Brought to You by George Soros! By James Reed

Leave aside the issues of Middle East war politics, and let us focus upon the US university protests. One would have thought that with an issue of such concern and importance that future elites, the students, would be mounting intellectual arguments at least on social media about the war. But, no, it is back to the 1960s-style excitable protests, mainly fuelled by outsiders, funded by the usual suspect, George Soros' Open Society Institute, as stated below.

And after smashing into university buildings, the radicals demanded tasty food be brought in to them. You would have thought with all the money from Soros, that some paid agitator would have thought about getting a few tins of baked beans! The whole thing undermines any credibility to their protests, as if that was the real point of it, a poison well scenario perhaps?

https://jameshowardkunstler.substack.com/p/nostalgia-for-the-mud

"Resentful childless harpies unconsciously longing for domination. Why else worship at the altar of Hamas? Why else would it be so overwhelmingly female?" — Dr. Jordan Peterson

Wasn't it cute how the youngsters who "occupied" Columbia U's Hamilton Hall — and were busy smashing things up inside — demanded restaurant-grade meals sent in to avert "starvation and dehydration" amongst their dauntless ranks? You could imagine a colossal mommy breast with three hundred nipples descending from the sky over upper Manhattan to nourish them back to action. "Feed me . . . !"

It turns out, actually, that at least half the troops inside were not students at all, but rather semi-pro activists paid up to $7,000 each by George Soros's Open Society Institute and other overtly insurrection-themed orgs, so you'd think that the troops could afford to load-up their ever-ready backpacks with Cliff bars and bottles of Smart Water. The order-in food and beverage gambit suggest we should understand that this is not so much politics as the acting out of a game — which is exactly what you might expect of people who spend more time on video screens than in the real world — in which something like a half-time intermission for refreshments is de rigueur." 

 

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Sunday, 24 November 2024

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