Is Russian Roulette the Last 'Derivative' of Bavarian Red Cross?

20 Nov 2007

November 19, 2007 (LPAC)--If the Bavarian Red Cross were a doctor, it might be the kind of disturbed personality you occasionally hear about, who, unbeknownst to the anesthetized patient about to undergo the knife, has planned to pay-off gross debts to the local racetrack bookies by selling just a few of the deceived patient's internal organs on the black market. On the wall behind the desk of this imagined doctor's private practice is a plaque which reads "Liberalism", and it is this mounted "pride and glory", this system of pathological thinking, which has led the Bavarian Red Cross, as well as other institutions and municipalities that pretend they still have "good intentions", to swirl, not very independently, into the same maelstrom of moral despondency.

At the moment, the Bavarian Red Cross is tied up in a scandal regarding its managers' gambling habits; those which an anonymous source at the Bavarian Interior Ministry called, "highly speculative interest bets" through which their debts were to be reduced, they hoped. Derivatives swap deals are a practice that is actually illegal for non-profit organizations, and should be illegal for everyone, due to their intrinsic detriment to society. The organization claims that "no membership donations were used for it", and that, as many eager casino addicts neurotically maintain, they are "sure" they will come out on top.

Meanwhile, observers of reality have repeatedly pointed to the fact that there is no "top". The financial system has already bottomed-out. Unless key U.S. and world officials make it their business to meet with Lyndon LaRouche, openly, about proceeding with global bankruptcy re-organization, civilized society is done for.