Monday, October 1, 2018

Two CFR Videos Expose Hatred of Populism and Fear of an Interconnected, Uncensored Participatory Public

by Scott Creighton (archived repost from May 27, 2018)

The Council on Foreign Relations sets the tone and the agenda for the neoliberal globalists across the world and they hold seminars regularly to get their bullet points out to their sleeper cells who in turn take action like so many Amway regional reps would after a convention.

Though I watch these things regularly so I can better understand the major narrative and agenda item shifts of our adversaries (so nice of them to underestimate us by making these things public thinking we wont see or care about them), I rarely publish them on my website. They are dry and usually simple regurgitation of previous neoliberal indoctrination material, devoid of actionable intelligence as it were.

However, these two videos below are fascinating in that they come right out and admit they are concerned to the point of panic that they are losing the battle for the hearts and minds of the targeted populations. Us.

The first video is from May 3, 2018. The second from April 23.

The first one deals with them planning on how to tackle the issue of “fake news” and by that they mean how they need to regain control of the thinking of the people by 1. continuing to push pro-free market neoliberal globalization while simultaneously 2. stemming the flow of communication between citizens in an open and free manner which counters their lies and deceptions.

The second tackles the issue of how to counter the rise of populism in what they call “illiberal” or “fake” democracies around the world. The list several repeatedly 1. Turkey 2. Venezuela 3. Russia 4. Hungary 5. Poland (they also mentioned “Donald Trump” in passing as an example of someone gaining political influence by appealing to “populism”)

Just for the record:

“populism – support for the concerns of ordinary people”




These are very informative talks they give. Very enlightening how they perceive the world around them and the threat of governments and movements that actually show “support for the concerns of ordinary people”


video one: Combating Disinformation and Fake News (26 up votes to 630 down votes)



 video two: The Rise of Illiberal Democracies (51 up votes to 36 down votes)



Notice how they keep juxtaposing the term “democracy” with what they really mean: a neoliberalized free-market state with open borders, typically a very undemocratic leadership and no concern for the will of the people who are struggling against growing wealth inequality that neoliberalism is DESIGNED to produce.

In the first video, after the host praises his own former role promoting propaganda as a service, he ignores the last question from a man from an African nation who was concerned the panel didn’t fully understand the kinds of damage propaganda has caused in South American and African nations. That in itself is a perfect example of the kind of thinking these over-dressed animals practice on a daily basis.

Two very good videos for you to see how they think and how they are squirming right now in the face of the global backlash against neoliberal globalization.

Yes, we are winning. And all they can try to do to regain control is shut down free speech and redefine what it means to be a democratic state.

This is the war on populism at it’s core. The war on the concern for the interests of ordinary people.

Ironically, this is the heart of the war on democracy and they all damn well know it.

What they fear is 1789. What they fear is 1917. What they fear is 1776. And they fear it with good reason.

1 comment:

  1. The enemy of our enemy is not necessarily our friend. Non-left populists in Hungary and Poland are in large part Catholic fundamentalist, chauvinistically nationalist figures like Viktor Orban, the type with normally little tolerance for freethinking like yours, or ethnic, religious and sexual minorities in addition to women's rights. Orban in particular has said some very dehumanising things about Asians and Africans in his official speeches (fidesz.hu-use Babel or Google Translate). If I were Hungarian, I'd be incredibly sad that my politics have boiled down to a choice between Soros and Orban's agendas.

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