2024 introduction
I published this article thirteen years ago. I’m reading it here on account of the attack on Britain’s farmers. When I’ve finished, I’ll add some up to date comment.
You will notice that I alluded herein to what was called the Greek government debt crisis. I published two articles on that, one of them using a storyline from a TV soap opera as an analogy. I have linked both articles below.
Original article:
https://www.financialreform.info/f_r_time_for_our.html
That completes the article. Our governments are not standing up to the banks, rather they are in league with them. You can debate who you think is behind this, the World Economic Forum, the Bilderberg Group, the European Parliament, or even the Elders of Zion, but the fact remains that there is an attack on farmers worldwide. In the Netherlands, the Dutch Government is peddling some garbage about there being too much nitrogen in the soil. In Ireland, there are too many cows passing methane. In Sri Lanka, a ban on fertilisers led to an agricultural disaster.
What is happening in Britain is an attempt to bankrupt farmers, to force them off their land, and to seize that land for nefarious purposes.
Take a gander at this photograph. Fresh milk from one of our 1300 farms, it says. If this tyrannical Starmer government succeeds, we’ll be lucky if there are 13 dairy farms left in the entire British Isles, and if almost all the land isn’t owned by a handful of mega-corporations producing synthetic meat and worse.
We must stand behind the farmers and keep Starmer’s grubby little paws off their land, all of it. This claim that there is a £22 billion black hole in the economy and the only way to fill it is to tax farmers, small business people and the motorist into oblivion, is too absurd for words. This so-called black hole is figures in a book, or nowadays blips in cyberspace. The Government can solve that problem with a few keystrokes on a Bank Of England computer, or it can simply order debts to be written off. This has been done throughout history. Following the 2010 earthquake in Haiti, the island nation’s creditors wrote off over a billion dollars in debts, and the sky did not fall.
Debt-Bondage And The Elephant In The Room
https://www.financialreform.info/f_r_greek_debt.html
Can’t pay, won’t pay — a lesson in Greek economics
https://www.financialreform.info/f_r_cant_pay_wont.html
The links page on my main website; link to all my publications and videos from here:
https://www.infotextmanuscripts.org/links.html
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