One Lie, One Intention, for Bloomberg "Mussolini" Corporatism

Feb. 7 (LPAC)--Amidst new attempts to "eliminate" Sen. Hillary Clinton's campaign in the press--citing the campaign's need for much more money--the Senator raised $4 million on Wednesday and millions more on Thursday after the "Super Tuesday" primaries, according to surprised national political reporters. Among others, the Michael "Mussolini" Bloomberg-worshiping CNBC Wall St. financial network, had broadcast at midday Wednesday a diatribe against Clinton and a promise that "her campaign funds are evaporating." CNBC regularly interviews Bloomberg and "has thrice offered him the crown," exhorting him to announce his undeclared but obvious third-party campaign for the Presidency.

In a anti-Clinton diatribe which one observer called "an obvious response to LaRouche's Homeowners and Bank Protection Act, CNBC anchors claimed that Clinton's fund raising was doomed because of her proposed national moratorium on home foreclosures, and five-year freeze on mortgage interest-rate resets. This was the main focus of the Wall Street attack on her, on CNBC's "Power Lunch" segment. In fact, this demand to halt home foreclosures is one of the key elements in Clinton's surge of support, after the Iowa caucuses, among the "lower 80%" of Americans by income, who have been sinking in the economic collapse.

At the same time, Republican candidate and Bain Capital billionaire Mitt Romney made a strange "dropout" from the Presidential race. At the Conservative Political Action Committee convention today, Romney announced he "has to step aside" to make sure Democrats don't win, so he's "suspending" his campaign. He did not endorse Sen. John McCain. "I simply cannot let my campaign be a part of aiding a surrender to terror" by Clinton or Obama, said Romney. "If I fight on in my campaign, all the way to the convention, I'd forestall the launch of a national campaign, and make it more likely that Senator Clinton or Obama would win." BUT, Romney also talked about "fighting on," and referred to Ronald Reagan in 1976, the apparent meaning being, that Reagan came back in 1980 to win the nomination. But Romney said, "I'll fight on, and you'll fight on. You're with me all the way to the convention."

Romney spoke as if anticipating something happening to McCain--in fact, part of the intended scenario for bringing Bloomberg into the Presidency.