Anonymous ID: a82a3c May 3, 2019, 3:58 p.m. No.6406182   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6226 >>6305

New from Rex at https://quodverum.com/2019/05/123/potus-hillary-r-clinton-america-s-last-president.html

 

"Historians always remind us that in order to understand the present, we need to study the past.

 

"I'm going to add another angle - in order to predict the future, we need to study the present, as well.

 

"Over the last two weeks and today, America has witnessed very disturbing - and revealing - behavior by the Democrats in Congress.

 

"Be under no illusion. In a last ditch stand, a desperate Obama and Clinton, who by now know what is coming, are directing everything we are seeing. They are controlling the Democrats in Congress, as well as the narratives being parroted by their lugenpresse.

 

"It may be too late for them now but in my view, they will still instruct their slaves to impeach President Donald J Trump. They know that there is no chance of success, but that isn't the point. It's a political 'hail mary' pass. Fast running out of options, they will use impeachment to continue smearing the President with lies and innuendo, for as long as they can, to distract their exhausted base and influence the 2020 Presidential election.

 

"Stalin's Lavrentiy Beria and Hitler's Josef Goebbels would be proud of their efforts, if they were alive to witness the appalling spectacle we are watching.

 

"Why? Because Obama and Clinton are using totalitarian tactics, that they mastered. And like Beria and Goebbels, Obama and Clinton will fail. However, they will try to cause as much damage on the way out, as they can.

 

"That's what totalitarians do."

Anonymous ID: a82a3c May 3, 2019, 4:58 p.m. No.6406709   🗄️.is 🔗kun

https://nationalinterest.org/commentary/machiavelli-still-shocking-after-five-centuries-9126

 

"Third, use deception as a central element of your statecraft. Mask your true intentions, and remain faithful to pledges only so long as they are in your interest. Remember that others will be false to you, unless you ensure that their falsehoods do not pay. Beware of surrounding yourself with powerful subordinates. Keep your own counsel and listen to only a few advisors. Eliminate victorious generals and keep nobles weak and divided."

 

"In other respects, though, The Prince holds up well as a guide to politics, domestic and foreign. His accounts of official corruption in Florence, of decadence in the late Roman empire, and of deception by Italian popes would raise few eyebrows in contemporary Washington, D.C. Nor would modern readers be surprised to learn that in political life, it is more frequently the sinners than the saints that rise to power and cling to their positions."