Trump — his both horrible and wonderful appointments

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A  comrade and repeat generous donor commented:

I have lost all hope in Trump. I just read that he intends to attack Iran with American military might. Seems to me that Trump is more loyal to the Jews than he is to White Americans, or even to Americans in general.

 

My response:

I was planning to attack Trump before the election for  ignoring the two absolutely core issues — race and the juze — but then I saw two things:

1) he might actually win, and 2) he might do some real good this time, and he seems to have smartened up a lot, which is why even very anti-Trump liberals like Kennedy, Gabbard, Musk, and Rogan came out for him, and Tucker Carlson changed his mind about the man, Tucker being liberal but a true paleo-conservative saw Trump as a big talker but a failure and a guge disappointment. So Trump performed a kind of miracle to win over these big-name longtime enemies.

And the prospect of Kamala as president was just too ghastly. She and Walz spoke openly against the 1A and 2A, the two core issues, free speech and guns.

So “give the guy one more chance” became my guiding principle for the last month or so. And the appointment of Florida Congressman Matt Gaetz as Attorney General is fantastic. This guy (of German ancestry, btw) has been a fearless, overt enemy in Congress of the corrupt FBI, CIA and NSA. And Bobby Kennedy did get the nomination as Secretary of HHS (Health and Human Services), where he can do incredible good.

When I first came (with Margi) to this town of Ontonagon in 2014, NO ONE was obese. Now it is every third person here, and 80% are overweight.

My theory in 2014  was that the lack of fatsoes was because there was no McDonalds, PizzaHut, or other fast-food/junk-food  chain stores here. In fact, there were (and there still are only locally-run, family-owned diners here.

Anyway, it was clearly not the absence of McDonalds. Without any of that, waistlines exploded. And I  am talking 18-year-old  HIPPOS.

It has to be the regular food at the grocery store.

(However, I saw two cute teenage girls explode, and a woman who knew them both said to me: “They are sleeping around, so they get a birth control injection that lasts for for several months. But right after that, these girls get tubby.”

So this MAHA (“Make America Healthy Again”) of Kennedy is very needed.

When Trump talks  about what Kennedy will be doing, he somehow never ever brings up RFK’s opposition to many vaccines. One can speculate about this.

Trump also just appointed Tulsi Gabbard as Director of National Intelligence, a very powerful position indeed, above even the CIA, for this anti-war Army lieutenant-colonel and former four-term Congresswoman — a GREAT move!

But as Goethe said, “Charakter ist Schicksal” — Character is destiny.

The Donald still that same warmongering nature, because he is the almost unreformed and still ego-driven, fame-seeking, charismatic conflict-loving George Patton.

who, while hating the juze and the communists, yet did their bidding. And when he stepped seriously out of line, and vowed to resign totally from the US Army and wake America up about the communists and the juze, they KILLED him.

Patton awards himself a third star as general:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TzSUoHmjVrU

He is indeed moving toward fulfilling the disastrous Van Rensburg prophecy which — I do feel it important to state this — I, and I alone in the anglosphere, have been fearlessly trumpeting (pun intended 😉 ) since April 20, 2017.

Basically, in the white world, only the Boers knew about this until I came along.

Trump’s victory — a glorious but very brief respite; the astonishing 1917 prophecies of Nicholas van Rensburg

Interesting scene from the movie “Patton”, one of three that, openly or between the lines, reveals his belief in reincarnation and specifically in his own reincarnation as one warrior  after another (starting at 1:51, recalling Napoleon’s retreat from Moscow, and his belief that he had been Marshal Murat or with him): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hKWprtKwv74

Two other accurate scenes of Patton discussing reincarnation and his own reincarnation (and this was not unheard of — the great car maker and antisemite Henry Ford openly also discussed reincarnation):

1) Scene from the 1970 movie “Patton” with George S. Scott as the great general, telling General Omar Bradley (played by Karl Malden) about his battle 2,200 years before as a Roman officer with the Carthaginians.

2) British generals toast Patton as the Anglo-Americans prepare to invade German-held Sicily, and one, UK General Harold Alexander, says Patton could have been one of Napoleon’s marshals:

Patton who famously said he loved war told of a number of past lives in the military.

He described being a Greek Hoplite fighting the Persians under Darius. He helped smash the Persian navy and then laid siege to Tyre. The walls fell after five months as Patton and his fellow Hoplites stormed the city in 332 BC.

Patton died fighting for the Roman Republic in the Middle East killed by a number of arrows in his neck.

The general also remembered being stationed in Langres, France — as a Roman legionnaire in Caesar’s X Legion.

During WWI, in France, Major George Patton astonished his hosts in the French Army by taking THEM on a tour of some ruins of a nearby Roman legion camp. He told THEM what each room in the Roman camp had been used for — 1,800 years ago!

Langres, France, location of the Roman legion camp, was on the front lines in WWI, facing the then German-ruled Alsace and Lorraine.

Langres, in Roman times, was called “Andematun.” “-tun” was a keltic ending meaning “town,” hence our own English word. This ending is also in the famous place name of the capital of Britain, Lon-don.

The gate to the Roman legion camp there is still standing, with the arches filled in much later on with bricks — a testimony to Roman glory, power and incredible durability. Roman concrete is still world-standard.

This is a section of a map showing Langres in the middle (the building) taken from the famous so-called “Peutinger Table” (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tabula_Peutingeriana), now kept in Vienna, Austria. It was a Roman map showing the entire Roman Empire and beyond.

It was originally created in the first century AD, still showing Pompeii (so it was made before the eruption of Mt Vesuvius). In the 300s AD it was recopied, still with old Pompeii on it  and then it was very carefully recopied in the Middle Ages. (This is all we have now, the medieval copy.)

Patton knew, to the Frenchies’ astonishment, what each room had been used for.

  •  © Conseil Général de Haute-Marne

Maybe I knew Donaldus Trumpicus  back then, being a huge romanophile myself, a devoted student of Latin, and a voluminous reader about Rome.

Virtually all the buildings I had constructed in 1933-40 were in the Greco-Roman (NOT germanic) style. There was literally nothing teutonic about this plan for the new capital of Germany, Germania — the total rebuilding of Berlin as a Roman city.

Anyway, my point is this, that the soul who is now Trump was never a coward. When Patton was a young adult, he was kicked by a horse, who broke his leg in three places. Close to death from his wounds,

Patton had a vision of his death as a Viking raider — where a vision appeared to him on the battlefield, offering to take him to the Viking afterlife.

Many times in World War I and then in World War II, Patton would claim to know his way around towns and battlefields which he had never been before. Patton believed that this came from his time as a French knight fighting the English under Edward III, most notably at Crécy. The 1346 Battle of Crécy saw the English crush the French in a very lopsided fight. He died when he was impaled by an English lance.

As a child, Patton claimed to have fought alongside John the Blind, Count of Luxembourg and king of Bohemia, who also met his death at Crécy in 1346. During the Hundred Years’ War, switching sides, he fought alongside King Henry V at Agincourt in 1415.

Patton once described fighting on ships as he freed captured slaves or prisoners of war, firing into the enemy at point-blank range during a storm, or even being hanged as a pirate or privateer [ = a legal pirate, a captain who, with government approval, attacks merchant ships, takes the loot, but must share it with the government]. Patton describes feeling a rope around his neck as the red deck (presumably blood-stained) was set aflame.

Again he was pitted against the English, though this time his loyalties were less to a nation than to the House of Stuart. Patton was a Scottish Highlander during the third English Civil War, around 1650, supporting the Stuarts after the death of Charles I.

Patton described “riding with Murat”. Joachim Murat was one of Napoleon’s marshals, and was one of the most capable cavalry officers and leaders in service to the French Emperor.

Patton doesn’t specify his role with Murat, but the marshal was pivotal at battles like Jena and in the invasion of Russia in 1812. When the Allies left North Africa to invade Sicily, British General Sir Harold Alexander told Patton that if had been alive in the 19th Century, Napoleon would have made him a marshal — to which Patton replied: “But I was.”

Guess who defeated Murat in 1815 at the Battles of Ceprano and the Battle of San Germano?

THIS guy! Count Laval Nugent. the Norman-Irish born Austrian general!

Through a Glass, Darkly.

By George S. Patton:

Through the travail of the ages,
Midst the pomp and toil of war,
I have fought and strove and perished
Countless times upon this star.

In the form of many people
In all panoplies of time
Have I seen the luring vision
Of the Victory Maid, sublime.

I have battled for fresh mammoth,

I have warred for pastures new,

I have listed to the whispers
When the race trek instinct grew.

I have known the call to battle
In each changeless, changing shape
From the high-souled voice of conscience
To the beastly lust for rape.

I have sinned and I have suffered,
Played the hero and the knave;
Fought for belly, shame, or country,
And for each have found a grave.

I cannot name my battles
For the visions are not clear,
Yet, I see the twisted faces
And I feel the rending spear.

Perhaps I stabbed our Savior
In His sacred, helpless side.
Yet, I’ve called His name in blessing
When after times I died.

In the dimness of the shadows
Where we hairy heathens warred,
I can taste, in thought, the lifeblood;
We used teeth before the sword.

While in later, clearer vision
I can sense the coppery sweat,
Feel the pikes grow wet and slippery
When our Phalanx, Cyrus met.

Hear the rattle of the harness
Where the Persian darts bounced clear,
See their chariots wheel in panic
From the Hoplites’ leveled spear.

See the goal grow monthly longer,
Reaching for the walls of Tyre.
Hear the crash of tons of granite,
Smell the quenchless eastern fire.

Still more clearly as a Roman,
Can I see the Legion close,
As our third rank moved in forward
And the short sword found our foes.

Once again I feel the anguish
Of that blistering, treeless plain
When the Parthian showered death bolts,
And our discipline was in vain.

I remember all the suffering
Of those arrows in my neck.
Yet, I stabbed a grinning savage
As I died upon my back.

Once again I smell the heat sparks
When my Flemish plate gave way
And the lance ripped through my entrails
As on Crécy’s field I lay.

In the windless, blinding stillness
Of the glittering tropic sea
I can see the bubbles rising
Where we set the captives free.

Midst the spume of half a tempest
I have heard the bulwarks go
When the crashing, point-blank round shot
Sent destruction to our foe.

I have fought with gun and cutlass
On the red and slippery deck
With all Hell aflame within me
And a rope around my neck.

And still later as a General
Have I galloped with Murat

When we laughed at death and numbers
Trusting in the Emperor [Napoleon]’s Star.

Till at last our star faded,
And we shouted to our doom
Where the sunken road of Ohein
Closed us in its quivering gloom.

So but now with Tanks a’clatter
Have I waddled on the foe
Belching death at twenty paces,
By the star shell’s ghastly glow.

So as through a glass, and darkly
The age-long strife I see
Where I fought in many guises,
Many names, but always me.

And I see not in my blindness
What the objects were I wrought,
But as God rules o’er our bickerings
It was through His will I fought.

So forever in the future,
Shall I battle as of yore,
Dying to be born a fighter,
But to die again, once more.

***

These are the eight reincarnations of the man we know as General George S. Patton

Patton: Many Lives, Many Battles: General Patton and Reincarnation: Karl F. Hollenbach: 9781481257435: Amazon.com: Books

As for ego, this scenes evokes the childish rivalry between British general Montgomery and Patton:

Russophobia: Patton nearly causes a huge, public, diplomatic incident with the still-ally (and while his anti-communism was laudable, and prescient, I aim to demonstrate by this that Patton was truly a loose cannon, and totally unauthorized as a general to seek conflict with an absolutely essential ally):

Patton urges war with the Soviet Union (and he was right, of course), because just five years later, we WERE at war with them in Korea, where my Marine father fought and suffered:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AxAIE9TbGyk

In the truly superb movie “The Bridges at Toko-Ri,” a US Navy admiral admits that it was Soviet-Russian pilots in those jets with whom his men were dogfighting in the sky over Korea (with William Holden as the young naval officer, the beautiful Grace Kelly as his wife, and Frederic March as the admiral; in many other scenes, Mickey Rooney plays a wild Irish-American chopper pilot and two-fisted bar denizen):

Tthe Admiral says to the pilot and his wife: I am no longer allowed by the Pentagon to say the truth to the press — that we are actually fighting the [Soviet communist] Russians, their guns, planes, pilots and submarines.”

.https://johndenugent.com/images/bridges-toko-ri-russians-soviets-korea-admiral0.mp4

.
.

…..On Trump’s Cabinet nominations

Translated from
https://www.maurizioblondet.it/cosa-sta-facendo-donald-trump/

What are you doing, Donald Trump?

Larry C. Johnson, who resigned from the CIA)

Let me say at the outset that I am not a “Trump fanboy ”. But I’m sure that what I’m about to write will bring about that some of you accuse me of this. And so be it.

Listen to my interview today with Danny Davis, I was rather disturbed by the news that Trump was going to nominate Marco Rubio as Secretary of State. Rubio is a lightweight on all fronts and is no deep strategic thinker.

But then came the shot of the scene tonight: Trump has appointed the a moderator on Fox News, Pete Hegseth, as Secretary of Defense. Wow! Hegseth, in addition to having served in the army, has no experience in managing as gigantic a bureaucracy as that of the Department of Defense. What the hell was Trump thinking? I think that has a simple answer:

Trump is nominating for key positions only loyalists that are not affected by or connected to the military-industrial complex and the war lobby in Washington.

I know one of these lobbyists (we were neighbors) and I guarantee you that tonight he is furious. Trump is sending to the Deep State an unequivocal message: “I will be running the show”.

Trump has also appointed the former member of Congress and former Director of National Intelligence (alias DNI), John Ratcliffe, as head of the CIA. In my opinion, it is an excellent choice. Ratcliffe is an honest man, and not an ambitious climber type who aspires to become president, as Mike Pompeo did and does. In virtue of his previous tenure as DNI, Ratcliffe knows where the bodies are buried at the CIA, and he will play a key role in the dissemination of the JFK files

I know many of you are convinced that Trump has fallen under the influence of AIPAC and of the zionists. You might be right, but I believe that there is a hope that Trump is not completely captured. Let me remind you of some of the episodes of the past. In the first place, in an interview on “Sixty Minutes” after his defeat in 2020, Trump excoriated Bibi Netanyahu for being the first to congratulate Joe Biden. Trump used an expletive to describe Netanyahu. In the second place, the majority of jews in the United States, at least 70% – voted for Harris, not for Trump. In the third place, it seems that Trump has warned Netanyahu that the war in Gaza must end by 20 January.

 I see things as being on a gradient. Trump has not totally submitted to the zionists and radicals. It is worth mentioning that he has good relations with the Haredim, the ultra-orthodox jews who reject the State of Israel. Although I am not suggesting that Trump will stand with the Palestinians, I doubt that he will do as Biden did, giving Israel everything it needs to continue the carnage.

Let’s not forget that Trump wants to be appreciated. He made some promises also to American Muslims. I don’t think that Trump is aware of how much the United States has been isolated from area Arabs and from the muslims because of Israel.

MBS in Saudi Arabia, who, four years ago, was on the point of entering into an agreement with Trump to begin diplomatic relations with Israel, now speaks with a very different voice. There will be no relations with Israel until there is a safe Palestinian State.

To emphasize this point, last week the Minister of Defense of Saudi Arabia flew to Tehran to meet with his Iranian counterpart.

Despite being willing to give Trump the benefit of the doubt, I’m convinced that if Trump leads the United States into a war against Iran or China, or both, this will destroy his presidency and perhaps the nation.

My advice is to wait and see what it does Trump in his first week in office. At that point, if I’m wrong, I’ll take the blows that I deserve. Until then, get ready. Trump is trying to do something with the bloated government of the United States that has never been attempted, at least until now.

 

4 Comments

  1. A female jewish butcher, just as evil and sadistic as jewish men.
    2) Vera Grebeniukova (aka Dora) – Odessa, UkraineRozalia Zemliachka (Rozalia Samuilovna Zalkind) – Ukraine

    “Rozalia Zemliachka and her lover Bela Kun murdered 50,000 White officers (with Lenin’s approval). They were tied in pairs to planks and burned alive in furnaces; or drowned in barges that she sank offshore.” [Crimes of the Century, C. J. Griffin, on 20 July 2005, Amazon book review]

    Wikipedia: Rozalia Samuilovna Zalkind (Russian: Залкинд Розалия Самуиловна) known under nicknames Devil (for personal participation in mass executions) and Zemlyachka (20 March 1876 – 21 January 1947) was a Russian revolutionary, Soviet politician and statesman. She is best known for her involvement in the organization of the First Russian revolution, and along with Bela Kun, as one of the organizers of the Red Terror in the Crimea in 1920-1921, against former soldiers of the White Army.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rosalia_Zemlyachka

    ***

    4) Rebecca Platinina-Maisel – Arkhangelsk

    “In Arkhangel, Rebecca Platinina snuffed out the lives of more than a hundred, including the entire family of her husband, who was executed by crucifixion, in a an act of wanton revenge. “ The agents who committed these brutalities ended their days immersed in insanity. According to Gippius, a major female poet of Petrograd during the period of the red terror observed that “there was literally a single family in which someone had not been arrested, taken and then disappeared without a trace.” (autostranslate revised by RStE) [“Ideologias e ideias,” 06 de Abril de 2010, Boletim (newsletter) – 708]
    http://antigo.apufsc.org.br/texto/1267/

    “Rebecca Platinina-Maisel in Arkhangelsk killed over a hundred, including the whole family of her ex-husband whom she crucified in an act of savage revenge. Such was the brutalizing effect of this relentless violence that not a few Chekists ended up insane. Bukharin said that psychopathic disorders were an occupational hazard of the Chekist profession. Many Chekists hardened themselves to the killings by heavy drink

    “A large share of the torturers were of non-Russian nationalities, selected in Lenin’s assessment Russians seemed ‘too mushy,’ unable to cope with the ‘tough measures.’ Among the torturers there were also women. “Vera Grebennikova, one in Odessa, in just two months have killed 700 people.” (autostranslate revised by RStE)
    [“Ideologias e ideias,” 06 de Abril de 2010, Boletim (newsletter) – 708]
    http://antigo.apufsc.org.br/texto/1267/

    “Women were also not exempt from the perpetration of sadistic violence. Vera Grebennikova, for example, was alleged to have killed over 700 people, many of them with her bare hands, during two months in Odessa..”
    [Читать онлайн “A People’s Tragedy: The Russian Revolution, 1891-1924” автора Figes Orlando – RuLit – Страница 239]
    Rebecca Platinina-Maisel” cited in: Orlando Figes, Tragedie van een volk: de Russische revolutie 1891-1924, p. 794

    ***

    Wikipedia excerpt:

    Cheka (ЧК – чрезвыча́йная коми́ссия chrezvychaynaya komissiya, Emergency Committee, Russian pronunciation: [tɕɪˈka]) was the first of a succession of Soviet state security organizations. It was created on December 20, 1917, after a decree issued by Vladimir Lenin, and was subsequently led by Felix Dzerzhinsky, a Polish aristocrat turned communist. By late 1918, hundreds of Cheka committees had been created in various cities, at multiple levels including: oblast, guberniya (“Gubcheks”), raion, uyezd, and volost Chekas, with Raion and Volost Extraordinary Commissioners. Many thousands of dissidents, deserters, or other people were arrested, tortured or executed by various Cheka groups. After 1922, Cheka groups underwent a series of reorganizations, with the NKVD, into bodies whose members continued to be referred to as “Chekisty” (Chekists) into the late 1980s.

  2. CHEKA WOMEN
    Sadistic female Jewish butcher.
    She literally tormented her victims: pulled out their hair, chopped off their limbs, cut off their ears, and twisted their cheekbones, and so on. During the two and a half months of her service in the Cheka, she alone shot 700 people, i.e. almost a third of those executed in the Cheka by all the executioners.”

  3. Kharkov. The corpses of tortured women hostages; the victims were alive when their breasts were severed and simultaneously the victims were disembowelled. Burning embers had been thrust up their vaginas.In other places, the victim’s head was placed on an anvil and slowly crushed with a steam hammer. Those due to undergo the same punishment the next day were forced to watch. The eyes of church dignitaries were poked out, their tongues were cut off and they were buried alive. There were Chekists who used to cut open the stomachs of their victims, following which they pulled out a length of the small intestine and nailed it to a telegraph pole and, with a whip, forced the unlucky victim to run circles around the pole until the whole intestine had been unravelled and the victim died. The bishop of Voronezh was boiled alive in a large pot, after which the monks, with revolvers aimed at their heads, were forced to drink this soup.

    Decapitated corpse with severed leg was discovered in the yard of the KGB in Kherson. The body had been badly burnt.
    Decapitated corpse with severed leg was discovered in the yard of the KGB in Kherson. The body had been badly burnt.
    The corpse of Ilya Sidorenko, owner of a fashion store in the city of Sumy. The victim’s ribs and arms before death had been broken and the genitals crushed and mutilated.
    The corpse of Ilya Sidorenko, owner of a fashion store in the city of Sumy. The victim’s ribs and arms before death had been broken and the genitals crushed and mutilated.
    Other Chekists crushed the heads of their victims with special head-screws, or drilled them through with dental tools. The upper part of the skull was sawn off and the nearest in line was forced to eat the brain, following which the procedure would be repeated to the end of the line. Chekists often arrested entire families and tortured the children before the eyes of their parents, and the wives before their husbands. Mikhail Voslensky, a former Soviet functionary, described some of the cruel methods used by the Chekists in his book.

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