- CJ Members
- EAC
- OC Teams
Understanding the Media as Subset of Global Shadow Government (Cabal)
[Prepared by affiliated scientists.]
- Parts 1 and 2 of the presentation are available from FIRE-EARTH PULSARS.
Posted by feww on February 22, 2017
[Prepared by affiliated scientists.]
Posted in News Alert | Tagged: cabal, CNN, Cox Enterprises, Global Shadow Government, Google, Jeff Bezos, Media, Michael Bloomberg, Mortimer Zuckerman, News Corp, Reuters, Sheldon Adelson, Warren Buffett | Leave a Comment »
Posted by feww on October 20, 2014
The reader contended, and we’ve confirmed, that the comment contained original quotes from a book written by a prominent Japanese businessman, humanitarian and author, Toshihiko Abe, who was a former Director of European and American Operations at Casio Ltd.
The book, titled “Japan’s Hidden Face: A Call for Radical Change In Japanese Society & Commerce,” published by BainBridge Books, Philadelphia, is available in the United States and Japan.
The comment, which was submitted to Reuters and copied to Fire-Earth, is as follows:
In his book, “Japan’s Hidden Face,” the prominent Japanese businessman and author Toshihiko Abe says:
In Japan, although the prime minister is “the leader of the nation,” it’s “someone else sitting behind the scene [who] holds the real power. He can have the Diet designate whomever he wants to be prime minister, and manipulate him as he like, though he has no legal ground to do so at all. His power simply derives from money. This makes all LDP leaders absorbed in a money game, rather than working out good policies for the people. For the last [fifty] years, politicians, government officials and businessmen have built up a triangle of interests.” [P177]
“[The Boss] can simply replace his robot prime minister when necessary.” [page 183]
“Businesses provide ministers and government officials with positions in private companies after retirement. If government officials are faithful to LDP rulers, an easy and comfortable life is guaranteed for the rest of their lives.” [page 184]
[Japan’s Hidden Face ISBN 1-891696-05-X BainBridge Books]
[Library of Congress Catalog Card #98-70339]
This begs the question, at whose behest did Reuters news police remove the highly informative material that has previously been published by a respectable publisher?
Why Is Reuters So Afraid Of Truth?
Posted in News Alert | Tagged: Abe, censorship, Japan, journalistic integrity, Midori Matsushima, news, news police, politics, Reuters, Thomson Reuters, Yuko Obuchi | 25 Comments »
Posted by feww on October 20, 2014
Continued …
Posted in News Alert | Tagged: Abe, censorship, Japan, journalistic integrity, METI minister, news, politics, Reuters, Thomson Reuters, Yuko Obuchi | 2 Comments »
Posted by feww on March 23, 2010
And your next thought ought to be: Where did they get their information from?
Previously Fire-Earth briefly mentioned about the new UNEP report titled Sick Water? and pointed out the huge error made on the report’s ‘Joint Statement’ page, which was signed by Achim Steiner, Executive Director, UNEP AND Anna Tibaijuka, Executive Director, UN-HABITAT . The Blog commented:
UNEP must clarify why they made such a huge error, otherwise their report is not worth the billions of tons of sewage and waste that are being dumped in the world’s waterways each and every day of the year.
Header of the Joint Statement page in UNEP Sick Water?
Within hours of posting SICK WATER? on this blog, elements within Reuters news agency came to the aid of their party:
Top portion of Reuters report: Waste water kills millions of children, pollutes sea. Text may be subject to copyright.
Moderators searched through the 88-page UNEP report, but did not find any information to support what Reuters had suggested:
In a report entitled “Sick Water” for World Water Day, UNEP said the two million tonnes of waste, which contaminates over two billion tonnes of water daily, had left huge “dead zones” that choke coral reefs and fish.
This begs the following questions:
1. What is the source of information used by the Reuters reporters?
2. If the source was NOT UNEP, which clearly could NOT have been, why is Reuters using external information to paraphrase the inaccurate UNEP report, which is meant to be the authority on the issue?
As for the Reuters report, NOT even remotely close!
Related Links:
Posted in coral reef, dead zone, UN-HABITAT, Uncategorized, World Water Day | Tagged: Green Business, Reuters, SICK WATER?, UN-HABITAT report, UNEP report | Leave a Comment »
Posted by feww on May 27, 2008
New Zealand is facing electricity shortages unless sufficient rain recharges its hydro catchments, the government [sic] said.
“Unless we have some increased inflows in the South Island hydro catchments in the next three weeks, further conservation measures will have to be looked at,” the Energy Minister [sic] said.
South Island hydro power facilities provide about two thirds of New Zealand’s electricity. According to a wholesale electricity market operator, storage in hydro-electric lakes is about 40 percent below average. As a result the price of electricity jumped by 30.6 percent to $215.26 per megawatt hour.
Location map of Taupo, New Zealand
In the 2003 power crisis, the government had planned to cut residential hot water supplies, followed by rolling power cuts for residential users, and blackouts.
Rio Tinto’s Tiwai Point aluminum smelter, located in New Zealand’s South Island, consumes about 15 percent of the country’s electricity.
Earlier this month Bloomberg reported that the prolonged drought in New Zealand, the worst in 20 years, had cut farm production and more than doubled the power prices this year. New Zealand’s energy demand peaks June through August during the hemisphere winter months due to heating use. Hydro-power lakes have been below average since November 2007.
In April 2008, lake Taupo was 18 percent below average. Lake Pukaki was 40 percent below average. Lake Manapouri, which is used to supply Rio Tinto’s Tiwai Point aluminum smelter, was 45 percent below its usual levels.
Continuing drought in New Zealand and Australia, as well as a falling production in the UK and a weak dollar, are raising the prices of milk and dairy products globally. In the past 12 months the price of milk has increased by 32 percent, eggs by 40 percent and wholewheat bread by 26 percent.
Meanwhile, in a triple whammy, a 5.9-magnitude quake hit 2100 km (1300 miles) S of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, earlier today close to a major fault line. Recent increased seismic activities N, NW and SE of New Zealand do not bode well for the country. The earthquakes may result in a period intense volcanic activity in New Zealand in the coming weeks.
Related links:
santorini
Posted in Climate Change, energy, environment, food, Global Warming, health, new zealand, politics, Tourism, Travel | Tagged: australia, blackouts, bloomberg, crops, eggs, electricity, Electricity Shortages, food riots, grains, hydro power, Lake Manapouri, Lake Pukaki, lake taupo, Macquarie Island, Melbourne, milk, Reuters, rice, Rio Tinto, Rising Food Prices, South Island, southern hemisphere, Tiwai Point aluminum smelter, Victoria, wholewheat bread | 2 Comments »
Posted by feww on May 18, 2008
Anguished Chinese Nurse Serving in the Earthquake Disaster Area:
Photo below was taken by Jason Lee of Reuters news agency (China). The caption reads:
“A nurse holding a general’s written order begs soldiers to rescue surviving children still buried in the ruins of another nearby school in the old city district near a mountain at the earthquake-hit Beichuan county, Sichuan province, May 15, 2008. The soldiers are not under the command of the general, whose written order reads: ‘Please arrange for rescue operations at this school as quickly as possible.'”
Credit: Reuters/Jason Lee (china) Image may be subject to copyright. See FEWW Fair Use Notice!
A close up of the nurse’s face. Her heartfelt agony speaks a thousand words!
[Reuters caption: A nurse cries as she begs soldiers to rescue surviving children still buried in the ruins of another nearby school in the old city district near a mountain at the earthquake-hit Beichuan county, Sichuan province, May 15, 2008. REUTERS/Jason Lee (CHINA) Image may be subject to copyright. See FEWW Fair Use Notice!
“Although the time for the best chance of rescue, the first 72 hours after an earthquake, has passed [exactly as planned by CPC], saving lives remains the top priority of our work [believe what I say, not what I do, you ‘ignorant peasants’],” the [doublespeaking] Chinese president, Hu Jintao, told the survivors. (Source)
“Three days after the quake struck, troops and fire engines queued idly along the roadsides waiting for orders.”
“‘I saw a doctor walking along the lines of bloody bodies, checking pulses and looking at wounds. If he shook his head the nurses were instructed not to take the person to the operating theatre but move them to another room to die. It was like a scene from a war film,’ she said.” (Source)
Related Links:
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Posted in beijing olympics, China, disease, food, politics, rescue operations, Tiananmen | Tagged: ACTION, Amnesty International, children, China, chinaquake, chinese nurse, Climate Change, communists, CPC, CPC Central Committee, cutoff areas, disaster, disaster relief, disasters, environment, food, food prices, foreign policy, free world, health, Hu Jintao, human rights, Humanitarian Crisis, jason lee, mainshock, NATO, new zealand, nurse, Olympics, pandemics, paratroopers, plague, red cross, rescue, rescue team, Reuters, Sichuan, storm, Tiananmen Square Massacre, Tourism, Travel, water rationing, water shortage, Wen Jiabao, Zhou Yongkang | 12 Comments »
Posted by feww on May 12, 2008
Ten days after the Chilean volcano erupted for the first time in thousands of years, volcanic ash continues to rain down in Patagonia.
An eruption on the morning of May 2, 2008 forced the evacuation of more than 4,000 people from the town of Chaitén nearby (10 kilometers distant from the volcano) and caused the death of an elderly woman. The eruption continued through to May 4. Towns such as Futaleufú were affected and water supplies were contaminated. The town of Chaitén and Futaleufú were completely evacuated on the morning of May 6, 2008, due to a massive new eruption, with pyroclastic flows and possible emerging of lava. (Source)
The scientists have expressed grave concerns about the potential long-term environmental damage and the harm to the health of people and animals in the area.
“It has spoiled lakes, rivers and lagoons, coated plants in a dense layer of gray, and altered the sensitive habitat of animals now struggling to survive. Satellite images show a white stripe smeared across the southern part of South America.” Reuters said.
A bicycle covered in volcanic ash in Futaleufu town, about 1450 km south of Santiago May 11, 2008. Chaiten volcano began erupting May 2, 2008. (Photo: REUTERS/Ivan Alvarado) Image may be subject to copyright. See FEWW Fair Use Notice.
“I am tremendously worried because this is an environmental, social and ecological disaster,” said Alejandro Beletzky, an environmental scientist in Argentina.
“The presence of volcanic ash in the region, which falls constantly, is very risky for humans, plants and animals,” he said near Esquel, about 2,000km southwest of Buenos Aires. (Source)
Related links:
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Posted in Climate Change, energy, environment, food, health, new zealand, Tourism, Travel | Tagged: active volcano, Add new tag, animal habitat, animals, argentina, Chaiten, chile, Chile volcano, environmental damage, environmental scientist, Esquel, Futaleufú, health risk, lagoons, lava, Patagonia, plants, pyroclastic flows, Reuters, Shrinking World, South America, volcanic ash | 1 Comment »