No Crude = No Economy, No National Defense
24 July 2005 -- According to Toby Smith, author of ChangeWave Investing and Editor of ChangeWave Investing advisory, China has already made a deal with Brazil for the brunt of their sugar crop and Venezuela is now allegedly thumbing their nose at America's offer for oil.
"Brazil is turning 60% of its sugar crop into ethanol for the China market. Venezuela is breaking ties with the U.S. and diverting its tankers to the East," says Smith.
Uncle Toby offers this information with the hope that you and I will use his firm to invest in the changequake that is about to occur, which means he is profit driven in his presentation. However, if you look at the implications of this information, then you must at least walk away from this issue with a feeling of deep dread.
When President Bush went after Afghanistan and Iraq, especially the latter, I honestly believed that his intentions were not entirely as stated. I told my friends at the time that I did not see a 911 tie-in with Iraq, although there were some indications that Saddam may have been involved in aspects of funding or possible training issues. But, for the most part, I did not see a direct connection, and neither did others for there began to emerge a general feeling that he did it for the oil in the region. Well, that may very well be, and although I'm not exactly pro-war, I'm not against war when war makes sense.
If China is successful at diverting most of the world's oil supply to their own shore, most of us will be paying $5 to $10 a gallon before it's over. Many of us may not be working at that point or able to drive to work some distance away. I could easily point to the grand global scheme to reduce mobility among the world's population, but I won't waste my time trying to convince some of you that there is such an agenda afoot. But, those of you who continue to think it's a crime when Uncle Sam works to secure a ready, continuous supply of crude oil for America, U had better think about China's true intentions--you had better think ahead.
Simply put, no oil, no economy. No crude, no national defense.
Over the next few weeks we will provide you with some thought-provoking information on the issue of China and the question, "What is she up to?". It is our hope that you will stop for a few quiet moments to consider her continued effort to build her military might, despite the demise of the Cold War and the break-up of the USSR. Why is she still building her military and what is her true intent? If all of China were to mobilize, could the U.S. weather a petrolium war? What else is China up to that we simply don't see? What will you do if the price of gasoline reaches $5 a gallon or more? Perhaps that is what it will take before the liberal appologists among us stop crying in their coffee over Iraq and this administration.
For more information on the global agenda, go to www.tpromo.com/jcfa/charter99.htm, revisit the GKO website on Globalism, or view the web site of the Commission on Global Governance at www.commissiononglobalization.org/.
Al Colombo, GKO
Can We Win This War?
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