18 May 2002 - The weakness of those who conspire - Part 2
I am glad to see that the pressure is building to hold the security agencies to account as I urged in an earlier commentary . The dam is starting to leak. The pressure is building, now we see increasing leaks of information and the first gushes of information from the US president's office itself, admitting knowledge of warnings of the 9/11 attack.
The weakness of those who conspire is being attacked more and more effectively. But like a trapped animal, we can expect desperate attacks as their plots are exposed and their denial increases. They will try ever more audacious conspiracies to distract us into blind rages against each other.
But don't lose heart. Remember, as I pointed out, the bigger the conspiracy, the greater the corruption that needs to be hidden, the greater the incompetence that has to be claimed to make us accept that the crime fighting organisations have not been compromised, and hence the easier it is to expose the lies.
To win, we must keep cool heads and persevere patiently in finding out and exposing the evidence. Don't rely on the TV to tell you what to think. Do your own investigations. Use the mind that God gave you, or He will ask you why you didn't.
One key guideline in investigating the organised crime whose profits drive conspiracies is to look at the great crimes that take place and identify the consequences. Then ask yourself "who benefits?". As the profit motive is the driving force here, we can be fairly clear what "who benefits?" means. It means "who makes money out of this?". Once you identify who does, you can productively focus your efforts there.
Since the beginning of "the war against terrorism" (or TWAT for short) we can identify a number of key profit makers and hence suspect players:
1, Drugs dealers. The Afghan farmers who can now grow their deadly crop get 0.04% of the final sale price. This amounts to several hundred billion dollars each year in profits that the Taliban were on the point of denying to the drug dealers. Their removal safeguarded a very large part of the drugs trade.
2, Weapons dealers / manufacturers / hired killers. A massive hike in military spending of the order of tens of billions of dollars per year is now underway in the USA.
3, Oil companies. It is often stated that it is in the interests of the USA to maintain "stability" in oil producing countries, in order to keep the prices low. However, the equation is not that simple. Ideal profits for oil companies are achieved by taking control of the oil / gas fields and pipelines by force and then ensuring puppet governments are just stable enough to survive with the help of the oil companies. Afghanistan is a model of this strategy in operation to access Caspian Sea reserves.
For more tips to those beginning to investigate the organised crimes taking place a good place to start is http://whatreallyhappened.com