hmmm. More European underwater cables cut. Gregg Phillips responds, "God bless freedom." ( Does that mean white hats or black hats did it?)
(media.greatawakening.win)
❄️ EURO-C-C-C-CUCKS❄️
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Here are a few articles that speak about the “pay for play” between Ericsson and Clinton during the 2016 campaign.
https://sputniknews.com/20160901/ericsson-payment-clinton-1044864339.html
The Obama administration excluded the telecom giant Ericsson from sanctions against Iran after Ericsson paid former US President Bill Clinton $750,000 for a speech, Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump told supporters at a campaign rally in Wilmington, Ohio on Thursday.
https://www.cnn.com/2012/07/03/politics/clinton-speaking-fees
Clinton delivered 54 paid speeches in 2011, roughly the same as his 2010 workload, but the marked increase in income can be credited to six overseas events that earned him the largest single paydays of his career.
The most lucrative was a November speech in Hong Kong to Swedish-based telecom giant Ericsson – $750,000.
https://www.rcrwireless.com/20160824/network-infrastructure/trump-accuses-ericsson-of-paying-clintons-for-protection-in-iran-tag4
Donald Trump this week said Ericsson paid former President Bill Clinton a speaking fee as part of an effort to protect its business in Iran from U.S. State Department sanctions. The situation Trump referenced has been in the news before, and, as before, Ericsson denied the accusations. Ericsson did pay Bill Clinton $750,000 to speak in November 2011, at Ericsson’s first Networked Society Forum event in Hong Kong. The Swedish company said it considered many potential speakers and ultimately chose Clinton because it wanted a speaker who could attract “relevant key executives at our customers as well as representatives from academia, government and the industry.” At a Monday rally in Ohio, Trump said Ericsson hired Bill Clinton to speak just a few months after “Hillary Clinton’s State Department began adding goods and services to a list that might be covered under expanded sanctions on Iran and other state sponsors of terrorism.” Trump noted that although Ericsson had previously been “under U.S. pressure for selling telecom equipment to several oppressive governments,” its equipment was not listed when sanctions were ultimately imposed in 2012.