Can you image believing anything George Soros, the Nazi, relates to the American people. His job is to destroy countries – ask Great Britain – they ran him out. Hungary ran him out. He has been run out of every country he has been; and, it is time for the people to send him packin’. He is running the Democratic Socialist Muslim Party with his money and telling Obama what to do.
The following speech he made was at Hillary and Bill Clinton’s Global Initiative which is nothing but what some people call the School for Pedophiles, Hillary and Bill Clinton’s private bank account, and working with the Bush’s for One World Order. In Texas we called it, The Chicken Ranch.
Soros is the person who is paying all the people to march, i.e., Ferguson, MO, and Baltimore, MD – and now Black Lives Matter. These are groups of people who are organized and paid to cause trouble. We saw how they burned down Ferguson, MO, and Baltimore, MD. And the Black Lives Matter slogan – PIGS IN A BLANKET, FRY THEM LIKE BACON in reference to the police.
Following is Soros’ speech. l portion and the last part is Soros’ actual token words.
SOROS: We must ‘resist the siren song of the likes of Donald Trump and Ted Cruz’
By Colin Campbell
George Soros speaking at the Clinton Global Initiative.
Billionaire hedge fund manager George Soros warned in a Monday op-ed that Republican presidential candidates were following a belief that endangers “open society” with how they frame the fight against the Islamic State terror group.
Writing in The Guardian, Soros singled out Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) and real-estate mogul Donald Trump, a fellow billionaire. Trump and Cruz are the leading two candidates in nationwide polls of the GOP primary.
“Abandoning the values and principles underlying open societies and giving in to an anti-Muslim impulse dictated by fear certainly is not the answer, though it may be difficult to resist the temptation,” Soros wrote. “I experienced this personally when I watched the last Republican presidential debate; I could stop myself only by remembering that it must be irrational to follow the wishes of your enemies.”
Soros, a Democratic mega-donor, accused Republicans of discussing the terrorism issue as a broader war against Islam. Much of the GOP field, including Trump and Cruz, has chided President Barack Obama for not using the phrase “radical Islamic terrorism.”
Additionally, all of the Republican contenders have called on the US to temporarily halt its acceptance of Syrian refugees fleeing the civil war there. The Islamic State, also known as ISIS, has seized swathes of territory in Syria, and Republicans argue that the terrorists may be able to slip in among the refugees. Trump even warned that the refugees could be a “Trojan horse” capable of instigating “one of the greatest coups of all time.”
Soros suggested such statements stir anti-Western resentment among Muslims, which he said helps radicalize those living in the US and elsewhere.
“The hysterical anti-Muslim reaction to terrorism is generating fear and resentment among Muslims living in Europe and America,” he wrote. “The older generation reacts with fear, the younger one with resentment; the result is a breeding ground for potential terrorists. This is a mutually reinforcing, reflexive process.”
The high-profile investor concluded:
Of course, the outlook for Syria remains highly uncertain, and the conflict there cannot be understood or tackled in isolation. But one idea shines through crystal clear: it is an egregious mistake to do what the terrorists want us to do. That is why, as 2016 gets underway, we must reaffirm our commitment to the principles of open society and resist the siren song of the likes of Donald Trump and Ted Cruz, however hard that may be.
********************************
George Soros
It’s not easy to resist the threats and the hysteria that surround us, but we must do, as fear is the greatest danger to open society
Vigil in Paris after the Charlie Hebdo attacks of January 2014
People gather for a vigil in the Place de la Republique, Paris, after a terrorist attack on the offices of Charlie Hebdo in January 2015.
Monday 28 December 2015 08.27 EST Last modified on Tuesday 29 December 2015 04.47 EST
Open societies are always endangered. This is especially true of America and Europe today, as a result of the terrorist attacks in Paris and elsewhere, and the way that America and Europe, particularly France, have reacted to them.
Jihadi terrorist groups such as Islamic State and al-Qaida have discovered the achilles heel of our western societies: the fear of death. Through horrific attacks and macabre videos, the publicists of Isis magnify this fear, leading otherwise sensible people in hitherto open societies to abandon their reason.
Scientists have discovered that emotion is an essential component of human reasoning. That discovery explains why jihadi terrorism poses such a potent threat to our societies: the fear of death leads us and our leaders to think – and then behave – irrationally.
Science merely confirms what experience has long shown: when we are afraid for our lives, emotions take hold of our thoughts and actions, and we find it difficult to make rational judgments. Fear activates an older, more primitive part of the brain than that which formulates and sustains the abstract values and principles of open society.
More on this topic Terrorism needs your help. Do you really want to lend a hand?
The open society is thus always at risk from the threat posed by our response to fear. A generation that has inherited an open society from its parents will not understand what is required to maintain it until it has been tested and learns to keep fear from corrupting reason. Jihadi terrorism is only the latest example. The fear of nuclear war tested the last generation, and the fear of communism and fascism tested my generation.
The jihadi terrorists’ ultimate goal is to convince Muslim youth worldwide that there is no alternative to terrorism. And terrorist attacks are the way to achieve that goal, because the fear of death will awaken and magnify the latent anti-Muslim sentiments in Europe and America, inducing the non-Muslim population to treat all Muslims as potential attackers.
And that is exactly what is happening. The hysterical anti-Muslim reaction to terrorism is generating fear and resentment among Muslims living in Europe and America. The older generation reacts with fear, the younger one with resentment; the result is a breeding ground for potential terrorists. This is a mutually reinforcing, reflexive process.
The hysterical anti-Muslim reaction to terrorism is generating fear and resentment among Muslims in Europe and America
How can it be stopped and reversed? Abandoning the values and principles underlying open societies and giving in to an anti-Muslim impulse dictated by fear certainly is not the answer, though it may be difficult to resist the temptation. I experienced this personally when I watched the last Republican presidential debate; I could stop myself only by remembering that it must be irrational to follow the wishes of your enemies.
To remove the danger posed by jihadi terrorism, abstract arguments are not enough; we need a strategy for defeating it. The challenge is underscored by the fact that the jihadi phenomenon has been with us for more than a generation. Indeed, gaining a proper understanding of it may be impossible. But the attempt must be made.
Consider the Syrian conflict, which is the root cause of the migration problem that is posing an existential threat to the European Union as we know it. If it was resolved, the world would be in better shape. It is important to recognise that Isis is operating from a position of weakness. While it is spreading fear in the world, its hold on its home ground is weakening. The United Nations security council has unanimously adopted a resolution against it, and the leaders of Isis are aware that their days in Iraq and Syria are numbered.
Of course, the outlook for Syria remains highly uncertain, and the conflict there cannot be understood or tackled in isolation. But one idea shines through crystal clear: it is an egregious mistake to do what the terrorists want us to do. That is why, as 2016 gets underway, we must reaffirm our commitment to the principles of open society and resist the siren song of the likes of Donald Trump and Ted Cruz, however hard that may be.
So, in the end, this proves to the people in this country that George Soros, Hillary and Bill Clinton, and all of the Bush’s are in on this act of One World Order. It is time to slap them down and do what Trump tells us we must do: “TAKE OUR COUNTRY BACK” from the likes of these Socialists Muslims but in reality are no more than Nazis’. It is all about control of the people and making them into slaves of the government.
kommonsentsjane
Reblogged this on kommonsentsjane and commented:
Reblogged on kommonsentsjane/blogkommonsents.
We took our country back from the likes of Hillary Clinton and George Soros. Now lets roll.
kommonsentsjane
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