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Monday, March 17, 2008

CBS'S BARRY PETERSEN JESUIT PLUG

Tonight on CBS Evening News, Barry Petersen said:
"AS THE JESUITS SAY; IF YOU GET THEM WHEN THEY'RE YOUNG, YOU'LL HAVE THEM FOR LIFE".
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Blogman says:
That's it get'em hooked young! Dupe 'em, while they're young and innocent!
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In the light of all the child abuse scandals that the Catholic priesthood has been accused of in America; Is it sensitive (politically correct) to apply that euphemism in this case? Think, think think!
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In a story covering the American attempt to expose the Mainland Chinese to 'America's Favorite Pastime', Baseball; While appearing with some cheerful young chinese boys in baseball uniforms, while some wore 'red' kerchiefs around their necks, at a ball park; Petersen approached the camera and stated the above comment.
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Was this a freudian slip, or was it visual Broadcast version of Muzak, intended to desynthesize the viewing public of the pervasive Jesuit manipulation of the media, and of virtually all aspects of life today?
This is yet another salvo of the continuing struggle for the complete domination of our Protestant Republic.
A day does not go by without a plug or a pitch from the holy see. Yesterday, on CBS Evening News, Sunday-March 16, 2008, it was a comment about Ratzinger's statements about the violence in Iraq.
Has our country finally, lock, stock and barrell, "wondered after the Beast"?
Since when are we all Catholics, and are interested in the platitudes of the Bishop of Rome ?
Or the tactics of Jesuits; necessitating a day by day diary of their rumblings and rationales???
Why Columbia Broadcasting System, Why?
Are we (CBS) finally that much in our (Catholic) element that we can now push through blatanly our Catholic One World Government Agenda? Please inform me.
I've been watching yous-guys for a while, and only recently have noticed this unabashed escalation of Catholicity. Where does it end?
When the airwaves, and the goverment are completely an arm of the Vatican?
Therefore, implementing roman catholic views, solely, and exclusively? You know I'm really curious.
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As the Jesuits say: "The ends, justify the means".
You CBS, are the Means, please justify where it ends?
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Was 1984 just a book? Or the pivotal year? The long awaited synthesis?
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Blogman.
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Here's the enigmatic report:

Sending America's Favorite Pastime To Asia

With The Dodgers And The Padres Playing In Beijing, Will China Fall In Love With Baseball?



Baseball, a sport that was once popular in China, is now being re-introduced to Beijing students. (CBS)



(CBS) Baseball: It's the sound, the hot dogs, the peanuts, the souvenirs ... of the complete all-American pastime.

Except, this is China, where Major League Baseball wants into the world's largest market even though almost no one here has even seen a baseball game, CBS News correspondent Barry Petersen reports.

"It's very exciting," one Chinese fan says.

Baseball was once popular here.

Even Mao had baseball teams in his army, as training for throwing grenades. But then he banned capitalist things like baseball.

Today, with only a handful of obscure Chinese teams, the biggest hurdle is teaching a whole nation the love of the game.

"There is a certain rhythm, there is a certain poetry and it takes time, there is no question it takes time to really understand and get into it," said Los Angeles Dodgers coach Joe Torre.

It was the Jesuits who said, if you get them when they are young, you will have them for life. Obviously that's part of the marketing strategy of Major League Baseball in China.

They organized baseball programs for thousands of school kids. But it's tough.

I knew what a home run way, says 8-year-old Xinwei, but I forgot.

The kids there can't name one American player … but ask about basketball?

China's Yao Ming of the Houston Rockets is a hometown hero, and a symbol of what 20 years of marketing has done for America's NBA in Asia.

With games on TV and the government building 800,000 multi-purpose courts in rural China.

"During the day, actually, you can dry your crops there," said Tim Chen, the CEO of NBA China. "At night people get together there, social activity, watch movies. Then later you can play basketball there."

But don't underestimate how fast they can learn about American teams.

Or how making it to the big leagues can become a little boy's dream ... no matter where he was born.