
''The common theme is very simple: For the wealthy, the rules do not apply – because of their wealth. For the poor, the money flows to them no matter who's in power. For the middle class, we bear the cost but are denied the benefits.''
During the evil Clinton boom years, when the president was busy doing his Tiger Woods imitation, I lived in the metropolis. A money-fund manager sometimes came to our political lunches. When he did, he brought with him a recurrent theme: "The wealthy fear the middle class, and they will do anything they can to keep them down."
Back then, I attributed his comment to the financial market having moved against him (and his middle-class clients). Today, I think I understand what he was saying.
First, global "warming": As the East Anglia whistleblower's document dump shows, the concept of manmade global warming is the greatest fraud ever perpetrated upon humanity. The computer code, above all, shows the data to be a complete and utter fraud, based on selective data and outright manipulation. That's why they refused to share the data, which alone should have made them scientific laughingstocks.
While the propaganda-researchers got their public millions for their public propaganda, who would have (and may still) pay for it all? The poor? Hardly; they have no money. The wealthy? Ain't happened yet, baby! If the wealthy were going to pay, why would they be taking their private jets to Copenhagen and extending both begging hands to the United Nations climate-controlled star chamber to carbon-tax them into poverty?
It's the middle class that was (and maybe still is) going to pay the carbon tax – in the form of higher prices for everything, with nearly unlimited dollars going to the government. And from there the money goes – where? To the wealthy – like Occidental Petroleum "Algore," his heirs and assigns, in perpetuity and ad nauseam.
The wealthy can afford tax attorneys to battle the IRS. The middle class either either hand over the money or have their assets seized by the IRS and their lives and businesses
ruined. And if you're an employee, payroll withholding ensures you will never see the money they take in the first place. http://www.wnd.com/index.php?fa=PAGE.view&pageId=119224
Back then, I attributed his comment to the financial market having moved against him (and his middle-class clients). Today, I think I understand what he was saying.
First, global "warming": As the East Anglia whistleblower's document dump shows, the concept of manmade global warming is the greatest fraud ever perpetrated upon humanity. The computer code, above all, shows the data to be a complete and utter fraud, based on selective data and outright manipulation. That's why they refused to share the data, which alone should have made them scientific laughingstocks.
While the propaganda-researchers got their public millions for their public propaganda, who would have (and may still) pay for it all? The poor? Hardly; they have no money. The wealthy? Ain't happened yet, baby! If the wealthy were going to pay, why would they be taking their private jets to Copenhagen and extending both begging hands to the United Nations climate-controlled star chamber to carbon-tax them into poverty?
It's the middle class that was (and maybe still is) going to pay the carbon tax – in the form of higher prices for everything, with nearly unlimited dollars going to the government. And from there the money goes – where? To the wealthy – like Occidental Petroleum "Algore," his heirs and assigns, in perpetuity and ad nauseam.
The wealthy can afford tax attorneys to battle the IRS. The middle class either either hand over the money or have their assets seized by the IRS and their lives and businesses
ruined. And if you're an employee, payroll withholding ensures you will never see the money they take in the first place. http://www.wnd.com/index.php?fa=PAGE.view&pageId=119224
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