War in Pakistan -Waziristan Coming Soon to a Market Near America.

Political puppets did not allow development of vast rich USA resources like interior and offshore Alaskan, West Coast and Western coal, oil, gas, shale, nuclear or even tri-coastal tidal energy.

President Clinton took the world’s largest known clean coal deposit off the market by turning it into a 1.7 Million acre Utah National Monument over the objections of Utahans in the name of environmentalism, and promising a fair exchange which still has not been delivered.

It was political payoff to Indonesian campaign donors with low sulfur coal, the Riady Family Lippo Group, who paid a multimilliondollar fine for illegal political contributions.

Utah Senator Orrin Hatch called the trillion-dollar Saudi Arabia of coal the mother of all land grabs.

Because the Utah clean coal land had been put in trust to benefit Utah schools, Phyllis Sorensen, head of the Utah chapter of the National Education Association, called Clinton’s action a felonious assault stealing from the schoolchildren:

http://constitutionallyright.com/?p=539

Instead of facing long-term economic reality, politicians increased Public Debts, Deficits and Spending to line their conflict of interest pockets with public promises of algae, electric, hydrogen and natural gas cars, free housing, solar and wind power projects that require transmission lines, pipelines and battery technology not yet available or economic in the knowable future.

They refused to enforce laws against illegal immigration.

Illegal aliens in the US wired $250 Billion a year back home, up to one quarter of the Mexican GDP.

Meanwhile, Illegal Aliens from around the world brought arms, drugs, gangs, kidnapping, rape, theft and violence to the USA.

US Border Guards were sent to prison and assaulted for doing their jobs. Believe it or not, Federal Reserve Banks are even working on ways to tap illegal cash flow for bigger business:

http://www.canadafreepress.com/printpage.php

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This entry was posted on Tuesday, October 20th, 2009 at 7:12 am and is filed under Market Psychology. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

 

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