I found this two-minute video clip to be
astonishing. There are many loosely connected dots about the PTB's desperation to kill the US (at least) economy. There's much talk of a new economic system, digital, which requires destruction of the current system. We see new groundwork being laid for potential lockdowns that would kill more businesses. Food shortage threats, power shortage threats, stock-market crash potential, predictions of riots, Soros saying we're running out of time to save civilization, likely false-flag events happening, etc. Everything that is economically negative seems to be viable. Now this bewildering bit on video.
Sen. Joe Manchin (D) appears stunned as he reads a Department of the Interior statement during a hearing with Deb Haaland, US Secretary of the Interior, regarding a new, proposed energy-policy plan to be introduced on June 30. The badly worded memo seems to indicate that, potentially,
no leases may be granted for oil drilling or development, which would be unprecedented and practically end US oil production (and by extension, kill the economy). Astonishingly, Ms. Haaland seems not to dispute Manchin's inference! He appears to be in disbelief. Why a globalist as he should be concerned about killing US oil supply, it's not clear -- but perhaps he is overwhelmed at the boldness and speed of such a potential move -- beyond his expectation. If his inference was incorrect, why wouldn't Ms. Haaland have refuted it clearly and concisely? She behaved strangely, IMO.
I don't know, but we'll have to wait until June 30 to see what happens. If anyone has insight or reaction to this, I'd like to hear about it. It's just
weird.
Interior Secretary Deb Haaland struggled to explain a memo from HER department calling for the shutdown of new oil leases during a hearing on Biden’s 2023 budget request before the Senate Energy and N
rumble.com
Regardless of whether I'm interpreting this correctly, it does look like the globalist alliance is showing that it feels a threat, and will need to make some enormously bold move(s) quickly, before US elections in November.