California Wildfires Linked to British Imperialism and Plans to Clear U.S. Treasuries through London
On July 22, 2021, U.S. Rep. Brad Sherman, who represents California's 32nd congressional district, sponsored the LIBOR Act as part of an effort to throw a financial lifeline to the bankrupt British government. In short, the world's greatest imperial power was struggling to pay its bills, sending panic throughout BlackRock, insurance and gas companies, hedge funds, and debt-based businesses like Tesla. The Brits needed assets, liquidity, and favorable lending terms and rates to combat insurmountable debt.
The City of London looked to the United States, its colony from which it has for centuries harvested assets, in order to shore up wealth and stabilize markets.
On March 15, 2022, President Joe Biden signed the Adjustable Interest Rate (LIBOR) Act into law.
As has already been reported on this Substack, utility companies had already identified trillions of dollars in untapped oil in California – areas that had years earlier been devastated by PG&E fires. Rothschild owns the utility companies.
A few years later, planning officials determined that Los Angeles would be transformed into a Smart City, implementing the City of London's technocratic agenda.
In 2022, Los Angeles elected a new mayor who appointed administrators whose decisions contributed to the most devastating wildfire in California history. As has been reported on this Substack, key administrators had longstanding financial and professional ties to the City of London.
The fires raged through Los Angeles, devastating Pacific Palisades and adjoining regions and coinciding with Donald Trump's second term.
Coincidentally, Sherman, the sponsor of the LIBOR bill, represented Malibu, the City of Los Angeles, and Pacific Palisades, which were devastated by the fires that cleared the area designated for Smart Cities, thanks to a devastating combination of neglect, incompetence, arson, and possible Directed Energy Weapons (DEWs).
Once the homes were wiped out, BlackRock and other developers descended upon the area to acquire the land for pennies on the dollar. Whether the fires were intentionally set or not, the sheer callousness of investors to exploit human suffering reflected a level of psychopathy and desperation that has come to typify the City of London whose decades-long financial predation is finally coming home to roost.`
Desperate for Cash
Among the investors to spot Britain's recent duplicity on Capitol Hill was hedge fund manager and market analyst Alex Krainer, who founded TrendsCompass.net and Krainer Analytics. Speaking on Commodity Culture, Krainer observed that Great Britain's economy was hanging on a precipice. Moreover, its central bankers were needing to print more money and acquire more favorable interest rates and loan terms to keep afloat.
"The UK is desperately strapped for cash," Krainer said. Great Britain was facing over £36 billion in unfunded spending programs. "They were counting on capital markets (to fund the British government), but it's not going well. There seems to be an attempt to corner the collateral of the exchange clearing houses to unwittingly fund the British government."
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