Karen Hudes - World Bank attorney Karen Hudes says she is one of a group of global whistleblowers. Hudes contends, "We're running out of time. It's time to tell these thugs and crooks that they're fired." Hudes goes on to say, "We don't have to wait for anybody to fire the Fed or Bank for International Settlements . . . some states have already started to recognize silver and gold, the precious metals, as currency . . . there are other alternatives like Bitcoin . . . We, the consumer, can choose which currency to use, and that's what we're going to do in very short order." What's really going on in Syria? Hudes, who was Senior Counsel and worked at the World Bank for 20 years, charges, "Qatar, who has all this natural gas, wanted to run a natural gas pipeline through Syria to reach the European market. Who's supplying the European market with gas? Russia. . . . All this business about dead babies and sarin gas is just all to keep us confused." Hudes says this is not a fight about money but survival of the planet. "We're dealing with whether we can continue as humanity and have an earth or whether we blow ourselves up. . . . whether we love each other enough to save the world, or we all go to hell in a hand basket," says Hudes.
Former senior legal counsel at the World Bank turned whistleblower Karen Hudes talks about the corruption inside the World Bank and her personal saga to find out about it. She says a worldwide currency war is certain and NATO in jeopardy, if the wrongdoing isn't finally addressed.
Former senior legal counsel at the World Bank turned whistleblower Karen Hudes talks about the corruption inside the World Bank and her personal saga to find out about it. She says a worldwide currency war is certain and NATO in jeopardy, if the wrongdoing isn't finally addressed.
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PART 1
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PART 2
In 2007 Karen warned the U.S. Treasury Department and the U.S. Congress that the US would lose its right to appoint the President of the World Bank if the current American President of the World Bank did not play by the rules. The 66 year old Gentlemen’s Agreement that Europe would appoint the Managing Director of the IMF and US would appoint the World Bank President ended in 2010
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American Whistleblowers in Prison and in Exile
08/01/2013 by Bea Edwards
Now that the verdict is in for Bradley Manning, Edward Snowden has been awarded asylum in Russia. The Manning conviction on six counts of espionage showed clearly that Snowden has a well-founded fear of persecution in the United States. Although he would be tried in a civilian rather than a military court, he could be incarcerated for decades for releasing classified information, even if the information should never have been classified in the first place.
The material released by Snowden exposed the fact that our national security agencies are spying on us, in violation of our constitutional rights under the First, Fourth and Fifth Amendments - our rights to freedom of speech, freedom of association and freedom from unreasonable search and seizure. Before Snowden blew the whistle on the US intelligence apparatus, we didn't know this, and for his actions, Snowden is now an enemy of the state.
What does this say about the United States government? What does it mean that a US whistleblower must seek asylum abroad because he exposed official lies and surveillance?
The United States used to be a country where people sought asylum from persecution.
READ MORE: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/bea-edwards/american-whistleblowers-i_b_3690311.html
08/01/2013 by Bea Edwards
Now that the verdict is in for Bradley Manning, Edward Snowden has been awarded asylum in Russia. The Manning conviction on six counts of espionage showed clearly that Snowden has a well-founded fear of persecution in the United States. Although he would be tried in a civilian rather than a military court, he could be incarcerated for decades for releasing classified information, even if the information should never have been classified in the first place.
The material released by Snowden exposed the fact that our national security agencies are spying on us, in violation of our constitutional rights under the First, Fourth and Fifth Amendments - our rights to freedom of speech, freedom of association and freedom from unreasonable search and seizure. Before Snowden blew the whistle on the US intelligence apparatus, we didn't know this, and for his actions, Snowden is now an enemy of the state.
What does this say about the United States government? What does it mean that a US whistleblower must seek asylum abroad because he exposed official lies and surveillance?
The United States used to be a country where people sought asylum from persecution.
READ MORE: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/bea-edwards/american-whistleblowers-i_b_3690311.html