“Junkyard Joe’s” Kabul Fire Sale

ATTENTION TALIBAN MEMBERS!

Had enough of the American military on YOUR soil?  Tired of the oppressors telling you you can’t institute Shariah Law?  That you’re violating the human rights of women?  Girls?  Infidels?  Christians?  Heretics?  Homosexuals?  Musicians?

WELL, today is the day.  After nearly 20 years of occupation, America is finally pulling out of Afghanistan.  The country is all yours. 

As a token of his recognition of your long fight for your freedom, “Junkyard Joe” Biden is holding a fire sale outside of Kabul.  All United States military equipment is now on sale, at bargain basement prices!

You can have your pick of Blackhawk helicopters!  Toyota Pickups (a favorite of terrorist groups worldwide)!  Military Drones!  Howitzers!  Grenades!  Night Vision Goggles and Night Vision Scopes!  C-4 Exposives!  And millions of rounds of ammunition!

“Junkyard Joe” vows that the United States of America will never invade your country again!  And neither will any other Western imperialist power!  You have enough equipment and munitions to keep Afghanistan Muslim for the next 100 years.

Plus, you have the Central Communist Party of China’s promise of your share of riches from your vast mineral mines!  Lithium, for powering the West’s hunger for electronics and electronic cars!  Gold!  Iron!  Coal!  Natural gas!  Oil!  Precious gems!

All right in your own mountains!  China, of course, will take over management.  But you’ll have a free hand with your own people, to murder, torture, and rape anyone who opposes your rule (except the Chinese of course).  They will make sure that the RUSSIANS never invade your country again!  But if they do, the Taliban is equipped with the latest in military hardware to stave them off!

You can count on China and its “disarming” spokesman, “Junkyard Joe.”  China defeated the United States in Viet Nam and they’ve defeated America in Iraq and Afghanistan.  The Ummah is all yours!

There’s a special, 20 percent discount for recent graduates of ISIS-K!

Here is a more complete list of U.S.-supplied and left behind equipment list now controlled by Taliban:

  • -2,000 Armored Vehicles Including Humvees and MRAP’s
  • -75,989 Total Vehicles: FMTV, M35, Ford Rangers, Ford F350, Ford Vans, Toyota Pickups, Armored Security Vehicles etc.
  • -45 UH-60 Blackhawk Helicopters
  • -50 MD530G Scout Attack Choppers
  • -ScanEagle Military Drones
  • -30 Military Version Cessnas
  • -4 C-130’s
  • -29 Brazilian made A-29 Super Tocano Ground Attack Aircraft
  • =208+ Aircraft Total!!
  • -At least 600,000+ Small arms M16, M249 SAWs, M24 Sniper Systems, 50 Calibers, 1,394 M203 Grenade Launchers, M134 Mini Gun, 20mm Gatling Guns and Ammunition
  • -61,000 M203 Rounds
  • -20,040 Grenades
  • -Howitzers
  • -Mortars +1,000’s of Rounds
  • -162,000 pieces of Encrypted Military Comunications Gear
  • -16,000+ Night Vision Goggles
  • -Newest Technology Night Vision Scopes
  • -Thermal Scopes and Thermal Mono Googles
  • -10,000 2.75 inch Air to Ground Rockets
  • -Reconnaissance Equipment (ISR)
  • -Laser Aiming Units
  • -Explosives Ordnance C-4, Semtex, Detonators, Shaped Charges, Thermite, Incendiaries, AP/API/APIT
  • -2,520 Bombs
  • -Administration Encrypted Cell Phones and Laptops ALL operational
  • -Pallets with Millions of Dollars in US Currency
  • -Millions of Rounds of Ammunition including but not limited to 20,150,600 rounds of 7.62mm, 9,000,000 rounds of 50.caliber
  • -Large Stockpile of Plate Carriers and Body Armor
  • -US Military HIIDE, for Handheld Interagency Identity Detection Equipment Biometrics
  • -Lots of Heavy Equipment Including Bull Dozers, Backhoes, Dump Trucks, Excavators

It’s all yours for the taking!!  May the blessings of Allah be upon your endeavors!

Published in: on August 31, 2021 at 12:47 pm  Leave a Comment  

To Vax Or Not to Vax: That Is The Question

In the past few weeks, three Conservative radio talk show hosts, all of whom questioned the necessity of getting the COVID-19 vaccine, have died of the Wuhan Virus.

Dick Farrel, a talk radio show host on WIOD in Miami and WPBR in Palm Beach, and had served as a fill-in anchor on Newsmax, died on Aug. 4th.  He turned 65 just a few days before his death.  He’d been an outspoken opponent of the vaccines, but after he contracted the Wuhan Virus, he changed his stance.

Phil Valentine, of SuperTalk 99.7 WTN in Nashville, Tenn., died on Aug. 21st after battling the virus for more than a mointh.  He was 61.

Marc Bernier, of WNDB in Daytona Beach, Fla, died on Aug. 28th, three weeks after being hospitalized.  He was 65; he’d been with the station for 30 years.

On the other hand, a family friend received the full schedule of vaccinations as soon as they were available and still came down with the virus.  They had to go to the emergency room, but were not hospitalized.

Authorities have admitted, especially since the emergence of the Delta Variant, that the vaccine cannot prevent you from contracting or spreading the virus.  Only a fraction of one percent of those who contract the Wuhan Flu actually die from it.  However, the deaths are alarming nonetheless.

What good does it do us to get a vaccine that cannot protect us from getting or spreading this pneumonia-related virus?  What good does it do to wear masks when authorities claim that the microbe is so tiny that wearing the mask is like putting your face up against a chain-link fence to protect it from a handful of sand?

From the beginning, we have been told the truth about this virus.  We have not been told the truth about how it originated, what causes it, how we contract it, or what we can do about it.  Our guess is that the stories about the Bat Lady of China are true.

People who find themselves walking unprotected through a cloud of dusty bat dung unprotected can contract a form of particulate pneumonia.  Bats eat mosquitos, among other insects, and in the tropics, those insects carry malaria and other heart-damaging diseases.  Since DDT was outlawed, diseases such as malaria and dengue fever have increased.

Bats are mammals capable of long-range, migratory flight.  Their dung, or guano, is used as fertilizer.  Due to their physiology, bats are one type of animal that acts as a natural reservoir of many pathogens, such as rabies, and since they are highly mobile, social, and long-lived, they can readily spread disease among themselves. If humans interact with bats, these traits become potentially dangerous to humans.

This is not to say we want to make war on bats.  Rather, we must be suspicious of laboratories, like the Wuhan Institute of Virology, which experiment on bats.  While bats are highly-sociable, it only means they live communally.  They are nocturnal creatures and normally do not like to interact with light-loving humans.

Unless you live in a cave yourself, you’re not likely to meet up with a bat or be attacked by one, unless it is rabid.  You’re in no more danger from a bat than from, say, a raccoon, another night scavenger.

What we are in danger from is autocratic governments that experiment on such disease-carrying animals in order to weaponized the pathogens they carry and from pharmaceutical corporations that can, in turn, make billions on “vaccines” developed as a curative. 

Many questions have arisen around the vaccines, one of which, the Pfizer vaccine, has received FDA approval.  The Pfizer vaccines was not supposed to receive approval until next year; the other vaccines, even later.  There are concerns about the manipulation of RNA, the messenger gene, to convince the virus not to attack.

Clearly, it does not always work and may pose risks to future generations through parents of child-bearing age.  Nobody yet knows what the real side effects are and may not be known until those progeny have reached adulthood.

The Johnson & Johnson and other vaccines, authorities now admit, are only useful for about six months.  Six months almost to the day after our friend go the vaccine, they contracted the virus.  Nice of the authorities to tell us.

But still they say we should not panic.

Talk is growing of making the vaccines mandatory, even for children.  Adults, as fearful of losing their jobs as contracting the Wuhan Flu, are reluctantly lining up for the shots.  Others are protesting the possible violation of their civil rights and refusing to be vaccinated.

Younger women who get the vaccine appear to be at increased risk of side effects such as anaphylaxis.  Such a reaction is not reserved to the Wuhan Flu shot alone; it can happen with any number of flu-rated vaccines.  Some younger men have reported myocarditis:  inflammation of the heart muscle.  Again, no one knows why or, if they do, explaining why it happens.

It would be nice to know, doc.  Incidentally, I finally got this thing.  We finally finished getting Mom’s house ready for sale, so I don’t have to worry about side effects from the vaccine anymore.  I’ll be getting the second dose in mid-September.  I think wearing the mask and taking vitamins is more helpful.  But since I need to go back to work and can’t breathe through those masks, I have to do it.  Some experts say it has to do with your blood type. Sure would be nice to know why.

What’s most troubling is that the greatest fear comes not from the disease itself but, rather, from our own government and its corrupt relationship with Communist China, international health organizations, and an untrustworthy media.

Hydroxychloroquine, available over the counter in every tropical country, is illegal here, even though it can restore a Wuhan Flu patient (like President Trump) to health in days.  Why is that?

Our great uncle developed a cure – mind you, a cure, not a “treatment” – for poison ivy.  However, he was defeated in his quest for a patent by the government and the pharmaceutical industry.

That was in the Thirties or Forties.  Here we are in the 21st Century and well on our way to becoming prisoners of this triangle of despotism.  What other plagues are they preparing for us in the future and how will we defend ourselves against them?

Published in: on August 30, 2021 at 2:03 pm  Leave a Comment  

The Afghanistan Debacle: The China Syndrome

The battle for power:  it’s a story as old as mankind itself.  The building of Babylon and Nimrod’s battle to create an empire, waging war on peoples who’d lived in peace since we left the Garden of Eden.

We’re seeing yet another battle for power – literally, as in energy power – trillions of dollars’ worth of lithium (to power up those electric cars Illegitimate Pres. Biden is mandating by 2025), copper, gold, iron, oil, natural gas.   The Media sold us the old propaganda line that there was no reason for the United States to be in Afghanistan, at least once we got Bin Laden, that it was just a “senseless” war.

But there is a reason.  The same reason Hitler wanted the Ukraine.  The same reason Japan wanted Chosen, Manchuria and Indochina, a goal later taken up by Communist China:  the oil in the South China Sea.  It makes perfect sense, in fact.  The reason we go to fight these wars is to prevent despotic powers like Communist China and the former Soviet Union from arrogating worldwide domination, eliminating liberty, and shackling the world in permanent slavery to the state.

It’s a story as old China itself.  By the 17th Century, China was already exploiting South America for its wealth of gold and precious stones.  Attempts by the British to trade with China failed.  Europe simply didn’t have anything China needed or couldn’t get by itself by plundering the unexplored southern continent.  People would be surprised to learn how many Chinese descendants live there.

That’s when the dreadful Opium Wars began.  The British discovered tea in India – and hemp, for marijuana or cannabis, and of course, they had recourse to the ancient poppy (Papaver somniferum) for opium.  When the British and Dutch could find no market for their goods in China, they created one.  That was the real beginning of the War on Drugs.

China lies just on the other side of Afghanistan’s eastern border.  The passage is tiny (46 miles), through the Hindu Kush.  But it’s there.  The Soviet Union used to lie more extensively to its north.  Since the Eighties, those territories were broken up into a number of Muslim states.

The Russians built natural gas lines through Afghanistan running westward towards Europe.  Osama bin Laden supposedly cut his terrorist teeth on bombing those gas lines as well as railroad bridges in Afghanistan during the Eighties.  Afghanistan is a mountainous fortress which even the most resolute despot has been unable to conquer.

People have been calling the Fall of Kabul our 21st Century Fall of Saigon, with the same cast of characters.  The battle was over the same resources.  Oil, natural gas, mineral rights.  World War II in the Pacific was about the resources of both Korea and Indochina, as well as Mongolia.  There has always been oil in the South China Sea.  That’s what World War II was about.  That’s what the Korean War was about.  That’s what the Viet Nam War was about.

Oil, mainly.

According to the June 6, 1926 issue of the San Francisco Examiner, about 15 years before the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, the Japanese General Staff had prepared an outline for war with an unnamed Western power.

The article specifies the “[e]xploitation of the vast natural resources of Korea (then called Chosen) and Manchuria, and the production of immense quantities of essential materials of war – iron, coal, oil and foodstuffs.”

“Construction of a comprehensive system of railroads through Manchuria” to transport these vital necessities and “the development of harbors” on the shores of the Korea[n] Straits and the Sea of Japan as well as defensive networks for these ports.

“Adoption of a friendly policy by Japan towards China and avoidance of any hostile action against the Chinese in order to facilitate the Japan exploitation program.”  Obviously, the Japanese greatly underestimated the Chinese.  The Japanese greatly feared the Soviet Union, which held the same interests in Chinese natural resources.

They also feared the development of the latest naval weapon – the submarine.

As the crisis of World War II drew nearer, Western intelligence indicated that Japan had expanded her interests to French Indochina.  That would be Viet Nam to us.  There was oil in the South China Sea and Japan had its sights on the Philippines, Viet Nam, Thailand, and Borneo, where the Dutch were already undergoing drilling in the relatively shallow portions of the South China Sea.  Japan had its eye on Thailand.  They built the Burma Road – with slave labor – to transport the natural resources –oil and natural gas – up through the main land of China and the ports in the Korean Straits and the Sea of Japan, thus avoiding the dangers of the naval powers of Great Britain and the United States.

In a key move during the interwar period between World Wars I and II, Japan convinced the League of Nations to order Great Britain and the United States to sink their battleships.  Great Britain complied; the United States did not.

No oil in the South China Sea, you silly people?  Too deep for drilling, even today?

Poppycock.  The United Nations reluctantly confirmed the presence of oil in the South China Sea in 1968 but declared the oil beyond modern reach.  It wasn’t too deep in the 1920s and 1930s.  Today, China reportedly has super rigs in the Spratly Islands, ready to exploit the oil and natural gas we were told was beyond reach.

In a recent article entitled, “What China Wants From Afghanistan,” on spiked.com, August 22, 2021, Tom Bailey writes: 

The fall of Kabul has led to fears that Afghanistan will come under the influence of China. Taliban representatives met with Chinese officials in July. And since the Taliban’s takeover, Beijing has made friendly gestures towards Afghanistan’s new rulers.

Chinese influence in Afghanistan has not come out of nowhere. Its involvement in Afghanistan goes back decades. China’s interests here are both geopolitical and economic.

For instance, Beijing has had a clear interest in mineral rights in Afghanistan since the early days of the US-backed regime. Shortly after the 2001 invasion, China learned that the new regime was looking for bids on mining rights for the Aynak copper mine. The Afghan government wanted cash and mining royalties were a good way to get it.

The Aynak mine contains one of the world’s largest copper deposits [Afghanistan also boasts of the largest deposit of lithium in the world, crucial for the all battery-operated nightmare cars of the Marxist future – China also owns The Greenbushes lithium project in Western Australia].

Its use [copper] stretches back to ancient times. The Soviets once attempted to develop the mine, but mujahideen attacks prevented this. The state-owned Metallurgical Corporation of China and Jiangxi Copper Company won the contract in 2007, amid allegations of bribery. Even without bribes, the Chinese bid would have been hard to turn down. Royalties were set at an extremely high 19.5 per cent and the consortium surpassed other bidders on almost every financial account. It was estimated that production at the mine would boost Afghan government revenue by 50 per cent.

But there was another factor behind China’s successful bid:  Pakistan.  The Afghan government hoped that China’s good relations with Pakistan would shield the mine – and the regime – from Taliban attacks.  As Andrew Small puts it in The China-Pakistan Axis: Asia’s New Geopolitics, the thinking was that ‘any insurgent advance on Kabul would now worry Beijing too, with the mine barely 20 miles southeast of the capital’.

The Aynak deal was just one of China’s commercial investments under the US-backed regime.  Chinese technology companies ZTE and Huawei set up telephone services in Afghanistan in the 2000s. ZTE later won a major contract to construct a fibre-optic cable network in Afghanistan. Chinese companies also worked on road and irrigation projects. At one point, it looked as if China would become one of post-Taliban Afghanistan’s biggest investors.

These investments caused outrage in the West. At the time, author Robert Kaplan said that ‘while America is sacrificing its blood and treasure, China will reap its benefits’. But China’s interests in Afghanistan were never purely commercial. And Beijing’s relationship with the US-backed regime was always uneasy. The Aynak mine, for instance, proved a constant source of tension. China kept delaying production, blaming the presence of archaeological sites nearby. In response, the Afghan government repeatedly threatened to put the mining rights back out for tender. And despite its engagement with the US-backed regime, Beijing never felt comfortable with the presence of American troops in Central Asian states on the Chinese border.

Mariam Amini wrote for CNBC.com on Dec. 16, 2016, that the Taliban had given China the green light to “restart” its $3 billion mining project, “but Afghanistan’s legal government says the militant group is just blowing smoke.”

However, another reporter embedded in Afghanistan recently told Glenn Beck on his radio program that Afghanistan’s military leaders sold its army out to the Taliban for a substantial bribe, after receipt of which the military leaders fled the country.

Guess it was the Afghan government that was blowing the smoke.

According to an article in the August 26, 2021 issue of Newsweek by Tom O’Connor, China is seeking the Taliban’s assistance in wiping out Uighur Islamist separatist groups in Afghanistan (or perhaps compromising them) that have been plaguing western China.

Even our own CIA Director William Burns has been in secret negotiations with the Taliban.

Something called the Kabul Process of 2010 was supposed to guarantee the Afghanis billions of dollars in copper and iron mines.  All information on this conference with then-Afghanistan President Hamid, also known as the “Consultative Peace Jirga of 2020, sponsored by the United Nations, has since vanished.

The Brookings Institute, in a February 21, 2013 report, reprinted an article from the SAIS Review, Summer/Fall 2012, that stated:

Many discussions of China’s involvement in Afghanistan begin with the investments made by Chinese firms to extract Afghanistan’s vast mineral wealth, which is valued at about $1 trillion by the United States Geological Survey and $3 trillion by Afghanistan’s Minister of Mines.1 In 2007, Metallurgical Corporation of China (MCC) and Jiangxi Copper Corporation (JCCL) agreed to make the single-largest foreign investment in Afghanistan to date—$4.4 billion—when they won a tender to develop what geologists believe is the world’s second largest undeveloped copper deposit at Aynak in Logar Province, 35 kilometers southeast of Kabul.  In 2011, China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC) and its Afghan partner, Watan Oil & Gas, secured the rights to three oil blocks in the provinces of Sari-i-Pul and Faryab in northwestern Afghanistan, which CNPC expects to invest $400 million initially to develop.

These investments gave rise to the contention that China is free-riding on the U.S.-led efforts to stabilize Afghanistan to lock down natural resources needed to fuel China’s continued economic development. Specifically, critics argue that China is benefiting from a public good provided by the United States and its partners in Afghanistan—security—to which it has not contributed. China has not offered any troops, equipment, or funds to the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) in Afghanistan. Yet, ISAF has made Afghanistan safe for Chinese investment. China’s state-owned energy and mining companies won Afghanistan’s first major mineral and energy tenders. Moreover, they did so by offering generous terms, including infrastructure development packages, which their Western competitors were  unable to match. To add insult to injury, as the narrative goes, U.S. troops are indirectly providing security for the Chinese companies by patrolling the areas in which they operate.

However, Brookings Institute – a Marxist entity – insists that the United States could benefit by this investment made by Chinese “corporations” rather than the Chinese government.  In Communist China, they’re one and the same.

Now that Illegitimate President Biden has assured the Chinese and the Taliban that U.S. forces will absolutely be out by August 31st, the Media is falling all over itself to admit that it has been about the Chinese interest in mining operations, as well as oil and natural gas, all along, coinciding with Taliban anxiety to have a Marxist ally against incursions by the Soviet Union, an ally that has been supplying them with arms and weapons, including our own.

We’re talking about $1 trillion dollars’ worth of minerals.  And Biden just handed it over to them.

We’ve known about this all along, since the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.  For all anyone would listen:  it’s all about the rare earth minerals – not to mention the poppy fields which produce the heroin which will addle the brains of Americans who might otherwise oppose this traitorous, unelected president.  Popular Science reported on China’s exploitation of Afghan mines at least ten years ago.

Trump’s presidency put a temporary kibosh on China’s cozy deal with Afghanistan.  It took the bribery of former Vice President Biden and his son, Hunter, and the theft of an election, putting in office the most underhanded, untrustworthy,  incompetent man ever to sit in the Oval Office, to bring about these billion- and trillion-dollar deals.

Evidently, part of the deal is to yield to Taliban demands to leave behind all our military hardware as well as thousands of Americans to be used (or slaughtered) in their jihad.  Biden has left the people behind and callously admitted that he doesn’t care.  The State Department has been blocking humanitarian flights out of Kabul, although they allowed a C-130 military plane to take off, filled mostly with unidentified Muslim men and land right here in the United States.

We swallowed the same lie we were told about Viet Nam – that there was no U.S. interest in Afghanistan.  Wherever there is a Marxist or other autocratic body attempting to rule the world with an iron fist, the United States should be there, even if it is only to assist the residents of those countries in living in freedom.  Yes, other free nations should do their part.

But America has always led the way and should continue to do so.  If we do not, the enemies of freedom will have the literal power to fuel their war machine and  march, fly and sail all over the face of the Earth.

Joseph Robinette Biden Jr. is not the lawful President of the United States.  Congress and the Supreme Court should never have authorized his election.  China bought Biden years ago and placed him in the seat of power to do their bidding.

Our brave men and women in uniform and the freedom-loving Afghanis, especially those who are Christian, are paying the price for the betrayal by our so-called government.  Biden, for his part, exhibits no sense of remorse.

He is doing what he was paid, not elected, to do:  betray the United States of America in favor of Communist China.

Published in: on August 27, 2021 at 10:44 am  Leave a Comment