Monday, March 18, 2013

Telepromt-In-Chief for the Technofascists Houses of EU US ET AL

Barack Obama during his law school years. His two years as at Columbia, says classmate Len Rosen, was a 'bleak time.' Photo by AP
"... But here's the thing: Not one of us remembers Barack Obama - who transferred to Columbia after his sophomore year at Occidental College in California - from our undergrad years, nor do we know anyone else who does.

"If he wasn't on my radar, he wasn't on anyone's radar," asserts Jamie Miller, a mother of five, who lives in Beit Shemesh and remains active in the alumni association, traveling back to New York every five years to attend reunions.

"I was a cheerleader, so I knew all the jocks," says Miller, who went to law school after college and today works as a librarian and English teacher. "I was in the marching band, I worked on the yearbook, and I was involved in student government, so I knew everyone. But I never saw him around."

haaretz.com/obama-s-israeli-columbia-classmates-don-t-recall-the-young-president.premium<Click


Circa 1963, JFK said we would mint our own money and also freedom of the press would be truly open.

The Technofascists decided the New World Order on that tragic day, and it appears Jack Ruby had a message to convey that was not allowed.  The Technofascists realized the new power and acted on this as quickly as any good criminally insane corporate cronyism RICO would.

WHISTLEBLOWERS

The PRESS, Circa 19??, owned by the NAZI FASCISTS that came to America from WORLD WAR II's HITLER, and RUSSIA'S STALIN and we got the FRAUDULENT "BANKS" which of course set-up perfect crimes:

London's FINANCIAL long arm of TECHNOCRATS [IE BANKS], to STEAL our SOVEREIGNTY.

DIGITAL DUST, in 1963, and Kennedys knew the truthTIME for the truth to set free the reality of genuine life in earth.


By Pedro Nicolaci da Costa, NATIONAL HARBOR, Maryland | Sat Mar 16, 2013 1:52pm EDT
 
(Reuters) - The largest U.S. banks are "practitioners of crony capitalism," need to be broken up to ensure they are no longer considered too big to fail, and continue to threaten financial stability, a top Federal Reserve official said on Saturday.

Richard Fisher, president of the Dallas Fed, has been a critic of Wall Street's disproportionate influence since the financial crisis. But he was now taking his message to an unusual audience for a central banker: a high-profile Republican political action committee.

..  Fisher's vision pits him directly against Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke, who recently argued during congressional testimony that regulators had made significant progress in addressing the problem of too big to fail. Bernanke asserted that market expectations that large financial institutions would be rescued is wrong.

reuters.com/us-usa-fed-fisher<Click 






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