Monday, January 1, 2018

Floating petroleum: Dead fishes: the Take Over (Part 2)

Below are abstracts from a Book I've read first days in America: Vector by Robin Cook 

"Yeah, hey, you'd better wake up" It's happening, this country is on the brink of being taken over by Niggers, Spics, Slanty-eyes and Queers. It's going to be up to people like you and me if our God-fearing, self-reliant culture is to survive where people work for a living and Queers stay in the closet. I tell you, not only are these other races seeping in here like water through a sponge, but they are reproducing like flies. This one hell of a problem, we just can’t sit around on our asses anymore. If we do, we only have ourselves to blame."

"The Zionist occupied Government doesn't want you to know about it. They keep it out of the schools, out of the newspapers, and off the TV; all of which they control. The reason is that they want to neutralize us by diluting us genetically."

"It's a ZOG conspiracy. They don’t even want kids to learn the term because encouraging miscegenation is the most insidious sin of all that ZOG is guilty of. And to God it's abomination.

It's Satan attempt to do away with God's chosen people. It's Holocaust in reverse."


"This is a rootless culture" people are supposed to be free, but they are not. They are all scrambling for status and identity. We Slavs, may have had some trouble down through history, but at least we know who we are."

Trump Election: Draining the swamp or using Booms and skimmers?

Trump Can't Reverse the Decline of White Christian America
Two-thirds of those who voted for the president felt his election was the "last chance to stop America's decline." But his victory won't arrest the cultural and demographic trends they opposed.

Down the home stretch of the 2016 presidential campaign, one of Donald Trump’s most consistent talking points was a claim that America’s changing demographics and culture had brought the country to a precipice. He repeatedly cast himself as the last chance for Republicans and conservative white Christians to step back from the cliff, to preserve their power and way of life. In an interview on Pat Robertson’s Christian Broadcasting Network (CBN) in early September, Trump put the choice starkly for the channel’s conservative Christian viewers: “If we don’t win this election, you’ll never see another Republican and you’ll have a whole different church structure.” Asked to elaborate, Trump continued, “I think this will be the last election that the Republicans have a chance of winning because you’re going to have people flowing across the border, you’re going to have illegal immigrants coming in and they’re going to be legalized and they’re going to be able to vote, and once that all happens you can forget it.”

The 2016 election, in fact, was peculiar because of just how little concrete policy issues mattered. The election, more than in any in recent memory, came down to two vividly contrasting views of America. Donald Trump’s campaign painted a bleak portrait of America’s present, set against a bright, if monochromatic, vision of 1950s America restored. Hillary Clinton’ campaign, by contrast, sought to replace the first African American president with the first female president and embraced the multicultural future of 2050, the year the Census Bureau originally projected the United States would become a majority nonwhite nation.