Martin Parsons
GBNews
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Comments by "Martin Parsons" (@MartinParsons-tr6wi) on "CRISIS: France breaks EU ranks as migrant terrorism pushes them to breaking point | Nigel Farage" video.
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@jopiez1 That's why millions of us marched against it. I have to allude to it, or my comment is cancelled, but when the new York skyscrapers got knocked down, the US (mic ?) felt it obligatory to be seen to retaliate. Bosnia was no help to anyone, though the east west power play after the wall came down may have been a factor, as well as the fact the us probably wanted to appear conciliatory towards the crescent people for fear of a full blown, polarised schism. This has been a factor ever since (chastising the Chinese for their mistreatment of the Rohinga Muslims (suddenly forgetting the Tibetans), and highlighting the plight of the Bangladeshis at the hands of the Burmese Buddhists (not normally known to be warlike)(and, maybe, letting the Turks join NATO)). It was obvious WMD was a pretext and Saddam was a bulwark against the Iranians. That was why many of us thought that was asking for trouble. A few people who tried to stop it died mysteriously. Whether the US envisaged the subsequent wave of migrants after choosing to destabilise a host of countries (ostensibly, as a deterrent against future attack) is open to conjecture. Suffice to say, the conventional narrative ( in itself, deliberately vague) is a long way from the whole story, and reading between the lines (and conspiracy theories) is necessary to make any sense of it. As this is my conjecture, I may be way off beam, but it sort of hangs together with what (I think) I know
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@william_marshal I agree with you about cars, though I thought the same about chess once (contrary to the film, 2001, A Space Odyssey). However if you watch footage of the inside of a factory, where in the seventies you'd have seen hundreds of people working, now you'll see wall to wall machines, with robot arms passing components from one application to the next. You might see a couple of people in lab coats. The concept of "growth" has been the product of creative accounting for many years, as can be testified by the astronomical amounts of debt in the system, I reckon a lot of economic theory ceases to apply when you put minus signs into the equation. We might be having less children, but we haven't stopped altogether, and the story that we need more immigrants is just that, a story. Maybe getting them all in debt theoretically balances the books (in the short term), but that doesn't factor in the extra demand for resources (food, water, energy, waste management) and that's not what they're telling us (which is a clue that there may be some truth in it). Machines don't need sick pay, holiday pay, pensions or lunch breaks, and they don't go on strike. Effectively, humans have, or are about to have , made themselves redundant, not everyone has got the memo yet. Mass immigration, especially of an intolerant creed with no allegiance and an ingrained sense of grievance, can't bode well. I don't feel there's any place for cults in the western world, and if they want to live amongst us, it's something they should have to forego. It amounts to treason, and different people rowing in different directions is never clever in a small boat, and a waste of energy (and antagonising). Otherwise, the intolerant will overwhelm the tolerant, and that's not good for anyone. Narrative control means one has to read between the lines to know (/estimate) what's really going on, but simple, Dickensian maths tells us the flush has been busted for some time, unnecessarily in my opinion, but I might be giving humans too much credit ....
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