No wonder the shills were complaining today about giving farmers money.
Sebastian Rivera
"At least four independent insider sources have revealed that the Alliance is now locating and legally seizing trillions and trillions of dollars in assets stolen by the Deep State. The money is set to be released back into the legitimate economy as “prosperity funds” that could almost immediately create radical improvements in our overall quality of life." "It is very obvious that the Deep State is in a hyper-violent fight to the death right now, and it is losing by the day. The sealed indictments alone are nothing we’ve ever before seen in history, and Q has now validated their involvement in the plan. If our briefings are correct, we are seeing a nearly complete shut-down of human trafficking and pedo rings, an end to genocidal aspirations and “false flag” terrorism, and an imminent financial rehabilitation on an epic scale. These events will also pave the way for disclosure of forbidden technology, the secret space program and the ET presence in time. This will go from a “fringe” subject to something that is fully, absolutely mainstream, and a key concern on everyone’s minds."
Hehe, great job. So create a system in which your own farmers don't have enough funds and then use taxpayer money to subsidize. That's some fucking underwater chess right there.
Brody Wright
fuck off jew
Jason Fisher
"We just found out that the Inspector General’s team actually has 470 people working it, and is directly responsible for filing the 40,483 sealed indictments now on record as of June 30th, 2018. [UPDATE: The 470 people are on the Inspector General’s team. The link Q sent us to, as seen below, makes this clear. The post was a bit hard to understand. This is all anyone wanted to write in the comments! Got it…. breitbart.com/big-government/2018/03/31/turley-sessions-using-utah-federal-prosecutor-much-better-trump-2nd-special-counsel/ Attorney General Sessions… also informed the chairmen that Inspector General Michael Horowitz, who is working with Huber, has a staff of 470 investigators, giving Huber access to enormous investigative firepower that far exceeds the staff of any special counsel.]"
Michael Jenkins
>Jack Chick Nice kike loving comic you got there.
Christian King
I'm sorry that your country hasn't taught you how to read properly. Let me try: DEEP STATE BAD DEEP STATE TOOK OUR STUFF FROM US TRUMP GOT IT BACK TRUMP IS GIVING IT BACK TO US
Evan Hughes
Democracy is for faggots.
Julian Reyes
"The Alliance has discovered that their goal of defeating the Deep State has been far more complex, time-consuming and difficult than earlier battle plans had considered. It is becoming obvious that a very large “drop” of contentious, world-changing information will occur at some point, now quite possibly before the end of this month. This will likely be paired with dramatic and publicly visible actions, such as some form of the mass arrests we have been briefed about since 2009. This is much different from insider chatter. There are literally forty thousand sealed criminal indictments ready to hit the scene. It is hard to even imagine what names will be among those 40,000, and the things we will learn as it all becomes public. Once this event sequence takes place, it will be up to us — this audience — to help everyone understand what is going on, and the positive nature of the steps that are being taken."
Nathaniel Hall
need legitimate source and details on deep state stuff plz, else you are peddling lies.
Lucas Myers
>divinecosmos
Zachary Moore
I'm not even a leaf, I'm Russian and this anti-free market garbage is retarded even to me. Trump is good on immigration but a fucking dolboeb on tariffs.
Oliver Rogers
Hate the phrase 'deep state' but giving our people money at the shitlibs' expense is a serious strength of Trump's administration. Also note the end of the SALT deductions that federally subsidized liberal states' high taxes.
Isaac Myers
I assume you've never been on Jow Forums before because there are deep state threads like every damn day dude sorry you are so deeply entrenched in kikery that you can't look at things yourself to see if they add up or not
Carson Hill
ive been here since you were a babe in swaddling clothes. i see you have no source though.
Take a look at what we hear in the original article from the New York Times: nytimes.com/1986/02/18/us/dept-of-hundred-dollar-toilet-seats.html?mcubz=3 Disclosures about the Defense Department paying hundreds of dollars for a hammer and hundreds more for a toilet seat have infuriated President Reagan, who has called the reports a ”constant drumbeat of propaganda” and not typical of the way the Government operates. But that ”propaganda,” the President apparently forgot or did not know, originated with a commission on governmental efficiency for which he has been full of praise, the Grace Commission. In this next article from the LA Times on July 30, 1986, the reviewer makes a joke early along, only to reveal this is how the US military really worked: articles.latimes.com/1986-07-30/news/vw-18804_1_nut You may have read in the paper the other day that a division of Litton Industries and two of its former executives are accused of defrauding the government out of $6.3 million on military contracts. According to the U.S. attorney, the company “grossly inflated prices intentionally” on about 45 contracts from 1975 to 1984. It makes you wonder if all our weapons aren’t overpriced…. A handy book for any taxpayer is “The Pentagon Catalog” (Workman), which describes and shows diagrams of numerous pieces of military hardware that authors Christopher Cerf and Henry Beard describe as “ordinary products at extraordinary prices.” They claim that their firm, Pentagon Products, can supply any of these items to anyone at the prices our military paid for them, and they boast, “We will not be oversold.” Anyone who buys this paperback for $4.95 gets a $2,043 nut free. The nut is glued to the inside of the back cover, in the upper right hand corner, and fits in a hole in the pages, so it goes through to the front. This nut, which is described as “a plain round nut,” was made by McDonnell Douglas for the Navy at $2,043 each.
Bentley Ortiz
In 2015, we found out that a single helmet for a fighter jet was supposedly worth 400 thousand dollars: theeconomiccollapseblog.com/archives/the-u-s-government-is-spending-400000-dollars-on-a-single-helmet Would you pay $400,000 for a single helmet? Of course you wouldn’t – but that is precisely what the U.S. government is doing. Just the helmet for the pilot of the new F-35 Lightning II is going to cost taxpayers nearly half a million dollars. And since we are going to need 2,400 of those helmets, the total bill is going to end up approaching a billion dollars. But what is a billion dollars between friends, eh? Sadly, our military has a very long history of wasting money like this. Back in the 1980s, the “six hundred dollar toilet seat” became quite famous. Average Americans were absolutely outraged that the government was wasting so much of our hard-earned money, and promises were made that things would change.
Asher Moore
Then in 2016, an expose’ from The Nation revealed even more examples in current times. This journalist was able to track down 33 billion dollars in mysterious over-spending just on his own: thenation.com/article/only-the-pentagon-could-spend-640-on-a-toilet-seat/ The latest revelations of waste at the Pentagon are just the most recent howlers in a long line of similar stories stretching back at least five decades. Other hot-off-the-presses examples would include the Army’s purchase of helicopter gears worth $500 each for $8,000 each and the accumulation of billions of dollars’ worth of weapons components that will never be used…. Keep in mind that the above examples are just the tip of the tip of a titanic iceberg of military waste. In a recent report I did for the Center for International Policy, I identified 27 recent examples of such wasteful spending totaling over $33 billion. And that was no more than a sampling of everyday life in the 21st-century world of the Pentagon…. The first person to bring widespread public attention to the size and scope of the problem of Pentagon waste was Ernest Fitzgerald, an Air Force deputy for management systems. In the late 1960s, he battled that service to bring to light massive cost overruns on Lockheed’s C-5A transport plane. He risked his job, and was ultimately fired, for uncovering $2 billion in excess expenditures on a plane [in late 1960s dollars]…. The C-5A fiasco, combined with Lockheed’s financial troubles with its L-1011 airliner project, led the company to approach Congress, hat in hand, for a $250 million government bailout….
Gabriel Robinson
wnd.com/2016/08/6-5-trillion-missing-from-defense-department/ A relatively obscure audit report from the Office of Inspector General of the United States Department of Defense suddenly is getting a lot of attention for what it apparently reveals: The Pentagon can’t account for $6.5 trillion. At ArmstrongEconomics, the blog reported, “Once again, the office of inspector general has come up with a huge hole in the Department of Defense with a missing $6.5 trillion.” The day before 9/11, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld admitted $2.3 trillion was missing from the Defense Department budget, noted the blog. That figure has now grown to $6.5 trillion and counting.
jewishvirtuallibrary.org/excerpts-from-mein-kampf In the big lie there is always a certain force of credibility; because the broad masses of a nation are always more easily corrupted in the deeper strata of their emotional nature than consciously or voluntarily. And thus in the primitive simplicity of their minds they more readily fall victims to the big lie than the small lie, since they themselves often tell small lies in little matters but would be ashamed to resort to large-scale falsehoods. It would never come into their heads to fabricate colossal untruths, and they would not believe that others could have the impudence to distort the truth so infamously. Even though the facts which prove this [colossal lie] to be so may be brought clearly to their minds, they will still doubt and waver and will continue to think that there may be some other explanation. For the grossly impudent lie always leaves traces behind it, even after it has been nailed down, a fact which is known to all expert liars in this world and to all who conspire together in the art of lying. — Adolf Hitler
Nicholas Walker
thanks user. ill read these. now any evidence that trump is specifically doing something about this?
its no secret that defense contractors have been riding the gravy train for almost 80 years now.
Jonathan Wilson
"i declare war on the pentagon" rumsfeld, september 10 (i think) 2001
Aaron Adams
>giving money to hard-working American farmers that feed our nation: evil >giving money to lazy shitskins that contribute nothing to society: profoundly virtuous
all you can do is watch the news, brother. He truly is sent by God to save us
Julian Lee
yeah im hopeful. i think he is just a man, fallable and with his own faults, but he is also shaking things up which is much needed.
in the larger picture though, us currency is ultimately backed by threat of violence. you dont want to trade oil in usd? prepare to see your country reduced to rubble and dust.
since the usd is backed by threat of force (bases all over the world within striking distance of creditors), it kind of makes sense to pursue military superiority at any cost.
note: im not defending this system, just looking at it. just look at it.
Isaac Thomas
>ET's They're not alyums, they're the Reichsdeutsche.
Chase Price
this is why (((they))) are trying to prevent us from hooking up with Russia, because Putin is leading the march to go back to the gold standard.
Thomas Hughes
there's both. The alyums contacted the Germans, told them how to build the saucers, and right before they lost the war the germans colonized the moon in the 30's and mars in the 50's.
Andrew Bailey
to elaborate a bit, take the f35 helmet. >borrow all the money from china >pay lockheed a shitload of money, thereby boosting american economy >never have to pay debts back in full because of threat of force >china just payed for the f35
i know its simplistic, and it assumes that the usa companies still produce something truly superior while sucking the govt teat.
but its more nuanced than pure and simple theft/corruption imo.
William Campbell
Remember, all public money is taxpayer money, so "giving" public money to the lazy who pay nothing is theft from the industrious, but giving public money to hard-working taxpayers is just returning their rightful property.
Alexander Myers
like three years ago I would have believed this, but I have seen too much shit at this point that cannot be coincidence, and no I can't link three years worth of evidence lol, i'm just asking that you keep an open mind
Jeremiah Nelson
Sauce, David Wilcock... You absolute fucking mongoloid.
im not at all disagreeing that corruption is rampant, and big old money makes the rules to suit themselves. this is true for all industries from real estate to defense contractors to oil to agriculture.
and yeah it would be pretty amazing if trump does something about american tax dollars being funneled into the pockets of elites.
what im saying though is that the extreme money spent on defense serves a double purpose. it lines the pockets of the well connected (not ideal at all) but it also, in theory, prevents the usas creditors from really being able to collect on their debts.
think of it like this. usa is biggest mob boss. he takes loans from everybody and spends the money like there is no tomorrow. but you cant come and just demand your money back, because he has spent so much money on guns and footsoldiers that he will just kill you and your family if you get uppity.
Noah Young
You scared leftycuck that Rosenstein is getting kicked?
like I said, I used to believe this a few years ago. I'm absolutely convinced that it was not only hush/incentive money for elite favors, but for building infrastructure on other planets and underground
Jason Myers
this would be a great time to start hemp production and disrupt the petrochemical industry with biodegradable plastic production.
Brandon Sullivan
Trump is going to get all that rolling as soon as he's done removing these evil fuckers. He promised us new things in areas like space and medicine, he's already made our economy amazing and everything that these "crazy conspiracy theorists" have been saying is starting to come true