ΣΧΟΛΙΟ ΙΣΤΟΛΟΓΙΟΥ : Ενώ οι Ούννοι...είναι "αγγελούδια".!! Γνωρίζουμε σχεδόν όλοι , ότι η CIA και το βαθύ κράτος των Η.Π.Α (Διεθνιστές Χαζάροι τραπεζίτες) ελέγχουν τι γράφεται και τι εκτυπώνεται στην Γερμανία. Ειδικά το περιοδικό Der Spiegel, είναι εντελώς το φερέφωνο της CIA. Το «Der Spiegel» και όλα τα άλλα φιλελεύθερα ελεγχόμενα μέσα ενημέρωσης, σε όλο τον κόσμο, είναι φυσικό να γράψουν και να πουν ότι ο Τραμπ είναι το χειρότερο δυνατό για την Αμερική . Αποκαλύπτοντας και καλά, και ξεφουρνίζοντας ένα παραμύθι που σχεδίασαν και προετοίμασαν τόσο προσεκτικά για δεκαετίες ...όλα τα Μ.Μ.Ε παγκοσμίως ελέγχονται απο τους Διεθνιστές χαζάρους...και γράφουν παντού τα ίδια και τα ίδια. Γιατι δεν γράφουν στο Der Spiegel , ότι οι δημιουργημένες και ελεγχόμενες «ταραχές» στις ΗΠΑ είναι ισοδύναμες με αυτές στο Βερολίνο το 1933. Άνθρωποι τότε ξυλοκοπήθηκαν μέχρι θανάτου, καταστήματα καταστράφηκαν, ιδιοκτήτες καταστημάτων ταπεινώθηκαν και σκοτώθηκαν. Είναι ακριβώς οι ίδιες τακτικές πανομοιότυπες τακτικές με την άνοδο της Γερμανίας το 1933...στο παγκόσμιο στερέωμα. Οι ίδιοι άνθρωποι κρύβονται απο πίσω και στις δύο περιπτώσεις.
ΠΗΓΗ
German media covering US President Donald Trump’s response
to the protests, rioting and violence stemming from the police killing
of George Floyd have gone to cartoonish lengths to pin all the nation’s
problems on Bad Orange Man.
Der Spiegel, never one to look too kindly on the president,
nevertheless outdid itself with this week’s cover-story, depicting
Trump at his desk holding a match while America burns outside his
window. The title? “Der Feuerteufel,” which translates to ‘The Fire
Devil’. Subtlety is not their strong suit.
Trump, the center-left outlet proclaims, is “fueling hatred
to distract from [his] own failure” and deploying “questionable
methods” to secure re-election.
Blaming the president for the rioting and destruction
gripping dozens of American cities is nothing new – it’s certainly a
ubiquitous narrative across US media. But should Trump beat the odds and
snag another four-year term, Der Spiegel has completely painted itself
into a narrative corner. What’s more evil than the devil, after all?
Siamese twin devils? A devil walking another devil on a leash?
Apparently deciding to cross that bridge when they come to
it, the writers proceed to blame Trump – who, one might recall, took
office in 2016 – for a good chunk of the history of American racism,
police brutality, political division, and growing authoritarianism. They
also predict that he will contest any election he does not win, perhaps
forgetting it was Trump’s opponent, Hillary Clinton, who has spent the
last four years hinting she’s the rightful heir to the US equivalent of
the throne.
The piece even quotes a Georgetown University law professor
who likens the riots unfolding nationwide in the wake of the police
killing of George Floyd to the Reichstag (Parliament) fire of 1933,
which Adolf Hitler’s National Socialists blamed on their political
opposition and used as an excuse to seize most government powers for
themselves
.
Rather than ask Professor Rosa Brooks to elaborate why she
finds it “hard not to think about the Reichstag fire” when contemplating
the events of the past few weeks, however, Der Spiegel merely describes
an increased police presence around the White House, the erection of a
new meter-high fence, and a now-notorious helicopter stunt in which a
military bird marked with Red Cross insignia dived low to disperse
protesters. The latter “show of force” has figured prominently in nearly
every piece describing the Trump administration’s supposed overreaction
to peaceful protests in Washington DC.
No mention is made of the various state governors who
jumped at the chance to declare states of emergency amid the coronavirus
pandemic, seizing as much power as they could grab in the name of the
virus while Trump himself – despite media pearl-clutching turned up to
11 – remained curiously restrained. Even as he has called for
designating Antifa activists as “domestic terrorists,” the president has
left the actual prosecution up to Attorney General William Barr. The
AG, in turn, has largely passed the buck to state governors – an issue
which continues to frustrate Trump when those governors refuse to accept
the “help” he’s offered in the form of the National Guard.
Der Spiegel does hint that the US’ problems with racism
predate Trump entering the White House by several decades – but one has
to plow through nearly half the piece to learn this. The Chicago
neighborhood of Austin, the writers admit, was devastated by
globalization in the late 1980s and never really recovered. The fact
that Chicago is a Democratic stronghold – the home city of Trump’s
predecessor Barack Obama, even – yet still afflicted by the “wall” of
“institutional racism” goes unremarked upon.
The anti-Trump slugfest runs aground on a few points. Trump
is said to have “never brought a single black man to a prominent
cabinet position.” While Housing and Urban Development Secretary Ben
Carson has arguably done vanishingly little with his post, the black
neurosurgeon does still serve in the Trump administration, which is more
than one can say for most of the president’s initial appointments.
The writers also attempt to link the voter suppression in
Wisconsin’s “coronavirus primary” to Trump, apparently not realizing
that Trump wasn’t competing with anyone for the Republican nomination
and had no reason to order the closing of 175 of 180 polling places.
They hold up a “working group” established by rival Joe Biden’s campaign
to scrape Trump out of office if he refuses to go willingly as proof
that Trump will not, in fact, go willingly.
Never-Trump neocon Bill Kristol even makes an appearance,
hailed as a “leading intellectual” and the “discoverer of
vice-presidential candidate Sarah Palin” – two seemingly contradictory
points the subtleties of which may have passed over the heads of the
German editorial staff.
Der Spiegel didn’t have much choice but to declare Trump
the devil, having previously run covers showing him as a hooded
Klansman, a comet posing a threat to all life on earth, and a
blade-wielding savage decapitating the Statue of Liberty. Of course,
those who find Der Spiegel’s assault too over-the-top can read Stern,
which “only” calls Trump “The Destroyer” and asks (on a cover
refreshingly free of flames) whether he’s “driving the country into
civil war".
While Trump has been blamed both in and out of the US for
the riots erupting in cities across the country, to the point of being
censored on social media for tweets supposedly glorifying violence,
mainstream media outlets like Slate have actually praised violence as an
“important tool for protests,” while some local governments have
refused to prosecute rioters arrested for violent acts.
Police killings are depressingly common in the US, with
some 1,000 people dying every year at the hands of officers. However,
George Floyd’s death seems to have touched a nerve, setting off protests
around the world – including in GermanyΠΗΓΗ
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