Economist Exposes How Banks Manufacture Wars, False Flags & Famines to Usher in the New World Order
5/22/20262 hr 9 min
Virtually every major war begins under false pretenses. German economist Richard Werner explains what the current global conflict is actually about. (00:00) The Effect of Propaganda in Wartime (11:52) The Return of Total War (53:28) Is There Danger of Japan and China Collaborating? (1:07:51) China's One-Child Policy and Anti-Population Growth (1:18:17) The Great Deception Richard A. Werner is an Oxford- and LSE-educated economist, professor of banking and finance, and internationally recognized expert on central banking and monetary policy. He is best known for coining the term “Quantitative Easing” in 1995 and for his bestselling book Princes of the Yen. Over a 30-year career, Werner has advised governments, central banks, pension funds, and major global financial institutions. His research on banking, credit creation, and financial crises has become some of the most widely downloaded academic work in the world, making him a leading voice on economic reform and the global economy. Paid partnerships with: Black Rifle Coffee: Promo code "Tucker" for 30% off at https://www.blackriflecoffee.com StopBox USA: Get firearm security redesigned and save 10% off @StopBoxUSA with code TUCKER at https://stopboxusa.com/TUCKERGood Ranchers: Start your plan today and you'll get FREE meat included with every order PLUS $100 off your first three orders. Use code TUCKER at https://go.goodranchers.com/tucker Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Transcript preview
First 90 secondsTucker Carlson· Host0:00
[instrumental music] Richard, thanks for doing this.
Richard Werner· Guest0:05
It's a great pleasure and honor to be here.
Tucker Carlson· Host0:08
Um, I think of the claim that we went to war with Iran because of its nuclear program as a kind of IQ test. Anyone who repeats that claim has failed the test. As, as you pointed out many times, all wars are engineered, and we're just having a discussion at breakfast that I think is worth recounting for others. Um, so First World War, one of the most momentous events in world history, ended Christian Europe, killed more than twenty million people, wounded another twenty million, just really reordered the globe, and then led to the Second World War. So the United States joined that war in nineteen seventeen. Toward the end, it had already been going for three years. But one of the main reasons the US got into that war is because of the sinking of a passenger ship called the Lusitania off the coast of Ireland two years before in, in nineteen fifteen, in which a hundred and twenty-odd Americans were killed. It was sunk by a German U-boat. And even at the time, there were people who said, "I don't think this is [laughs] this is not quite on the level." But now, a hundred and twelve years later, w-we know a lot more about the sinking of Lusitania, and I wonder if you wouldn't just mind recounting what you said to me this morning at breakfast because it gives us perspective on the effect of propaganda in wartime.
Richard Werner· Guest1:26
Right. Um, yes, I mean, the, this,