MF Global & The Incest of Power
As the century of change sweeps mankind under the rug, the rogue history books on the black market in the future, if these even share an iota of truth with inquisitive minds, will tell of the largest consolidation of power the world had ever seen, in this the twenty-first century; hence, the century of change.
This century of change comes on the heels of the century of central banking, which, according to Ron Paul, is also the century of total war. If these history books determine what single lesson can be learnt from the current scene of history, it’s that competing power-centers was mere illusion. Accurately speaking, the keystone corporations on the planet, those fulcrum behemoths of society, at the top are all one. That’s what must be learnt from all this gobbledygook.
What is truly taking place at MF Global? Well, it is not hard to tell, as long as you shield yourself from the propaganda arm of the international neo-soviet’s Central Committee. Throughout the course of the MF Global debacle, the story has changed numerous times. The media trumpets one week that ex-Chief Executive Officer Jon Corzine— a former senator—simply did not know much about the day-to-day operations at the more than two century old transnational brokerage firm. The next week he’s the isolated mastermind.
Yet more damning, is that in December he stood next to MF Global’s COO Bradley Abelow who, during oath-taking, held his hand in the shape of devil horn’s or an upside down pyramid. Such symbols are vividly documented as customary of the ruling class in social settings. Not only is Abelow being disrespectful in a civic manner, but, pertinently, he is demonstrating his obedience and dedication to the dark forces of history.
Moreover, the wordsmiths over at MF Global come straight out of a Orwell novel. Corzine told the Senate Agriculture Committee in December that he had “no reason to believe” that customer funds had been misused until the night of October 30, less than 24 hours before his former company filed for bankruptcy.
Funny that, millions of people who have concerned themselves with the truth of the global financial system—that is that it is built upon a 300+ year ponzi scheme based on voodoo economics with absolutely no real underlying assets except for the success of propaganda in public schools on the television and in the keystone newspapers—could not be surprised that an english-originated brokerage firm had a business model based on larceny and grand theft.
In fact, even those individuals without much concern in regards to the inner-workings of the global plantation were not surprised that an illuminist transnational corporation had been defrauding its own customers—after all, most of the world does indeed bank at one of these illuminist transnational banks, and thus knows that patronage equals fleecing in an unfree world. Once attention is paid, then one knows he/she his right and his/her rights.
“I never directed anyone at MF Global to misuse customer funds,” Corzine has said. “I never intended to, and as far as I’m concerned, I never gave instructions that anybody could misconstrue.”
What could “as far as I’m concerned” possibly mean in this context? Is this “in my opinion”; is this “as far as it matters to me”; or perhaps it is “in as much as it effects me.” What kind of psychological p***y-footing around is this? Corzine might be a champion for his master’s cause, global financial consolidation and the imposition of a new austere way for society, but he is a terrible actor.
The CEO of any company should be concerned as far as any of the customers were concerned, and since he claims to have not known what was going on with their money—something with which the customers obviously were and are concerned—should be jailed for criminal negligence based on the fact that he was the CEO—the company’s lead decision maker. But, as I mentioned before, he knew plenty. Generally, all markets today have been befallen by moral hazard. Yes, really…
I’m sure AT&T, or whatever transnational telecommunication company his MF Global office used, has plenty of taped phone conversations that could spark a revolution by a well-to-do former MF Global clientele, many of whom might be among the Occupy Movement’s despised though allegorical 1%.
MF Global is the product of the incest of power and in the incest of power the ability of man to get in touch with inner-humanity are retarded by the inebriation of vantage. The ruling culture, with whom persons like Corzine gather for cocktails, spins on a daily basis from one axiom: anything goes, no matter how dark. And they don’t care about people—they care about the agamous “aphrodisiac” known as power.
The truth is MF Global is JP Morgan, Goldman Sachs, Deutsche Bank, Citi, Bank of America, the Rothschilds, The Rockefellers, the military-industrial superstructure and so on. So it goes as Kurt Vonnegut oft wrote.






