- The ghost of "9-11" passed, like a chilling
breath, through the meeting, as Britain's special trade minister, Andrew,
the Duke of York, coddled the Brits in the audience. He also shocked those
foreign press and dignitaries, whose thoughts might have strayed, appropriately,
to the connection between the BAE's Al-Yamama and the Saudi kingdom, as
being adducible to the truly witting from the keynoted theme of his colorfully
flavored remarks to the audience. Otherwise, his unfavorable view of the
Guardian on this account was also a notably related enhancement of this
peculiarly notable occasion.
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- The Duke may certainly not have wished to bring the "9-11"
matter directly into that discussion, but, whether intended or not, he
did imply just that effect in more ways than one. What the Duke did, on
this account, was to bring two distinct aspects of Britain's role to an
ironically juxtaposed, common point, that in more or less the same ironical
fashion employed by Johannes Kepler in the world's original discovery of
the general principle of universal gravitation.
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- On the one aspect, the BAE connection through Al-Yamama
to the Saudi Kingdom of such as Prince Turki, was called to mind. On the
second count, the relationship of the British Al-Yamama connection to the
Saudi Kingdom's part in the proposed early military attacks on Iran was
brought to the attention of the sentient audience attending and of the
broader circulation of these remarks to the world's press, by aid of attention
to the "Wiki-leaks." As if to be certain that such connections
might not be overlooked, the Prince's presentation was made the more eye-catching
by the Prince's picking a fight with a prominent member of the British
press, the Guardian. It will prove rather difficult, to conceal the point
of the matter under a diversionary heap of references to a mass of "Wiki-leaks,"
especially to the matter of the British hand in the reported Saudi backing
for warfare against Iran.
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- There are two general categories of major press-leaked
scandals. One type is mostly a few headlines, with slim substance in the
body of the texts; another, is one in which the attempt is made to conceal
a major scandal by means of a diversionary attempt at a change of the subject
to a more superficial matter of substance, as has been done in much of
the handling of the "Wiki-leaks" flap.
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- What I have just written above, so far, were sufficient
for the cognoscenti; but, what the British have to fear from the Duke's
remarks, lies not in the content of the words themselves, but in the peculiar
ripeness of the hyper-inflationary potential of an oncoming general, global
economic breakdown-crisis centered on the British system's presently crumbling
imperial monetarist Inter Alpha Group launched as a replacement for the
fixed-exchange-rate system in 1971. Worry about matches captures the mind's
attention best when the neighborhood has been set afire.
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- The only financial means available for attempting to
conceal the authorship of the execution of the U.S.A.'s "9-11"
events, has been located in a certain gap between the price of Saudi petroleum
at the exits from its port of origin, and the price of the same petroleum
as a product nominally priced for resale in the European spot market. The
only visible means for securing a relevant amount of difference between
the two prices needed for funding an operation known as "9-11,"
points the finger of qualified suspicion in the direction of the Al-Yamama
channel. This is of particular significance in light of what was put on
the record as the role of certain pilots, who had received financial assistance
through the charity of official Saudi channels toward a certain two nationals
who had turned up as pilots in the "9-11" operation.
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- Then, add to that already lurking connection, the Wiki
leak respecting the commitment of Saudi elements to the projected warfare
plans against Iran.
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- Kepler, wherever he may be today, might nod in recognition
of the principled aspects of the matter in our present time.
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- When Nations and Editors Think Small
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- What any truly qualified British intelligence figure
would have to admit, at least to himself, or herself, would be, that much
of the British empire's strategic success is owed to the credulity of the
nations it sets into warfare against one another, all to the net advantage
of British imperial interests. So, the Venetian potencies averted much
of the threat posed by the Fifteenth Century Florentine renaissance, by
plunging all of Europe into a permanent state of warfare, between the 1492
expulsions of Jews from Spain and the end of that monstrous warfare by
the action of the 1648 Peace of Westphalia.
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- So, the British empire of Lord Shelburne's East India
Company triumphed by organizing the continental European warfare of 1756-63.
So, the British empire of that same Lord Shelburne, created the British
Foreign Office in 1782 as the vehicle crafted to orchestrate a reign of
warfare on the continent of Europe, a warfare which extended from the initial
diplomatic set-ups by Shelburne in 1782, past the shared triumph of the
British Foreign Office and Prince Metternich in 1815, and beyond.
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- So, the British empire, finding its imperial power in
geopolitical jeopardy through the European continental extensions of what
had been accomplished by the U.S.A.'s trans-continental railway system,
arranged the termination of the services of Chancellor Bismarck, and crafted
sundry consequent contributions to a permanent state of geopolitical disorder
throughout the world, a policy of what British weapons trafficker Alexander
Helphand ("Parvus") employed as his famous recipe: "permanent
warfare, permanent revolution," a theme which has continued as the
implicitly continued state of conflict, permanently, throughout more or
less all of the planet. Such was the state of geopolitical conflict since
the assassination of France's President Carnot and the launching of the
British alliance with Japan for the wars against China, Korea, and Russia
of the first two decades following the ouster of Bismarck, and for the
continuous states of general warfare or preparations for such geopolitical
conflicts up through the present date, as in Southwest Asia since two wars
against Iraq, and the permanent state of warfare in Afghanistan since the
relevant tenure of the notorious Anglophile Zbigniew Brzezinski.
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- Beyond Brzezinski
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- Now, the British geopolitical interest has led much of
the governing political forces of Europe, and beyond, into what is frankly
identified as the intention for the "End of the Westphalian System."
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- From the beginning of this period of geopolitical conflict
which had begun with Bismarck's post-1876 adoption of Henry C. Carey's
reports to Europe on the principle of "The American System of political
economy," the possibility of establishing a "post-Westphalian
system" of empire had depended on breaking the United States through
inducing internal corruption within the U.S.A. London's organization of
what become the Confederacy, expressed this intention. Since January 2001,
we had now reached, under the recently elected U.S. President George W.
Bush, Jr., and, presently, the mentally disturbed President Barack Obama,
the point at which the great British gamble of creating a "post-Westphalian
system" has obviously appeared to some in London, to be a likely venture.
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- What the British empire had actually gained in this fashion,
was the presently immediate prospect of a very near, pathetic disintegration
of the world's present trans-Atlantic system, a breakdown which the leading
Asian nations, by themselves, could not endure in physical terms.
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- To bring about the present prospect of a global victory
for a global British Empire, Shelburne's distant dream of a new Roman empire
under British reign, is now impossible. The horror of the Fourteenth-century
New Dark Age, is the relevant precedent for an attempted establishment
of empire, now. The ironically suitable remark would be the useful pun,
that today's Venetians have been "blinder than ever."
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- So, the Delphic promise of a great empire's fall, is
on the verge of the present moment, unless we prudently change from our
presently foolish ways.
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- This should provide Prince Andrew with the opportunity
to consider improving upon his recent speech, and upon the opinions it
had been assigned to express.
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