Chris, you would be happy in Oklahoma.   Because of your post I just read
the Soros material on death and dying.  I had no problem with anything that
I read.   I work with families who are going through death and I saw nothing
that remotely resembled your hyperbole.    As for the drugs.   Do you drink
alcohol?    Oklahoma  strictly regulates alcohol.   No purchase of alcohol
by the drink.   If you go to a restaurant you have to purchase your wine or
beer at a package store and bring your drinks with you.   They say that
Alcohol in the state is the doorway to the Hard stuff.   They have a lot of
illegal Meth labs and the health care is terrible.   

Personally I don't use drugs either hard or alcohol, grass etc..   The Art
takes me anywhere I need to go.  Also I won't use anything that has been
used by the oppressor groups to manipulate and control my own people.   I'm
glad you brought Soros up.   I looked it up and I have a lot more trouble
with people who effect me and my family much more directly than this old
Hussar.   He kind of reminds me of Edward Teller.   Now that was a man you
could talk about.  It seems to me you ought to come over to NYCity with
Keith on the QMII and let's all go out to dinner at the Café Luxemburg
downstairs in my building.   We could have a good time and see each other
rather than the inferences from writing.   Just be sure you don't do what
Mike Hollinshead did and come to NYCity when my wife and I both had the
Swine Flu.   That's was a drag.   We spent all the time talking on the
phone.   

REH

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Christoph Reuss
Sent: Tuesday, July 13, 2010 6:31 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Futurework] FW: Tremble, Banks, Tremble

Lawry wrote:
> I talked with Soros once. He deplored the system that allowed him to make
> a killing through opportunistic currency trading that amounted to
artificial
> attacks on vulnerable currencies and people. And then he said that a
> regulatory regime was essential if the harm caused by these attacks was to
> be stopped. And then he further added that until such a regime were was
put
> in place, which would apply to him as well as everyone else who was
engaged
> in these practices, he would have to continue to exercise his trading
> practices. I do believe that there was a part of him that regretted this
> situation, though not enough to voluntarily and alone stop the practice.

The concept of regret on the part of Soros doesn't make sense -- if he'd
regret it, he would stop his practice.  After all, unlike nearly 100% of
the people, he is not obliged to continue making money for a living,
because he already has accumulated more than enough.

This wasn't regret (crocodile tears come to mind) -- it was simply an
attempt
to shift the blame from himself to the "regulatory regime".  Exactly the
same excuse that Gurstein used today, to defend predators:  Not the fox
is to blame that the hens are dead, but the farmer is to blame because he
left a hole in the henhouse fence unfixed.  This glamorizes the fox as
clever/smart while painting the farmer as incompetent/stupid.  Would you
expect such a painting from those who hold public office and emphasize
that the state is good?  Or are they in fact allies of the fox?

As the New Statesman quoted Soros in 2003:

| Asked about the havoc his currency speculation caused to Far Eastern
| economies in the crash of 1997, Soros replied: "As a market participant,
| I don't need to be concerned with the consequences of my actions."
| Strange words from a man who likes to be regarded as the saviour of
| civil society and who rails in print against "market fundamentalism".


> Enough though to prompt him to engage in philanthropic initiatives such
> as the Open Society.

When you take a closer look, this so-called philanthropy is a veiled way
of maximizing his RoI and/or implementing his sinister personal agenda.
For example, by the OSI's role in the East, in order to plunder it.
Or euthanasia programs like "Death in America" and the drug-pushing
campaigns.
Considering how much money Soros puts into pushing for the legalization of
marijuana, which is a gateway drug to harder illegal drugs, one may wonder
what stake Soros has in the market of hard illegal drugs...

Chris




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