The recent color revolution in Bangladesh is being marketed as a Gen Z triumph of young, new thought verses the old, boomer ways. It's not. It's a Clintonista, neoliberal, WEF, NED, IMF regime change operation using young people as cover.
The recent color revolution in Bangladesh is being marketed as a Gen Z triumph of young, new thought verses the old, boomer ways. It's not. It's a Clintonista, neoliberal, WEF, NED, IMF regime change operation using young people as cover.
(What a 'win' for Gen Z!!! the new Prime Minister in Bangladesh they have installed is good friends with Killary and donates to the Clinton Foundation!! You go kids!!! fucking idiots)
from Resonant News
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was accused of unlawfully using her position to channel over $13 million in grants, contracts, and loans to Muhammad Yunus, despite his removal from Grameen Bank in 2011. These funds were allocated to Yunus through 18 different transactions by the US Agency for International Development (USAID), as detailed on the federal contracting website USAspending.gov.
Following Clinton’s entry into the administration, other federal agencies also provided funds to Yunus. The Department of Treasury gave a $600,000 grant directly to Grameen America to support community development financial institutions. Additionally, the Small Business Administration started issuing grants to Grameen America in July 2011, amounting to $934,000 for “salaries and expenses” for its New York offices, in the state where Clinton had served as a senator.
Documents suggest that Hillary Clinton also pressured the Bangladesh government to halt a corruption investigation into Yunus. Yunus has been a close family friend of the Clintons, a significant donor to the Clinton Foundation, and implicated in dubious activities with the Clintons.
(Hillary Clinton's buddy is to take over in Bangladesh. Good for you, Gen Z 'revolution'! fucking idiots)
from the NYT
The president of Bangladesh on Tuesday appointed Muhammad Yunus, a pioneer in microfinance and a Nobel laureate, to oversee an interim government, accommodating demands by protesters and offering a reprieve for a country scarred by violence.
The plans for a new government were announced a day after Bangladesh’s authoritarian leader, Sheikh Hasina, resigned and fled the country amid a popular uprising.
Word of the Yunus appointment came from the main coordinator of the protests, Nahid Islam, who was among a group of people who met with President Mohammed Shahabuddin on Tuesday. Military officials also attended the meeting, though Mr. Yunus did not.
With the Bangladeshi Parliament dissolved, Mr. Yunus, 84, is expected to lead a temporary government for an uncertain period of time...
read more here