Showing posts with label Illuminati. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Illuminati. Show all posts

Sunday, June 15, 2008

China Earthquake Caused By HAARP Weapon (引发地震的证据)

Please watch this video. This is the kind of world that we live in now. WAKE UP!

Here's another one. It covers the disasters in both Myanmar and China.

THE US GOVERNMENT CAUSED THIS QUAKE USING HAARP AND CHEMICAL TRAILS!

This article was prepared to provide a summary of the contents of a book written in 1995 which describes an entirely new class of weapons. The weapons and their effects are described in the following pages. The United States Navy and Air Force have joined with the University of Alaska, Fairbanks, to build a prototype for a ground based "Star Wars" weapon system located in the remote bush country of Alaska.

The individuals who are demanding answers about HAARP are scattered around the planet. As well as bush dwellers in Alaska, they include: a physician in Finland; a scientist in Holland; an anti-nuclear protester in Australia; independent physicists in the United States; a grandmother in Canada, and countless others.

Unlike the protests of the 1960s the objections to HAARP have been registered using the tools of the 1990s. From the Internet, fax machines, syndicated talk radio and a number of alternative print mediums the word is getting out and people are waking up to this new intrusion by an over zealous United States government.

The research team put together to gather the materials which eventually found their way into the book never held a formal meeting, never formed a formal organization. Each person acted like a node on a planetary info-spirit-net with one goal held by all -- to keep this controversial new science in the public eye. The result of the team's effort was a book which describes the science and the political ramifications of this technology.

That book, Angels Don't Play this HAARP: Advances in Tesla Technology, has 230 pages. This article will only give the highlights. Despite the amount of research (350 footnoted sources), at its heart it is a story about ordinary people who took on an extraordinary challenge in bringing their research forward.

HAARP Boils the Upper Atmosphere

HAARP will zap the upper atmosphere with a focused and steerable electromagnetic beam. It is an advanced model of an "ionospheric heater." (The ionosphere is the electrically-charged sphere surrounding Earth's upper atmosphere. It ranges between 40 to 60 miles above the surface of the Earth.)

Put simply, the apparatus for HAARP is a reversal of a radio telescope; antenna send out signals instead of receiving. HAARP is the test run for a super-powerful radiowave-beaming technology that lifts areas of the ionosphere by focusing a beam and heating those areas. Electromagnetic waves then bounce back onto earth and penetrate everything -- living and dead.

The Red Skull And The Cosmic Cube

The cartoon above is literally a frame-by-frame adaptation of the classic Lee-Kirby story from "Tales Of Suspense #s 79-81". Lee and Kirby may have known more than we thought about occult stuff like the Philosopher's Stone as a mind-manipulation technological device that alters reality. Go check out this blog ("Inside The Cosmic Cube") for more information.

In the meantime, in line with the "skull" theme above, here's a video about the infamous Skull and Bones Society:

Finally, if you're still in the mood for more conspiracy theories on how powerful people are fucking with our lives, check out this video below on the Bilderberg Conferences:

Thursday, June 12, 2008

An Open Message To The Illuminati Brotherhood

You play with the price of fuel.
You play with earthquakes and cyclones.
Humanity is like cattle to you.
You brainwash people and create religions to imprison minds.
We are watching you.
Now, fuck off.

Wednesday, June 4, 2008

The Hillary-Obama Race

The Hillary-Obama Race ended yesterday with Hillary bowing out and giving her support to Republican Presidential Candidate Obama. The below is a quick recap of their five-month race:

When the race first started, nobody knew who the hell Obama was!

Obama started to pick up pace despite tripping over issues now and again.

Next came the issue of *personal financing*. The two delegates started out with mega-truckloads of cash. In the middle of the race, Hillary seemed to have gone dry but Obama seemed to have a limitless flow of green... Hmm, you smell somethin' there?

After five long months of gruelling drama on TV and the papers (actually it was all staged, believe me), Obama won the Oscars from Hillary. That is another reason why I don't watch the Oscars, the judges have no idea at all. Hillary was the better actress in this case. She managed to convince the world that she was seriously contending - when it was all staged.

In the end, it never really mattered who wins anyway! The whole thing was all staged and the US Agenda (really the Brotherhood Agenda) is the thing that will be carried out.

"Bila Pak Lah Jadi PM, Semua Naik!"

Sebelum pilihanraya Mac 08, ramai orang cakap, "Bila Pak Lah jadi PM, semua naik!"
Kini diorang BN menang majoriti dan bina government sekali lagi.
Tak banyak surprise lah jika harga barang naik lagi!
Semalam, gua pergi Stesyen Petrol.
Gua dapati Stesyen Petrol punya traffik-jam lagi teruk daripada Lebuhraya Persekutuan!
Sebab manyak kereta tunggu nak pam petrol sebelum harga naik.
Dah kata kan? Tak surprise langsung.
Semalam Kancil full-tank = RM35. Ini hari Kancil full-tank = RM50!
Awek gua bawak Proton Wira.
Ini hari mau full-tank kena bayar RM65++.
Tapi gaji tak naik - cuma government cakap pasal "subsidi" dan "rebate" yang gua tak faham langsung aje...
Ada yang kata nak buangkan PM yang tak guna ni.
Diorang mau Anwar jadi PM baru.
Anwar manyak bagi janji bahawa dia dapat turunkan harga minyak.
Gua percaya sebab dia tu memang "kamcheng" sama ketua-ketua Illuminati Brotherhood.
Halliburton Oil (Zionis) dan Paul Wolfowitz semua abang-adik sama Anuar.
Pastilah dia dapat kurangkan harga minyak.
Tapi kesannya? Dia jualkan negara pada pihak Illuminati!
Jadi kitorang rakyat yang menderita.
Kitorang hanya ada dua pilihan:
PM Pengecut yang naikkan harga ataupun
PM Pembelot yang jualkan negara kepada Kuasa Luar.
Mana Abang Superman bila kitorang perlukan dia???

Pesanan Abang Superman: "Bawak je basikal...!"

Friday, May 16, 2008

Recent News Reports (Part Three):

CNNMoney.com: Oil surges on China use, Goldman note

Friday May 16, 4:16 pm ET
By Steve Hargreaves and Kenneth Musante, CNNMoney.com staff writers

The government said Friday that it would halt deliveries to the strategic oil reserves in July, a move many lawmakers have been calling for in an attempt to boost oil supplies and bring down gas prices.

Oil prices eased a bit from pervious highs, but still settled at a new closing record of $126.29 a barrel as Saudi Arabia rejected a plea from President Bush to boost production and Goldman Sachs revised their price outlook sharply higher.

The U.S. Energy Department announcement comes several days after Congress voted to direct the Bush administration to stop the shipment of oil to the emergency reserves.

The Energy Department decided not to purchase oil for the reserve from July to December in case the bill becomes law, said Megan Barnett, a spokeswoman for the department.

The Strategic Petroleum Reserve, located underground at four sites in the salt caverns bordering the Gulf of Mexico, was built in the 1970s after the first oil embargo to protect the country against a sudden drop in oil supplies.

The Bush administration has been filling the reserve since 2001, boosting the reserve from about 540 million barrels to 702.7 million, enough to protect against a disruption in imports for about 58 days, said Barnett.

Barnett remained skeptical of the halt's effect, saying deliveries to the strategic reserve accounts for "less than one tenth of one percent" of the oil on the market.

"The amount of oil put in the SPR last week... we trade that in less than one minute," said Tom Kloza, the Oil Price Information Service's chief oil analyst.

But supporters say halting shipment to the reserve could bring down gas prices by as much as 24 cents a gallon.

Saudi Arabia rebuffs Bush: Earlier on Friday, oil had risen more than $3 a barrel as Saudi Arabia rejected President Bush's call to increase production, saying there wasn't enough demand from its customers.

Bush met with Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah on Friday as part of his Middle East tour to appeal for greater production to help quell crippling fuel prices.

According to the Associated Press, Saudi oil minister, Ali al-Naimi, said the kingdom decided on May 10 to raise production by 300,000 barrels, at the request of customers, and that increase was sufficient.

"Supply and demand are in balance today," he told a news conference. "How much does Saudi Arabia need to do to satisfy people who are questioning our oil practices and policies?"

Some analysts have attributed the recent surge in oil prices to fears about future oil supplies, not a current supply shortage. They say there won't be enough oil in a few years to satisfy soaring worldwide demand.

Crude began to rise early Friday after traders foresaw a jump in diesel fuel use following the earthquake in China and Goldman Sachs revised its price outlook sharply higher.

Oil prices: U.S. crude for June delivery rose $2.17 a barrel to settle at $126.29 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, a new closing record. That topped the previous closing record of $125.96, set May 9.

Crude also hit a new intraday record of $127.82, topping the previous intraday record of $126.98 set May 14.

"Everything the market looks at is bullish," Peter Beutel, an oil analyst at Cameron Hanover, wrote in a research note Friday.

Also pushing up prices Friday were fears of higher demand from China. Traders fear that the rebuilding after the 7.9 magnitude earthquake that rocked southwest China Monday - and killed more than 20,000 people with tens of thousands of others still missing - will lead to a sharp increase in diesel fuel use, the Associated Press reported.

Rocketing fuel: Diesel fuel has been in tight supply for the past several months following a cold winter in the Northern Hemisphere, and as the popularity of diesel cars grows in Europe and the developing world.

With diesel prices outpacing gasoline, refiners in the United States have been ramping up production of diesel and sending it abroad. That has displaced some domestic gasoline production, helping push gas prices higher.

The price of diesel fuel hit a new record high Friday of $4.482 a gallon, according to a daily survey from AAA. Regular unleaded gasoline also reached a new record of $3.787 a gallon.

Goldman Sachs weighs in: Also contributing to Friday's oil price spike: analysts at the investment bank Goldman Sachs boosted their oil price predictions for the second half of the year from $107 to $141 a barrel.

"Supply constraints continue to push crude prices higher," Goldman analysts wrote in a research note Friday.

But the bank noted that despite the high prices, the global economy - and by implication, the demand for oil - continues to grow.

"The dire macroeconomic impact from the current oil shock has yet to materialize," the note said.

Recent News Reports (Part Two):

Rush for rice is expected after Myanmar cyclone

By Bruce Wallace, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
May 8, 2008

TOKYO -- By strewing death and destruction across a rice-rich delta, the weekend cyclone that battered Myanmar has raised a new question for other poor Asian countries already scrambling to find affordable food: Will damage to its current crop force Myanmar to join the clamor for rice imports at a time when prices are at a record high?

So far, the trend in commodity markets suggests the answer is yes. The price of rice has jumped over the last four days, a sign that traders see a further squeeze on a tight global market.

Storm damage to the Irrawaddy delta, Myanmar's low-lying rice bowl, means that the country is likely to move from being a modest exporter to a major importer, traders say. But other experts say they expect the cyclone's effect on the rice market to be minor, noting that Myanmar produced only 1% of the rice traded on global markets last year.

And though they acknowledge that the cyclone damaged at least part of the current crop and that some supplies were lost, the experts say the next harvest this year may benefit from the cyclone's soaking.

"The moisture on the land is a good thing for rice, so their yearly production should go up, not down," said Vichai Sriprasert, a leading Thai rice exporter and honorary president of the Thai Rice Exporters Assn. "They may have some problems with rice in the warehouses, but even in the delta area, the plant should not have been harmed."

Both sides agree that there will be a short-term scramble for food. Officials from the United Nations World Food Program working in Myanmar reported that at least one major rice warehouse was destroyed, and that another had its roof torn off and its stocks drenched. They also said that much of the spring rice in the field was showing signs of spoilage.

"Our staff report that following the tidal surge, some of the rice was yellow and smelled bad," said Paul Risley, a spokesman for the agency's regional office in Bangkok, Thailand.

But the urgent need for aid to Myanmar is not yet sending the agency looking for new rice supplies. Emergency rice supplies are of little use in an area where there is no cooking oil. Instead, the agency has begun airlifting high-energy biscuits.

Experts say the problem in Myanmar, where the World Food Program was already feeding about a million of the 48 million people, is poor infrastructure and the lack of an effective distribution system.

There is widespread agreement that the country should be able to feed itself. "This is a country blessed for growing rice," said Duncan Macintosh, a spokesman for the Philippine-based International Rice Research Institute.

But production has been stifled by Myanmar's ruling generals, who have set themselves up as the only domestic rice buyer. The government's low prices mean most farmers grow only what they need for themselves, experts say, and as a result, the world's largest rice exporter before World War II now contributes just a trickle to the 30-million-ton-per-year international rice trade.

Yet that capability to grow rice with ease has many observers convinced that Myanmar, also known as Burma, will be able to feed its people again within a few months.

"The rice fields farther north are going to get plenty of water now," said Sriprasert, the Thai rice exporter, who has traveled to Myanmar. "The land and the water there are better than in Thailand; the river systems are huge.

"They'll start to plant soon," he said. "And the crop will be good."

Recent News Reports (Part One):

Rice price overshadows Southeast Asian trade meeting

By Kevin Yao and Gde Anugrah Arka
Fri May 2, 9:48 AM ET

Southeast Asian trade officials met on Friday for talks on how to respond to soaring rice prices, after U.S. President George W. Bush proposed $770 million in new U.S. food aid to stave off a global food crisis.

The weekend gathering of the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) on the resort island of Bali, famed for its shimmering green rice terraces, is also discussing efforts to build momentum for long-delayed world trade talks.

"Our minister will talk about the rice price. We share the general concern," said an official from the Philippines, which is the world's top rice importer, buying about 10 percent of its annual needs from overseas.

Asian rice prices have almost trebled this year and prices on the Chicago Board of Trade have risen more than 80 percent.

Bush, expressing concern as rocketing world food prices intensified unrest in poor countries, promised on Thursday that the United States would take the lead as hunger takes hold of a greater swathe of the developing world.

"With the new international funding I'm announcing ... we're sending a clear message to the world that America will lead the fight against hunger for years to come," Bush said.

The World Food Program, which has issued an emergency appeal for $755 million to help feed 73 million hungry people in 80 countries, said on Friday it was not yet sure if the new U.S. aid would resolve its funding problems.

"We will have to wait to see how this money is going to be allocated to the different agencies responsible for responding to the impact of global food prices," said WFP spokesman Gregory Barrow. "But clearly this is a major step for all of us who are engaged in addressing this problem."

At the Bali talks, which conclude on Sunday and were also involving representatives from Australia, New Zealand, India and the United States, Malaysian trade minister Muhyiddin Yassin said he would press for the "hot topic" of food security to be higher on the agenda.

"RICE SUMMIT"

The world's biggest rice exporter, Thailand, is also at the Bali meeting of ASEAN economic ministers and an official from its delegation said the seller's perspective should also be heard.

"The cost for producers, such as fertilizer, is going up. Everything is going up," said the official.

With only 30 million tons traded annually, government export curbs, such as those from India and Vietnam, have spooked importers such as the Philippines and Bangladesh, at a time when global stocks have halved from a record high in 2001.

Media reports quoted Indian commerce minister, Kamal Nath, who is also due to attend the meeting, as saying rice exporters like India, Thailand and Vietnam had a key role and would support Bangkok convening a "rice summit." No other details were available.

An Indian official in Bali confirmed New Delhi had floated the idea, but doubted it would be brought up at this meeting.

A Thai trade official, who declined to be named, sought to soothe concerns about a further rise in rice prices, reaffirming the country's policy not to curb rice exports.

"Thailand's policy remains the same. We don't have any problem over the supply of rice," he said.

Thailand should produce around 19 million tons of milled rice in 2008, with 7-8 million tons for local consumption and the rest for exports and stock, its agriculture ministry said.

Thai Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej recently revived talk of an "OPEC-style" rice cartel in Southeast Asia involving producers Thailand, Vietnam, Myanmar, Laos and Cambodia. But analysts said on Friday the idea was unlikely to gain traction.

"I don't think it would work. All they can do is agree on a price, but they can't control the supply like oil," said Graham Catterwell, an economic analyst with 30 years of experience in Thailand and the region. "It's going nowhere."

(Writing by Ed Davies; Editing by Alex Richardson and Jon Boyle)