Thursday, October 29, 2015

DEAD TIME STORIES: MOTHER GOOSE AND THE MALLEUS MALEFICARUM

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DEAD TIME STORIES

MOTHER GOOSE AND THE MALLEUS MALEFICARUM

I have to confess that for the first time in the 20 years I have presented Ground Zero I have never had a show back fire on me in my dreams. I actually dreamt about the black figure in the frightening video that is making the rounds on the Internet. Perhaps it was the sound that planted a seed or that I had to review the images and the video over and over again before I presented it on the show.
In my dream I was in another time – I would say the 1800’s or even earlier. There seemed to be a lot of mud and horse manure in the streets. There were also sick people and some who looked like they were near death. I looked ahead in the road and there was the man in the black cloak walking the streets.
He was not wearing a cowl he was wearing a hat and carried a bag. He was walking toward me or me toward him I really don’t remember and before we passed on the street there was a cart with flowers and squash, pumpkins and apples. I decided to take an apple. There was no one there to pay for the apple and so I rubbed it in my shirt. The plague doctor said something to me in a voice that was muffled by the mask. He said to me with a nervous laugh; always remember an apple a day keeps doctor away.
That is all I can remember about the dream. Now, you may be wondering why I could possibly dream of a plague doctor saying this to me. Well it is simple. The night before the show I was watching a new cable show on TruTv called “Adam Ruins Everything.” It is about a guy who basically reveals the truth about certain beliefs we cling to that are unfounded.
The show was about how wedding rings are a scam, food drives are worthless, and for some reason there was a segment where he says “an apple away keeps the doctor away.”
Well after the dream, I came into the office obsessing about the dream. I Googled the origins of the axiom an apple a day and I found out that its origins are from an old Welch proverb:
Eat an apple on going to bed, and you’ll keep the doctor from earning his bread.” In the 19th century and early 20th, the phrase evolved to “an apple a day, no doctor to pay” and “an apple a day sends the doctor away,” while the phrasing now commonly used was first recorded in 1922. There has also been a version where dentist is substituted for the doctor.
However, it is argued that varied versions of this saying were attributed to Mother Goose and various nursery rhymes that have a dark past. The “doctor” in question was a 16th century doctor and the full rhyme was more like a witches spell:
“An apple a day keeps the doctor away
Apple in the morning – Doctor’s warning
Roast apple at night – starves the doctor outright
Eat an apple going to bed – knock the doctor on the head
Three each day, seven days a week – ruddy apple, ruddy cheek.

The poem or nursery rhyme as some people call it is loosely associated with the black plague and the doctor that is to be warned off with an apple is the same doctor who wears the beak like mask and the black hat.
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In fact I stumbled upon a book called the “Secret Meaning of Nursery Rhymes” by Linda Alohin. On page 14 of the book it talks about the “apple a day” poem and in the corner of the page is the figure in the video 11B-X-137 we talked about on my radio show. There was also a Pinterest photo that was also associated with the Black Plague Doctor.
I have been aware for some time about a paranormal anomaly known as “The Black hat Man.” I wrote an article about “The Black Hat Man” back in the late 1990’s called “In the Hue of Midnight.”
I am now curious that this entity is a shadowy figure that has been conjured by a simple nursery rhyme or spell that brings him to the bedsides of people and frightens them.
The entity is usually described as a tall shadow man dressed in a long black trench coat and wearing a wide brimmed hat. He is distinctively male and witnesses say that he has no face or a shadowy blurred face.
The Hat Man seems to be different than most shadowy figures often staying for a prolonged period of time and sometimes he even touches his victims some even claim that they feel like they are being examined or in some cases smothered by the entity.
After a visit from this entity people feel as if something bad will happen to them, maybe an accident or ill health.
I then thumbed through the nursery rhyme book to find out more about the connections to Mother Goose. There were no direct connections as listed because the saying was first seen in print in 1866 – however on page ten, there was an eerie rhyme about Mother Goose that indicated the mother of nursery rhymes was a witch and many of her rhymes were connected to spell casting and witchcraft.
Here is an example:
“Old Mother Goose, when she wanted to wander,
Would ride through the air on a very fine gander.
Mother Goose had a house,’Twas built in a wood,
Where an owl at the door as a sentinel stood.”

There is also this rhyme about her:
“Cackle, cackle, Mother Goose, have you any feathers loose?
Truly have I, pretty fellow, half enough to fill a pillow.
Here are quills, take one or two, and down to make a bed for you.”

With every rhyme I found there were artist’s depictions of Mother Goose riding a goose, wearing a pointy hat and in some depictions handling a broom.
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The words of the original Old Mother Goose Nursery Rhyme can be interpreted to find a darker meaning to the identity of ‘ Mother Goose’! The title ‘Mother Goose’ probably originates from the 1600’s – the time of the great witch hunts. Comparisons can be made between the Mother Goose in the nursery rhymes and the popular conception of witches we have today.
Witches were able to fly. In art work that depicts Mother Goose. It looks as if her broomstick has been replaced by a goose, hence the name – Mother Goose. In some depictions, she carries a broom while riding a Goose. Her sentinel is an owl. Witches were known to a have ‘familiars’ most often cats but also owls.
Much like Harry Potter, he had an owl called Hedwig.
It is also known that owls are symbolically associated with clairvoyance, astral projection, and magic, both black and white.
The owl was known as a harbinger of bad tidings and doom throughout Europe, and put in appearances as a symbol of death and destruction in a number of popular plays and poems. For instance, Sir Walter Scott wrote:
“Birds of omen dark and foul,
Night-crow, raven, bat, and owl,
Leave the sick man to his dream —
All night long he heard your scream.”

Even before Scott, William Shakespeare wrote of the owl’s premonition of death in story of Lady Macbeth.
If you remember there were three witches in the play Macbeth. They were there to represent evil, darkness, chaos, and conflict. They were there to establish a time of moral confusion. In the first act the witches chant a rhyming spell:
“Fair is foul, and foul is fair: Hover through the fog and filthy air.”
This reminds me once again of the black hat figure wearing the beak mask because at the time of the Black Plague there was a miasmatic theory, that plague and evil was in the air and this is what caused the disease thus the mask had to be worn in order to keep the doctors from getting sick.
The witches in Macbeth were old crone’s who lived in the woods, as we see in the Mother Goose rhyme she was hidden there.
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In Macbeth, we hear the familiar rhyme:
“Double, double toil and trouble;
Fire burn and cauldron bubble.
By the pricking of my thumbs,
Something wicked this way comes.
Open, locks,
Whoever knocks!”

The rhyming witches and their spells remind us that entities will arrive if you invite them in.
People were obsessed with witches during the 16th and 17th centuries when there was limited understanding of the cause of devastating events, such as storms, drought and disease. The disasters were believed to be brought about by supernatural forces which resulted in witches being blamed.
A book called the ‘Malleus Maleficarum’ was published in 1486 as guide used for the torture and persecution of witches – a bestselling book of those times, only being out-sold by the Bible.
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Witchcraft was outlawed in England in 1563 and a Witchcraft Act was passed in 1604.
Similar to what we call Satanic Panic the witchcraft hysteria grew and eventually led to the Parliamentary appointment of Matthew Hopkins as Witchfinder General in 1644.
His task was to seek out witches, in fact it became profitable for him because he was said to have been paid twenty shillings for each witch he condemned.
During his interrogations he was guided by books like the ‘Malleus Maleficarum’ which stated that an animal Familiar “always works with the witch in everything.”
A familiar usually was an animal of some kind.
Mother Goose has been seen in artwork with her trusty goose, a cat, frog, pig, raven, Goat, Wolf, Crow, Bat and Mouse , It is also believed that Witches ran apothecaries where natural tinctures were used containing blood or even whiskers or hair from these familiars.
The dark hated Plague doctor would carry with him in his sack, frogs and leeches to bleed the buboes of the victims of the Black Plague.
Many nursery rhymes originated in the 16th and 17th centuries and the children of these eras would have been familiar with stories of witches and witchcraft. Many of the children would recite many rhymes and couplets that have a dark meaning to them.
It is a common belief that most traditional children’s songs and stories were designed to inform kids via metaphor about a potentially harsh world in a time where children worked and traveled and were essentially treated more like miniature adults than “kids”. But originally, fairy tales were told to many different audiences, ghost stories and tales of witches, child catchers and conjured entities were also told by frightened villagers.
The legends were based in a belief in paranormal machinations; poorer people were always encountering demons, specters, goblins, and shadowy figures.
These stories were common amongst the peasants – they were graphic, terrifying and even recorded in history as real events. They were then changed and metaphor was used to illustrate a lesson. Only after they were first recorded by early folklorists did the stories obtain morals and, eventually, kiddie-friendly endings that removed the graphic violence and occasional cruel twist ending.
Such is the legend of the children’s rhyme, “Ring around the Rosy, pocket full of posies ashes to ashes we all fall down.”
It has been argued that this rhyme has ties to the Black Plague, the Black Death, and the Pneumonic Plague.
For centuries, these plagues were known as a ghastly and horrible ways to die. The victim’s skin turned black in patches, and the inflamed glands or ‘buboes’ in the groin, combined with compulsive vomiting, a swollen tongue and splitting headaches, made it a horrible, agonizing killer.
Though there were other euphemisms to describe the various plagues like “Great Mortality” and the “Great Pestilence,” these diseases produced coughing sneezing and black boils caused by dried blood under the skin from internal hemorrhaging.
The first indications of these plagues were a red ring that formed around your cheeks. Then you would begin to sneeze as the bacterial infection held you in its deadly embrace. The bacterium would spread to the victims’ lungs, causing them to fill with frothy, bloody liquid. This derivative of the disease was known as the pneumonic plague, and would quickly spread from person to person through the air.
In the spring and summer of 1665, an outbreak of bubonic plague spread from parish to parish until thousands had died and the huge pits dug to receive the bodies were full. People were dying at the rate of 7000 per week.
The smell of death permeated the streets, and it was wise to carry with you a pocket full of flowers to give relief the pungent smell of putridity. Physicians used to carry scented herbs and flowers, in an attempt to ward off the plague. Traditional 17th century London physicians wore the long robes and the long beaked mask with posies and other aromatic herbs stuffed inside.
The bodies needed to be burned to kill the bacteria before the mass graves were filled, resulting in the phrase “Ashes Ashes”. In other versions of the verse, the phrase was “Achoo Achoo”, indicating the sneezing associated with these plagues.
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There are many people who have decided that this particular rhyme does in fact have ties to the plague of 1665; however, the first renditions of the rhyme were not written until 1881. This means that, if it were truly a rhyme that was created during the plague, it would have to have been recited for nearly six hundred years. This makes the plague connection suspect.
However, one third of the earth’s population, perhaps more, succumbed to the plague and it could have been picked up very quickly as an elegy or a culling verse, taken from something that was created before. It could be a parody of a previous song or verse.
It is also possible that the rhyme was taken from a Hindu ritual. Richard Stoney has researched the possibility of the rhyme’s being attached to the destruction and reincarnation ritual, “The Twilight Dance of Shiva.” Shiva is known as the god of destruction.
In the ritual, Shiva is encircled with roses. Then a circle of fire moves about Shiva, and mountains flatten and the Universe is burned. The idea is to dance around Shiva until you fall down from exhaustion.
The connections and the dot connecting of nursery rhymes always seems to have an element of death, plague, oppression, mental illness and witchcraft.
Even in some artist interpretations of “Old Mother Hubbard” the old woman is seen as a witch who after not finding a bone, bakes a loaf of bread for her dog to make happy. And Mary Mary who was quite “contrary” was a murderous psycho path, namely Queen Mary I of England, and is the basis for the children’s game Bloody Mary.
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So be warned of the Dead Time stories that are told like witches spells. Mother Goose may be a fictitious witch, but the stories attributed to her seem like spells that spin in the autumn twilight. The stories from the old books of the witch hunts and the various plagues remind us of the dark figures and shadows of the man in the black hat. Also,the man with the beak mask, representing death.
As the last page is turned and the storybook closes, we lie back in our bedrooms and stare at the shadows cast by the moonlight. It may be wise to check under our beds to make sure that no dark demon from the lowest levels of hell is waiting to take possession of our souls.
While we are on the floor checking, it may be wise to pray to God, or else face the alternative and that is becoming prey to some calculating devil.

Increasing Police Brutality: Americans Killed by Cops Now Outnumber Americans Killed in Iraq War     ~ hehe what walks like a nazi,acts like a nazi ,uses nazi "tac~tics" ,dress's like an nazi  ...ummm A.) amer~ri~can 'POOOO~lice' Oops    Siek~Heil  Ass~so~fer  :o  ...(And you are 29 times more likely to be murdered by a cop than a terrorist! )


policestate
Originally published in December 2013:
The increase in police brutality in this country is a frightening reality. In the last decade alone the number of  people murdered by police has reached 5,000. The number of soldiers killed since the inception of the Iraq war, 4489.
What went wrong? In the 1970’s SWAT teams were estimated to be used just a few hundred times per year, now we are looking at over 40,000 military style “knock and announce” police raids a year.
The police presence in this country is being turned into a military with a clearly defined enemy, anyone who questions the establishment.
If we look at the most recent numbers of non-military US citizens killed by terrorism worldwide, that number is 17. You have a better chance of being killed by a bee sting, or a home repair accident than you do a terrorist. And you are 29 times more likely to be murdered by a cop than a terrorist!
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A hard hitting mini film by film maker Charles Shaw, properly titled RELEASE US, highlights the riveting and horrid reality of America’s thin blue line.
From the film:
500 innocent Americans are murdered by police every year (USDOJ). 5,000 since 9/11, equal to the number of US soldiers lost in Iraq.
In 1994 the US Government passed a law authorizing the Pentagon to donate surplus Cold War era military equipment to local police departments.
In the 20 years since, weaponry designed for use on a foreign battlefield, has been handed over for use on American streets…against American citizens.
The “War on Drugs” and the “War on Terror” replaced the Cold War with billions in funding and dozens of laws geared towards this new “war” against its own citizens.
This militarization of the police force has created what is being called an “epidemic of police brutality” sweeping the nation.

Automakers and Their Dark, Deadly Conspiracies   ~ hehe there's NO such thing as an ,..."C"  Oops ,  that's gotta B an "lone nut auto~maker"  hehe

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Over the past eighteen months two of the world’s largest automakers have been found responsible for deadly conspiracies. But, recent revelations can’t compete with the industry’s previous scandals.
Last month Volkswagen was caught rigging millions of its cars emissions testing systems to meet regulatory standards. The German company programmed its turbocharged direct injection diesel engines to activate emissions controls during laboratory testing while in real-world driving the vehicles produced up to 40 times more nitrogen oxide (NOx). Hundreds, probably thousands, of people will be afflicted with asthma, lung disease and other ailments as a result.
The Volkswagen scandal follows on the heels of General Motors’ efforts to hide ignition and airbag defects in millions of its vehicles. The faulty ignition switches cause the vehicle to lose power and its airbag to fail during accidents. GM accepts that at least 124 people died as a result of a glitch company officials knew about for years.
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In a much bigger scandal, a half century ago information surfaced implicating auto companies in a conspiracy to keep the population in a toxic haze. The “smog conspiracy” was revealed in 1968 when the US Department of Justice filed an anti-trust case against the Big Three. They were accused of colluding to withhold the installation of catalytic converters and other technologies to reduce pollution. “Beginning at least as early as 1953, and continuing thereafter,” alleged the Department of Justice, “the defendants and co-conspirators have been engaged in a combination and conspiracy in unreasonable restraint of the aforesaid interstate trade and commerce in motor vehicle air pollution control equipment.”
In the early 1950s smog became increasingly common. Los Angeles (the car capital of the world) became the centre of the pollution debate. In a bid to quell mounting criticism of car generated air pollution, GM, Ford, Chrysler and the Automobile Manufacturers Association (AMA) agreed in 1953 to collectively research pollution-reducing technologies. The automotive manufacturers claimed their alliance was driven by a concern for public health. It was not. As time passed evidence emerged that the Big Three had in fact united to block the installment of anti-pollution devices. Their agreement stipulated they would wait for unanimous agreement to move forward on smog-busting technologies. In Taken for a Ride, Jack Doyle writes that “the automobile manufacturers, through AMA, conspired not to compete in research, development, manufacture and installation of [pollution] control devices and collectively did all in their power to delay such research, development, manufacturing and installation.” The public had been hoodwinked.
But the biggest automotive scandal was much worse than the smog alliance. It was a conspiracy that changed the face of urban landscapes across North America. In 1922, Alfred P. Sloan, head of General Motors, created a working group charged with undermining and replacing the electric trolley. The group’s first act was to launch a bus line that arrived a minute before the streetcar and followed the same route. The trolley line soon shutdown. At the time, there were hundreds of trolley lines in Los Angeles so it was not particularly noteworthy when one shut down. But it was a harbinger of things to come.
In the early 1920s the streetcar industry was booming. There were 1,200 tramway and inter urban train companies with 29,000 miles of track. In the best years they topped 15 billion riders. Over a thousand miles of trolley track criss-crossed the Los Angeles area alone, carrying most people to work. The streetcar dominated the transit scene, but the competition was gaining strength. The number of cars on the road reached 20 million in the1920s. While pressure from the automobile mounted, the trolley remained the major form of urban transportation.
During this crucial period in transit history, GM was intent on eliminating the competition. As one of the biggest companies in the world, GM offered municipal politicians free Cadillacs to vote the company’s way and insisted that railway companies shipping their cars aid their campaign. They also pressured banks in small communities to starve local trolley companies of finance and then made credit available to streetcar companies that replaced their tracks with GM buses. In 1932, GM established United Cities Motor Transportation (UCMT) to buy electric streetcar companies in urban areas and convert them into bus operations. After purchasing streetcar systems, UCMT ripped up their tracks and tore down the overhead wires. Once the conversion was complete, UCMT resold the new bus systems, on condition they were not reconverted to streetcars. New owners signed contracts with UMCT, stipulating that “new equipment using any fuel or means of propulsion other than gas” could not be used. The contracts also required that GM be the source of all new buses.
In the relative obscurity of Galesburg Illinois, UCMT made its first urban takeover in 1933.23 Moving swiftly, it had already dismantled trolley systems in three urban centres before being censured by the American Transit Association. After its 1935 censure, GM dissolved UCMT. It was not long, however, before its anti-trolley activities were revived and redoubled.
GM and its co-conspirators developed a network of front organizations. In 1936, GM joined with Greyhound to form National City Lines; in 1938 they collaborated with Standard Oil of California to create Pacific City Lines; in 1939 Phillips Petroleum and Mack Truck joined National City Lines. American City Lines was created in 1943 to focus on the biggest cities.
GM’s conversion strategy ran into a major obstacle in many big cities. In the larger urban areas trolley lines were often owned by electricity companies that made money from selling the energy to power the rails. The electrical companies benefited from a tax provision allowing them to absorb trolley deficits through lower taxes paid by the parent company. Frustrated by this trolley-electricity ownership arrangement, in the early 1930s GM produced a number of dossiers for Congress highlighting the loss in tax revenues that resulted. GM’s strategy was successful.
The 1935 Public Utility Holding Company Act made it extremely difficult for energy companies to own trolley lines. Companies that had previously refused GM’s advances began to sell. Eighteen months later, GM scooped up 90 miles of tramway in Manhattan. After successfully converting New York’s trolley system, GM and its cronies moved on to Tulsa, Philadelphia, Montgomery, Cedar Rapids, El Paso, Baltimore, Chicago and LA. When all was said and done a hundred electric transit systems in 45 cities were ripped up, converted and resold.
By the mid-50s nearly 90 percent of the US electric streetcar structure was gone.
GM’s apologists deny any conspiracy took place. Some even claim GM invigorated public transit. Yet, the facts are overwhelming. As Edwin Black points out in Internal Combustion, GM and company were condemned by the Department of Justice, Senate and courts (from the lowest district venue to the Supreme Court) for anti-trust practices that were part of this nationwide conspiracy. In a section of the 1947 indictment labeled “THE CONSPIRACY,” prosecutors and the grand jury jointly declared: “Beginning on or about January 1, 1937, the exact date being to the Grand Jury unknown, and continuing to and including the date of the return of this Indictment, the defendants, together with other persons to the Grand Jury unknown, have knowingly and continuously engaged in a wrongful and unlawful combination and conspiracy to acquire or otherwise secure control of or acquire a substantial financial interest in a substantial part of the companies which provide local transportation service in the various cities, towns and counties of several states of the United States, and to eliminate and exclude all competition in the sale of motorbuses, petroleum products, tires and tubes to the local transportation companies owned or controlled by or in which National City Lines … had a substantial financial interest.”
The verdict was guilty. Yet the punishment for conspiring to destroy a mode of mass transit amounted to a fine of five thousand dollars. Not much of a disincentive for a company worth billions of dollars. And just after its 1947 conviction, National City Lines revived its anti-trolley activities.
The only legitimate dispute is the extent to which GM’s motivation was to promote private auto use or simply to increase the number of gasoline-powered buses, which GM sold. Some believe GM pushed buses to spur future personal automobile sales. Others think differently. “The conspiracy against mass transit,” argues Edwin Black, “was first and foremost a conspiracy to convert cities from electric [streetcars] to petroleum [bus] systems.”
 Yves Engler is the author of The Ugly Canadian: Stephen Harper’s Foreign Policy

CHINA’S BRETTON WOODS

CHINA’S BRETTON WOODS Mr. L.B. sent me this article about developments China is fostering, and, more importantly, the efforts of Western meddlers (like Mr. Soros), to save their crumbing system: here's the article:
Must read The book About us Media Buy online China discussing ‘Bretton Woods topics’ with other leading countries.
Note the statements attributed to Mr. Soros, whose meddling hand is deeply implicated in the Ukrainian mess:
During The Bretton Woods Committee Annual Meeting 2015 a discussion between investor and philanthropist George Soros and Committee Co-Chair James D. Wolfensohn on the future of the Bretton Woods System was organized. Acoording to the Committee’s website; ‘Soros remarked that the Bretton Woods institutions (IMF and World Bank -WM) have now “lost their monopoly,” and the world has broken into two “rival camps.” The extent of cooperation between the new “Beijing Consensus” (e.g. AIIB, etc.) and the existing Western-led institutions will have a profound impact on the world order. Soros also expressed his belief that a stable economic and geopolitical future rested on the transition of China from a production and export-based economy to a domestic consumer and import economy – a transition that the Bretton Woods Institutions and the U.S. should help facilitate by allowing the renminbi to join the IMF’s basket of currencies. In return, China should make concessions to reform including accepting the rule of law. In Soros’ view, this will create a “binding connection” between the two camps and is necessary to avoid the possibility of China aligning itself with Russia and the real threat of a third world war.’
(Emphasis added)
It really is amazing sometimes to watch these plutocrats tiptoe through the tulip field of their own euphemisms, as if by muttering phrases such as "rule of law" and "binding connection" their now well-known and tiresome playbook isn't fully obvious. In the case of the referenced remarks of Mr. Soros, the flower-strewn march of euphemisms boils down to this:
  1. We don't like China;
  2. The US dollar's days as a reserve currency may be numbered;
  3. China is an industrial powerhouse, and therefore, we must de-industrialize it and turn it into the service-sector swamp, just like we did to the USA;
  4. We don't like China because we don't want anyone else to be above the "rule of law" except ourselves;
  5. We need to bind China into our international system;
  6. We don't like China;
  7. We don't like Russia either;
  8. (We really don't like Russia);
  9. We don't like this Russia-China cooperation, and we must break it apart;
  10. So we'll dangle accepting the reminbi into a "basket of currencies" like the IMF's SDRs(special drawing rights), so that we can gain control over China, because
  11. We don't like China; and
  12. We don't like Russia either.
I rather suspect that the Chinese, having a few centuries' experience of dealing with the western plutocracy, realize what Mr. Soros's game is, and that he is simply speaking for an endangered class.
In the wake of the Chinese intervention in Syria on Russia's and Assad's side, all one can say is, "yea, good luck with that Mr. Soros."
Our high octane speculation? Watch for China to string out the game until the point that it dictates the terms, not Mr. Soros.