I was told years ago the government are not our friends, and do not
look after us but themselves. Anything they do in our favour is either a
bribe or a coincidence. Once you have that view you start looking for
examples, and every now and again in a policy or a throwaway comment
they prove it, in the form sometimes of an open confession few will even
notice.
1) Low interest rates. The current UK rate of
0.5% helps a third to a quarter as many people who borrow as the great
majority who saves. The banks and governments however do borrow at 0.5%
while others still pay a few percent to a few thousand depending on the
nature and length of the loan. So in this example, there would be no
logical reason for any government to hurt the large majority of society,
unless it helps them instead.
2) Renewable energy.
Wind turbines cost around ten times more per watt than fossil fuel, and
even then by their nature can't ever produce the small amounts of power,
often in short bursts (like the wind, basically) which ends up wasting
half as it's produced when not needed, and staying idle the rest of the
time. They need power to start them up, turn them to the wind, heat them
when freezing and stop them when too windy. Then a real power station
must be on permanently to back them up, again whether or not the power
it uses is drawn on. They can't produce on demand so waste their energy
as well while they are not being drawn on, wasting energy twice. The
maintenance is vastly expensive when they go wrong and use millions of
tons of concrete for the foundations. They will never be able to produce
more usable power than they cost.
Solar panels only
work in sunny areas during the long days, which is stating the obvious
unless you've bought them already and clearly forgotten. People buy them
for the guaranteed subsidies simply taken from everyone else's bills,
and in the winter when they are needed the most can hardly work at all
outside the tropics. So you have a system which produces a weak amount
of energy (the atmosphere reduces the sunlight by 25 times) and if
stored can only be released when there's enough time during the daylight
to build enough up. So their production decreases directly with the
amount required.
Wood chips are supposed to be a waste
product of the building industry, yet besides costing three times more
than fossil fuel Britain can't produce their own and import them from
the US. As trees are a restricted commodity there will be a point
reached where the annual requirement for wood chips can never be met
worldwide as the trees can't grow fast enough to be cut down and burnt.
Biofuel
clears either existing crops or rain forest, and creates monocultures
of corn and palm oil which instead of being used for food (they don't
grow more corn, but take a proportion of it) is burnt despite there
being hundreds of year's worth of coal at the very least.
Again,
the figures are absolutely known in every aspect. Everyone, even the
buyers, know for example an electric car can only be fuelled at a point
(even if you have to wait many hours when you reach one), but still buy
the things and somehow wipe from their minds the inevitable point when
they will find themselves, probably on a cold winter night when they
need the heater and maybe the wipers on, and forget the usual 50 mile
range is down to 30 or 40. Even if they run out a mile from home, they
may be able to walk home, but how will they get the car back? Answers on
a postcard please. And wait till the battery runs out, a new one costs
the value of the car.
3) Unemployment. Throwaway
comments can be the destruction of any criminal's career, as when you're
a crook your truth is criminality. You lie to appear genuine, and your
victims who believe they are your customers pay for the products of your
front business, while the money is almost certain to never reach its
final destination of a full return plus profits. So for example someone
spends £8000 on a solar panel, despite the maths explain on the brochure
you will only save £300 a year (based on subsidies and average annual
output, which cannot be known in advance), meaning they can't produce a
profit for well over 20 years, and how many people will still be there
by then? I don't think you can take them with you, plus the wiring and
inverter to convert DC to AC. But some solar power drops off after a few
years, and some pack up long before the 20 years is up. Then they need
cleaning every year, and guess what it costs to get a man up to wipe
them clean. Whichever way you arrange the figures the only person making
a profit are the sales chain. Now if someone like, say, the managing
director of Siemens, said to his staff "We all know solar is a waste of
money but the profits are so great we must get involved anyway". This
was reported by a number of staff at a meeting when it happened, but for
the economic realities of reducing subsidies and maybe customers waking
up to the figures gradually then they didn't do it for very long. And
the simple observation very few bankers own a credit card. Follow the
insiders, they know, and if they don't buy GM food or aspartame in their
drinks then neither should you.
Our great new leader,
Mark Carney of the Bank of England, for the first time ever gave
conditions for the rise in interest rates he wasn't planning to do.
Unemployment must fall to below 7% from 7.8%, subject to various other
conditions. The Daily Mail reported how investors are dreading this
week's unemployment figures, as if they are too low then it could mean
an earlier rise in interest rates.
These are the
bankers who gain from low interest rates, like property companies gain
from high property prices while the owners never can, and are both a
tiny minority of society. The government and the bankers work in tandem,
sharing the low interest rates and passing bonds and futures between
them to enrich whoever wins the bets, while it's our money they're
gambling with as they stole it from investors in deposits and pensions.
So we already know the government are not looking after us with low
interest rates, but the people they are looking after, the bankers, want the country to have high unemployment as they make more profits from it. You can't please all the people all the time, but surely you should look after the majority wherever possible, and never try and profit from their misfortunes. As Mark Carney has now guaranteed will happen.
It
is one thing to spend years of detective work tracing money and
tracking down perpetrators to spend weeks or months presenting evidence
in court before possibly winning a guilty verdict, and having policies
which openly admit 'We are ripping you off' in ten foot tall flashing
letters. How much more evidence does anyone need, that you can not only
prove our government is looking after a small group of already
successful people, but probably the great majority of all its other
policies are doing the same thing in less obvious ways? We can elect new
people, and the rise of UKIP is proving this with their growing support
ahead of the next elections, but until the majority actually discover
how the current three parties (as they don't disagree on any of these
policies) are all out to get us, or at least not out to help us, things
can never change. Unless you want them to.
If people trust their authorities they will accept whatever they are told and are always shocked the rare times they are exposed as criminals. This material allows everyone to read the signs and spot the patterns everywhere and not be taken in. The same psychological methods have been used to create illusions since the bible mentioned the serpent, and the ways to see through them have been the same as well.
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