Devolution - Part 16 - To Xi or Not To Xi?
💊 RED PILL 💊
The day before the November 3rd election, the Trump administration dropped a compilation of speeches specifically about the CCP and the threat they pose to our sovereignty. The timing of that can't be ignored.
The eye-opening part is the timeline of moves that were made from November 3rd, 2020 - January 20th, 2021. There is simply too much circumstantial evidence to ignore.
Trump went to war with the CCP.
Devolution is real.
It's quite obvious that Xi has been following Trumps lead recently. He promotes nationalism, tradition (including traditional gender roles) and an aversion to wokeness and degeneracy. There's a reason why Soros called Xi "the most dangerous enemy".
On the other hand, Taiwan is a liberal DS-aligned regime. It needs to go.
Xi also took a bunch of (((money))) and ran with it hahahaha.
Xi out-jooed the cabal lololol.
Yep. China played their game until they built their economy to the point where they could stand independent of (((international finance))). Now they sent their own terms. That has set the banker tribe into a panic (up to this point they assumed China would have to bend the knee to global finance because otherwise their economy would be destroyed), which is why they've ramped up the anti-China rhetoric in their media apparatus in recent years. I guess we'll have to see how it goes. They're having a nationalist renaissance right now, and they have insulated themselves from the degeneracy of the West as well as humanly possible, so I'm cautiously optimistic.
Thing about the KM, there is no getting out. China will have to fight them to be independent and stay Chinese or they will punish China.
So why does Pompeo say China is number 1 enemy?
CCP, "China" is different than China. My take on it.
You could ask the same question about Trump. I think there are many reasons. Perhaps the simplest reason could be political: American voters do not like China because the Chinese are now running the factories the Americans used to run a few decades ago, even though that's more the fault of American politicians than the Chinese obviously. Another one is because they align themselves strongly with the Israel/banker lobby, so naturally a country that challenges them is against the interests of their supporters and donors.
Finally, keep in mind that even the nationalist, traditional-minded China that is rising would not be necessarily aligned with the US interests. They would be competing empires, and while that doesn't necessarily mean hostility, it does imply some competition. I think that when and if the US manages to escape the grasp of the (((globalist cabal))) (which might take more time, the US is basically home turf for the cabal) the relationship between America and China will shift away from outward hostility and towards productive competition.
Got sources