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Rothschild Family Supports Hillary's Presidency
#1
Lynn Forrester de Rothschild has thrown the immense support of her family behind the Presidential candidacy of Hillary Clinton.

ROTHSCHILD FAMILY SUPPORTS HILLARY'S PRESIDENCY

by Kentroversy

Just as I have been telling people through my writings and interviews -- Hillary Clinton is the Global Elite's choice for President of the United States in the 2008 election. In fact, in my report HILLARY CLINTON'S HIDDEN AGENDA OF MANIPULATION -- which I published on February 5, 2007 -- I included a screenshot of a September 26, 2002 message board posting where I describe her as the first woman President of the United States!!

On October 5, 2007, a member of the oligarchical Rothschild family -- Lynn Forrester de Rothschild had gushed incessantly about how great Hillary will be for America "and her fellow capitalists." This was part of an interview with Conde Nast's Portfolio.com website (see link below) where she simply could not stop talking about how great Hillary will be for our nation.

Here is an excerpt of that interview for Conde Nast's Portfolio.com website:

L.G. is Lloyd Grove
L.R. is Lynn Rothschild

L.G.: Let me ask you, when your fellow capitalists come to you and express worries and fears about what Hillary Clinton will do in terms of raising taxes on capital gains and hedge fund operators, and income taxes, what do you tell them to reassure them that Hillary will be good for business?

L.R.: First of all, Hillary will be good for America. And so if we care about our country —which all of my fellow capitalists do —we'll be very pleased that she's president. And second of all, if we look at what is best for the economy, remember, she is a Clinton, and our economy under Clinton was strong, dynamic, productive, exciting. And the same kinds of people who advised Bill Clinton will be around Hillary Clinton. And she understands the importance of the business community, and it's not going to be about raising taxes or doing any one specific thing. It's going to be, What is in the best interest of all Americans? And I think if history is our guide, we've had stronger economies, more wealth creation, under Democratic presidents than we have under Republican presidents. So I don't understand why all my capitalist friends aren't Democrats.

L.G.: Really? Are they buying this argument, Lynn?

L.R.: Well, you know, it's funny. As people are getting a better and better look at Hillary, they're understanding that Hillary is talking in a way that is so positive for America. We can think we live in elite circles, but we don't. I mean, America is about Main Street, and Main Street is coming around to Hillary. And Wall Street and the C.E.O.'s can't buck that tide, and if they think they have some vested interest in their tax rate, those are a very limited number of people who think only about that.

L.G.: By the way, you may also have seen that Hillary reported an eye-popping $27 million raised in the third quarter, which was beyond expectations and far and away the most of anybody. How much of that can we credit you with?

L.R.: [Laughs.] I am—full disclosure—I'm always doing everything I possibly can for Hillary Clinton.

L.G.: Have you made a dollar commitment to the campaign? Have you said, "I'll raise a million bucks" or something like that?

L.R.: I don't really do that. I do everything that I can, and I have been waiting for this since Bill Clinton left office, frankly.

The full interview is linked below, in the SOURCES section ...

© 2007 Kentroversy Papers
All rights reserved. Used with permission.

Sources:

The following sources were used in the creation of this Kentroversy Paper . . .

The World According To Lynn Forrester de Rothschild (October 5, 2007) Portfolio.com

Hillary Clinton's Hidden Agenda of Manipulation (February 5, 2007)

2008 Presidential Election

Hillary Clinton

Kentroversy

Kentroversy Papers

Kentroversy Tapes

Kentspiracy Kronicles Newsletter

President of the USA

Rothschild Family

Rothschild Family $300 TRILLION Net Worth

posted by Kentroversy

http://kentroversypapers.blogspot.com/20...larys.html
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#2
She didn't contribute to her campaign because the election is fixed. Well, that's what you would say, right.
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#3
You know the elections are fixed. Bush's last 2 elections are proof of that. It looks like we’re entering a new era of women presidents. Do you hear South America just elected a woman president? 

South America Ushers In The Era of La Presidenta

Women Could Soon Lead a Majority of Continent's Population

By Monte Reel
Washington Post foreign service
Wednesday, October 31, 2007; A12

BUENOS AIRES, Oct. 30 -- Here in the land of machismo, where leaders were long supposed to conform to the standard of the strong-armed military man in epaulettes, a rising wave of leaders is working on a new 21st-century cliche: la presidenta.

The movement started at South America's southern tip, where Chile elected Michelle Bachelet president last year. Argentina followed this week, choosing first lady Cristina Fernández de Kirchner as its first elected female president.

"Permit me to specifically address my sisters in gender, to call out to all of them who have remained alone in the home, to the female factory workers and students, the professionals and businesswomen," Fernández de Kirchner, 54, said during her first speech as president-elect. "I know we can all do great work."

The gender-specific rallying cry now seems poised to spread north. In Paraguay, outgoing President Nicanor Duarte is backing former education minister Blanca Ovelar as his replacement in next year's presidential election. And in Brazil, many political observers say that President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva seems to be grooming his chief of staff and former energy minister -- a woman named Dilma Rousseff -- to carry his party's torch when his term ends in 2010.

"This term is only 10 months old," Rousseff reminded listeners during a forum at the Folha de S. Paulo newspaper this month, seeking to douse some of the rampant speculation about a possible campaign. "I'm not a candidate."

But the possibility that she could become one has South Americans confronting a prospect that just a few years ago would have seemed utterly impossible: a continent where the majority of the population is led by women.

At the same time that American voters are considering the possibility of a female front-runner in Hillary Rodham Clinton, people here have been trying to explain the recent surge in female candidates. The feminine political touch is tricky to define, even among the women who suggest it might be just what South America needs to confront lingering social ills such as poverty and income inequality.

Fernández de Kirchner briefly danced around the subject during her acceptance speech, obliquely referring to a woman's "special aptitudes -- not better, just special." Similarly, Ovelar has pointed out the advantages of "a woman's vision" in solving the social problems that voters in South America customarily list as their most pressing concerns.

"I think people generally just want a change," said Ana Esposito, a 55-year-old social worker in Buenos Aires province. "I also think that a woman might have a wider vision than a man, because generally women do more things simultaneously than men do -- but that's just my opinion."

Their rise to the highest seats of power has been sudden, but women have been working their way up through the region's political systems for years. Both Bachelet and Fern¿ndez de Kirchner became involved in politics during the 1970s as opponents of military governments. In the 1990s, Bachelet served as a minister of health and defense. Fernández de Kirchner was a prominent senator in the national legislature well before deciding to run to succeed her husband, Néstor Kirchner, who declined to seek reelection this year.

Marta Lagos, who conducts polls throughout Latin America and is based in Chile, said both women rose to prominence because their people were desperately seeking a new class of political elites.

Like most of the region, both Chile and Argentina were ruled by military dictatorships in the 1970s and early 1980s. And as elsewhere on the continent, the politicians who subsequently ushered in democratic rule there failed to convince voters that they were making sufficient progress against problems such as poverty and social inequality.

"When people began demanding strongly a change in elites, women suddenly became an option," Lagos said.

That said, she doesn't believe that the news is all positive for female candidates in South America. In Chile, Bachelet's approval rating has fallen to less than 50 percent, and she is often criticized for being indecisive. Lagos said she fears a backlash against future female candidates as a result.

"She is always saying that when she gets mad, people here in Chile say that she has a bad temper," Lagos said of Bachelet, "but when a man gets mad, they say he's a strong leader."

According to the World Economic Forum's ranking of 116 countries in terms of gender gaps, opportunities for women in South America still lagged behind those of women in many other parts of the world in 2006. Argentina ranked 42nd in terms of equal opportunities for women, Paraguay 65th, Brazil 68th and Chile 79th, according to the survey.

But in terms of political empowerment for women, Argentina jumped to 23rd on the list, ahead of the United States and Canada. Many here credit that to a law passed in 1991 aimed at increasing female representation in the National Congress.

The number of women in Argentina's legislature more than quadrupled immediately after the law was enacted, and 11 other Latin American countries passed similar laws within the next decade.

Fernández de Kirchner was one of the women who entered Argentina's national legislature after the quotas were established; she was elected as a senator for Santa Cruz province in 1995. In 2005, two years after her husband was elected president, she defeated another woman -- Hilda González de Duhalde -- to win a Senate seat for Buenos Aires province. Her nearest rival in this week's presidential election was Elisa Carrió, also a former legislator.

Fernández de Kirchner is often compared to Clinton, another lawyer, senator and former first lady. During a television appearance with an interviewer after the election, she wished Clinton well on her campaign to acquire another title that Fernández de Kirchner has now captured.

"Why not?" she said. "Another woman wouldn't be bad."

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/con...02223.html
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#4
Maybe we can expect Hillary will be president for USA-EAST in Atlanta, and Arnold Schwarzenegger will be for US-WEST in Denver.
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#5
I’m not sure if there will be a split of East and West. I don’t know how that would play into the future North America union. Since the US, Canada, and Mexico are joining together, it doesn’t seem like they would want to split the US.
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