Anonymous ID: 3127eb May 14, 2019, 7:57 p.m. No.6501663   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>6501557

 

People need to know about Monsanto's Nazi history with Bayer and IGFarben.

 

Also read (or listen to a podcast about) author Annie Jacobsen's "Operation Paperclip". Book hit me harder than any I've read in the last 10 years. What a redpill.

 

"There were $125 billion worth of proposed agri-chemical mergers in 2016, nearly doubling the previous record of $65 billion in 2010. In addition to the proposed Bayer/Monsanto deal, there are also pending mergers between Dow and DuPont as well as Syngenta and the Chinese National Chemical Corporation."

 

More strikingly,

 

"At Bayer, and other IG Farben laboratories, research and development was carried out on numerous chemical war gases. The inventor of phosgene gas, Fritz Haber of BASF, successfully advocated for its use in World War I. Similarly, Bayer’s Duisberg was personally involved in the development of mustard gas and pushed successfully for its use in WWI, contrary to international law. Moreover, the inventor of sarin and tabun gasses, Gerhard Schrader, was the head of Bayer’s pesticides department after World War II. Sarin is the gas that was used in the 1995 Tokyo subway attack that killed 12 people, and more recently, against Syrian Sunni rebels, killing an estimated 1,200. And a subsidiary of IG Farben, BASF, supplied Zyklon B (the “final solution” cyanide gas) that was used in the Nazi gas chambers.

 

IG Farben was a central player in the conquests of the Third Reich. As countries were conquered, IG Farben followed the troops and took over considerable parts of the occupied nations’ chemical, coal and oil industries. The Bayer/IG Farben leadership had all joined the Nazi Party by 1937, playing leading roles in the orchestration of Nazi atrocities. In the war criminal trials in Nuremberg, the IG Farben cartel was also on trial.

 

“It is undisputed that criminal experiments were undertaken by SS physicians on concentration camp prisoners,” declares a passage from the Nuremberg findings. “These experiments served the express purpose of testing the products of IG Farben.”

 

These horrific experiments under Nazi directives were known about and approved by the highest echelons of IG Farben, as is documented by Joseph Borkin’s book, The Crime and Punishment of IG Farben. While many were convicted as war criminals in Nuremberg, none of the IG Farben executives served sentences longer than four years and all were able to continue their corporate careers. Fritz ter Meer, for example, convicted of plunder, spoliation, slavery and mass murder, became chairman of the Supervisory Board of Bayer in 1956 and held that position until 1964."

Anonymous ID: 3127eb May 14, 2019, 8:03 p.m. No.6501731   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>1757

>>6501608

They just didn't get their dream of globalism realized before they got too old.

 

Pelosi would, of course, want to avoid a harsh sentence, but doesn't look like an act. This looks like somebody in the rec room of the nursing home.

 

They're all tied up tightly in California. So is what's left of the insane Getty family running them?

 

https://calmatters.org/articles/commentary/gavin-newsoms-keeping-it-all-in-the-family/