Source: Land Destroyer Report
Tony Cartalucci
Tony Cartalucci
Q. Why are such research documents - Which Path to Persia? or "String of Pearls"
- made public on the web? If these are in fact strategic and
provide a view into the world of powers that run the show on our
globe, why would they allow such "sensitive" information and "plans"
to be made public for everyone to read?


Image:
Despite producing the vast majority of rules, regulations, laws and
policies that dictate the destiny of Western civilization, as well as
drawing up plans for war, these corporate-funded, corporate-serving
think-tanks are little known amongst the general public. Despite
publishing much of their work on publicly accessible websites, most
people will never know about it, let alone take the time to read it.
....
A. You
can't keep global empire a secret - by necessity you need people to
believe in your cause - even if you dress it up and spin it as something
other than naked conquest. The global corporate-financier elite
manage access to information by marketing different levels of it to
different demographics. This has been done throughout all of history.
The reasoning done with the aristocracy to keep them in line was more
straight-forward and pragmatic than the absolute fantasies used to dupe
and manipulate the common man.
It works in layers - papers like "Which Path to Persia?" being toward the top are aimed at people who believe in global governance and globalization - professors, senior editors, CEOs etc. who falsely believe they have a stake in the process - and while it is made public, it is generally inaccessible to the average reader because of its use of academic English, length, and very high minimal requirements in understanding the history, strategy, geopolitics, and human nature necessary to understand the contents.
It works in layers - papers like "Which Path to Persia?" being toward the top are aimed at people who believe in global governance and globalization - professors, senior editors, CEOs etc. who falsely believe they have a stake in the process - and while it is made public, it is generally inaccessible to the average reader because of its use of academic English, length, and very high minimal requirements in understanding the history, strategy, geopolitics, and human nature necessary to understand the contents.