Obama's Dictator Dreams: America's Nightmare

Intelinet.org
February 8, 2012


By Servando Gonzalez
(02/08/12)
Does Obama want to become America’s dictator? It seems so. In his recent Disaster of the Disunion speech, which apparently was written by Bush’s speechwriter at the Council on Foreign relations, there is an obscure reference to more power for Obama.

According to Mr Soetoro,[1]
 
Some of what's broken has to do with the way Congress does its business these days. A simple majority is no longer enough to get anything -- even routine business -- passed through the Senate. (Applause.) Neither party has been blameless in these tactics. Now both parties should put an end to it. (Applause.) For starters, I ask the Senate to pass a simple rule that all judicial and public service nominations receive a simple up or down vote within 90 days. (Applause.)

The executive branch also needs to change. Too often, it's inefficient, outdated and remote. (Applause.) That's why I've asked this Congress to grant me the authority to consolidate the federal bureaucracy, so that our government is leaner, quicker, and more responsive to the needs of the American people. (Applause.)
Of course, this is not the first time that an American president has openly expressed his belief that America needs a dictator. CFR member George W. Bush said at least three times that he would like to become a dictator. In 1998, talking about what it was like to be the governor of Texas he said: “You don't get everything you want. A dictatorship would be a lot easier.” [2]

In 2000, Bush joked: “If this were a dictatorship, it would be a heck of a lot easier, just so long as I'm the dictator.”[3] But, a year later, Bush repeated, now very seriously, “A dictatorship would be a heck of a lot easier, there's no question about it.”[4]

Not surprisingly, some members of Congress are delighted with the idea. Last year, Republican Senator Mitch McConnell shamelessly proposed a drastic solution to the administration’s insistence that the country’s debt ceiling be raised against the wishes of many congressmen. According to McConnell, the power of the purse, an authority clearly invested in Congress according to the U.S. Constitution, should be handed over to the President.[5]

The idea, however, that the U.S. needs an Emperor, not a President, is much older.

A long time ago, the CFR conspirators realized that it would be much easier to buy or coerce a single corrupt politician (am I being redundant?), the President, than a whole bunch of them. Faithful to their infiltration techniques copied from the British Fabians, they rather prefer to hide in the shadows as the power behind the throne than to be in the limelight. But there was no throne in the U.S. Actually, it was closer to a set of musical chairs. By creating the concept of the division of powers, the Founding Fathers had erected an almost inviolable barrier to the conspirators’ dreams.

But the CFR conspirators are very resourceful people. So, faced with the barrier of the separation of powers, they circumvented it and created the concept of the “imperial presidency.”

Until the mid 1930s, U.S. Presidents had a small staff, most of them located at the President’s office in the U.S. Capitol. But this was changed dramatically as soon as the conspirators’ secret agent Franklin D. Roosevelt took office. Using the Great Depression and World War II as pretexts, Roosevelt’s Brain Trust of advisors, most of them CFR agents, implemented the New Deal and the creation in 1939 of the Executive Office of the President, a major step in the creation of the imperial presidency. Another major step was the implementation of the so called “executive orders,” an unconstitutional power grab by which the president, bypassing Congress and behind the backs of the American people, wrote veritable diktats, more akin to dictators than to democratically elected presidents of a constitutional Republic.

Initially, not all American presidents were members of the Council on Foreign Relations. These were the cases of Truman, Kennedy, Johnson and Reagan. But, like carthorses wearing blinders, the CFR managed to surround U.S. presidents with a dark curtain of disinformation in the form of a large group of its secret agents, most of them grouped in the National Security Council.

The National Security Council is a key element in understanding how the CFR conspirators control the U.S. government. CFR secret agents in the U.S. government pushed the creation of the National Security Council and the CIA in 1947, allegedly as a tool to avoid events like Pearl Harbor and to manage the military, intelligence, and foreign policy areas of the U.S. government.

But, soon after it was created, CFR agents in the National Security Council changed it into a tool to control the information reaching the eyes and ears of the Presidents, thus creating a smoke screen of disinformation around them. This guarantees that the policy decisions they take are the ones already made at the Harold Pratt House in Manhattan.

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