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jueves, 11 de julio de 2013

CROCODILE TEARS: NOBEL LAURATE KISSING A GIANT GOODBYE

By Wolfgang von Eschenbach
July 11, 2013

Bouma or umbrella tree (Rhamnaceae: Maesopsis eminii). Credit: Dr. Bruce G. Marcot, EPOW.


A Nobel laurate, member of the global elite Club of Rome founded by David Rockefeller and of the Commission on Global Governance, kisses goodbye a giant tree that has been given to a private logging multinational company at Pokolo, Democratic Republic of Congo. The logging industry refers to this type of tree cutting as "selective harvesting".

A few crocodile tears were shed when the tree was chopped down, vilely assassinated (Video 1). Unfortunately, there was no Miranda Gibson to save it.


                            Video 1. A Nobel laurate kisses goodbye a giant tree.



Big corporations always know what to do to handle and appease people. In this case, they got the helping hand of the Nobel laurate, Dr. Wangari Maathai, the charm of a remarkable African woman on their side. This way they made sure that environmental activists would keep their mouths shut. 

After all, Prof. Maathai had the status and aura of the Green Belt Movement backing her up, an impressive story. 

But here is the big question:

Is Green Belt Movement somehow an offshoot of the failed British Colonial Development Corporation set up right after WWII and later metamorphosed and revived into the Commonwealth Development Corporation (CDC)?  

CDC has hundreds of businesses throughout the world, including in Costa Rica where it has a company named Del Oro, which comprises Inversiones Guanaranja, CIGASADel Oro, S.A., and a 3.000 hectares orange grove.

Considering that as soon as you have been elected to enter the Nobel laurate roster (a Mount Olympus think tank) and you have also sold your soul to the global elite clubs and secret societies that want to establish a world government by scaring the heck out of people with stories of global warming and climate change, you immediately become sanctified, sacrosanct and untouchable, and part of the Jesuit´s global agenda, therefore it stands to reason that Wangari Maathai "had the right" to say some philosophical rethorics that "every living thing must die, even we will die", something very convenient to kick off the exploitation of the Pokolo mature forest, and at the same time it was quite acceptable and also served as a perfect excuse to bring down a healthy tree that had worked throughout its life towards the maintenance of the Biosphere.  The tree did not deserve to die this way

The umbrella of "economic development" is not an excuse either. Economic development is a very strange worm that has a way of eating the body and leaving only skeletons wherever it hatches. 

Scientists have had an important role in giving life and keeping afloat this worm and therefore should avoid becoming mere peons and puppets on corporate chessboards.

Man´s appetite needs more than just bolts and nuts to be sustainable. 

The way humans see and interact with the world needs a total overhaul.


References

Havinden M. & Meredith D. (1993). Colonialism and Development: Britain and its Tropical Colonies, 1850-1960. Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, London, UK. 420 p.


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