Making an appearance on the Morning Joe television show, the Rockefeller
globalist Zbigniew Brzezinski said it is high time the rich who have
made billions since the days of the Clinton administration help out
the poor and struggling masses. Said Brzezinski:
Where is the monied class today?
Why aren’t they doing something: the people who made billions,
millions. I’m sort of thinking of Paulson, of Rubin. Why don’t
they get together, and why don’t they organize a National Solidarity
Fund in which they call on all of those who made these extraordinary
amounts of money to kick some back in to [a] National Solidarity Fund?
(ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW)
Brzezinski almost looked grandfatherly as he said this (see video).
He almost came off as a good-natured humanitarian… almost. It
all sounded good, if implausible — that is until Brzezinski
reached the end of his carefully crafted diatribe:
And if we don’t get some
sort of voluntary National Solidarity Fund, at some point there’ll
be such political pressure that Congress will start getting in the
act, there’s going to be growing conflict between the classes
and if people are unemployed and really hurting, hell, there could
be even riots.
In other words, Brzezinski is afraid that if some filthy lucre is
not dispensed among the unwashed, they will rise up and burn down
the banks, sack the corporations, and destroy the globalist edifice
so painfully erected over the last fifty or so years — and maybe
even go so far as to string up Brzezinski and his fellow globalists
from trees and overpasses, the sort of dirty and regrettable business
that invariably occurs in the process of violent revolutions in response
to decades of provocation.
It’s not the pain suffered by the unemployed and homeless that
concerns Brzezinski and the one-world patricians. It is the prospect
of class warfare. It is the horrific prospect of losing it all.
Brzezinski realizes the engineered financial crisis will have dire
consequences and he wants to set aside a few crumbs to mollify the
growing numbers of impoverished before they take to the streets. It
is odd, however, that he mentioned fellow Trilateralist Robert Rubin
as one of the people who should be donating to this proposed National
Solidarity Fund. No doubt the former Goldman Sachs and Citigroup stooge
Rubin had a good laugh over Brzezinski’s preposterous proposal.
If realized, it will be a National Solidarity Fund to save the bankers,
not the people. Brzezinski and the global elite understand the last
time they pulled this swindle — causing the so-called Great
Depression — mass unemployment and bread lines transformed into
widespread and popular political activism that seriously threatened
the establishment. In response, the “New Deal” was cooked
up to dissipate growing rebellion. It took a major world war and subsequently
the creation of the military-industrial complex, the national security
state, and highly orchestrated cold war to inflate a newly contrived
“boom” bubble to get out of the banker engineered Great
Depression.
Brzezinski’s National Solidarity Fund is another bankster scam
devised to sideline the possibility of rebellion before it gets going.
Needless to say, this shabby hustle is wholly insufficient and it
will take more than a few billion dollars worth of crumbs from the
likes of Hank Paulson and Robert Rubin to prevent the rebellion, class
warfare, and violence of the coming storm.