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to Heavensoon
Soros:
It’s Not So Easy Being God
Soros figured out early on that his messiah
complex wasn’t going to be well received
in the real world and he should try to tone
it down a bit. He’s having mixed results
with that. There are those who still cling
doggedly to the fabrication that Soros is
some kind of “philanthropist”
despite overwhelming evidence to the
contrary. The compassionate
philanthropist has been pushing for human
euthanasia for years. The august altruist
has long believed we made much too big of a
fuss about 9/11, an event which he found
inspiring: “Hijacking fully fueled
airliners and using them as suicide bombs
was an audacious idea, and its execution
could not have been more spectacular.”
(George Soros, “The Bubble Of American
Supremacy,” The Atlantic Monthly, 12/03)
Poor George, like his current Jackal in
Chief, has carried the burden of being a god
throughout his life: “A passage in his
book The Alchemy of Finance, published in
1987, distinguishes Soros from all other
financiers, ever. ‘I have always harboured
an exaggerated view of my
self-importance,’ he wrote. ‘To put it
bluntly, I fancied myself as some kind of
god or an economic reformer like Keynes, or,
even better, like Einstein. My sense of
reality was strong enough to make me realise
that these expectations were excessive, and
I kept them hidden as a guilty secret. This
was a source of considerable unhappiness
through much of my adult life. As I made my
way in the world, reality came close enough
to my fantasy to allow me to admit my
secret, at least to myself. Needless to say,
I feel much happier as a result.’”