Theresa May Was Always a Puppet

THERESA MAY


It is no secret that bankers want
to run the entire planet, but few people realise how very close they are to succeeding. To the outside world, the Brexit fiasco is a mess beyond understanding. But here in Eurocage UK, we can see exactly how the banks have almost total control of the situation, thanks to their careful use of high-profile fake politicians. Two in particular catch the eye and we'll start in Downing Street with the most visible Bank of England stooge, the ex-Prime Minister Theresa May.

Theresa May has had only had two jobs in the real world.
In 1977 she left Oxford University and was immediately recruited by the Bank of England. You would imagine that most people would need a little bit more than a geography degree to get that kind of gig as a first job, but Theresa was clearly something special. The Bank of England kept her for 8 years, and must have taught her a thing or two, because by 1985 she had become a Senior Adviser in International Affairs for the UKPA.
The UKPA runs an international banking system that verifies billions of pounds in payments that go in and out of Britain every month. The trainee Prime Minister remained in that job for the next twelve years.
And that's it. That is Theresa May's entire working career. The Bank of England and a huge international banking system. Now you would think those kind of high-pressure jobs would keep you fully occupied, but during her last five years with the UKPA, Theresa May's employers were happy to pay her a whopping salary even although she was very busy indeed trying to get herself elected to Parliament. Sadly, the voters in both South Durham and Barking rejected candidate May in consecutive elections. However, in 1997 a brand new constituency was created, which just happened to include the borough of Windsor and Maidenhead, where house prices are higher than anywhere else in Britain outside of London.

Although the Tory party was certain to be annihilated in the 1997 General Election, Theresa May was chosen to stand in Maidenhead -now one of the safest Conservative seats imaginable. This was quite an honour, considering she had never been elected before. But people in high places had big plans for Theresa. Not surprisingly, she won the seat, at which point her bosses at the UKPA waved her goodbye and she left the banking industry for Westminster, where she remained - in both senses of the word - until May 2019. Theresa May, we can see, is no ordinary MP or PM. She was (s)elected in a custom made constituency, and came to Parliament straight from the very heart of the international banking industry, which was all she had ever known.

This might sound like an unusual career path – geography graduate goes to Bank of England, becomes international banking consultant, becomes MP, becomes Prime Minister. Because in the first two jobs, you go from big money to very big money and then sharply downhill to – well, a British MP earns less than the average second division football player.


SAJID JAVID


But a remarkable amount of modern politicians have a very similar profile. Take the current Home Secretary, Sajid Javid. The media invariably describe him as a "bus driver's son". Uh-huh. Well, in 1991 aged 22, Sajid Javid graduated from Exeter University with a degree in economics and politics. Clearly this degree was the platinum-plated kind, kind of like Theresa May's geography diploma, because the ink was barely dry when Sajid was snapped up by the Chase Manhattan Bank in New York City.

Being the son of a Pakistani immigrant, Sajid Javid is constantly declaring his love for the British Isles. However, his loyalty to Britain did not prevent him rushing out of the UK the moment Wall Street came calling. Sajid was launched by his new friends on an extremely lucrative career in management, mainly in South American countries, where the banks are famously corrupt and frequently criminal.

Despite his age and total lack of experience, the young Sajid emerged from the financial sewer of South America covered in glory. At the grand old age of 25, 'the bus driver's son' was promoted to become a vice president of the Chase Manhattan Bank. Javid returned to London in 1997, and within three years had bagged a brand new wonder-job as a director at the Deutschebank -not bad going for a 31 year old. And he wasn't stopping there. By the age of 35, the German banking giant decided that a British Pakistani who had mainly worked for Americans was just the chap to be a Deutschebank managing director.
 In 2007 they sent him to Asia, and put him in charge of credit trading, commodities, and private equity trading – you know, the "dodgy broker" stuff – the exact kind of crooked dealing that bankrupted the American economy the very next year, in 2008.

By 2009 Sajid Javid was earning around £3,000,000 a year as far as we know, although it's anybody's guess what he's really worth. It would be a strange international banker who didn't have a few million stashed away somewhere like Buenos Aires. Allegedly.
In any case, at this point in his meteoric career, something truly remarkable happened. Sajid Javid gave up banking. He had made millions for himself, billions for his chums at Chase Manhattan and gazillions for the central bank of Germany.
But suddenly, enough was enough. Perhaps Sajid was overcome by the sheer enormity of his own success. Perhaps God spoke to him in the night, muttering about the eye of a needle or something. Either way, one of the most brilliant banking brains of this or any other century (allegedly) jacked in his modest 3 million a year salary and decided he would rather be the MP for Bromsgrove, in Worcestershire. Sajid Javid came back to Blighty.

Remember, his dad -the bus driver- had come to Britain as a poor immigrant with only a handful of rupees (allegedly), but somehow Sajid had risen like a rocket into the financial stratosphere. And now, after almost 20 years of enriching himself, and two major foreign banks, Sajid had seen the light – what he really wanted was to do something for dear old Britain.
Uh-huh.
For one reason or another, it was time for Sajid Javid to become a politician, and the necessary arrangements were made. Quick as you like, the Tory party threw out a low-level MP for the crime of fiddling her expenses and put Sajid Javid into her very safe seat. He was of course elected, and before you could blink the bus-driver's son was shooting up the ranks just like he did in Wall Street and Berlin.

What has all this to do with Brexit?

Fast forward to 2018 : Theresa May, a classic banker's puppet, became Prime Minister after the David Cameron referendum disaster. Her job -her real job- was to prevent Brexit from happening at all costs. It's no secret the Bank of England, longs to prevent Brexit.
On orders from above -from the same bankers who paid her first ever wages-  May installed Sajid Javid as Home Secretary,  and set about destroying Brexit with a series of fake negotiations and well-planned delays. 
You can read here how I predicted exactly this scenario in November 2018. No clairvoyance was involved, as the globalist/banker plan  was screamingly obvious to anyone who bothered to look. When May has finally been dragged screaming from Downing Street, yet more delay opportunities will open up for her controllers. (Expect the 'leadership challenge' bullshit to continue for weeks. Because we can't leave the EU without a 'leader' can we?)
Javid, of course, is now perfectly positioned for his own, inevitable rise to power. This will happen much later, however, when the dust has settled on the grave of Brexit. Javid will emerge like a Phoenix from the ashes of the Conservative Party, after the inferior options - Johnson, Mogg etc, have done their shift at the helm and passed their sell-by dates.

It's an old cliche that in politics. nothing happens by accident, and this was very much the case with both May and Javid.
Both are products of an international banking industry that likes to write its own rulebook. 
Politicians are supposed to make the rules, so the banks choose future 'leaders' from their own ranks, and see that they are carefully groomed for a second career in the political world. Both May and Javid were placed into Parliament by their billionaire bosses and fast-tracked into the Cabinet. This is how it works.
This way, when the right political 'crisis' appears, the central banks have their people already in place, primed and ready to go. Theresa May was appointed specifically to prevent Brexit from happening. She knew very well that derailing Brexit would end her Parliamentary career. She knew that at the start when she accepted the job as Prime Minister – that, you see, was the price of wearing the crown. 
Although she's now in the doghouse of  'public humiliation' , in private, May is being congratulated for her tremendous efforts in obstructing Brexit. She will be richly rewarded in the years to come – make no mistake. Remember the many millions awarded to Tony Blair for his part in arranging the Iraq war that created billions for international financiers.

Sajid Javid, meanwhile, waits in the wings. His turn in the sun is coming, and he knows it. His real bosses – the Deutschebank- have big plans for him, and for Eurocage UK, and for the European Union itself. Sooner or later, Sajid Javid will be Prime Minister, you can depend on it. And Prime Minister Javid will be tasked with steering Britain into the jaws of the fledgling World Government. You will be hearing plenty about the World Government – and sooner than you think. Watch this space.

                                Theresa May and Sajid Javid 

These two are the very epitome of modern European politicians -that is to say, they were never political in any real sense. They have both posed as Conservatives and as British patriots, but their true loyalty is to the banks who made them and who guaranteed their future wealth and success.

Please do not see this as a reason to embrace the leaders of the Labour Party. They are equally fake. Do not kid yourself that corruption is a "right-wing" phenomenon. The banking industry works hard to control both major parties in Britain just as it does elsewhere.

But this is how the EU works. Here in Eurocage UK, every decade or so a new cast of performers appear in the theatre of Parliament, although the only thing that ever changes is the colour of the rosette. While the bankers remain in power, you cannot vote your way out of their system, any more than you can vote your way out of Europe.

But if all this sounds to you like some crazy conspiracy theory, and you think the EU is a marvellous thing that has nothing to do with corruption and bankers, then perhaps you should move somewhere closer to the heart of Europe, like France for instance. The French know how to run things properly. 
Of course there is the small matter of the the guy in charge President Emmanuel Macron. Bit of a curious type – he only ever had one job in his life before politics. Macron went straight from college to work for the Rothschild banking network. And then he went straight from the arms of the Rothschilds to being President of France. But I'm sure that's just a coincidence.
But no worries, if you still think Brexit is a terrible idea and the EU is on the level, that's fine. But please drop me a line at the email address below. You see, I happen to own a wonderful bridge in London that you might just be interested in buying. 

Ian Andrew Patrick

 

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