Anonymous ID: 6d0d68 May 2, 2018, 10:06 p.m. No.1282273   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2297

A German Journalist and politician, who has been harassed over the past years and thrown out of the government, because he believes in a gold-backed currency dropped a BOMBSHELL 3 months ago. Youtube has silenced his account and I, someone who tries to get every information on obstruction of democracy, did NOT notice his disappearance and his OVERWHELMING record of reports that the German government is being driven by banks. I know that banks have a major influence, but I did not know, that the German government is cooperating with Youtube and other outlets to silence political opponents! This was a big mistake. I spread the video like a virus and accused every other journalist for covering it up, because noone informed us about the happenings.

Anonymous ID: 6d0d68 May 2, 2018, 10:08 p.m. No.1282297   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>1282273

The latest bombshell he dropped was in Switzerland, when he explained the folks, that their currency is not gold-backed anymore. Since Switzerland 1990 joined the International Monetary Fond and the World Bank. Both are Rothschild inventions and the evil impersonation on earth. Their first rule is, you can only join us if you drop your gold as a backup. WHAT THE FUCK

Anonymous ID: 6d0d68 May 2, 2018, 10:24 p.m. No.1282435   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2453 >>2460 >>2462 >>2466 >>2487 >>2511 >>2704 >>2754

HELL NO, WHAT I HAVE I FOUND

The United States and the former Soviet republic of Kazakhstan have completed moving some 100 tons of highly radioactive material from a Caspian Sea port in the country's west to a safe storage site in northeastern Kazakhstan.

The shipments included enough dangerous nuclear material for nearly 800 nuclear weapons.

Years in the planning, the project took a year to move the material by rail and road 1,500 miles across the country. The last of the shipments was delivered Monday.

In 1973, a nuclear reactor began operations in the small Soviet city of Shevchenko on the Caspian Sea. This nuclear plant produced steam heat and electricity for the people of the region, as well as fresh water for them to drink.

It also produced another very important product, notes Richard Hoagland, the U.S. ambassador to Kazakhstan. "It also provided the plutonium for the Soviet Union's nuclear weapons that potentially could have been used against the West," Hoagland says.

 

FOLKS THIS IS AN EMAIL OF STRATFOR

The fucking american security company, these people know everything and they are not even in the government! FFS

 

https://wikileaks.org/gifiles/docs/18/1830131_-eurasia-kazakhstan-sweep-101117-.html

Anonymous ID: 6d0d68 May 2, 2018, 10:27 p.m. No.1282460   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2481 >>2487 >>2649 >>2704

>>1282435

IT GETS EVEN DIRTIER!

 

It also produced another very important product, notes Richard Hoagland,

the U.S. ambassador to Kazakhstan. "It also provided the plutonium for the

Soviet Union's nuclear weapons that potentially could have been used

against the West," Hoagland says.

Kazakhstan Turns To U.S. For Help

The plutonium was very high quality, especially suited for nuclear

weapons.

It's called ivory grade plutonium and it is "quite unusual," says Leonard

Spector, a former Energy Department official who first became of aware of

this plant in the 1990s. Spector is now with the Washington office of the

James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies.

"In a typical nuclear power plant, the plutonium is usable for nuclear

weapons, but it's of a low quality, and would not be what you would seek,"

he explains. "But this particular material at this reactor did have these

attributes that made it really ideal for that purpose. And the reactor was

sitting across the Caspian Sea from Iran."

When the Soviet Union broke up in 1991, the city changed its name to Aktau

and found itself part of a newly independent state, Kazakhstan. The

leaders of Kazakhstan wanted to do something about the reactor, and they

sought the help of the United States.

Anonymous ID: 6d0d68 May 2, 2018, 10:42 p.m. No.1282586   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2630

>>1282511

 

YES that Hoagland. Look:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_C._Hoagland

Wiki says he's a conspiracy theorist but at the same time he was awarded by Harvard with a Nobelprice. LMAO