|
"That is too, why it won't fly!" I interjected.
The man next to Fred promised that it will fly. He said that once the planned bio-weapons are unleashed, and the biological 'emergency management process,' whatever it will be called, is put under the synarchist U.N. mandate and is supported by U.N. research, meaning lies, and U.N. enforcement agencies as stooges of empire are given special powers and specialized equipment to do the killing, no nation on earth will have the power to stop the process to protect its people. He said it will be too late by then; empire has to be stopped now!
"The project that the masters of empire dream about will never fly," I protested again. "Killing livestock to prevent a pandemic is one thing, but killing people in response to artificially created pandemics is a totally different ball of wax. This will never get off the ground."
The man just laughed. "Who will prevent it?"
"No one will carry out this kind of mass killing of people!" I countered him. "It doesn't need to be prevented. Nobody will do it. That's why it won't happen."
The man just kept on laughing. "What do you mean by mass killing? The most intensive mass killing has already been done. Remember Hiroshima! It was repeated three days later. We have already made the preparations to repeat it 65,000 times more. The whole world is committed to this insanity. There may be a few individuals who will not participate, and those are few and far between. This needs to be prevented by setting up a higher platform, a world free of empire."
"Now you are dreaming. This won't happen," I countered.
"Why then did Nagasaki happen three days after Hiroshima? A quarter million people were killed. Now we have a hundred submarines plying the oceans with enough missiles to kill a thousand more cities," said the man, "and more are being build as we speak.
"Hiroshima and Nagasaki were exceptions," I countered the man. "The few people who did this genocide probably volunteered for the job. They were probably profiled for absolute and unreserved 'obedience' to whom a suggestion was a command."
"Oh?" said the man. "What about Dresden, then? Half a million people were sacrificed in the biggest single massacre ever. A thousand heavy bombers were deployed that dropped three-quarter of a million firebombs onto a sleeping city. It was an orgy of killing that was repeated and repeated and repeated for 14 hours; an orgy of insanity that renders the term, genocide, too weak an expression to describe it. Thousands of airmen lend their hand to it. What they did was worse than genocide. But it was done. No one refused, as far as I know. They all participated. They even bombed the already burning city. In fact they did it twice and even machine-gunned the survivors that had fled to the river. Where were those who wouldn't do this? They certainly weren't on those planes. And that my friend, is history. There must have been 5000 airmen involved in this massacre that didn't even serve a military objective. It served a political objective, to impress Stalin. The killers of that day were all run-of-the-mill folks. They served their machine. They did their duty. Every one of them did. And it was a massacre. You can't call it anything else when you deliberately burn a large city to the ground that had no military value and was overflowing with refugees fleeing the war. They burned them alive with firestorms hotter than a steel furnace. The smoke plume could be seen hundreds of miles away, as far away as London. Roasting out entire cities became almost a routine thing in those days. The concept of humanity had lost its meaning. Japan had been devastated by a whole string of those massacres. Millions have been killed in the firestorms that our airmen set off in Japan. So don't tell me that the mass-killing of human beings is not possible, because no one will do it. It has already been done and not just once. We've crossed this line so many times already."
Next Page
|| - page index -
|| - chapter index -
|| - Exit -
||
|