Showing posts with label Biden’s. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Biden’s. Show all posts

Friday, October 4, 2013

Biden’s “CODEWORD” Warning – More Than Meets the Eye



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WASHINGTON, DC - U.S. Vice President Biden speaks with law enforcement officials at the Eisenhower Executive Office Building July 19, 2013 in Washington, DC. Biden met with the law enforcement officials to discuss immigration reform issues. (Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images)

WASHINGTON, DC – U.S. Vice President Biden speaks with law enforcement officials at the Eisenhower Executive Office Building July 19, 2013 in Washington, DC. Biden met with the law enforcement officials to discuss immigration reform issues. (Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images)



Opinion

Staff Writer
Intellihub.com
October 4, 2014

WASHINGTON, D.C. — The U.S. Treasury has warned that the $ 16.7 trillion debt ceiling must be raised by Oct. 17, to avoid a U.S. debt default. This warning has concerns amongst investors and citizens alike as most are unsure of their futures in this once great nation.


Based on a study of a previous debt ceiling impasse in 2011, the results won’t be good if figureheads in Washington find no solution. WashingtonPost.com reported, “Failing to do so, Treasury warned, would have catastrophic consequences.


“A default would be unprecedented and has the potential to be catastrophic: credit markets could freeze, the value of the dollar could plummet, U.S. interest rates could skyrocket, the negative spillover could reverberate around the world, and there might be a financial crisis and recession that could echo the events of 2008 or worse,” the report said.”[1]


Some are wondering why this was all allowed to happen in the first place. Why would a corporation, the Corporation of the United States (i.e. D.C.), intentionally run itself into the ground, what’s the point? Obviously this was not done by the corporation itself or one single person, but rather the greedy men and women in charge of it. Their hands are deep into the honey pot as they have used the funds for years to fund their private corporations, awarding themselves no-bid contracts and so on.


So how might this all affect us now?


According to the Treasury Department report on economic fallout of 2011 debt ceiling impasse, ”Real GDP expanded at a 1.8 percent annual rate in the first half of 2013, and last month, a consensus of private-sector economists forecast real GDP to accelerate to a 2.4percent annual rate in the second half and then to expand 2.8 percent in 2014. As economic activity strengthens, labor market conditions should improve further, creating new jobs and maintaining the downward trajectory of the unemployment rate. The government shutdown that began October 1 puts that outlook at risk. Private sector economists have estimated that a weeklong shutdown could slow GDP growth in the fourth quarter by over a quarter percentage point, while a longer shutdown could have a substantially greater effect, perhaps even causing a recession.


If such projections prove accurate, the weaker-than-expected economic expansion would be even more susceptible to the adverse effects from a debt ceiling impasse than prior to the shutdown. A protracted debate about the debt ceiling could spark renewed financial market stress, and a fall in stock prices and wider credit spreads would depress spending from the private sector. In addition, increased uncertainty or reduced confidence could lead consumers to postpone purchases and businesses to postpone hiring and investments. A precise estimate of the effects is impossible, and the current situation is different from that of  late 2011, yet economic theory and empirical evidence is clear about the direction of the effect: a large, adverse, and persistent financial shock like the one that began in late 2011 would result in a slower economy with less hiring and a higher unemployment rate than would otherwise be the case”[2]


 Whatever the case may be, the economic future of America looks grim.


You also have to take a step back and ask yourself: why was all of this allowed to happen? Why was the spending in Washington allowed to go so far? Upon closer look, you may realize this was planned for a long time. Entertain the fact that it was in the cards if you will. After all, the actor turned U.S. President, Ronald Reagan, wasn’t puppeteered to start the Readiness Exercise 1984 (REX84) program for nothing.



In fact, some people fear the recent spectacle by Vice President Joe Biden, in which he was pictured holding a document entitled “CODEWORD” outside of a secure area against protocol, is a warning to “people in-the-know.” 


An anonymous tip sent in to Intellihub.com today read, “I am a U.S. Government contractor working closely with different 3-letter agencies. My colleague a U.S. Rear Admiral, retired and still maintaining his classified clearance, and I have taken a closer look at the J. Biden picture where he holds a classified file “CODEWORD”. I wanted to offer some insight which you can publish to your readers, but please keep my name confidential.


 ”CODEWORD” is a highly classified designation and such files can not even leave a SCIF (classified room). It is a violation of national security rules to have a file marked “CODEWORD”outside of a SCIF. And, this begs the question. Was it a mistake or was it a message? 


The Admiral and I believe it absolutely is a message and that there never was any classified information in the file held by Biden, otherwise Biden is in violation of US National Security. The possible meaning(s) of Codeword: ”CODEWORD” is tied to a passage in a fictional book published Codeword: Apollyon – Terrorism’s Second Wave.


This fictional book is about an ‘event’ post 9/11.This is what we believe the message means. It wasn’t done by chance,but is a message to those who are “in the know”. Apollyon corresponds to a passage in the Bible. Revelations 9:11 (no coincidence 9/11), which reads; ”And they had a king over them, [which is] the angel of the bottomless pit, whose name in the Hebrew tongue is Abaddon, but in theGreek tongue hath [his] name Apollyon.”Some biblical scholars interpret Apollyon or Abaddon to mean Lucifer/Satan as it is translated to “a place of destruction, the Destroyer, or Angel of the bottomless pit”, but I believe it is a reference to something else.


The “Destroyer” is also called “Wormwood” which is the mythical “Nibiru”. Read the Revelations passage again, ”And they had a King Over Them, [which is] the Angel of the bottomless pit, whose name in the Hebrew tongue is Abaddon, but in the Greek tongue hath [his] name Apollyon [the Destroyer].” Ancient word for King going back to ancient Egypt is “N-g-r” meaning God or “Negash” meaning King. This word was used for Heavenly bodies in the Cosmos and not for Pharaohs. “And they had a King of them.. theAngel of the bottomless pit…the Destroyer” This message has two possibilities, and it is NOT a mistake, it is reference to a passing object in our solar system known as the”destroyer”, or it is indication of the implementation of another false flag event like 9/11. 


No doubt this was done to announce an upcoming event to those “in the know”. Again, this was not a mistake. Now, I do not subscribe to the theory of Nibiru, but I do believe a passing comet such as ISON could trigger dramatic events on Earth in the near future. Also there is another comet on the exact same trajectory as ISON in 2014.Is this government shut down really a coincidence? The picture of Biden holding the classified file was publicized September 30th, one day before the shut down. 


I wanted to send this insight as I believe it is worth investigating and reporting to the public. On a separate note, I was notified by my kids high school Principal last month that as of October 1st all schools in our County have received from FEMA high frequency radios for alternate emergency communications, and just today they are holding a public school, county-wide (FEMA) lock down drill. HF radios are not cheap, and every school in our county in Florida has receive done. Why now?? Are they expecting an “event” in the near future? My gut tells me “YES”.”[3]


Something is coming down the pipe people. Remain vigilant.


Sources:


[1] Long debate over debt ceiling could harm economy, report says – WashingtonPost.com


[2] Treasury Department report on economic fallout of 2011 debt ceiling impasse - WashingtonPost.com


[3] Email Submission – tips@intellihub.com


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Intellihub News



Biden’s “CODEWORD” Warning – More Than Meets the Eye

Sunday, September 15, 2013

Joe Biden"s Iowa fan club

Joe Biden is shown. | AP Photo

Biden has built relationships in Iowa that date back to his first White House bid in 1987. | AP Photo





DES MOINES – Sometimes Joe Biden wants to go where everybody knows his name.


And at Iowa Sen. Tom Harkin’s steak fry Sunday, Biden will be among friends – people who know him not because he’s the nation’s number-two elected official and who don’t refer to him as “the vice president” or, back in the day, as “Sen. Biden.”





Karl Rove on 2016: Biden ‘gets in’




Where Biden wears shades


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To many activists in this state, which Biden has courted on and off for nearly 30 years, he’s just “Joe.”


More than perhaps any presidential candidate in modern times, Biden has cultivated a set of relationships in Iowa – and that other key primary state, New Hampshire – that date back decades, to his first presidential campaign in 1987.


(PHOTOS: Joe Biden over the years)


That race ended abruptly, when Biden dropped his candidacy amid a plagiarism scandal and the start of the Robert Bork hearings in Washington. But in the intervening years, Iowa Democrats and veteran Biden allies say he has worked hard to maintain his friendships in the state, and not merely for political reasons.


He developed genuine bonds during that first campaign and renewed them in his 2008 race, which ended in a disappointing fifth-place Iowa finish. If Biden seeks the presidency a third time in 2016, his friends in Iowa say they’re prepared to saddle up again for a man who has become more than a political candidate to them.


“He has literally – as he would say, literally – touched just about every Iowan there is,” said Teri Goodmann, a Dubuque Democrat who has stayed in contact with Biden since his ‘87 effort. “Joe is a person to hold your hand or touch a shoulder, or share an emotion. Joe is a known entity in Iowa.”


Former Delaware Sen. Ted Kaufman, who was Biden’s finance director in the ’88 race, predicted of the steak fry: “So many people will come to that event because they’re friends with him, and I mean outside-D.C. friends.”


(PHOTOS: Joe Biden mingles with the stars)


“He has relationships with people. Jill has relationships with people. Valerie has relationships with people,” Kaufman said, referring to the vice president’s sister, Valerie Biden Owens. “He’s gone out there for people’s funerals.”


The vice president’s Iowa following underscores, in some respects, what an unusual politician Biden is in the year 2013 – a political moment dominated by politicians who rise quickly and burn out fast, and whose essential skill is typically mass communication through TV and social media.


On the contrary, Biden is a retail campaigner of the old school, a man who embarked on his political career before the advent of cable television and whose longevity in national politics sets him apart from even Hillary Clinton among the possible 2016 hopefuls. His first major campaign appearance in Iowa was at a Jefferson-Jackson Dinner in the autumn of 1985.


(WATCH: Biden: ‘Neanderthal crowd’ slowed VAWA renewal)


Indeed, looking at Biden’s original Iowa team is like sending a gang of prominent Democrats from the 21st century back through a time warp. His 1988 state director was David Wilhelm, later chairman of the Democratic National Committee under Bill Clinton. Obama-Biden media consultant Larry Grisolano was, at the time, Biden’s Iowa field coordinator. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack and his wife, Christie Vilsack, were youth organizers.


The Iowans Biden has known for most of his adult lifetime speak of him as a recurring presence in their own lives, including at deeply intimate moments. Judy McCoy Davis of Des Moines, who worked on Biden’s 1988 race, said Biden’s contacts in Iowa are far more “two-sided” than those of most aspiring presidents.


In her own case, Biden sought out McCoy Davis during a visit for former Congressman Leonard Boswell ahead of the 2008 campaign. After dining with a small group, Biden gave her a “pep talk” about how to go on in life without her late husband, former Des Moines Mayor Arthur Davis, another Biden ’88 alum.


(Also on POLITICO: Biden wants Napolitano on SCOTUS)


“He really wanted to talk to me about the fact that he knew what it was like to lose a spouse,” recalled McCoy Davis, who said Biden’s longest-standing supporters in Iowa often reassemble for his visits. “Almost everyone [can] talk about the very personal ways that he stays in touch. It’s less about the political side of things than it is just the interest in what’s happening with you.”




POLITICO – TOP Stories



Joe Biden"s Iowa fan club

Monday, August 26, 2013

Biden"s Uphill Road to 2016



His Republican foes branded it the “2016 Kickoff Tour” and vice-president Joe Biden made it clear to the people of “my native town, Scranton” that he hopes to build a White House campaign on tales of his humble upbringing in Pennsylvania coal country.


After recently seeming to bolster former secretary of state Hillary Clinton’s credentials to be his successor, President Barack Obama went out of his way to give a boost to his No 2.


Their joint appearance on Friday was also significant because coming from a place such as Scranton, an archetype of blue-collar America, is the modern equivalent of growing up in a log cabin.


“This was a signal that [Obama’s] not playing sides,” said Ed Mitchell, a long-time Democratic consultant in Pennsylvania.


“He wanted to be there together with Biden so that people didn’t think that because he’d had lunch with Secretary Clinton and said nice things about her on 60 Minutes that he was favouring her.”


Obama said at Friday’s rally to promote an initiative to make college more affordable that the “reason that I love Scranton is because if it weren’t for Scranton, I wouldn’t have Joe Biden”.


Noting that it was exactly five years since the “special day” that he selected Biden as his running mate, Obama piled on the praise. “It was the best decision that I ever made, politically, because I love this guy . . . and he’s got some Scranton in him,” he said.


Biden grinned broadly, perhaps imagining the campaign commercial that could be crafted from the event. “I tell you, it’s good to be home,” he said, of the city his family moved away from 60 years ago, when he was 10. Scranton was a place “where your heart stays” and where “community, hard work, personal responsibility, faith, family” helped to sustain the American dream.


As vice-president, by rights Biden should be Obama’s heir apparent and in pole position to be the next Democratic choice for the top job. The last occupant of the post to seek his party’s nomination for the White House and fail to land it was Alben Barkley in 1952.


Clinton, however, is viewed as the overwhelming Democratic favourite if, as expected, she chooses to run. A Public Policy Polling survey last month gave her a 59-point lead over Biden in first-voting Iowa. The 1952 analogy is not auspicious for Biden. Barkley was considered too old for the presidency — he was 74, the age Biden will be in 2016.


Supporters of Clinton are quick to point out that she is five years younger than Biden and only Ronald Reagan has been as old as 74 when elected, and that was for his second term in 1984. They also note that in 2008 Biden said that Clinton “might have been a better pick than me” for vice-president.


Biden does not even have the upper hand over Clinton in his birthplace, in part because she also has deep family connections there. Her great-grandparents came to Scranton in the 1880s from Wales, her grandfather worked as a boy at the Scranton Lace Factory and her father is buried in the city.


And while Obama’s words might have seemed an imprimatur, few in Washington will take them at face value. While Obama likes to portray Biden as “the scrappy kid from Scranton who beat the odds”, in large part this is to trade on Biden’s appeal to blue-collar whites, who have been slow to warm to the president’s aloof manner.


Biden’s blunders are legendary, and eagerly recounted by Republicans. The garrulous former senator for Delaware, who served in Congress for 36 years, once told a wheelchair-bound state senator: “Stand up, Chuck — let ’em see you.”


In his book This Town, a dirt-dishing account of the insider world of politics that has become a summer must-read in the American capital, Mark Leibovich describes Biden as “the lovable rodeo clown of the administration”, someone Obama talked about “with a patronising over-fondness — as if the VP were the beloved family dog that kept peeing on the carpet”.


Biden’s two previous runs for the White House were spectacular failures. In 2008, his folksy, long-winded style failed to resonate and he dropped out after securing just 0.9% of the vote in Iowa.


In 1987 he was forced to withdraw when it was revealed that he had plagiarised a speech by Neil Kinnock, then Labour party leader.


He also spoke then about “my ancestors who worked in the coalmines of northeast Pennsylvania and would come up after 12 hours and play football for four hours”.


It turned out that no known forebears had been miners. A great-grandfather he had thought had been a miner turned out to have been a university-educated engineer.


Steve Corbett, a local radio host, said that Biden was “privileged” in Scranton terms and was not quite the “working-class hero” that he purported to be. “A Biden presidential campaign will be like watching Benny Hill reruns,” he said. “Our Joey will be predictable — he’ll be as stale as a day-old sausage roll and cheeky in his own goofy way.


“In the eyes of most Scranton Democrats, Hillary Clinton has earned the presidency. Bill Clinton is much loved in Scranton and campaigned for Obama here on the eve of the election last year. Her brothers have a family cottage 20 miles away. If you face off with a Hillary-Joe Biden deal, then Hillary’s going to walk all over him.”


Joe Trippi, a veteran Democratic operative who ran Howard Dean’s presidential campaign in 2004, said he did not believe Biden would take on Clinton but it was possible that something unforeseeable might make her decide not to run or leave her weakened.


“He only has one more opportunity at this,” he said. “He’s got to go all out. But he’s a realist and in 2008 he understood very early how the cards were dealt.” 




RealClearPolitics – Articles



Biden"s Uphill Road to 2016