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Wednesday, March 19, 2014

Dead Bankers, Common Core, and Destruction of the Middle Class

Coincidence? No! The implementation of Common Core Standards is part of the educational plan to strip children of their self-determination and to establish a one-world economy. The educational system is not intended to accomplish this act alone. The impending collapse of the financial markets will complete the mission.

According to the Canadian Free Press, changes in banking rules under the Clinton administration created opportunities to consolidate wealth through the destruction of the middle class. Numerous bankers subpoenaed to testify about this criminality are missing or have been found dead under suspicious circumstances. The undermining of wealth held by the middle class began decades ago, and so did the undermining of the American educational system.

When educational experts Benjamin Bloom and B.F. Skinner decimated the educational system in the 1950s, A Nation at Risk: The Imperative for Education Reform was commissioned. The conclusions were that a foreign government imposing our current educational system on Americans would have committed an act of war and that the failing American educational system destabilizes American prosperity, security, and civility.

To accept a world economy and a one-world order, students must be taught a belief and value system that induces Americans to surrender their Constitutional Republic, their sovereignty, and their freedoms. Educational theorists acknowledge this fact.

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4 comments:

  1. How true? How so very true...

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  2. In the time of Ronald Reagan, the Depository Institutions Deregulation Act (also known as "Garn-St. Germain" after the sponsoring Republican senator and representative) pretty much gave banks a free hand when it came to interest rates, mortgages and other forms of loans. This was when we began to see 10%+ interest rates on certificates of deposit, 13-14% on mortgages and 17-18% on car loans. Adjustable rate mortgages (complete with balloon payments) were introduced then, as was the practice of issuing mortgages close to 100% of appraised value of the property. During this same period, the buying and selling of mortgage-backed securities (the practice which landed us in the pile of crap we've been in since 2008) really took off. You can blame Clinton if you want to, but this is when it started. I was working in the legal department of a savings and loan at the time and the whole thing unfolded before my eyes.

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  3. Saul Alinski's book coming to life.

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  4. All. true. But, does it matter. Obama will be blame for the damages of past presidents.

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