Thứ Ba, 31 tháng 10, 2017

Waching daily Oct 31 2017

The Cube Max Beautiful Luxurious Home is a Vacation Home

For more infomation >> The Cube Max Beautiful Luxurious Home is a Vacation Home - Duration: 2:10.

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How The Elite Dominate The World – Part 5 The Endgame Is Complet - Duration: 7:16.

How The Elite Dominate The World � Part 5 The Endgame Is Complete And Utter Global

Domination

Do you want your children and grandchildren to grow up in a global socialist �utopia�

in which everything about their lives is micromanaged by bureaucrats working for a worldwide system

of government instituted by the elite?

To many of you this may sound like something out of a futuristic science fiction novel,

but the truth is that this is exactly where the elite want to take us.

This is their endgame.

Their agenda has been quietly moving forward for decades, and if we don�t take a stand

now, future generations of Americans could very well end up living in a dystopian nightmare

with none of the liberties or freedoms that we enjoy today.

Bill Clinton�s mentor at Georgetown University, Dr. Carroll Quigley, wrote about this network

of elitists in a book entitled Tragedy and Hope�

In fact, this network, which we may identify as the Round Table Groups, has no aversion

to cooperating with the Communists, or any other groups, and frequently does so.

I know of the operations of this network because I have studied it for twenty years and was

permitted for two years, in the early 1960�s, to examine its papers and secret records.

I have no aversion to it or to most of its aims and have, for much of my life, been close

to it and to many of its instruments�my chief difference of opinion is that it wishes

to remain unknown, and I believe its role in history is significant enough to be known�because

the American branch of this organisation (sometimes called the �Eastern Establishment�) has

played a very significant role in the history of the United States in the last generation.

In other parts in this series, I have discussed the tools that the elite are using to achieve

their goals.

In part I, I talked about how debt is used as a tool of enslavement, and in part II I

explained how central banking is a system of financial control that literally dominates

the entire planet.

Professor Quigley also mentioned this system of financial control in his book�

�The powers of financial capitalism had another far-reaching aim, nothing less than

to create a world system of financial control in private hands able to dominate the political

system of each country and the economy of the world as a whole.�

Today, a system of interlocking global treaties is slowly but surely merging us into a global

economic system.

The World Trade Organization was formed on January 1, 1995, and 164 nations now belong

to it.

And every time you hear of a new �free trade agreement� being signed, that is another

step toward a one world economy.

Of course economics is just one element of their overall plan.

Ultimately the goal is to erode national sovereignty almost completely and to merge the nations

of the world into a single unified system of global governance.

The United Nations is the apex of this planned structure, and the globalists are always looking

for ways to transfer more power to this institution.

For example, that is what the Paris Climate Accord was all about.

Since the climate affects everyone, it gives the globalists a perfect excuse to argue that

the world needs to �work together�.

The following comes from the official UN website�

To address climate change, countries adopted the Paris Agreement at the COP21 in Paris

on 12 December 2015.

The Agreement entered into force less than a year later.

In the agreement, all countries agreed to work to limit global temperature rise to well

below 2 degrees Celsius, and given the grave risks, to strive for 1.5 degrees Celsius.

Implementation of the Paris Agreement is essential for the achievement of the Sustainable Development

Goals, and provides a roadmap for climate actions that will reduce emissions and build

climate resilience.

�Protecting the environment� sounds like a reasonable goal, right?

Well, when you click on the link for the �Sustainable Development Goals�, it sends you to a website

where you can read about the 17 pillars of the plan to �end poverty, protect the planet,

and ensure prosperity for all� that were agreed to by all of the members of the UN

in September 2015.

This plan is also known as �Agenda 2030�, and when you dig into the details of this

plan you quickly realize that it is literally a blueprint for global government.

Sadly, most Americans don�t realize this, and neither do they understand that this has

been the goal of the elite for a very long time.

For instance, during an address to the General Assembly of the United Nations in 1992, President

George H.W. Bush made the following statement�

It is the sacred principles enshrined in the United Nations charter to which the American

people will henceforth pledge their allegiance.

Say what?

Once you start looking into these things, you will see that the elite are very openly

telling us what they intend to do.

One of my favorite examples of this phenomenon is a quote from David Rockefeller�s book

entitled Memoirs�

Some even believe we are a part of a secret cabal working against the best interests of

the United States, characterizing my family and me as �internationalists� and of conspiring

with others around the world to build a more integrated global political and economic structure

� one world, if you will.

If that�s the charge, I stand guilty and I am proud of it.

As David Rockefeller openly admitted, they are �internationalists� that are intent

on establishing a one world system.

Candidates for Congress are not supposed to talk about this stuff, but if I am elected

I am promising to fight the globalists on every front.

We are literally in a battle for the future of our children and our grandchildren.

If the globalists have their way, American sovereignty will continue to erode and the

United States will slowly but surely be merged into a one world system.

But that isn�t going to happen on our watch.

Those of us that love liberty and freedom are going to take this country back, and we

will never stop fighting the insidious agenda of the globalists.

Michael Snyder is a Republican candidate for Congress in Idaho�s First Congressional

District, and you can learn how you can get involved in the campaign on his official website.

His new book entitled �Living A Life That Really Matters� is available in paperback

and for the Kindle on Amazon.com.

For more infomation >> How The Elite Dominate The World – Part 5 The Endgame Is Complet - Duration: 7:16.

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The NFL trade deadline is suddenly exciting. What changed? - Duration: 8:04.

The NFL trade deadline is suddenly exciting. What changed?

The NFL trade deadline is Tuesday afternoon and that means fans can imagine a deal that would make their team better. For years those were pipe dreams that never happened.

A year ago, Joe Thomas, Sheldon Richardson, Alshon Jeffery, Joe Haden and others were rumored to be possible pieces in trades before the 2016 deadline.

But no blockbuster happened and the biggest moves were the Browns acquiring Jamie Collins and the Patriots getting Kyle Van Noy.

The trade deadline is getting much more exciting, though.

We got a taste when the Jaguars traded for two-time Pro Bowl defensive tackle Marcell Dareus on Friday, and the Seahawks traded for three-time Pro Bowl offensive tackle Duane Brown on Monday.

But the bombshell came Monday night when the Patriots sent Jimmy Garoppolo to become the new franchise quarterback of the 49ers.

Seeing those dominoes fall gives hope to any fan wishing their team would go after Martavis Bryant, T.Y. Hilton or one of the other big names that has been tossed into the rumor mill. Dream big, NFL fans.

For years, the NFL trade deadline paled in comparison to the excitement that comes when the trade deadline approaches for the NBA in February, or the MLB deadline in the summer.

Hell, two of the starting pitchers in the World Series right now are Yu Darvish of the Los Angeles Dodgers and Justin Verlander of the Houston Astros, who were with the Texas Rangers and Detroit Tigers, respectively, just a few months ago.

The NFL equivalent of that has never really happened, but that day may actually be here now. Here are three reasons why the trade deadline is suddenly more exciting than its ever been:

1. The tight salary cap is loosening up

Adding an important player from another team who can actually contribute, typically raises the question 'Why didn't the other team just keep him?' There's usually a long answer for that, but a huge salary is typically the crux of the situation.

The gigantic contract Dareus has is the biggest reason why the Bills sent him to Jacksonville. Brown's discontent with his contract with the Texans is a huge part of what sent him to Seattle.

Garoppolo is cheap, but due to become a free agent and that was about to become a giant pain in the Patriots' ass.

But unlike baseball, which doesn't limit spending outside of a luxury tax, not every NFL team has enough room under the salary cap to acquire a player who recently received, or is on the hunt for, a gigantic contract.

That tide has shifted a bit.

The salary cap is rising faster than franchises are spending and that means more room than ever for moves. Fifteen teams currently have at least $10 million in space and only two have less than $1 million.

According to The Ringer, just 13 teams had at least $5 million in space during the 2014 season.

There's much more room to work with now and a handful of teams with gobs of money to throw at players like Dareus and Garoppolo.

2. Coaches are being more flexible with game plans

There's are a lot of moving parts in football making it difficult to incorporate a new face into the mix.

Adjustments have to be made after trades in other sports too, but ultimately Verlander and Darvish were pitchers for the Tigers and Rangers, and are still pitchers with new teams to do the same exact thing: Get batters out.

But communication is crucial on every single play in the NFL, and it's a liability to have a player on the field who isn't exactly aware of where they should be, or what they should be doing.

That level of sophistication may even be exaggerated a bit in the minds of NFL coaches who aren't so sure if someone new will be able to soak their genius designs in.

Thankfully, that rigidity seems to be waning a bit. There's a rise in "positionless football," with teams more willing to tailor schemes to the talent on the roster.

There's a renaissance happening of college offenses leaking into the NFL that rely on simple schemes and speed mismatches.

The increased flexibility is making it easier to slot players in right away as they're still learning.

3. The NFL's decision to move the deadline in 2012 is paying off

The best blockbuster deals typically happen because one team wants to acquire a piece that pushes them over the top, and another wants to dump a contract and get a shiny new draft pick in return.

But why send away a contributor to get a pick for next year when there's still a chance that player can help you get to the playoffs?

By the time February rolls around in the NBA or July and August come in the MLB, it's already very apparent for many teams whether they still have championship hopes or if their year is sunk.

For years, the trade deadline was after Week 6 of the NFL season. That's way too early for teams to be giving up on their chances with the exception of the few teams that really stink it up in September.

But in 2012, the NFL pushed the deadline back to the Tuesday after Week 8.

Those two extra weeks do a little bit more to sort out the contenders from the pretenders, and give teams a better idea of what kind of postseason chances they have.

Pro Football Talk has suggested doing away with the deadline altogether, although that runs the risk of a team ditching an impending free agent in Week 17 and sending them to a Super Bowl contender.

The reward of a compensatory draft pick nullifies that risk some, but the value of a trade deadline in the interest of fairness is understandable.

But how about pushing it back to Week 10 or so? Week 12 even? Because this week has been a lot of fun.

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