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View Full Version : Neo-Nazi Jimmy Carter Announces ban on Iranian Immigration to US



Shami-Amourae
11th December 2015, 10:08 AM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r3WNAiR1AHc

Down1
11th December 2015, 01:44 PM
His hair is a little weird too.

A guess that is a "thing" with these Nazi types.

Horn
11th December 2015, 02:11 PM
What a horrible blunder the Jimmy Carter experience was.

Cebu_4_2
11th December 2015, 03:05 PM
What a horrible blunder the Jimmy Carter experience was.

The elite didn't like him because he wanted to get the US off foreign oil by using peanuts for oil.

Horn
11th December 2015, 03:13 PM
The elite didn't like him because he wanted to get the US off foreign oil by using peanuts for oil.

Was that what it was? lol I could never figure it out,

he always reminded me of that one kid in gym class who got the goals mixed up when playing soccer, then scored for the other team.

Jimmy wait, your going the wrong way!

Cebu_4_2
11th December 2015, 03:22 PM
Was that what it was? lol I could never figure it out,

he always reminded me of that one kid in gym class who got the goals mixed up when playing soccer, then scored for the other team.

Jimmy wait, your going the wrong way!

I remember him talking about this, during the oil embargo and the 'energy crisis'. Of course I can't find that particular part now, scrubbed
apparently.

http://www.ontheissues.org/Celeb/Jimmy_Carter_Energy_+_Oil.htm

Hitch
11th December 2015, 03:36 PM
Nice find, Shami. Goes to show back then, the .gov put our country's needs and American's first. Now, we take a back seat.

Horn
11th December 2015, 09:42 PM
Nice find, Shami. Goes to show back then, the .gov put our country's needs and American's first. Now, we take a back seat.

What it was is that .gov and the people were independent from lobbies and the global market, Carter tried to rally that aspect but failed miserably in execution and came off like a Mr. Rogers goes to Washington. Guy had like an all time low respect level, I was only a lad, but it was even noticeable to me. I'm not sure anyone really liked him at the time, forget the elite.

You don't want government caring about your needs.

Neuro
12th December 2015, 02:41 AM
What it was is that .gov and the people were independent from lobbies and the global market, Carter tried to rally that aspect but failed miserably in execution and came off like a Mr. Rogers goes to Washington. Guy had like an all time low respect level, I was only a lad, but it was even noticeable to me. I'm not sure anyone really liked him at the time, forget the elite.

You don't want government caring about your needs.
I don't remember him blocking Iranians. He must have done it late. I think the impression people had of him, was one where he didn't act, or didn't appear to act. Reagan dealt much better with the Iranians, talked tough, and then he did secret weapon deals with them (Iran-Contras), but probably he wasn't involved with the Ollie North gang...

monty
12th December 2015, 07:03 AM
What a horrible blunder the Jimmy Carter experience was.

The reason Jimmy Carter was elected President was for the CFR to get their man in the White House. Carter was Zbigniew Brzezinski's hand picked CFR man. This was done to give the CFR control over the executive branch and dictate policy bypassing Congress. Every administration since has had their CFR candidate installed. Ronald Reagan was not a CFR man. He was not supposed to be elected. His vice president Gerorge H. W. Bush was the intended CFR guy. The CFR did manage to get him in as vice president. Since Carter the candidates have been chosen by the CFR, the Rebub is groomed by Kisinger, the Dem by Brzezinski.


Correction: Carter was the Trilateral President.

monty
12th December 2015, 07:12 AM
Jimmy Carter: The Trilateral President (1976-80)

Late in 1972, W. Averell Harriman (http://modernhistoryproject.org/mhp?Entity=HarrimanWA) (known at that time as the "grand old man of the Democrats"), Establishment strategist and CFR member, told Milton Katz (also a CFR member and Director of International Studies at Harvard): "We've got to get off our high horses and look at some of those southern governors." Carter (http://modernhistoryproject.org/mhp?Entity=CarterJE) was mentioned, and Katz informed Rockefeller (http://modernhistoryproject.org/mhp?Entity=RockefellerD), who had actually met with Carter in 1971, when they had lunch in the Chase Manhattan's Board of Director's dining room, and he was impressed with the fact that Carter had opened trade offices for the state of Georgia in Tokyo.


In February, 1973, while former Secretary of State Dean Rusk (http://modernhistoryproject.org/mhp?Entity=RuskD) (a Bilderberger) was having dinner with Gerald Smith (U.S. Ambassador-at-Large for Non-Proliferation Matters), Rusk suggested that Carter (http://modernhistoryproject.org/mhp?Entity=CarterJE) would be a good candidate for the Commission. In April, while Robert Bowie (former professor of International Affairs at Harvard, who later became Deputy Director of the CIA), George S. Franklin (Rockefeller assistant, CFR member, and Coordinator for the Commission), and Smith were discussing the recruitment of candidates, it was decided that they needed better representation from the South. Franklin went to Atlanta to talk to Carter, and then proposed his name for membership. It had been a choice between Carter, and Gov. Reuben Askew of Florida.


In the fall of 1973, after having dinner with David Rockefeller (http://modernhistoryproject.org/mhp?Entity=RockefellerD) in London, Carter (http://modernhistoryproject.org/mhp?Entity=CarterJE)'s political momentum began. From that point on, he was groomed for the Presidency by Zbigniew Brzezinski (http://modernhistoryproject.org/mhp?Entity=BrzezinskiZ), and the Trilateralists. Just to be on the safe side, they also brought in Minnesota Senator Walter Mondale (a protege of Hubert Humphrey, whose eventual withdrawal from the Presidential race guaranteed the Democratic nomination for Carter), and Rep. Elliot Richardson (former U.S. Attorney General; Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare and Secretary of Defense, and Under Secretary of State under Nixon; former Secretary of Commerce under Ford; and former Ambassador to Great Britain) as possible candidates, and even considered Sen. Ted Kennedy (http://modernhistoryproject.org/mhp?Entity=KennedyEM) of Massachusetts.


Brzezinski (http://modernhistoryproject.org/mhp?Entity=BrzezinskiZ) said in an October, 1973 speech: "The Democratic candidate will have to emphasize work, family, religion, and increasingly, patriotism, if he has any desire to be elected." Carter campaigned by stressing those very virtues, as he asked America to elect him, an "outsider," to clean up the mess in Washington.


In December, 1975, seven months before the Democratic National Convention, the Gallup Poll indicated that only 4% of the country's Democrats wanted Carter. Even the Atlantic Constitution in his own state, ran a headline which said: "Jimmy Carter Running For What?". However, within six months the nomination was his because of the most elaborate media campaign in history. Carter was glorified as the new hope of America as the media misrepresented his record as Governor in Georgia. This led former Georgia Governor Lester Maddox to say: "Based on false, misleading and deceiving statements and actions ... Jimmy Carter in my opinion, neither deserves or should expect one vote from the American people."


Even though Carter (http://modernhistoryproject.org/mhp?Entity=CarterJE) later resigned from the Trilateral Commission (http://modernhistoryproject.org/mhp?Entity=TrilatComm), he was hardly an "outsider." He was supported by the Trilateral Commission, the Rockefellers, and Time magazine. Early contributions came from Dean Rusk (http://modernhistoryproject.org/mhp?Entity=RuskD), C. Douglas Dillon (http://modernhistoryproject.org/mhp?Entity=DillonCD), Henry Luce (http://modernhistoryproject.org/mhp?Entity=LuceHR), and Cyrus Eaton. Leonard Woodcock of the United Auto Workers Union, and Henry Ford II (http://modernhistoryproject.org/mhp?Entity=FordH2), both of whom are CFR (http://modernhistoryproject.org/mhp?Entity=CFR) members, endorsed Carter on the same day.


Carter's two major foreign policy speeches during the primary campaign were made to the Chicago Council on Foreign Relations (http://modernhistoryproject.org/mhp?Entity=CFR)and the Foreign Policy Association (http://modernhistoryproject.org/mhp?Entity=ForPolAsc). He used terms like "a just and peaceful world order," and "a new international order." In another primary campaign speech, Carter talked about "world-order politics."


A Los Angeles Times article in June, 1976, identified the advisors that helped Carter prepare his first major speech on foreign policy, all of whom were all members of the CFR and most were also members of the Trilateral Commission:



http://modernhistoryproject.org/mhp?Article=FinalWarning&C=9.1

Horn
12th December 2015, 07:41 AM
Read some of that and you start to wonder if the hostage crisis wasn't again some problem solution dialect to empower CFR.

cheka.
20th December 2015, 06:34 PM
carter beat the attempt...but grandson didn't?

http://www.cnn.com/2015/12/20/us/jimmy-carter-grandson-death/

28-year-old grandson died

The grandson, Jeremy Carter, had not been feeling well and laid down to take a nap Saturday

The younger Carter's heart stopped

In late summer Jimmy Carter announced that he was diagnosed with brain cancer

the former President said that treatments and radiation had worked and that he was cancer-free.