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Code by Fab (12/October/2008) The Plan is an injustice against them. - Paulson panicked them. This
third one was also found by running a separate search for "Paulson"
and "Plan". Both terms were extendable to "the Plan is an injustice
(or burden) against (or on) them" and "Paulson panicked
(or hurried) them". An
update of one of the "Paulson Plan" codes: http://exodus2006.com/Fab3/Paulson3.htm.
I noticed the following, and interesting, verse right on top of the
main term "the Plan is an injustice (burden) against them": Speaking on Tulsa Oklahomas 1170 KFAQ, when asked who was behind threats of martial law and civil unrest if the Bailout Bill failed, Senator James Inhofe named Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson as the source...
http://eyeblast.tv/public/video.aspx?v=e4qG2G6UkU
"...Somebody in D.C. was feeding you guys quite a story prior to the bailout, a story that if we didn't do this we were going to see something on the scale of the depression, there were people talking about martial law being instituted, civil unrest. Who was feeding you guys this stuff?, asked host Pat Campbell. That's
Henry Paulson... responded Inhofe, we had a conference call early on,
it was on a Friday I think a week and half before the vote on Oct. 1.
So it would have been the middle what was it the 19th of September,
we had a conference call. In this conference call and I guess there
is no reason for me not to repeat what he said, but he said he painted
this picture you just described..." On October 2, Democratic Congressman Brad Sherman gave a stunning speech on the House floor during which he decried the fact that, Many of us were told in private conversations that if we voted against this bill on Monday that the sky would fall, the market would drop two or three thousand points the first day, another couple of thousand the second day, and a few members were even told that there would be martial law in America if we voted no. http://fr.youtube.com/watch?v=DgkwcMOuu5w
He
later retracted some of his comments: I also
want to stress that I have no reason to think that any of the leaders
in Congress who were involved in negotiating with the Bush Administration
regarding the Bailout Bill ever mentioned the possibility of martial
law -- again, that was just an example of extreme and deliberately hyperbolic
comments being passed around by members not directly involved in the
negotiations..." |
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