Anonymous ID: 8d4ea0 May 3, 2018, 6:54 p.m. No.1291780   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1791 >>2082

Notable #1615

>>1288670 , >>1288729 BIS… It's a fucking nation state of it's own.

Fascinating architecture as well.

 

Catherine Austin Fitts tells a story about she went to an ATM at the Basel train station within walking distance of BIS where people can top off their Bitcoin wallets in Swiss franc.

Anonymous ID: 8d4ea0 May 3, 2018, 7:02 p.m. No.1291868   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>1291761

>push this shit show to 6 more years…

That's exactly what the adversary wants…to drag this out sooooooo long, people get sick of hearing lawyers drone on and tune everyting out.

Then they get so sick hearing about drama surrounding POTUS, they just want him out to just be done with the BS.

 

Tis a pity Levin & Hannity appear to be falling for it. Had to turn Inghram last night after 90 seconds, as they were talking attorney shop talk.

 

They are going to try bore US to death methinks.

Anonymous ID: 8d4ea0 May 3, 2018, 7:22 p.m. No.1292082   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>1291905

They don't get any brownie points for originality, that's for sure.

Nimrods is an appropriate sounding term.

>>1291791

>>1291780

>https://www.nytimes.com/2013/07/21/books/review/tower-of-basel-by-adam-lebor.html

Designed to buy and sell gold and foreign exchange for its clients and provide short-term credit and asset management to central banks (though it is no longer needed for that), the B.I.S. has somehow managed to survive its own checkered history as well as the disappearance of the other two main reasons for its existence:

war reparations and the maintenance of the gold standard imposed at Bretton Woods.

 

From the 1960s on, it helped to lay the groundwork for the European Monetary Union, although it was quickly eclipsed in importance by the European Monetary Institute and then the European Central Bank.

Anonymous ID: 8d4ea0 May 3, 2018, 7:35 p.m. No.1292193   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2211 >>2227 >>2253

>>1291900

>>1291923

fun fact: the Norse god Loki actually came from the word for spider.

>https://www.norsemyth.org/2010/04/gods-goddesses-part-five.html

Loki is best-known in the guise of the Trickster - the god who continually gets into mischief, has his escapades go horribly wrong, gets compelled by the other gods to fix the results of his troublemaking, and ends up doing good in the end as a sort of byproduct of his machinations.

 

One of the more intriguing etymologies of his name connects it to the Swedish dialect-word Locke ("spider"), which places Loki in the world continuum of Trickster Gods with animal forms.

 

In 1933, French philologist Georges Dumézil argued that the characterization of Loki as master thief is incredibly ancient, and can be traced back as one of the foundational conceptions of Indo-European mythology.

 

>https://norse-mythology.org/gods-and-creatures/the-aesir-gods-and-goddesses/loki/

In his research into Nordic folklore from periods more recent than the Viking Age, Heide noticed that Loki often appears in contexts that liken him to a knot on a thread. In fact, in later Icelandic usage, the common noun loki even means “knot” or “tangle.”

 

Spiders are sometimes referred to as loki in a metaphorical sense, as their webs are compared to the fish nets (which are made from a series of knots and loops) that Loki crafts in certain surviving Viking Age myths.

 

From all of this, the most straightforward meaning of Loki’s name would seem to be “Knot” or “Tangle.”[8][9]

 

Second, it could indicate his being the “knot” in the otherwise straight thread of the gods and their world, the fatal flaw that ultimately brings about their demise.