PUTIN SENDS THE WORLD A MESSAGE PREPARE FOR REVOLUTION
Sep06
on September 6, 2013
Posted In: Prphecy, Putin, RUSSIA
Putin’s crass display of decadence as he hosts ‘Marie Antoinette’ ball for Obama and world leaders at G20 summit while the suffering in Syria goes on is he giving a message to the world that french revolution style anarchy is coming to the world if and now its only a matter of time when ww3 breaks out. ww3 will be combined with and timed no doubt by the bankers with the coming economic crash which will cripple world banking and the banks will be shut. With the banks closed and markets crashing gold at all time highs and ww3 about to erupt the people will be starving and terrified the same kind of conditions France found itself in under their King in the 18th century. Mr putin hosts a ball something which would be and is outrightly ridiculous except for the message it is conveying to those in the know. One Must remember after the revolution the whole of europe was drawn into war and with it rose what many call one of the forerunners of anti-christ Napoleon. Will a leader arise out of the coming chaos and is this also the hidden message in plain view.In America there have been reports of thousands of guiloteens been moved and ordered in secret, fema camps etc. This is not a good Omen.
- Heads of state sit down for dinner in midst of tension over chemical attacks
- Luxurious banquet took place at Peterhof Palace, the ‘Russian Versailles’
- Earlier, Putin and Obama clashed over proof of toxic attacks in Damascus
World leaders were greeted by a lavish display from Vladimir Putin at Russia’s G20 summit today with a decadent ball which felt a world away from the realities on the ground in Syria.
Women dressed in elaborate Marie Antoinette style costumes met the world’s most powerful men and women in a display which seemed to be a celebration of luxury at the Peterhof Palace in St Petersburg.
The images were somewhat removed from the kind of photographs the leaders will be poring over tomorrow when they discuss evidence of the horrifying chemical attacks in Syria which killed 1,400 innocent civilians including children.
War and Peace: President Barack Obama was greeted by women in aristocratic dress at the party which seemed to have the questionable theme of decadence while the summit’s key topic are poverty and war
A picture of mr obama with his head in a not very flattering place covering the genitals of this Golden statue
Time to relax? President Obama looked uncomfortable as he walked to the venue where leaders were encouraged to unwind after a hard day of politics
Civil:
The dinner table of the G20 summit at Peterhof Palace in Saint Petersburg, Russia, where the G20 summit is taking place
Revelry: Actors in costumes arrive at the Peterhof Palace where heads of state meet for a working dinner as part of the G20 summit Read more:
The French Revolution[edit source | editbeta]
French Revolution
On 14 July 1789, a mob seized the arsenal at the Invalides, acquiring thousands of guns, and stormed the Bastille. A brief battle ensued in which 87 revolutionaries were killed before the fortress surrendered. This event marked the first real manifestation of the Revolution, and is still marked in France asBastille Day.
Paris became the scene of revolutionary ferment, with political clubs taking over buildings for their headquarters. The uprising had, however, badly disrupted food supplies and in October an angry crowd marched to Versailles to protest—whereupon legend holds that Marie Antoinette, told the people had no bread, haughtily dismissed them with her famous remark, “Let them eat cake.” (In fact, it is a near-certainty that she never said this—the remark had been part of urban legends for over a hundred years, and seems to have been tacked on to Marie Antoinette by a populace that had decided to blame her for the country’s malaise.) The furious crowd began attacking the palace and were only placated when Louis himself appeared and agreed to return to Paris with his family. The royal family were reduced to virtual prisoners in the Tuileries. They tried to escape on 20 June 1791 but were caught and returned to Paris as captives.
With other European powers mobilising to crush the Revolution, which they saw as threatening their own monarchies, the political climate in Paris worsened as rumours of foreign plots and invasions took hold. Louis and those who supported an agreement with the monarchy were accused by the radical Jacobins of being the stooges of foreign powers, and on 10 August 1792 a mob demanded that the National Assembly depose the king. When the demand was refused, the mob attacked the Tuileries and the royal family took refuge within the Assembly. Power now passed to the radical
Commune de Paris, led by Georges
Danton, Marat and Robespierre. Paris remained the capital after the proclamation of the first Republic in September 1792, and Louis XVIwas among many executed at the Place de la Concorde during the Reign of Terror that followed from 1793 until 1794.