Sunday, June 9, 2013

US Ambassador of Truth Alex Jones goes bat shit crazy on BBC Sunday Politics show


C2C AM: Bilderberg With Alex Jones & Daniel Estulin ~ Saturday June 8 2013

C2C AM: 

Bilderberg With Alex Jones & Daniel Estulin ~ Saturday June 8 2013

 

Infowars Reporter Ambushes Bilderberg Member

Infowars Reporter Ambushes Bilderberg Member

Bilderberger Ed Balls confronted on secretive meeting and lies when he claims he is not a minister

 


There seems to be a conspiracy to get Alex Jones to make a fool on himself on TV.


There seems to be a conspiracy to get Alex Jones to make a fool on himself on TV. On Sunday morning he appeared on the BBC’s Sunday Politics to talk about the Bilderberg Group – as you can see in the video above. It starts fairly quietly enough but, over the length of the interview, Jones gets wound up and up and finally explodes. It comes at 4.40, after Andrew Neil politely requests that his guest “shut it” for the umpteenth time. That’s Jones’ cue to throw a bananas rant about how the Euro is a Nazi plot, the government is killing us with water and “You will not stop freedom!”
The frustrating thing about Jones is that his clowning around makes it harder to take the questions he raises seriously. And some of those questions are important. We’re currently going through the biggest big government scandal since Watergate, with revelation after revelation of mass surveillance and political harassment. It’s actually not unreasonable to ask if government is out of control and whose interests it really serves. The problem is that Jones takes reasonable questions and provides bat sh*t crazy answers that then discredit the questions.

more @ http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk

2 comments:

  1. The guy did not claim "the Euro is a Nazi plot." He refers to a Nazi plan which, it turns out, conceives of the same system as what became the Euro. Alex Jones did not discover a "New World Order." This term is in common use with leaders of politics and business. There is no "theory" that is a secret. Is this concept, popular with many powerful figured ("a new world order") a good thing? That is the question. Perhaps it is, but it is bizarre to hear people claim this it is made up by "conspiracy theorists." Let us look at the facts instead of hearing that the facts are not in existence.

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    1. Agreed. The biggest pass powerful "orders" get is when people will not calmly consider the facts, rather arrogantly dismiss the facts,laboring under dangerous presuppositions generously provided by the mechanisms overseen by those "orders." It is a cycle of ignorance and Mr. Jones does get frustrated after years of trying to alert the public what is very well documented...not conspiracy.

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