Drunk on Hope

Alex Jones was right when he described the two main political parties in the USA as “two management teams bidding for control of the CEO job of Slavery Inc.” I follow elections, not because I believe the results matter, but to see see what messages the manipulators think people will respond to, and which messages people ultimately decide upon (I observe advertising strategies for the same reason).

In a hopeless, troubled world, it’s no surprise that Obama’s message of hope and change resonated with voters. He looked the part too, his African ancestery and political ascendency seemingly symbolizing the triumph over adversity which Americans so eagerly wanted their government to provide.

Words without action, though, don’t amount to much. There’s been no change. The hope refrain is empty feel-good rhetoric without any substance whatsoever. What’s needed now is decisive action that will solve our problems, and it starts with auditing the Federal Reserve Bank to see to whom it’s giving its money, and what kind of financial condition the bank is in. Doing so will force the bank to close its doors and take away a major weapon in the arsenal of the political and corporate elite who, not through conspiracy but mere complicity (see Proverbs 30:27), have erected a structure of control which has all but entirely aborted the fetal American project.

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