94. Hard manipulation tools
The audio recording is available at https://youtu.be/l2ea1xPrOT0.
Compared to the soft tools that are
continuously applied for reprogramming, influencing, lying, and asserting
selfish power interests the backstage power uses hard tools less frequently,
mostly for triggering major events of fate. The power has started revolutions
and wars, managed and finishes them, and, for its own success, connects events
with the political and economic tools of the respective countries. Although
revolutions and wars are proclaimed as bringing a new order, they usually
result in greater disorder, where the winner can easily benefit from the
losses. The power uses revolutions primarily to test the tolerance of a given
society, so it can select the appropriate offensive tools for the next step:
the war. The time span between the two can be several decades, so that the
suffering population does not even notice the changes. Below are some
historical examples of the use of hard tools:
1). During the English
Civil Revolution (1642-1651) Oliver Cromwell, as a constructed authority
figure, was instructed by the hidden power in the Netherlands to overthrow the
English monarchy, execute King Charles I, and introduce the republic. Note:
Some believe Cromwell founded the English Freemasonry. The Dutch hidden power
helped William of Orange claim the English throne, and in 1689, with the
adoption of the Bill of Rights, established the Bank of England in 1694 and the
private money. This step enabled the lending of money on credit and the
repayment of loans, as well as the outbreak and participation in wars, such as
the American Independence War. The British goal of the war was to gain access
to the monetary markets of the 13 American colonies.
2). After acquiring the
English financial market, the backstage power set its sights on the French
financial market, which entered into the history as the Great French
Revolution. However, this revolution was neither great, nor French, nor
truly a revolution, because the money necessary for the revolution was sent
from Frankfurt. Its "greatness" perhaps lies in the fact that over 15
years, more than a million French people killed each other. But who were the
heroes and who were the losers? Preparations for the revolution had been
on-going since 1776, for example, by buying up grain to generate famine among
the population, thereby encouraging rival Freemason lodges to incite the people
against the king and the church. Interestingly, the silhouette of Robespierre,
who planned the massacre of hundreds of thousands, is still displayed next to
the motto of Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity on the websites of French
authorities and public institutions. Nothing has changed. The spread of
revolutionary, liberal, anti-church ideas was heavily influenced by the
encyclopaedists, such as D'Alembert, Rousseau, Diderot, Voltaire, Montesquieu,
and others, who produced a thirty-five-volume subversive work called the Encyclopédie.
Due to its subversive nature, Catholic states would frequently confiscate it at
their borders.
3). The reprogramming in
the World War I (1914-1918) was so successful that Kaiser Wilhelm II of
Germany, Emperor Franz Joseph of Austria-Hungary, and Tsar Nicholas II of
Russia did not know that this war would not end by the fall of 1914. This was
because, alongside the leaders, there were people appointed by the backstage power,
such as foreign ministers (Sazonov, Wartburg), who led the empire’s first
figures by the nose. The backstage power, including figures like Churchill,
facilitated the entry of the USA into the war in 1917 by justifying it with the
sinking of the Lusitania, a weapons-carrying ship. The necessary political
ideologies were also invented by the backstage power, such as Pan-Slavism and
Pan-Germanism, which argued for the unification of Slavs and Germans living in
foreign countries. Therefore it is necessary, the use of war to unite certain
regions or break up existing ones. If a country proposed such a suggestion
today, it would be labelled racist, but only because the backstage power is not
present. Note: Churchill also carried out the backstage power's mission
during World War II when, together with Stalin, they divided Europe into
eastern and western spheres of interest.
4). The Bolshevik leaders,
successors of the French Revolution as constructed authorities, especially the
non-pagan American agent Trotsky (Lev Davidovich Bronstein) and the German
agent Lenin (Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov), triggered the Russian Revolution in
1917. With a few millions from American banks, they took power on paper
(without the tales of the Aurora cruiser) and executed the Tsar’s family
so that foreign banks could freely take possession of the Tsar’s wealth. This
allowed the backstage power to begin the accelerated capitalism they would call
communism. This act of the backstage power led to the suffering, family
tragedies, and deaths of millions in Eastern and Central European countries.
The Russian Revolution also clearly demonstrates that the power pursues its
goals according to specific, long-term programs. The communist misery was
unleashed on Eastern and Central Europe to split Europe again, into developed
and underdeveloped regions, so that the two sides would see each other as
enemies. In the 1990s, the two camps were merged to provide the
"developed" countries with European colonies. Those familiar with
European Union affairs can see that the EU's 15 "core" countries
treat the EU's 12 "new" members as colonies.
5). The poorly crafted
Paris Peace Treaty from 1920 led to the thirty-year period of preparation
required for the Second World War (masked as peace). The period between
the two wars is sometimes referred to as the second Thirty Years’ War.
The war’s goal was to divide the world into two poles: one being the communist
system that emerged after World War I (accelerated capitalism), and the other
being the old (classical) capitalist system. These two systems would be pitted
against each other, and the conflicts they generated would be simulated. Profit
was made on both sides. Hitler, a figure built up with considerable financial
background by the power (he had a well-paid party army of thousands), received
support from American banks for every country he invaded. Many wealthy
industrial magnates, such as Henry Ford, supported the German army. A portrait
of Hitler hung on Ford’s office wall.
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