WhatFinger


Closing the border for national security is crucial, but it is critical that America's life-blood, water, not be released through a porous financial dam

Water: Islam's new target to crush the West



Murderous terror strikes by islamist organizations, mostly related to ISIS, are clear assaults against West-influenced civilization... Paris late last year, San Bernardino at Christmas, Brussels last week, and Lahore, Pakistan on Easter Sunday are all separate fronts in the ongoing war. Over the centuries, battles pitting Islam against the Infidel--virtually every instance instigated by muslims--go all the way back to Mohammed's seventh century rampage across the Arabian peninsula, the sale of Africans into slavery, pirating merchant ships off Africa's Barbary Coast, and the modern war against Christians, Jews, Israel and, frankly, any non-adherent to a favored sect of Islam. That Jewish school children in Turkey are being targeted by ISIS indicates the depths of depravity to which a theocratic "State" can descend.
Every attack, skirmish and major campaign has been blamed on the victims of Islamic violence. Muslim initiators or radical jihadis refuse to accept the validity of other religions, or political systems, as the case may be, Islam fitting the role of a political ideology even more than a faith. Immediately following the ISIS-claimed attacks at the airport and metro station in Brussels, capital of the EU and headquarters for NATO, a senior official of the Palestinian Authority said Israel was the cause. The convoluted logic behind the accusation is petrifyingly absurd. In Greece, so-called refugees (overwhelmingly composed of strong young men who abandoned their homeland) rose-up against police when the rumor that the Macedonian border would be opened proved to be untrue, impugning Greek authorities as victimizing muslims. Yet these are mostly men who voluntarily left their country to virtually invade the European continent, the result of which has been a meteoric rise in rape, riot and crime. These are all prongs of a concerted effort to devastate, demoralize and bankrupt non-islamic nations. Before the Middle East petro-dollar collapses any further under the weight of oil-flooded markets, another tactic to diminish the economy of other countries has been instituted. While the desert-bound muslim nations have profited from vast oil reserves, they have continued to suffer from lack of the one true life-giving resource--water. And under the very noses of governments spanning from Tanzania to the United States that are already dealing with drought conditions, their water is being depleted and amassed for islam's benefit.

Support Canada Free Press


Along the banks of the Colorado River in California and Arizona, tens of thousands of acres of farmland have been purchased by Saudi Arabia's Almarai Company. The harvest to be yielded? Alfalfa, a water-hog crop, grown to be shipped to feed the Arabian dairy industry. What may appear to be somewhat insignificant in the overall scheme of things, is actually anything but. It is a targeted undermining of the resource most necessary to feed our own people, especially while the EPA institutes further restrictions (WOTUS) on water consumption by farmers and ranchers. A few million dollars collected for land sales to Saudi agri-business cannot outweigh the overall depletion of American aquifers, placing the interest of muslim nations above that of our own. Over the last few decades there have been uproars over the "selling-out" of American businesses--hotels, banks, manufacturing and services--to foreign interests, such as Japanese and Middle East real estate magnates and Chinese bankers. These transactions had differing effects on local economies in Hawaii, the West Coast and NYC, but they pale in comparison to losses of water resources and encumbered farmland now producing for foreign countries rather than our own. This concern has not been consigned only to us. Reports from 2009 show African nations of Kenya, Congo, Tanzania and Zambia were losing millions of arable acres to Saudi, Qatari, Kuwaiti, and other interests to feed their populace while Africans' stomachs were empty. There is a continuing problem where small and independent growers are being shut-out from obtaining water as deep wells are sunk by foreign interests that suck dry ancient aquifers.

Before the enviro-lemmings cry that this is all due to global warming, it is essential that presidential candidates evaluate their stance on the wild creation and implementation of regulations by governmental agencies, particularly regarding the Clean Water Act. Water is becoming less available because government is locking away the resource by adding trickling brooks to its list of "navigable waters." March 30, 2016, the Supreme Court heard arguments on yet another overreaching agency, the Army Corps of Engineers, that promised to put the Hawkes Company of Minnesota out of business by red-taping it to death through invented jurisdiction. There are three issues swirling in this morass that the election will decide. The new president must have the chutzpah to be staunchly pro-American agriculture by,
  1. emasculating or dismantling the EPA, BLM, DHHS and related bureaucracies and their oppressive regulations;
  2. 2)taking steps to restrict foreign investment in vital American industries, including real estate investment and development and
  3. 3)nominate a constitutional conservative to the Supreme Court to properly fill the vacancy left by Justice Antonin Scalia.
Closing the border for national security is crucial, but it is critical that America's life-blood, water, not be released through a porous financial dam. Only a candidate who will abolish the stranglehold of regulation-crazy agencies wielding unconstitutional power over American enterprise is worthy of our vote. Weigh their deeds against their words.


View Comments

A. Dru Kristenev -- Bio and Archives

Former newspaper publisher, A. Dru Kristenev, grew up in the publishing industry working every angle of a paper, from ad composition and sales, to personnel management, copy writing, and overseeing all editorial content. During her tenure as a news professional, Kristenev traveled internationally as a representative of the paper and, on separate occasions, non-profit organizations. Since 2007, Kristenev has authored five fact-filled political suspense novels, the Baron Series, and two non-fiction books, all available on Amazon. Carrying an M.S. degree and having taught at premier northwest universities, she is the trustee of Scribes’ College of Journalism, which mission is to train a new generation of journalists in biblical standards of reporting. More information about the college and how to support it can be obtained by contacting Kristenev at cw.o@earthlink.net.


ChangingWind (changingwind.org) is a solutions-centered Christian ministry.

Donate Here


Sponsored