The proposed Carbon Trading Tax , call it what ever you like , is
designed EXACTLY like the " salt Tax ' used to extract money / TAX
from every man woman and child every where on earth and pass the money
forward to those who control the system , in this case it will be the
jews who run the World Bank Carbon Trading Unit or their agents
EXACTLY like the jews have positioned themselves so as to fully
CONTROL the banking industry AND the DIAMOND INDUSTRY , [ also
carbon ] the jews WILL soon secure themselves into positions where
they can FINALLY set a tax system up that can HARVEST the WEALTH of
the ENTIRE GLOBE and run the ENTIRE industry from one tiny office
FULL control of the entire Globe was never won so easily since the
British used "salt Tax" to enslave INDIA
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_British_salt_tax_in_India#Effects_of_the_salt_tax
The world Bank Carbon Trading Unit will have the power to extract any
amount of " tax " they choose from any company anywhere FOR ALL TIME
It will take centuries and World War 4 to remove their claws from this
monopoly once they get it started , they will NEVER voluntarily give
it up, billions will die trying to break these financial chains from
YOUR grand childrens childrens ankles
Exactly like the Salt TAX
It will be sugar coated and offered as a CURE to the current problems
and introduced at a very LOW rate with very BIG rewards promised
EXACTLY like the Salt TAX
It will give the jews the RIGHTS to extract what ever rate of TAX they
choose to charge , your government once SIGNED UP can never complain
or alter the rates , and MUST enforce the collection at YOUR costs
using YOUR courts and YOUR police to arrest ANYBODY who dares produce
carbon without a " permit " at a price the " controller decides you
can pay
Endless grinding poverty awaits EVERYBODY who permits their GOVERNMENT
to sign away YOUR children s economic freedom in Copenhagen
Economic enslavement to the jewish run World Carbon Trading Unit
[edit] Effects of the salt tax
The high price of salt made it unaffordable resulting in a number of
diseases arising due to iodine deficiency.
Abhay Charan Das in his The Indian Ryot published in 1881 has written:
Then again there is a still more wretched creature, who bears the
name of labourer, whose income may be fixed at thirty-five rupees per
annum. If he, with his wife and three children, consumes twenty-four
seers [ 49 lb ] of salt, he must pay a salt duty of two rupees and
seven annas, or in other words 7 ½ per cent income tax. Now we leave
it to our readers to judge, whether the ryots and the labourers can
procure salt in the quantities they require. We can positively state
from our own experience, that an ordinary ryot can never procure more
than two-thirds of what he requires, and that a labourer not more than
half[6]
As late as 1942, when India was embroiled in the Second World War,
there were innumerable deaths due to salt deficiency
It was my duty in India to do special tours in the hottest weather
(June) to observe heat effects in such particularly hot stations as
Allahabad, Cawnpore, Lucknow, and Bareilly. The tour of 1942 was
particularly instructive, because it happened to be an unusually hot
season (maximum shade temperature in the above stations were between
115° and 123°F. (46° and 50.6°C.) and because in that year – the first
real war year for India – there was not adequate shade provision for
men, nor was there general realisation of the importance of extra salt
intake. During this hot season there were 1,959 admissions to hospital
for heat effects and 136 deaths. I personally saw 400 cases[6]
—Dr. Marriott, consultant physician at Middlesex Hospital
[edit] Early protests against the British Salt Tax
Since the introduction of the first taxes on salt by the British East
India Company, the laws have been subjected to fervent criticism. The
Chamber of Commerce in Bristol was one of the first to submit a
petition opposing the Salt tax:
The price to the consumer here [in England] is but about 30s per
ton instead of 20 pounds per ton as in India; and if it were necessary
to abolish the Salt tax at home some years since it appears to your
petitioners that the millions of her Majesty's subjects of India have
a much stronger claim for remission in their case, wretchedly poor as
they are, and essentially necessary as salt is to their daily
sustenance, and to the prevention of disease in such a climate[7]
The Salt Tax was criticized at a public meeting at Cuttack in February
1888. In the first session of the Indian National Congress held in
1885 in Bombay, a prominent Congress member, S.A. Swaminatha Iyer
pleaded against the salt tax[8][9][10].
It would be unjust and unrighteous if the tax on salt should be
increased. It is a necessary article both for human as well as animal
well-being... it would be bad policy and a retrograde movement to
raise the tax, especially at a time when the poor millions of India
are anxiously looking forward for a further reduction of the tax....
As any increase, therefore, of this tax will fall heavily upon the
masses of the people of the land, I would strongly urge upon the
attention of this Congress the necessity of its entering its strong
protest against any attempt on the part of Government to raise the tax
on salt[1]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_British_salt_tax_in_India#Effects_of_the_salt_tax