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Ox's Sh*t is a Rising Threat in the East

  • 12 May 2024

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Ox Shit is a Rising Threat in the East

The World Economic Forum (WEF), the gathering center of the global elite, has been an influential factor in shaping the rise of Russia's oligarchs and the country's future.

The WEF has played an important role in Russia's economic and political structure by promoting global cooperation and dialoguing with various industry leaders. However, the WEF is also known to have banned Russian President Putin from attending events in Davos due to his clear oppositional stance.

At the World Economic Forum in 1996, oligarchs who made huge fortunes during Russia's transition to a market economy represented a large part of the Russian delegation. These oligarchs met in private meetings to provide financial support for Boris Yeltsin's re-election and to work on strategies to shape the country's future. This group, led by Boris Berezovsky, played a key role in consolidating Yeltsin's electoral victory that year. They held regular strategy meetings with Anatoly Chubais, Yeltsin's top aide and the man behind Russia's privatization program.

When we talk about Boris Yeltsin's re-election, we cannot fail to mention the following development.

The real story began to unfold in Russia before the Russian oligarchs attended the 1996 WEF meeting...

Russian President Boris Yeltsin announced that 'radical reforms' will continue, ignoring citizens in bread lines. His deputy Rutskoy described these reforms as 'economic genocide'. Yeltsin would target the parliament with artillery fire to suppress dissent.

As a result of the economic collapse and the unemployment of millions of people, a political movement against Yeltsin was born. Two different factions emerged in parliament; Yeltsin's opponents submitted one motion after another to remove him from office. On September 21, 1993, Yeltsin appeared on television to announce that he had dissolved parliament and would rule the country with special powers until new elections. Yeltsin, a democrat praised by the United States, succumbed to opposition pressure and declared the parliament dissolved, and the next day the Russian parliament met anyway.

Parliament dismissed Yeltsin and appointed his deputy. Russia was on the brink of a dangerous political crisis. The streets of Moscow were flooded with tens of thousands of people. The squares echoed with anti-Yeltsin slogans and people defended parliament. On October 4, 1993, Yeltsin, backed by the army and security forces, opened artillery fire on the Russian parliament, known as the White House. World television broadcast this event live. US President Bill Clinton described Yeltsin's action as a defense of democracy and declared his support.

Privatization Looting

Yeltsin invaded Chechnya militarily in December 1994, a year after pressure from Parliament. He tried to create an autonomous republic under Moscow's control, but he was forced to back down in the face of Chechen resistance and was in a difficult domestic political situation.

In 1995, Russia's foreign debts, subordinated to the IMF, increased dramatically. In order both to pay off these debts and to win the support of Russia's newly rich business people in the 1996 presidential elections, Yeltsin launched a new wave of privatization. He sold shares in Russia's largest factories and enterprises at low prices to emerging Russian banks. The businessmen who acquired these shares, called 'oligarchs', mostly of Jewish origin, became owners of the national media and banks.

Yeltsin Wanted to Be President for a Second Time

The story of Boris Yeltsin's election as President of Russia for the second time marks a really interesting period. In 1995, Yeltsin, who had suffered two heart attacks and struggled with alcohol addiction, suffered an unexpectedly heavy defeat in the parliamentary elections on December 17, 1995. His 'Russia Our Fatherland Party' won only 12.2% of the vote, while the 'Communist Party of the Russian Federation' led by Gennady Zyuganov won 34.9%. These results created a general expectation that the presidential elections in June 1996 would be won by Communist leader Zyuganov. In February 1996, however, Yeltsin announced that he would run for another term as president and participate in the June elections.

Yeltsin had two strong rivals, Communist Party leader Genadi Zuganov and General Alexander Lebed. The polls taken after Yeltsin announced his candidacy were as follows;

  • Genadi Zuganov: 50-55
  • General Lebed....: 30-35
  • President Yeltsin.....: 2-8

Yeltsin had lost credibility with the public by leaving the economy in the hands of the IMF, by looting Russia's surface and underground resources under the pretext of privatization, and by leaving the population facing unemployment. His alcohol addiction, serious health problems and erratic behavior also contributed to his unpopularity.

Yeltsin's supporters were alarmed by the negative results in the opinion polls. In particular, the oligarchs, who made billions of dollars from privatizations, were in a panic. They urged Yeltsin to cancel the presidential elections and openly proposed: "No need for elections, run the country like a dictator! They were among the new democratic faces of Russia, supported and praised by the United States.

Yeltsin did not listen to the advice he was given.

The team for the election campaign was revamped, with Tatyana and Chubais, the man behind the privatization process, appointed as leaders. Chubais quickly put together a team of bankers and media moguls and got to work. The media moguls were to provide constant propaganda in favor of Yeltsin, while the bankers were to provide financial support for the campaign. In return, Chubais would transfer Russia's most valuable assets to these people under the guise of privatization.

The rule for presidential elections in Moscow was simple: The candidate who received more than 50% of the votes in the first round became president. If no one achieved this percentage in the first round, the candidate with the highest number of votes in the second round a month later was elected president.

The date of the Russian presidential election was announced as June 16, 1996.

The election campaign gained momentum. While the Russian media was broadcasting in favor of Yeltsin, the other candidates were not getting any television coverage. According to opinion polls, Yeltsin was far behind Zuganov and Lebed. Yeltsin's daughter Tatyana and her business partner Chubais, who were managing Yeltsin's campaign, had to urgently find a solution. And they found it.

They asked for US support through Russian businessmen of Jewish origin who made huge profits during the privatization. Obviously, they were hoping that the Americans would come and help them win the election!

The American administration announced that it had sent three experienced political advisors to Moscow, George Gorton, Dick Dresner and Joe Shumate. These three American advisors quickly arrived in Moscow and set to work to support the campaign. They were experts in managing election campaigns and, in American parlance, they were skilled enough to sell the "ox's ass for gold". They would present Yeltsini to the Russian people as a 'uniquely democratic leader'.

The first recommendations of the three American experts were as follows:

The media would constantly spread false news, mud and slander against Yeltsin's opponents! Yeltsin's team opposed this tactic: no lies, no slander, honesty at the forefront. But the American response was clear: If you want to win the election, you will follow the strategy we have proposed; honesty does not win elections!

Three American political advisors presented Yeltsin with their second proposal: Yeltsin would mingle with the people, hug and kiss them, attend entertainment programs for young people, sing and dance with them; in short, he would present a 'very loving and cute' image. The Russians did not like this proposal either. They preferred Yeltsin's natural behavior and did not want him to play a contrived role. But the American advisors were insistent, arguing that it was impossible to win elections without acting and persuading the public.

Yeltsin's election campaign was almost at an impasse when Russia's privatization profiteering oligarchs and media moguls, who had a stake in bringing the three American experts from the United States, intervened. After intense discussions, the recommendations of the three American expert advisors were accepted. These three Americans were now pulling the strings in Yeltsin's election campaign.

In the first phase of the election, three American experts, capable of 'passing off ox dung as gold', were planning where Yeltsin would speak and who he would meet, while at the same time coming up with slogans for the media.

The Russian media spread baseless rumors and slander against Yeltsin's rivals, confusing even the most rational minds. Yeltsin's rivals, Zyuganov and Lebed, were bewildered by this smear campaign and could hardly find a television channel or a newspaper to defend them and make their voices heard.

In the presidential elections held on June 16, 1996, the turnout was 70% and the results were as follows: Yeltsin 35%, Zuganov 32%, Lebed 14.5%. Although no one was elected president in the first round, for Yeltsin it was a great victory. A few months earlier, his public support had been only 5%, and now, as if by magic, it had risen to 35%! While Yeltsin's campaign team was overjoyed, three American advisors were more cautious, saying that the real struggle had just begun.

Second Phase of the Election

The three American experts quickly set about their task. They were halfway there, but now they had to make the crucial move. They quickly presented Yeltsin with a strategy: Make Lebed, who received 14.5% of the votes in the first round, an offer he could not refuse and prevent him from participating in the second round!

Two days after the first round of the election, on June 18, 1996, President Yeltsin followed the recommendation of American experts and appointed Lebed as 'Secretary of the Security Council of the Russian Federation' and 'National Security Advisor to the President'. Lebed accepted this prestigious post with great satisfaction and announced his withdrawal in favor of Yeltsin in the second round of the presidential elections.

With Lebed out of the race, the field was open for Yeltsin and Zuganov. The three American advisors quickly launched the campaign against Zuganov. The media supported this campaign by constantly repeating certain slogans day in and day out.

  • "A vote for Zuganov will put the Communists back in power!"
  • "Electing Zugonov means resurrecting the dictator Stalin!"
  • "A vote for Zuganov will mean the end of democracy, the end of freedom!"
  • "If Zuganov, a communist, is elected, there will be civil war in Russia!"
  • "If you want to own property, property, jobs, vote for the democrat Yeltsin!"
  • "Vote for President Yeltsin, respected by the US and Europe!"

While the media continued its one-sided propaganda, millions of dollars from the privatization pool of Russian businessmen were transferred to regions and groups identified by three American experts. At the same time, the IMF announced a $10 billion loan to Russia. Yeltsin's campaign team was overjoyed.

Three American experts proposed to Yeltsin to pay pensions and workers' back wages. These payments were quickly made. Television channels repeatedly showed citizens hugging Yeltsin and tearfully thanking him after receiving their pensions and wages.

A week before the second round of the election, Yeltsin suffered another heart attack. On the advice of three American experts, the media announced that Yeltsin had the flu due to extreme fatigue. No one was allowed to get close to Yeltsin, he was not photographed, his image was not published. After this situation was skillfully managed, the second round of the presidential election was held on July 3, 1996. With a turnout of 69 percent, the two candidates received the following percentages of votes:

Yeltsin (53.8%), Zuganov (40.3%).

Three American experts, backed by the media and the privatization profiteering oligarchs, managed to sell the Russian people the shit of an ox as gold. Boris Yeltsin was elected for a second term as president of Russia. After Yeltsin's second term as president, Russia borrowed $40 billion from the IMF, but instead of going into the state treasury, the money went into the US and European bank accounts of Yeltsin's daughter Tatyana and the privatization profiteering oligarchs who supported Yeltsin.

This true story inspired the 2002 American movie 'Spinning Boris'. It can be translated into Turkish as 'Boris Yeltsin's Presentation to the Russian People'.

Davos is a city in Switzerland that has long served as a center for protecting and expanding the interests of the global elite. The World Economic Forum's top governing body is packed with representatives from the world of finance and global financial management. Board members from major banks and think tanks, including Mukesh Ambani, Herman Gref, Ernesto Zedillo and Mark Carney. Christine Lagarde, President of the European Central Bank, has a strong track record of attending Bilderberg meetings, having served as French finance minister and IMF president.

Such deceptions continue to be staged not only in Russia but also around the world.
An analysis of the staff of the World Economic Forum reveals that the WEF is also behind such deceptions.

This article addresses critical issues that every individual who values human dignity and freedom should be aware of, while also addressing the "invincibility" of the global elites and their collaborators scattered around the world.but rather to expose the fact that they will never achieve their goals against humanity, such as the " Great Reset", unless humanity allows them to do so.

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