Ostrzeszów/Poland 01/02/2024
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In the February 2023 article The Agony of a Great Empire, I wrote about the American provocation surrounding the Lusitania ship, which served as a pretext for US entry into World War I. Jeannette Rankin’s speech to the US Congress in 1942 revealed the next US provocation. It was another excuse for the US to enter the war. This time the Second World War.
Today is the anniversary of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7th, 1941, which caused America’s entry into World War 2. On December 8th, 1942, exactly one year after president Roosevelt stood before Congress and demanded a vote for war, Jeanette Rankin, the only member of Congress to vote against America’s entry into that war, penned an address to Congress, entitled, “Some Questions about Pearl Harbor”. In the speech, she asks whether or not the attack by the Japanese was ‘unprovoked’, as FDR put it. Source.
For centuries, politics has been a theater played against one’s own nations. The Pearl Harbor lies about sacrificing the lives of their own soldiers just for propaganda were just one episode in a long list of perfidious deceptions.
Challenge everything you think you know.
There was no pandemic.
There was no coup.
JFK was not assassinated by Oswald.
King was killed by the CIA.
Apollo didn’t go to the moon.
9/11 were not Muslim terrorists.
Iran doesn’t have a nuclear bomb.
China is not communist.
Assad did not use chemical weapons.
The Titanic didn’t sink.
There is no genocide against the Uighurs.
Pearl Harbor was not a surprise attack.
The pyramids were built by an advanced civilization.
Carbohydrates are unnecessary for optimal human health.
No vaccine has ever worked.
No atomic bombs were dropped on Japan.
HIV does not cause AIDS.
Petroleum is neither a rare nor a fossil fuel. Author: Przemysław Łukaszewski. Source Telegram July 13, 2023 10:42 p.m.
Every day we receive news that does not match the official narrative. What are we going to do about it? Most of the time we ignore them because they don’t fit our thoughts and ideas about the world. We would rather change the world than our ossified, long-devalued views shaped by media propaganda. We can curse all we want, but the fact remains: our assessment of world politics is based primarily on the knowledge we acquire – guess where? That’s right: television, radio, press, internet, friends. The latter are consumers of “truth” just like us. No one is immune from mass propaganda, even if they can recognize it. There are still good books, but we read fewer and fewer of them.
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Author of the article: Marek Wojcik
Email: worldscam3@gmail.com