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Government Private

Is the Council of Foreign Relations a US Government agency or is it private people with government members?
Or is it the other way around - a government agency with private members?
I'm confused about that. I see CFR mentioned in this board from time to time. I think it is private but am not sure because I read conflicting information and CFR web page "About" doesn't make that clear either.
Can someone please clarify this for me with certainty so I can make sense of the posts I'm reading about it.
Private although many people are MISLED to believe it is part of the government because the name is mis-leading.
CFR ultimate objective: global economy and global government.
That ultimately means end to American sovereignty and freedom as we know it.
CFR pushes North American Union and that is happening far faster (and QUIETLY) than people realize.
CFR controls the media. CFR and the elites behind it effectively pre-set the outcome of presidential elections.
Clinton, Obama and McCain are all either members of or affiliated with CFR. Ron Paul is the only standing candidate who is not.
For more reading, see:
"CFR Council Of Foreign Relations How They Control The Media"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tcgd67Sxvzo
"Zeitgeist, New World Order Agenda Real ID Media NAU CFR RFID"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1YHawc2N7D4
Search Google for "CFR Bilderberg" if you want to find some very interesting reading (and if you support Obama, watch for the name of Obama's foreign policy advisor, Zbigniew Brzezinski, to show up on those hits).
EDIT (addition): If you want to collect some "search words" to do your own research, I recommend first watching Alex Jones' "EndGame".
Google (full documentary (2 hrs)
or you can get it from You Tube (14 parts)
Link to part 1:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kkLNiv6EP-I
Sadly, the masses seem to believe this is all conspiracy theory. Hopefully the masses wake up while they still have the FREEDOM to stop it.
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![]() | Way Too Big to Fail: How Government and Private Industry Can Build a Fail-Safe M | ![]() | ![]() | US $25.45 | 28d 23h 58m |
![]() | Symbiosis of Government and Market: The Private, the Pu | ![]() | ![]() | US $245.02 | 26d 6h 34m |
![]() | Reshaping New Spain: Government and Private Interests i | ![]() | ![]() | US $87.30 | 25d 7h 50m |
![]() | State and Local Government and Public/Private Partnersh | ![]() | ![]() | US $195.44 | 25d 5h 6m |
![]() | Internal Controls: Guidance for Private, Government, an | ![]() | ![]() | US $121.14 | 24d 6h 44m |
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![]() | Public and Private Government NEW by Charles Edward Mer | ![]() | ![]() | US $38.40 | 23d 30m |
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![]() | Private Pensions NEW by Government Accountability Offic | ![]() | ![]() | US $51.84 | 20d 23h 1m |
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| | Public and Private Government $25.79 No Synopsis Available |
| | Private Neighborhoods And the Transformation of Local Government $31.69 No Synopsis Available |
| | Government and Private Sector in Contemporary Mexico $12.19 No Synopsis Available |
| | Government RiskBearing $183.21 The federal government wields substantial influence over resource allocation in the economy through its provision of credit and riskbearing services to the private economy. As the federal government has expanded its presence in the U.S. economy during this century, it has increasingly developed programs aimed at bearing risks that the private sector either would not accept at any price, or would take on but at a price thought to be so great that most potential beneficiaries would not purchase the coverage. In addition to the allocative effects these federal credit and riskbearing programs impose on the economy, they also expose taxpayers to losses when program revenues do not cover costs. A recent example of this problem is the federal governments payments to depositors at a large number of insolvent financial institutions.Government RiskBearing is based on a Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland conference and deals with the concept and performance of the Federal government as a riskbearing enterprise. The authors in this volume primarily experts on insurance products in which the federal government has some involvement consider the rationale for a federal presence in these markets and discuss the resulting effects on market performance and taxpayer exposure. This volume provides better understanding of the government as a risk manager and will assist public discussion about the appropriate role for government in the provision and administration of deposit insurance. Author: Sniderman, Mark S./ Sniderman, Mark S. Binding Type: Hardcover Number of Pages: 204 Publication Date: 1993/01/31 Language: English Dimensions: 9.21 x 6.14 x 0.56 inches |
| | Privatopia : Homeowner Associations and the Rise of Residential Private Government $22.93 No Synopsis Available |
| | Should the Federal Government Bail Out Private Industry? $22.78 No Synopsis Available |
| | Symbiosis of Government and Market : The Private, the Public and Bureaucracy $196.75 No Synopsis Available |
| | Public-private partnerships, government guarantees, and fiscal Risk $24.38 No Synopsis Available |
| | Labour Government and Private Industry : The Experience of the 1945-51 Governments $79.95 No Synopsis Available |
| | Internal Controls: Guidance for Private, Government, and Nonprofit Entities $97.45 No Synopsis Available |
| | Private Education in Modern China $186.07 Drawing on an abundance of primary sources as well as on the authors extensive personal experience in the Chinese school system, this book examines the evolution of nongovernmental schools in China between 1895 and 1995. The author begins with an overview of private education in premodern China, and discusses the growth of modern private schools in the past century as part of the Chinese peoples struggle for national survival. He argues that even though the government since the Late Qing period has placed a premium on education, the government never had enough resources, and private schools filled the gap. The author maintains that the disappearance of private schools in China in the 1950s was a casualty of the Chinese revolution. In the postMao era, private schools reemerged when the nation underwent some very fundamental social and economic transformations. Being part of Chinas burgeoning market economy, private education has not been immune to various problems. Nevertheless, the author argues that it is private education in the 1950s that has spearheaded Chinas educational reform. Author: Deng, Peng Binding Type: Hardcover Number of Pages: 200 Publication Date: 1997/09/23 Language: English Dimensions: 9.59 x 6.35 x 0.82 inches |
| | Private Police in the United States $84.44 High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles Private police in the United States are law enforcement bodies that are owned and/or controlled by nongovernmental entities. There is a strong overlap between the work of police and private security, given that they share some of the same goals, perform some of the same activities, and cooperate with one another, and often the same individuals work in both fields simultaneously, with police moonlighting as security guards. The overlap is even more pronounced when the police are private. Thus, it can be hard to draw a line between what is a private policeman and what is a private security officer. Private investigation is extensively used to investigate workplace crime. Perhaps the easiest distinction to draw between public and private police is by sponsorship (i.e. by government or by private entities). Author: Surhone, Lambert M./ Tennoe, Mariam T./ Henssonow, Susan F. Binding Type: Paperback Number of Pages: 108 Publication Date: 2010/11/18 Language: English Dimensions: 6.00 x 9.02 x 0.26 inches |
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Private Government - Metallico tis Evdokias
Is Government ownership of private businesses a good thing?
Assuming that intentions are good, can anyone think of example where a government began to control more and more of the private sector and it ended for the good of the private citizens?
No. Russia collapsed. Many Cubans died trying to reach the US. There seems to be a lot of political unrest in Venezuela. Communism leads to corruption and the suffering of the masses.
The trouble with Communism is that it is only concerned with survival, the most basic instinct of any living thing. Human beings grow beyond the level of survival. The pyramid of life motivation kicks in and people become very discontent at only the hope of survival. A survival that is equal in nothingness. If this weren't the case, we would be on the same level as a fish or a bird. The trouble is today there are many who believe that human beings should be on the same level as fish and birds.














