complacency. We need to develop new techniques and technologies for infection control and commensurate vaccines across large populations. Cities, states and regions must consistently prepare to protect their people from pandemics through stockpiling, cooperative planning and exploration at the frontiers of science.
Second, strive to heal the wounds to the world economy. Global leaders have learned important lessons from the 2008 financial crisis. The current economic crisis is more complex: The contraction unleashed by the coronavirus is, in its speed and global scale, unlike anything ever known in history. And necessary public-health measures such as social distancing and closing schools and businesses are contributing to the economic pain. Programs should also seek to ameliorate the effects of impending chaos on the world’s most vulnerable populations.
Third, safeguard the principles of the liberal world order. The founding legend of modern government is a walled city protected by powerful rulers, sometimes despotic, other times benevolent, yet always strong enough to protect the people from an external enemy. Enlightenment thinkers reframed this concept, arguing that the purpose of the legitimate state is to provide for the fundamental needs of the people: security, order, economic well-being, and justice. Individuals cannot secure these things on their own. The pandemic has prompted an anachronism, a revival of the walled city in an age when prosperity depends on global trade and movement of people.
The world’s democracies need to defend and sustain their Enlightenment values. A global retreat from balancing power with legitimacy will cause the social contract to disintegrate both domestically and internationally. Yet this millennial issue of legitimacy and power cannot be settled simultaneously with the effort to overcome the Covid-19 plague. Restraint is necessary on all sides—in both domestic politics and international diplomacy. Priorities must be established.
We went on from the Battle of the Bulge into a world of growing prosperity and enhanced human dignity. Now, we live an epochal period. The historic challenge for leaders is to manage the crisis while building the future. Failure could set the world on fire.
Mr. Kissinger served as secretary of state and national security adviser in the Nixon and Ford administrations.


Wall Street Journal April,3,2002

Black Fragility (Def.) by Mark Dice

  Discomfort and defensiveness on the part of some black people who live in a predominately White culture. Due to fixating on long gone past...