The purpose of the psy op is yet to be determined. The two possible purposes are complacency or awareness. Nobody ever said Q is not / was not a psy op. I know a lot of things I never knew before Q. Q has completely shifted my world view. So yeah, Q is a psy op.
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1840 is when the Whigs (a minority party) "joined" with the Democrats (bought the brand name Democrat) and together they became the majority party in the Senate. Remember this is when Senators were appointed by the Governors. Do the math.
The money behind the "union" of the parties was August Belmont, Rothschild financial representative for the United States.
Check out who August Belmont was married to...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/August_Belmont
Remember a while back I wrote about Adelicia and her cotton.
Follow the money all the way back to the Louisiana Purchase.
Not gonna be Jefferson's finest hour when we learn the details of the true history of the purchase.
I also spent a lot of time researching the Marshall Plan.
I got physically sick.
Gen K [JFK]
https://qagg.news/?q=%23%231433
u/v8power
Cui bono?
Louisiana Purchase...
Just sayin.
With $9 million to buy New Orleans, Monroe comes back with half of the American continent... though arguably a bargain, it put the US into significant debt to, you guessed it, a BRITISH bank.
Even Jefferson questioned whether the purchase was constitutional. But whatevs, GOD WILLS IT! No wonder JQA and some New England Federalists were pissed... spending a bunch of tax money to extend the political power of the southern (slave state) faction, while amassing a large debt to a bank in a country (Britain) which was still fighting with the French, thus pinning the US even tighter both sides while struggling to stay neutral.
And the icing on the cake... Lewis & Clark sent on a "exploratory expedition" that was billed as a "let's check out the cool animals and trees" adventure, when in reality it was more of a military scouting mission to see what potential obstacles might get in the way of America spreading all the way to the Pacific.
Funny how America fights a war with GB from 1812-1815, while still in debt to a British bank for the purchase of New Orleans, with payments scheduled until 1818, and the final major battle takes place AFTER the Treaty of Ghent at New Orleans....
"Jay's treaty, as first drawn, consented that no cotton should be exported from America. It changed the very history of the country when, in 1793, Eli Whitney invented the saw-gin, by which a slave could clean 1,000 pounds of cotton per day. Slavery at once ceased to be a passive, innocuous institution, promising soon to die out, and became a means of gain, to be upheld and extended in all possible ways."
Who introduced slavery into the colonies, where did they get them, from whom did they buy them.?
The answer to the first is not "The British."
Cui bono?
Into the eventual English colonies or into the various European colonies in "America"? If the latter, I think the answer you're looking for would be the Spanish and Portuguese.
There's also this interesting research:
https://rense.com/general81/d3ss.htm
I remember Egypt was using slaves long time before.