Money is made and money lost over Eastern Europe, Western Europe, Europe from Iceland to Kosovo, fromVladivostok to the Ukraine and from the Donbas to the world! The WEF members make money. Resetting steam rolls faster and then as Covid slowly moves off Broadway to finally replace West Side Story there are thinkers who say time is forcing the hand of the Tycoons who used Covid, whose golden dream requires opulence and after the wakey wakey of injections killing and maiming hundreds of millions a fear arises amongst them. A ghost from the Ukraine speaks at the Banquet. “ Globalism won with Covid. We are under the thumb of the Sanitary Diktat. Despots will rule and publics assent.”
The death of the West is the rise of Asia.
And the rise of GMO man.
Let Russia and the West grapple over the Ukraine. India and China will lend money. Labs will continue to work. Graft networks continue to grow fat. And 5G man will be an actuality.
Grain grows to feed the world in the Ukraine. Rightly managed the blood rich soil could deliver with GMO seeds a cornucopia.
Bloodlands: Europe Between Hitler and Stalin is a book by Yale historian Timothy D. Snyder that was first published by Basic Books on 28 October 2010. It is about mass murders committed during World War II in territories controlled by Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union.
Bloodlands:
Europe Between Hitler and Stalin
AuthorTimothy D. SnyderLanguageEnglishSubjectMass murdersduring World War IIGenreHistoryPublisherBasic BooksPublication date28 October 2010Pages544ISBN978-0-465-00239-9
In this book, Snyder examines the political, cultural, and ideological context tied to a specific region of Central and Eastern Europe, where Joseph Stalin's Soviet Union and Adolf Hitler's Nazi Germany committed mass murders of an estimated 14 million noncombatants between 1933 and 1945, the majority outside the death camps of the Holocaust. Snyder's thesis is that the "bloodlands", a region that now comprises Poland, Belarus, Ukraine, the Baltic states (Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania), northeastern Romania, and the westernmost fringes of Russia,