Trump catches attention of CFR, Bilderberg, Trilateral
by Jon Rappoport
August 24, 2015
The powerful Globalist players at the Council on Foreign Relations,
the Bilderberg Group, and the Trilateral Commission are certainly
watching the presidential campaign of Donald Trump.
Trump has already made statements about immigration they find
troubling. They may or may not be taking Trump’s presidential run
seriously. They may or may not view him as an inconsequential blowhard,
a shoot-from-the-hip cowboy who forgets today what he said
yesterday—but today the New York Times
has made reference to Trump in a way that will make these Globalist
heavy hitters pause and blink while drinking their morning coffee (Here
in “As Stock Market Plunges, Donald Trump Takes a Worldview” by Alan Rappeport):
“Mr. Trump has said that bad trade deals with China and Mexico
are to blame for a sluggish American economy and weak job creation. He
has promised to make ‘great’ deals with other countries to protect
American workers and has threatened to raise taxes on imports to the
United States to bolster domestic production.”
It’s the last part that rings alarm bells and shoots firecrackers into the sky:
“[Trump] has threatened to raise taxes on imports to the United States to bolster domestic production.”
Taxes on imports. Also known as tariffs.
Every significant trade-treaty negotiated since 1945 has been aimed
at lowering or eliminating tariffs, in order to establish Globalist
“free trade.”
Treaties like GATT, NAFTA, CAFTA, for example; as well as the current TPP and its cousins.
Free trade is code for: mega-corporations and banks can roam the
planet and set up shop anywhere they please. They can bankroll and
build production facilities, produce cheap goods, and sell them anywhere
in the world without paying tariffs.
Tariffs would make that whole operation useless. It would defeat mega-corporate greed and ambition internationally.
“We’ve got these factories making gizmos in East Nowhere, we’re
paying workers four cents an hour, we’ve got no environmental/health
regs and rules that would raise production costs, there are no worker
unions, and we’ve therefore got a big edge on our smaller competitors,
because we can ship these gizmos anywhere in the world and sell them
cheaper than they can, and all of this is possible because we pay no
tariffs. If there were stiff tariffs, we’d have to shut down the whole
scene, pack our bags, and leave…”
Globalism, at one level, is all about erasing tariffs.
Whether in a momentary fit, or by serious intent, Trump has crossed swords with the Globalists.
President Nixon tried that for a few moments in the early 1970s, and betrayed his main sponsor, David Rockefeller. Nixon erected a few tariffs to save American-based companies.
Rockefeller was and is Globalism personified.
Soon, Nixon found himself on a helicopter heading away from the White House for the last time.
Trump might want to think about pumping up his security detail.
He’s just stumbled into the Twilight Zone where money makes money for
money making money. Trump $$$ is nothing compared with Globalist $$$.
He’s just pulled the pin on a quiescent grenade in the world of mainstream media, where the subject of tariffs is a no-no.
“Reggie, Klaus here. I was just reading the Times this morning. Did
you see the reference to Donald Trump? Tariffs? Maybe we should take a
second look at this lunatic. If he presses forward with the idea of
protecting American businesses, and it catches on, and people figure out
what he’s saying…if he
figures out what he’s saying…we could have a problem. If all sorts of
business people—I don’t mean people like us—but ordinary business people
see a chance to come back to life…with tariffs to protect them…Trump’s
campaign could take on a new dimension. We’d have to do whatever it
takes to stop it…”
Yes, if the American people figure out that the new normal economy,
as miserable as it actually is, is linked like a lock and key to the
Globalist plan; if the American people figure out that no recent
American president, including Obama, had any ambition whatsoever to lift
up the American economy; that all these presidents are liars of the
first order; something might happen.
Something might change.
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