1181 Chinese politicians consider war
In this meditation, Geoff is being shown a scenario, and then a Guide takes over.
Now, next place is China. I’ve got a couple of umbrellas, they’re like cocktail umbrellas. The Chinese use them in, I suppose, parasols. And then there’s a huge house in China, a huge, could be a government building or whatever. And this is like the head place in China. So government building. Now they show me this building right in front and behind for just as far as you can see there are houses, towns, cities etc. Absolutely huge, it’s all controlled by this one building. Now the problem is here I know so much stuff about China about to go broke and so on, it is very difficult to keep the two apart. So I just say what I see which is the normal sort of way. So as I go inside, there’s a parliamentary debate going on, and there is a sword pushed into a scabbard along the side of the main table. And this is a war sword and if you pull the war sword it means to go to war. And what they need to do is they need to revitalize their industry. It’s been on a downward spiral for so long and it’s got to crash. They can’t stop it crashing. But there’s no quick fix. So what they want to do is sort of take people’s mind off it by drawing the sword and not necessarily going to war but getting the people to band together and to say it’s our country and we have to defend against the whatever it might be. Sabre-rattling is really what it is. Just to distract the people and try to get them all to pull together.
So what’re going to do is they’re going to ramp up the military. So that will create a lot of jobs, a lot more income into the economy. It will… it’s pretty much a fake thing, they don’t need it, but this is a way of generating industry and of course they’ve got to get exports as well as imports. So they’re going to sell some of their military hardware to whoever. One of the problem areas here of course is Russia, but it’s going to be too far away. What they would have to do is supply Russia with some of their military and then create new ones.
So this is a debate that’s going on in the building at the moment. You’ve got the three new people who are saying yes we should do this because they’re capitalist westernized, whatever. And then you’ve got the rest of them, there’s about a dozen of them, who are the old-fashioned, we have created a stable country, they’re communists and we should carry on in this vein and we can be successful where nobody else has been, and so on and so on.
So it’s these two now, one of the three, the main counter course is Xi Jinping. And he’s the one trying to say this is the best sort of option because it will stimulate growth in the country. It will, it’s like waving a finger at America and Taiwan and making them stand up a bit more. Be more wary is a better way of putting it. Now I see a hand going on the sword pushing it back in. It is just a band of energy.
I’ve got one person in front of me who’s been tied and gagged. So he’s not allowed to talk. Oh, okay, so this is naturally what’s happens in Parliament. Nobody’s allowed to talk about it. So it’s kept in place. Now I still have Putin in the background. And what he’s suggesting is that China give him some of their military and create new ones as we were looking at just now. But nothing has been decided yet.
See the Chinese are very wary of losing control. They have contingency plans for all sorts of things. And they have money invested in all the countries around the world. And they’ve got a small community in all these different countries around the world. And they’ve been lending them money and taking them over when they default and all sorts of things. And they’ve got a big presence in Africa, in the Middle East and all sorts. So this is only one part of their overall long-term strategy.