The Most Revolutionary Act

Uncensored updates on world events, economics, the environment and medicine

The Most Revolutionary Act

RFJ Jr: Father and Uncle Fighting Military Industrial Complex Before Their Deaths

Posted BY: | NwoReport

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. was recently interviewed by Piers Morgan and in the interview, he had a lot of interesting things to say about his father the late Robert  F. Kennedy, and his uncle President John F. Kennedy.

The topic of his uncle and father got brought up when Morgan asked Kennedy what impact did it have on him to lose both his uncle and father at such a young age.

Kennedy responded  “I think it had an impact on the world. I think my father and uncle were fighting against the emergence of the military-industrial complex.”

He continued “Their deaths really marked a fork in the road for our country and the rest of the world where we started down this road towards corporatism which I call the corrupt merger of state and corporate power.

[…]

Via https://nworeport.me/rfk-jr-says-his-father-and-uncle-were-fighting-against-military-industrial-complex-before-their-deaths/

6 thoughts on “RFJ Jr: Father and Uncle Fighting Military Industrial Complex Before Their Deaths

  1. The merger of State, and Corporate, and Industrial power was started by Abraham Lincoln. It was the power that fueled the Spanish American War. But, its emergence as a means of neocolonialism on steroids took off after the Second World War. It is true that your uncle and father tried to reign in its influence.

    Like

    • Indeed, papasha408. But I don’t think he had a lot of options given the “color revolution” the British foreign office launched against his presidency with their support of the Southern confederacy.

      Like

  2. That would mean getting rid of the pentagon, fbi, cia, atf and many others which
    sounds good to me. They are a drain on freedom and humanity.
    Tear them in a million pieces and throw them to the wind.

    Like

  3. Agree with the above, but it goes deeper than that, across centuries and cultures, but corporations only became recognized as political players in the late 1800s. The stock market was an early player in US history and has always had a strong influence, as did the London Stock Exchange, in getting us involved in international conflicts.

    Like

  4. I would go even further back than that, Katherine. Canadian historian Matt Ehret traces the oligarchical blood lines back to the Roman oligarchs, who first reestablished themselves in Venice, and went them there to Amsterdam, where they first established fractional reserve banking (ie creating money out of thin air to lend out at interest), and from there to London when William of Orange invaded England and created the Bank of England in 1696.

    Like

Leave a reply to papasha408 Cancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.