Rocksolid Light

Welcome to novaBBS (click a section below)

mail  files  register  newsreader  groups  login

Message-ID:  

6 May, 2024: The networking issue during the past two days has been identified and fixed.


aus+uk / uk.sport.cricket / American WHITES PLAN is to STEAL Australian Whites' MINERAL and NATURAL WEALTH - John Pilger

SubjectAuthor
* American WHITES PLAN is to STEAL Australian Whites' MINERAL andFBInCIAnNSATerroristSlayer
`- Re: American WHITES PLAN is to STEAL Australian Whites' MINERAL andFBInCIAnNSATerroristSlayer

1
American WHITES PLAN is to STEAL Australian Whites' MINERAL and NATURAL WEALTH - John Pilger

<ubdm10$2d8a8$2@dont-email.me>

  copy mid

https://www.novabbs.com/aus+uk/article-flat.php?id=27893&group=uk.sport.cricket#27893

  copy link   Newsgroups: uk.sport.cricket soc.culture.australia soc.culture.usa soc.culture.canada
Path: i2pn2.org!i2pn.org!eternal-september.org!news.eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail
From: FBInCIAn...@america.com (FBInCIAnNSATerroristSlayer)
Newsgroups: uk.sport.cricket,soc.culture.australia,soc.culture.usa,soc.culture.canada
Subject: American WHITES PLAN is to STEAL Australian Whites' MINERAL and
NATURAL WEALTH - John Pilger
Date: Mon, 14 Aug 2023 09:50:36 -0700
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
Lines: 201
Message-ID: <ubdm10$2d8a8$2@dont-email.me>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8; format=flowed
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
Injection-Date: Mon, 14 Aug 2023 16:50:41 -0000 (UTC)
Injection-Info: dont-email.me; posting-host="dc151416d741a0b35c6d00db34b362a0";
logging-data="2531656"; mail-complaints-to="abuse@eternal-september.org"; posting-account="U2FsdGVkX19AdMQZjgeqZQJvncQ4ouoLcELscK6vZH8="
User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64; rv:102.0) Gecko/20100101
Thunderbird/102.14.0
Cancel-Lock: sha1:PhKzqGyCoIZqTENdUX1fAra0QqM=
Content-Language: en-US
 by: FBInCIAnNSATerrorist - Mon, 14 Aug 2023 16:50 UTC

Whites DON'T UNDERSTAND their OWN THIEVING MENTALITY, DNA and MODUS
OPERANDI.

The EVIL American Whites ALREADY DESTROYED German, UK, French, Italian,
Spain and other european economies by bombing Nord Stream 2 and DENYING
EU from getting CHEAP RUSSIAN GAS which POWERED their economies.

Now the EVIL GREEDY RUTHLESS Amrikkkan Whites are STEALING Australian
Whites Wealth to TURN EVERY White country into a WORTHLESS VASSAL of
american whites.

https://twitter.com/johnpilger/status/1691120533507919872
Amerika now lists Australia as a "domestic source" for minerals and all
natural wealth. The plan is to hi-jack -- steal -- an entire country in
broad daylight. Indigenous Australians will have memory of a similar
theft more than 200 years ago. We are all Amerikans now.

https://johnmenadue.com/ripe-for-the-plucking/

Our minerals are ripe for the plucking by the US

By Tony Kevin
Aug 9, 2023

US-driven fast-track negotiations to develop secure strategic critical
minerals supply chains from Australia risk jeopardising our mining
industry links with China, and locking down our own industrial
development based on our critical minerals.

First, necessary context. The Global South is enthusiastically engaging
with multipolarity, through BRICS, SCO, Belt and Road, new reserve
currency systems etc. More and more, centuries of US/UK hegemonic
control over global resources is being challenged, especially in Africa.
More countries are abandoning exploitative Western resource deals,
preferring China as a trading partner. The US, haunted by fear that
China might lock up access to critical minerals essential to US military
power, is searching for politically reliable supply chains at least risk
of political disruption. Canada and Australia are top of the US wish
list. Australia is one of the world’s foremost producers of critical
minerals such as copper, lithium, nickel, cobalt, and rare earths.

On 20 May in Tokyo, Biden and Albanese announced a new ‘Australia –
United States Climate, Critical Minerals and Clean Energy Transformation
Compact’. In a Joint Statement, the two leaders proclaimed climate and
clean energy as ‘the third pillar of the Alliance’, alongside
US-Australian defence and economic cooperation. (It is not clear which
particular ’Alliance’ was being referred to here).

Under the sub-heading ‘Building Our Defence Capability’, the Joint
Statement said:

‘The President plans to ask the United States Congress to add Australia
as a “domestic source” [i.e., alongside Canada] within the meaning of
Title III of the Defence Production Act. Doing so would streamline
technological and industrial base collaboration, accelerate and
strengthen AUKUS implementation, and build new opportunities for United
States investment in the production and purchase of Australian critical
minerals, critical technologies, and other strategic sectors.’

Australian mainstream media welcomed the Compact, highlighting its
electorally popular climate and clean energy aspects. The strategic
critical minerals content went almost unnoticed in the general
Australian business community euphoria about truckloads of anticipated
US investment.

But in Washington briefings and commentary, the Compact’s significance
for US critical minerals supply chain concerns about China figured
highly. The White House Briefing Room noted that both countries are
determined to, within 12 months, identify concrete actions toward the
Compact’s objectives. ‘Underscoring the central role of critical
minerals’, Australia and the US are to establish a ministerial-level
Australia-United States Taskforce on Critical Minerals, to be led by
principals from the U.S. National Security Council and Australia’s
Department of Industry, Science and Resources, with engagement from key
stakeholders across industry and relevant government agencies. The
Taskforce is intended to work with industry leaders to … promote
responsible, sustainable, and stable supply of critical minerals. The
leaders intend to … identify risks and market distortions that impact on
critical minerals markets and consider mitigation options.

Just six days later in Detroit, Australia’s Minister for Trade Don
Farrell met with US Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo for the second
annual Australia-US Strategic Commercial Dialogue. Their Joint Statement
welcomed the Dialogue ‘as a key bilateral mechanism to advance shared
geoeconomic and commercial interests across the nexus of economic,
foreign, and national security policy. They agreed to convene Australian
and U.S. companies from across the critical minerals supply chain,
including miners, processors, manufacturers, and investors at an event
later in 2023.

To get behind the veiled language and understand what the US might be
really pushing for here – to cut China out of the Australian critical
minerals mining industry, and to lock up this vital strategic resource
for exploitation by the US strategic defence sector as and when it
wishes – an invaluable source is this commentary article by two
Washington researchers that appeared in Australia on 24 July in ‘The
Strategist’, an ASPI publication. This article sets out what look to be
US ambit claims in the forthcoming fast-track discussions.

They are quite horrifying, in my view. The US aim is ‘to reduce US
dependence on China, where various links in the critical mineral supply
chain are heavily concentrated’. To do this, the US will invest heavily
under the Compact in Australian critical minerals resources mining, but
only under certain conditions:

The US should only fund Australian mines: not refineries. All refining
beyond the minimum level of crude refining in order to economically ship
minerals to US should be done in US.

The US should only fund Australian mines that produce minerals that are
lacking in US and Canada, because ‘US critical-mineral supply chains are
most secure when they are in or near the US and under friendly control.
US taxpayer dollars should not be expended on distant mines when nearby
mines are available’. This provision could make the proposal for funding
Australian mines more palatable to Congress.

The US should allow companies to partner in a US-funded mine only if
they are not owned in any way by foreign entities of concern, including
all Chinese entities. The US should not fund Australian mines where
Chinese entities can benefit financially or influence the project at the
expense of US taxpayers. ‘To protect US national security, if an
Australian company is seeking to participate in a US-funded mine in
Australia, it should have to first divest any shares held by entities of
concern’.

‘American companies should have a controlling interest in US-funded
mines, so that the US government can enforce compliance with US
regulations, such as blocking Chinese companies’ involvement or
investment in the mine’. [Tony Kevin – and also to control decisions
whether to mine or to lock the Australian resource up as a US strategic
military reserve for the future]

‘Partnering with experienced Australian partners will also enable less
experienced US companies to build valuable mining skills.’

‘The US should require that mined materials from Australia be refined by
American companies in the US. The US should also require that the mined
material have an end use in a strategic US sector like aerospace or
transportation, not consumer electronics like televisions and mobile
phones.’

‘The US should also require all companies participating in the mine to
stop operating in China and selling their products to Chinese entities.
Nor should the US allow companies to use earnings from a US-funded mine
to support their operations in China or sales to Chinese entities.’

These are huge ambit claims, probably put up through ASPI to test the
climate of opinion in Australia.

The authors conclude that the Compact is ‘a satisfactory starting
framework for strengthening critical-mineral supply chains between the
US and Australia. The stipulations attached to such an arrangement would
help to ensure that US–Australia supply chains are diversified,
protected from Chinese influence, and forged by a workforce in both
countries.’

A leading Washington law firm endorsed the Compact as a ‘huge step
forward ‘in expanding US proactive measures to secure supply of critical
minerals and ‘hold out competitors’.

So – we will provide the critical minerals deposits and drive the
trucks: the US will control and benefit from almost everything else in
the supply chain, when and if the US chooses to develop it. And China
will be kept out .

The two big risks to Australia here are, firstly, jeopardising whatever
is left of our mining sector’s historic relationships of trust with our
major mining market in China. Any Australian mining company currently
selling to China could have its relationships and operations there
crippled if it went into business with US mining companies on this
basis. It is pure mercantilism, to put it bluntly – aimed at cutting out
Chinese competition in a fair marketplace.


Click here to read the complete article
Re: American WHITES PLAN is to STEAL Australian Whites' MINERAL and NATURAL WEALTH - John Pilger

<ubhqlk$376hb$1@dont-email.me>

  copy mid

https://www.novabbs.com/aus+uk/article-flat.php?id=27924&group=uk.sport.cricket#27924

  copy link   Newsgroups: uk.sport.cricket soc.culture.australia soc.culture.usa soc.culture.canada
Path: i2pn2.org!i2pn.org!eternal-september.org!news.eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail
From: FBInCIAn...@america.com (FBInCIAnNSATerroristSlayer)
Newsgroups: uk.sport.cricket,soc.culture.australia,soc.culture.usa,soc.culture.canada
Subject: Re: American WHITES PLAN is to STEAL Australian Whites' MINERAL and
NATURAL WEALTH - John Pilger
Date: Tue, 15 Aug 2023 23:34:19 -0700
Organization: A noiseless patient Spider
Lines: 220
Message-ID: <ubhqlk$376hb$1@dont-email.me>
References: <ubdm10$2d8a8$2@dont-email.me>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8; format=flowed
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
Injection-Date: Wed, 16 Aug 2023 06:34:28 -0000 (UTC)
Injection-Info: dont-email.me; posting-host="d4a757537f541a1233b4e65d8d3358d8";
logging-data="3381803"; mail-complaints-to="abuse@eternal-september.org"; posting-account="U2FsdGVkX1990eei39tPglecDfnH6MZqeJ5d6h9gy4U="
User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64; rv:102.0) Gecko/20100101
Thunderbird/102.14.0
Cancel-Lock: sha1:4WWyGnkKs3woPjgMI0CLPSdperE=
In-Reply-To: <ubdm10$2d8a8$2@dont-email.me>
Content-Language: en-US
 by: FBInCIAnNSATerrorist - Wed, 16 Aug 2023 06:34 UTC

On 8/14/2023 9:50 AM, FBInCIAnNSATerroristSlayer wrote:
>
>
>
>
> Whites DON'T UNDERSTAND their OWN THIEVING MENTALITY, DNA and MODUS
> OPERANDI.
>
> The EVIL American Whites ALREADY DESTROYED German, UK, French, Italian,
> Spain and other european economies by bombing Nord Stream 2 and DENYING
> EU from getting CHEAP RUSSIAN GAS which POWERED their economies.
>
> Now the EVIL GREEDY RUTHLESS Amrikkkan Whites are STEALING Australian
> Whites Wealth to TURN EVERY White country into a WORTHLESS VASSAL of
> american whites.
>
>
>
>
>
>
> https://twitter.com/johnpilger/status/1691120533507919872
> Amerika now lists Australia as a "domestic source" for minerals and all
> natural wealth. The plan is to hi-jack -- steal -- an entire country in
> broad daylight.  Indigenous Australians will have memory of a similar
> theft more than 200 years ago. We are all Amerikans now.
>
>
>
>
>
>
> https://johnmenadue.com/ripe-for-the-plucking/
>
> Our minerals are ripe for the plucking by the US
>
>
> By Tony Kevin
> Aug 9, 2023
>
> US-driven fast-track negotiations to develop secure strategic critical
> minerals supply chains from Australia risk jeopardising our mining
> industry links with China, and locking down our own industrial
> development based on our critical minerals.
>
> First, necessary context. The Global South is enthusiastically engaging
> with multipolarity, through BRICS, SCO, Belt and Road, new reserve
> currency systems etc. More and more, centuries of US/UK hegemonic
> control over global resources is being challenged, especially in Africa.
> More countries are abandoning exploitative Western resource deals,
> preferring China as a trading partner. The US, haunted by fear that
> China might lock up access to critical minerals essential to US military
> power, is searching for politically reliable supply chains at least risk
> of political disruption. Canada and Australia are top of the US wish
> list. Australia is one of the world’s foremost producers of critical
> minerals such as copper, lithium, nickel, cobalt, and rare earths.
>
> On 20 May in Tokyo, Biden and Albanese announced a new ‘Australia –
> United States Climate, Critical Minerals and Clean Energy Transformation
> Compact’. In a Joint Statement, the two leaders proclaimed climate and
> clean energy as ‘the third pillar of the Alliance’, alongside
> US-Australian defence and economic cooperation. (It is not clear which
> particular ’Alliance’ was being referred to here).
>
> Under the sub-heading ‘Building Our Defence Capability’, the Joint
> Statement said:
>
> ‘The President plans to ask the United States Congress to add Australia
> as a “domestic source” [i.e., alongside Canada] within the meaning of
> Title III of the Defence Production Act. Doing so would streamline
> technological and industrial base collaboration, accelerate and
> strengthen AUKUS implementation, and build new opportunities for United
> States investment in the production and purchase of Australian critical
> minerals, critical technologies, and other strategic sectors.’
>
> Australian mainstream media welcomed the Compact, highlighting its
> electorally popular climate and clean energy aspects. The strategic
> critical minerals content went almost unnoticed in the general
> Australian business community euphoria about truckloads of anticipated
> US investment.
>
> But in Washington briefings and commentary, the Compact’s significance
> for US critical minerals supply chain concerns about China figured
> highly. The White House Briefing Room noted that both countries are
> determined to, within 12 months, identify concrete actions toward the
> Compact’s objectives. ‘Underscoring the central role of critical
> minerals’, Australia and the US are to establish a ministerial-level
> Australia-United States Taskforce on Critical Minerals, to be led by
> principals from the U.S. National Security Council and Australia’s
> Department of Industry, Science and Resources, with engagement from key
> stakeholders across industry and relevant government agencies. The
> Taskforce is intended to work with industry leaders to … promote
> responsible, sustainable, and stable supply of critical minerals. The
> leaders intend to … identify risks and market distortions that impact on
> critical minerals markets and consider mitigation options.
>
> Just six days later in Detroit, Australia’s Minister for Trade Don
> Farrell met with US Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo for the second
> annual Australia-US Strategic Commercial Dialogue. Their Joint Statement
> welcomed the Dialogue ‘as a key bilateral mechanism to advance shared
> geoeconomic and commercial interests across the nexus of economic,
> foreign, and national security policy. They agreed to convene Australian
> and U.S. companies from across the critical minerals supply chain,
> including miners, processors, manufacturers, and investors at an event
> later in 2023.
>
> To get behind the veiled language and understand what the US might be
> really pushing for here – to cut China out of the Australian critical
> minerals mining industry, and to lock up this vital strategic resource
> for exploitation by the US strategic defence sector as and when it
> wishes – an invaluable source is this commentary article by two
> Washington researchers that appeared in Australia on 24 July in ‘The
> Strategist’, an ASPI publication. This article sets out what look to be
> US ambit claims in the forthcoming fast-track discussions.
>
> They are quite horrifying, in my view. The US aim is ‘to reduce US
> dependence on China, where various links in the critical mineral supply
> chain are heavily concentrated’. To do this, the US will invest heavily
> under the Compact in Australian critical minerals resources mining, but
> only under certain conditions:
>
> The US should only fund Australian mines: not refineries. All refining
> beyond the minimum level of crude refining in order to economically ship
> minerals to US should be done in US.
>
> The US should only fund Australian mines that produce minerals that are
> lacking in US and Canada, because ‘US critical-mineral supply chains are
> most secure when they are in or near the US and under friendly control.
> US taxpayer dollars should not be expended on distant mines when nearby
> mines are available’. This provision could make the proposal for funding
> Australian mines more palatable to Congress.
>
> The US should allow companies to partner in a US-funded mine only if
> they are not owned in any way by foreign entities of concern, including
> all Chinese entities. The US should not fund Australian mines where
> Chinese entities can benefit financially or influence the project at the
> expense of US taxpayers. ‘To protect US national security, if an
> Australian company is seeking to participate in a US-funded mine in
> Australia, it should have to first divest any shares held by entities of
> concern’.
>
> ‘American companies should have a controlling interest in US-funded
> mines, so that the US government can enforce compliance with US
> regulations, such as blocking Chinese companies’ involvement or
> investment in the mine’. [Tony Kevin – and also to control decisions
> whether to mine or to lock the Australian resource up as a US strategic
> military reserve for the future]
>
> ‘Partnering with experienced Australian partners will also enable less
> experienced US companies to build valuable mining skills.’
>
> ‘The US should require that mined materials from Australia be refined by
> American companies in the US. The US should also require that the mined
> material have an end use in a strategic US sector like aerospace or
> transportation, not consumer electronics like televisions and mobile
> phones.’
>
> ‘The US should also require all companies participating in the mine to
> stop operating in China and selling their products to Chinese entities.
> Nor should the US allow companies to use earnings from a US-funded mine
> to support their operations in China or sales to Chinese entities.’
>
> These are huge ambit claims, probably put up through ASPI to test the
> climate of opinion in Australia.
>
> The authors conclude that the Compact is ‘a satisfactory starting
> framework for strengthening critical-mineral supply chains between the
> US and Australia. The stipulations attached to such an arrangement would
> help to ensure that US–Australia supply chains are diversified,
> protected from Chinese influence, and forged by a workforce in both
> countries.’
>
> A leading Washington law firm endorsed the Compact as a ‘huge step
> forward ‘in expanding US proactive measures to secure supply of critical
> minerals and ‘hold out competitors’.
>
> So – we will provide the critical minerals deposits and drive the
> trucks: the US will control and benefit from almost everything else in
> the supply chain, when and if the US chooses to develop it. And China
> will be kept out .
>
> The two big risks to Australia here are, firstly, jeopardising whatever
> is left of our mining sector’s historic relationships of trust with our
> major mining market in China. Any Australian mining company currently
> selling to China could have its relationships and operations there
> crippled if it went into business with US mining companies on this
> basis. It is pure mercantilism, to put it bluntly – aimed at cutting out
> Chinese competition in a fair marketplace.
>
> Secondly, the proposals set out in the ASPI paper for US-majority-owned
> mining companies to dictate and determine development of industry
> processing of critical minerals in Australia contradict Australian
> aspirations for economic sovereignty. They would put Australia firmly
> back in our place as a raw materials supplier to the Metropolis, and
> nothing more – as we were in British Empire days. This cries out for
> Paul Keating’s acerbic pen.
>
> I have no confidence in the ability of the present Australian
> Government, dazzled by the US alliance, to manage these negotiations in
> our national interest – either commercially or strategically. I fear we
> will once again be exploited and entrapped by our great and powerful –
> and clever – friend.


Click here to read the complete article
1
server_pubkey.txt

rocksolid light 0.9.81
clearnet tor