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Editorial See other Editorial Articles Title: Sick corporate fluff piece compares Rothschild heir to Jesus Sick corporate fluff piece compares Rothschild heir to Jesus The December 2009 issue of Outside magazine, which is on display now at retail outlets, features a front page photo and profile of the purported Prius-driving Rothschild heir. In a story entitled "Plastics Jesus: David de Rothschild", the magazine notes how the 31 year old is "resurrecting purpose in big-time adventure", by building a boat out of plastic bottles to get attention to the topic of waste. Rothschild is wearing what appears to be a skull & bones belt buckle in the magazine photo. Described as searching for a "concrete cause" after a series of marginal attempts at notoriety, Rothschild admits that he just recently took his first sailing lessons. He has been promoting his project "Plastiki" for three years while they build his boat at Pier 31 in San Francisco. Several friends are mentioned in the article, including actress Karina Deyko, actor Adrian Grenier, Steve Cooper of the band Spirit Animal, and tv host Bruce Parry. Wikipedia describes Parry as speaking "on the importance of raising awareness for indigenous rights. He believes that if people understood the impact that our culture of greed and consumption has on the 'wonderful people' at the other end, they would act differently." (here's a yotube of Parry pushing his enviro agenda) Also mentioned in the article as a friend of Rothschild's is author Paul Hawken, who writes on his own website that "there's a surplus of people while natural capital... is in decline", and that "most businesses still operate according to a world view that hasn't changed since the start of the industrial revolution." The profile outlines how another activist beat Rothschild to the punch by building and sailing a plastic bottle boat. Marcus Eriksen of JunkRaft.com sailed "to Hawaii on 15,000 plastic bottles and a Cessna 310, to raise awareness about plastic fouling our oceans". Deeper into the 3 page online version of the Outside article is the admission that Rothschild's boat will not even be comprised of any actual recycled bottles, but rather "self-reinforced polyethylene terephthalate, or srPET, a new fabric-like derivative of the stuff used in plastic bottles", which Rothschild later intends to hawk to corporate takers. It goes on to explain Rothschild hasn't spent a dime of his own fortune on his project, thanks to a myriad of corporate sponsors which include Hewlett-Packard. Nickelodeon is set to run programs promoting Rothschild with SpongeBob, "and National Geographic Television will air a documentary" in the future, according to Outside magazine. Rothschild, who hosted a short-lived outdoor program on a cable channel , is profiled as someone searching for a mission and message in order to reach younger generations, "raising awareness" for "tangible solutions". In reality the propaganda Rothschild is spreading is nothing more than claptrap to enslave the planet with regulatory tyranny based on lies. In 2007, Rothschild appeared on the Alex Jones show and claimed that Mars, Saturn and Jupiter were closer to the sun than Earth. See also: David De Mayer Rothschild's Global Population Reduction Ideology Cold hard truth: Meet The Rothschilds Corporate press covers Yale's secret society skull & bones Clearchannel host covers the history of eugenics in America Mike Wallace questions Margaret Sanger on her opposition to the Catholic Church, 1957 Wicked government mandate forces immigrants to accept deadly vaccine
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#1. To: Artisan (#0)
That should save the planet.
If I were a member of the rotchild bankster klan, I'd already be well- entrenched in my bunker for the duration of what's coming...
Here's the original article: outside.away.com/outside/...d-de-rothschild-plastiki-1.html The only reference to Jesus is the title, which was undoubtedly someone else's attempt at wit. Since the entire article is about de Rothschild trying to find a use for recycled plastics, an editor cooked up the title with reference to an old (ca 1970) humorous country song about drunk driving, in which the singer's flask is disguised as a Jesus statuette on his dashboard.
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