Anonymous ID: 493061 Dec. 24, 2020, 3:10 p.m. No.12162359   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2374 >>2415 >>2441 >>2480

I just watchedPatrick Byrne on Jerome Corsi’s show today he mentioned that this whole election rigging was the Chinese Assasins Macewhich is how Chinese take over the world by not firing a shot. They are doing this with the 2020 election, they can conquer our country if the fraud is not overturned. He mentioned that we will be in a 1,000 years of darkness.

 

He mentioned this in the last 10 minutes of the program, if there is anything important about this show, it’s this

 

https://youtu.be/I7j-_6CD4zs

 

Assassin's Mace

 

Assassin's Mace (Chinese: 杀手锏; pinyin: Shāshǒujiàn) is a Chinese term composed of the characters for "kill", "hand", and "mace".[1] This term has its roots in ancient Chinese folklore, which recounts how a hero wielding such a weapon managed to overcome a far more powerful adversary.[2] "Shashou Jian" was a club with which the "assassin" incapacitated his enemy, suddenly and totally, instead of fighting him according to "the rules."[3]

Examples Edit

The term as a figure of speech has been around for centuries and has been revived in contemporary Chinese pop culture, as a slang phrase that appears in articles about everything from soccer to romance.[4] In popular usage, the term is roughly equivalent to the English idioms "silver bullet" or "trump card", and means anything which ensures success.[3][5]

Michael Pillsbury in his book "The Hundred-year marathon" suggest that People's Liberation Army strategists talks about developing "Assassin's Mace" to supplant the United States.[6] The Assassin's Mace Pillsbury describe is not a single tool or military equipment but a group of technologies or strategies to overtake the United States in the global hierarchy.[6]

See also Edit

Asymmetric warfare

Unrestricted Warfare

References Edit

^ Pillsbury, Michael (January 2000). "China Debates the Future Security Environment". National Defense University Press. Retrieved 27 August 2013. Chinese writings on the future of warfare and the revolution in military affairs (RMA) frequently use three Chinese ideograms to signify something that can be used in a war that will surprise and overwhelm the enemy, vital parts of exploiting the RMA. The three ideograms (sha shou jian) literally mean "kill," "hand," and an ancient word for club, or "mace." U.S. Government translations have rendered this term as "trump card," "magic weapon," or "killer mace." None of these translations is wrong, but none captures the full meaning. The importance of the term can be seen in its continued usage over time, both originally in traditional Chinese novels and ancient statecraft texts, as well as today in the daily military newspaper. Behind these three ideograms may lie a concept of victory in warfare through possession of secret weapons that strike the enemy's most vulnerable point (called an acupuncture point), at precisely the decisive moment. This entire concept of how RMA technology can win a war cannot be fully conveyed by its simple English translation of "trump card."

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assassin%27s_Mace