Among those who follow the Ron Paul campaign, the legacy media's ongoing distortions are a running comedy. Jon Stewart satirized them in the video below. Paul's Republican support has been as high as 10% but now, according to a recent Rasmussen poll, has fallen to 5%. The Wall Street Journal covers the poll in today's (Thursday, October 13th's) issue. The Journal excludes Paul from coverage by limiting its front page graph to the four frontrunners, one of whom, Newt Gingrich, has roughly the same level of support that Paul had in previous weeks when the mass media omitted him.
If Romney, Cain, or Gingrich is the Republican presidential nominee he will lose because the Paul vote will not go to him. We have had enough of the corporatist socialism of the Rockefeller Republicans.
The reason for the skewness in The Wall Street Journal's and Fox's Paul coverage is that their owner, Rupert Murdoch, is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, which has tended to advocate one world government, big government, and the enviro-fascism in UN Agenda 21, which George H. Bush signed. The Council on Foreign Relations, founded in the early 1920s to further corporatist aims and associated with David Rockefeller since 1949, is a bulwark of support for the Federal Reserve Bank, the recent Wall Street bailouts, and the century-long socialist trend initiated under the Theodore Roosevelt administration. In fact, it was Theodore Roosevelt's Wall Street-financed third party candidacy that led to Bernard Baruch's protege, Woodrow Wilson, being elected over William Howard Taft, who opposed a Federal Reserve Bank. Wilson appointed Samuel P. Bush governor of the first Federal Reserve bank board. Samuel P. Bush was George W. Bush's great grandfather. The socialist- corporatist musical chairs has gone on ad nauseum.
Since the Progressive era, the Council on Foreign Relations has repeatedly advocated and pushed through one foreign policy fiasco after the next, all of which have contributed to the weakening of American economic dynamism, the flattening of real hourly wage growth, and ever-increasing incursions on economic freedom and civil liberties that have culminated in the Patriot Act and the recent bailouts.
Cain is a former Federal Reserve Bank officer; as an employee of Bain Capital Management, a private equity firm, Romney is also intimately linked to Wall Street. Gingrich's reputation precedes him. Only foolishness or ignorance would motivate someone who believes in freedom to vote for Romney, Cain, or Gingrich. All three are ideologically similar to Barack Obama, and all three answer to the same Rockefeller-led banking interests.
Enough Republicans are fed up to bolt so that more of the same will fail. I certainly am. In 2004, I did vote for George Bush, whose family has had intimate ties to the Council on Foreign Relations for three generations. Bernard Baruch personally asked Samuel P. Bush to serve on the War Industries Board before Wilson appointed him to the Fed Board of Governors.
Dumber than dumb, in 2008 I contributed to Wall Street-bailout-supporting John McCain. Today, I have made my first contribution to the Libertarian Party. Absent a victory by Gary Johnson or Ron Paul, I will give more.
Thursday, October 13, 2011
Romney or Cain: the GOP Goes Down in Flames
Posted on 7:52 PM by Unknown
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