Days Recap 5/8/17
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Illuminati Plan to Control Mankind Through E T False Flag - Duration: 3:10.
Illuminati Plan to Control Mankind Through E.T.
False Flag
Dr. Wernher von Braun, the head of the Nazi rocket program, was brought to America after
the war because our government considered his knowledge and expertise too vital to fall
into enemy hands.
Dr. von Braun brought a wealth of information gleaned from other top Nazi scientists like
his boss, SS General Hans Kammler.
Von Braun was privy to work on anti gravity propulsion vehicles.
With access to NASA's secret programs, von Braun apparently began to see the "big picture"
regarding the true goals of America's space program and how the military-industrial complex
was manipulating it according to a secret, hidden agenda.
Dr. Carol Rosin was an industry executive when she first met Dr. Wernher von Braun in
February 1974.
At this time, before his death in 1977, von Braun confided to Dr. Rosin NASA's hidden
agenda.
Inviting her into his office, Von Braun stunned Dr. Rosin by explaining that it was all leading
to planetary control under an oppressive One World Government.
According to Dr. Rosin, von Braun then gave her one supreme assignment:
"He said a secretive trans-national power, already in existence, would move to permanently
take control of this planet thru a hoaxed alien invasion from outer space."
According to von Braun, space based weapons, later known as the "Star Wars" program, were
to be promoted as:
a "shield" against the Russians then, as a defense against 'rogue' nations
then, as protection against asteroids and meteors
finally they would be presented as a safeguard against an extraterrestrial threat
According to von Braun, all of these rationales would be lies.
These space based weapons would be useless against nuclear suitcase bombs available even
in 1974, as well as chemical, viral, bacterial and biological terror weapons.
More importantly, von Braun told Rosin that we already had the technology to build anti-gravity
vehicles and entire transportation systems which did not require so-called 'fossil' fuels.
Instead, they used "beams" of energy, eliminating all pollution.
IMPLICATIONS
If space-based weapons technologies are not being developed to protect the U.S. and its
allies, why are they being developed?
Could resistors, whether nation-states or isolated groups opposed to the coming New
World Order, be singled out and eliminated?
Another possibility is that such space-based weapons will be part of the "smoke and mirrors"
light show designed for use in "Project Blue Beam" with its false, projected presentation
of an alien invasion.
According to Dr. Steven Greer, the head of the "Disclosure Project,"
"...the prospect that a shadowy, para-governmental and transnational entity exists that has kept
UFO's secret - and is planning a deception that will dwarf the events of 9/11..."
This is a scenario that more people within the depths of our government have begun to
reveal.
Dr. Greer writes:
"Since 1992 I have seen this script unveiled to me by at least a dozen well-placed insiders.
Of course, initially I laughed, thinking this just too absurd and far-fetched... and yet
others told me explicitly that things that looked like UFOs, but that are built and under
the control of deeply secretive �black� projects, were being used to simulate � hoax
� ET-appearing events, including some abductions and cattle mutilations, to sow the early seeds
of cultural fear regarding life in outer space.
And that at some point after global terrorism, events would unfold that would utilize the
now-revealed Alien Reproduction Vehicles (ARVs, or reversed-engineered UFOs made by humans
by studying actual ET craft) to hoax an attack on Earth."
The goal of this hoaxed space alien invasion was simple: Create a common enemy and drive
all nations to submit to a One World Government.
And in Dr. Greer's words: "...to justify eventually spending trillions
on space weapons... thus uniting the world in fear, in militarism and war."
Greer claims that Hollywood movies have been deliberately implanting a fear of ET's:
"...this mental conditioning to fear ET has been subtly reinforced for decades, in preparation
for future deceptions...The Plan is to eventually create a new, sustainable, off-planet enemy..."
SPACE FLEET EXISTS?
The possibility of an "off planet" space fleet was given even more credence recently when
a young Scottish hacker by the name of Gary McKinnon recently broke into the Pentagon's
computers and reputedly came up with,
the names of some of our "off-world" U.S. space fleet (identified under the abbreviation:
USSS) two specific space ships, (the USSS LeMay
and the USSS Hillenkoetter) the names of the various crews, their ranks,
and transfer assignments between various "off Earth" space ships
This computer security breach so enraged the brass at the Pentagon that the U.S.
Government is currently seeking to extradite McKinnon from the U.K. to face charges of
computer hacking with a punishment of LIFE IN PRISON!
Certainly this is one way to permanently silence an embarrassing discoverer of forbidden information.
CONCLUSION
Now that we know Illuminati plans, we can prepare for the greatest deception in human
history by warning others, and deciding how we might deal with a hoaxed space-alien invasion
scenario.
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Blade Runner 2049 Trailer (HD) (English & French Subtitles) - Duration: 2:21.
For more infomation >> Blade Runner 2049 Trailer (HD) (English & French Subtitles) - Duration: 2:21. -------------------------------------------
Open Faced Jamon Iberico Sandwiches - Duration: 3:08.
Hello everyone I´m Albert Bevia with Spain on a Fork
in today´s episode we´re going to be making
Montaditos de Jamon Iberico
montaditos basically means open faced sandwiches
the main ingredient we´re going to be working with
today is Jamon Iberico
this is one of Spain´s most prized ingredients
we´re going to be making
3 different variations of montaditos
that are easy to make
have an incredible flavor
and will definitely wow the crowd
so let´s get started
and the first thing we´re going to do is pre-heat our oven
we´re going to put it in the bake and broil option
and we´re going to go 210 C
which is about 410 F
ok the next thing we´re going to do is
we´re going to grab 1 baguette
and we´re going to cut it diagonally
in 1 inch thick slices
ok next let´s grab our slices of bread
and let´s put them on a baking tray with some foil paper
next we´ll lightly drizzle a little a little
extra virgin oilve oil on top of each bread
and now we´ll add our bread to the oven
where going to leave it in here between 3-4 minutes
just to lightly toast it
and after 4 minutes i´ve taken the bread out of the oven
as you can see the bread is very lightly toasted
now we can get started making our montaditos
the first variation we´re going to make
is going to include tomato, jamon iberico
and extra virgin Spanish olive oil
first thing we´re going to do is we´re
grab one tomato that´s very ripe
and we´re going to cut it in half
next we´ll grab 1 slice of bread
and let´s grab our half tomato
and rub it on there
we´ll drizzle just a kiss of extra virgin Spanish olive oil
next we´ll grab a slice of jamon iberico
and let´s just roll it
we´ll place it on top of the bread
with tomato and olive oil
and pierce it with a toothpick to hold everything together
and our first style of montadito is done
the next montadito we´re going to create
is going to include roasted red bell pepper
queso manchego and jamon iberico
first thing we´re going to do is we´re going to get a slice
of queso manchego
and we´ll cut it in half
next we´ll grab a couple of pieces of
roasted red bell pepper
and put them on top of the bread
we´ll add 1 slice of our queso manchego
then we´ll grab a slice of our jamon iberico
and let´s go ahead and roll it
we´ll place it on top
and secure it with a toothpick
to hold everything together
and there´s our second variation of montaditos
and for our last style of montaditos
we´re going to be using some fresh dates
and some jamon iberico
I have some fresh dates here
the pits already been removed
I bought them like this in the store
let´s go ahead and cut it in half
we´ll grab 1 piece of jamon iberico
we´ll grab 2 halfs of a date
put them right there
and start rolling
we´ll drizzle just a little extra virgin olive oil
on top of the bread
add our jamon with the dates inside
and put a toothpick to hold everything together
and there´s our last variation of montaditos
now to garnish our dish
let´s grab some black pitted olives
and let´s thinly slice them
we´ll grab some fresh parsley and finely mince it
now we´ll garnish our plate with some
freshly chopped parsley
and our thinly sliced black olives
and there´s our finished plate of
montaditos de jamon iberico
stay tuned for future videos of me making different
styles and flavors of montaditos
for now, if you enjoyed this video
please subscribe to my channel
so you can receive all my future videos
until the next time...Hasta Luego!
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Donald Trump finally gets a bill passed — but his history of dealmaking is still full of failure - Duration: 11:45.
Donald Trump finally gets a bill passed � but his history of dealmaking is still full of
failure
President Donald Trump�s first 100 days were devoid of any promised dealmaking triumphs,
and was followed by a budget deal in which Democrats won almost everything they wanted,
and Trump got nothing but a tiny fig-leaf hologram � funding for border security that
he tried in vain to pretend was initial funding for his wall. Trump�s initial record of
non-accomplishment was striking enough to start raising questions about his self-branding
as a consummate dealmaker.
Which is why getting Obamacare repeal through the House was a very big deal � even though
it may well put the GOP House majority at risk, despite epic levels of gerrymandering.
Cook Political Report immediately shifted its ratings of 20 GOP seats the day after
the vote, saying, �House Republicans� willingness to spend political capital on
a proposal that garnered the support of just 17 percent of the public in a March Quinnipiac
poll is consistent with past scenarios that have generated a midterm wave.�
Details like that are not Trump�s problem, however. They never are in the deals he cuts.
He needed the House repeal vote to restore his get-things-done image. He needed a �big
win,� and the �fake news� media he loves to hate has already helped him on that score.
But that�s not what comes out of a closer side-by-side look at his budget-deal failure
and the Trumpcare success.
Donald Trump finally gets a bill passed � but his history of dealmaking is still full of
failure In big-picture terms, the budget bill contained
no funding of the border wall; no defunding of sanctuary cities, Obamacare subsidies or
Planned Parenthood; no drastic cuts to the EPA; and a $2 billion increase for the National
Institutes of Health, in place the $1.2 billion cut sought by Trump. Obamacare repeal even
more blatantly doesn�t deliver what Trump promised. It will cut roughly 24 million people
off of Medicaid, as the CBO score of the last bill showed, while Trump promised to protect
Medicaid. It will reduce Medicare benefits, which Trump also promised to protect, and
it will gut coverage for pre-existing conditions.
In short, Trump�s �success� in �repealing and replacing� is a much worse deal than
failure would have been. It even makes his budget failure look like a sparkling success.
To see things any other way � as Trump and the GOP so desperately want you to do � you
not only have to ignore the facts, but an almost unprecedented chorus of voices from
civil society as well: the American Medical Association, AARP, the March of Dimes, etc.
It�s still possible that Trump could pull this deal off � more possible than most
people realize. The Senate could pass a significantly less draconian health care bill, and the House
could approve it � or a compromise bill worked out in a conference committee � thereby
providing survival ammunition for House members who just cast seemingly suicidal votes. Maybe
only 14 million people would lose coverage. Maybe pre-existing condition protections would
be significantly spared. Trump would �win.� He wouldn�t have delivered what he promised,
but the political damage would be sustainable � perhaps. Such an outcome could easily
help build GOP support for him, which in turn might make it possible for him to accomplish
other things as well. So from Trump�s point of view, it�s worth the risk � that other
people alone will carry.
This is the real meaning of the �Art of the Deal� for Trump: It�s not the actual
content of the deal that matters, it�s how you�re able to portray it to the world,
and use it as a stepping-stone to the next deal, and the one after that.
But what does Trump�s actual record as a dealmaker look like? �The Art of the Deal�
was ghostwritten for Trump by Tony Schwartz in the mid-1980s and published in 1987, just
two years after Trump destroyed the USFL, with his suicidal effort to go head to head
against the NFL, a truly artful deal if ever there was one. As Schwartz told Jane Mayer
last July, he now regrets his role in helping create Trump�s image. If he were writing
it today, �Schwartz said, it would be a very different book with a very different
title. Asked what he would call it, he answered, �The Sociopath.�� As a magazine writer,
he had previously painted a very different picture of Trump, Mayer recalled:
In 1985, he�d published a piece in New York called �A Different Kind of Donald Trump
Story,� which portrayed him not as a brilliant mogul but as a ham-fisted thug who had unsuccessfully
tried to evict rent-controlled and rent-stabilized tenants from a building that he had bought
on Central Park South. Trump�s efforts � which included a plan to house homeless people in
the building in order to harass the tenants � became what Schwartz described as a �fugue
of failure, a farce of fumbling and bumbling.�
That�s a far more representative picture of what Trump�s deal-making is all about.
He frequently pays too much or otherwise invests foolishly, counting on his ability to squeeze
the life out of others down the line, as he�s done in numerous lawsuits over the years.
Altogether, USA Today counted more than 3,500 lawsuits in which Trump has been involved.
Its reporters compared Trump�s litigation record to five other top real-estate figures,
and found that �Trump has been involved in more legal skirmishes than all five of
the others � combined.�
This record alone shows that Trump�s not a good dealmaker. A good deal is one that
leaves everybody happy. Trump points out that he won most of the suits he�s involved in,
but that�s largely because he was usually matched against people with far fewer resources
who simply couldn�t spend enough to have a chance. The main point, however, is that
a good dealmaker would never have been involved in so many lawsuits to begin with.
Prior to �The Art of the Deal,� Trump�s initial success owed far more to his father
than he ever admits � thanks to a million-dollar loan � and was matched by an ongoing string
of failures as well. Afterward, he bankrupted himself in the casino business, a truly remarkable
feat. He then recovered with substantial help from shadowy international partnerships. Indeed,
it could be argued that a major reason he keeps his taxes hidden is to keep the world
from knowing exactly how the image of his economic recovery was fabricated.
Many of the sordid highlights were captured by Kurt Eichenwald last August, in a story
simply titled, �Donald Trump�s Many Business Failures, Explained.� Summing up his account
of Trump�s early record, Eichenwald wrote:
Trump is rich because he was born rich � and without his father repeatedly bailing him
out, he would have likely filed for personal bankruptcy before he was 35. His casino failures
had multiple causes, including his own indisciplined management style. Another key problem was
his shaky financing. He promised the Casino Control Commission that �banks would be
practically throwing money at him, and at prime rates,� unlike other developers dependent
on high-interest junk bonds � which he ended up using himself, after all the banks turned
him down. But the most glaring cause of Trump�s casino failures was his impulsive investment
in three competing casinos, pitting them against one another � a truly delusional alt-�business
plan.�
But it�s Trump�s recovery after his casino disasters on which he built his current reputation.
One aspect of this fraud is clearly visible, Eichenwald notes. �Trump falsely claimed
in two of his books that he owed $9.2 billion, rather than the actual number, $3.4 billion,
making his recovery seem far more impressive.� How much he actually repaid, how much he wriggled
out of, how much was paid by taxpayers as he deducted it from his taxes going forward
� we can�t know any of this for certain, because he won�t release his taxes. But
it seems probable that Trump only recovered from bankruptcy through four main avenues,
in which he made money in various ways, regardless of how well the deals involved turned out.
First, Trump cashed in on reality TV with �The Apprentice,� a show that made the
top 10 only in its first season, and never made the top 40 in its �Celebrity� reboot.
The illusion of his success with this show was bolstered by NBC�s prolonged ratings
struggles over the same time, making Trump a big fish in a shrinking small pond.
Second, Trump used the illusion of this success to open a variety of other doors, especially
naming-rights deals � some in construction, and others in a wide range of businesses he
knew little about and never really took seriously. Many of these have failed. Rolling Stone chronicled
some of them in �Donald Trump�s 13 Biggest Business Failures�: Trump magazine, Trump
Mortgage, Trump Steaks, Trump Vodka and of course Trump University.
Third, Trump engaged in wide-ranging deals with Russian and other kleptocratic actors
willing to lose large sums in order to launder the rest, as I described here in January,
drawing largely on �The Curious World of Donald Trump�s Private Russian Connections�
by investigative economist and journalist Jim Henry. As I noted then:
Trump�s various unsavory Russia connections aren�t one-offs, Henry argues. He proceeds
to document a much broader pattern, showing that �whatever the nature of President-elect
Donald Trump�s relationship with President Putin, he has certainly managed to accumulate
direct and indirect connections with a far-flung private Russian/FSU network of outright mobsters,
oligarchs, fraudsters, and kleptocrats.�
Trump has engaged in deals with similarly suspect actors all across the globe, including
figures associated with authoritarian leaders he has recently praised, such as Recep Tayyip
Erdogan in Turkey and Rodrigo Duterte in the Philippines. Russia isn�t alone, but it�s
emblematic of the kind of dark dealmaking on which Trump�s post-casino bankruptcy
reputation was built.
None of these �deal� models are generally viable. They represent niche and/or quasi-criminal
exploits that are commonly shunned by those with actual top-notch dealmaking abilities.
Working so long in such sub-prime situations, Trump has lost whatever real first-class dealmaking
acumen he might once have had � and Eichenwald�s reporting casts considerable doubt on how
much acumen he ever had. So it�s really no surprise we�ve seen Trump floundering
so far, and we should only expect more of the same.
The House repeal of Obamacare is being touted as a counternarrative: See, Trump can get
things done after all. But a White House celebration after passing a bill through the House is
more a sign of weakness than of strength. No one seems to remember any previous president
ever doing such a thing. It reads less as confidence than as desperation, unless the
president can fool folks into believing otherwise. And fooling people � unlike dealmaking � is
something that Trump actually excels at.
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Here's My Canada: Everyone Is Loving and Caring - Duration: 0:23.
In our country Canada, all of the people
are so loving and caring.
I want to thank Canada for all the homes
and lives here. The wilderness is so
awesome, because all the animals are so
loving and caring.
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What Is An Insurance Limit? | Allstate Insurance - Duration: 0:31.
What is an insurance limit?
A limit is the highest amount your insurer will pay for a claim that your insurance policy
covers.
Think of it this way: It's like filling up a fishbowl.
If you file a covered claim, your insurance policy will pay up to a certain amount.
You're responsible for any expenses that exceed the limit.
Want to learn more about insurance?
Visit tools and resources on allstate.com.
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TWICE's 'TT' Is Now the Most Viewed Girl Group K-Pop Video in History - Duration: 1:36.
TWICE's 'TT' Is Now the Most Viewed Girl Group K-Pop Video in History
The girls of TWICE might only be days away from beaming their Signal upon an unsuspecting world on May 15, but the massively popular Korean pop troupe already has a reason to celebrate this month: the record-breaking music video for their TWICEcoaster : LANE 1 smash "TT" is now the most viewed music video in K-pop girl group history.
Over the weekend, the "Knock Knock" troupe officially ousted the previous title-holder, Girls' Generation's 2012 hit "I Got A Boy," from the No.
1 all-time position with the video for their irresponsibly cute and catchy 2016 ode to the Korean emoticon (ㅜㅜ).
Naturally, the victory also provoked a bit of a fan war between the two groups in comment sections and forums — but mostly well-wishes and praise all around.
The video for "TT" is now at over 189 million views and counting. Prior to smashing the all-time record, "TT" became the fastest K-pop group video to hit 100 million views back in January.
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