Susan Bradford, Ivanka Trump Virtue Signals to Promote the Globalist Trump Brand
By Susan Bradford
Never
let a good crisis get in the way of promoting your brand. Just as
Ivanka Trump who has taken to social media to praise the “courage and
bravery”of the Ukrainians while commending the “volunteers” who are
“risking their lives” to deliver more than one million meals across the
country, thanks to public-private partnerships forged with churches that
have transformed Christian institutions into government contractors.
After Ivanka’s tears moved her father to bomb Syria so her husband’s friends could drill for oil in the Golan Heights, her heart-felt sympathy for the victims of Russian’s assualt against the Ukraine inspired her to work for Christian charities that send food parcels to Kyiv, Lviv, and Sumy.
“To
the people of Ukraine, you are in our thoughts and prayers,” an earnest
Ivanka told her fans on Instagram. “And our hearts break for what you
are experiencing in this dire time. You have inspired the world with
your courage and bravery as you fight for your country and for your
freedoms.”
In case the public were outraged over another senseless war that has so far claimed the lives of 17,000 Russian troops and pulverized Ukrainian cities, local rabbis, priests, and other “faith leaders” appeared before the media to distribute food parcels to devastated Ukrainians.
With
its family and friends amassing a fortune through public-private
partnerships, the Bush clan appreciated that profits were to be made by
transforming churches into government contractors which advanced
globalism while enriching politically connected friends. These
arrangements pulled the wool over the eyes of the Christian conservative
base, while mobilizing patriots behind them, and neutralize any
criticism or scrutiny of their self-serving agendas.
The separation of church and state was extinguished on January
29, 2001, when President George W. Bush issued an Executive Order at
the White House for an Office of Faith-based and Community Initiatives
to engage 11 federal agencies in helping churches provide social
services. To this end, the Bush Administration forged partnerships with
religious organizations, in line with public-private partnerships that
enabled powerful special interests to enrich themselves through
government contracting by providing an endless array of products and
services on the government’s dime.
Not
long after, ministers being subsidized by pharmaceutical companies,
were encouraging their congregations to support government initiatives
like the Affordable Care Act, woke activism, and open borders. During
the Trump Administration, they discussed the benefits of vaccines from
the pulpit. Through government initiatives, values were being reshaped and realigned to support globalism.
President
Barack Obama reinforced these efforts through his own Executive Order,
dated February 5, 2009, through which a President’s
Advisory Council for Faith-based and Neighborhood Partnerships was
established, ensuring that congregation-based community organizations
moved in lock step with the federal government to advance public policy.
The
Trump Administration built upon the inroads Bush and Obama had made
with churches to promote the Trump brand. Ivanka was quick ot join
former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger to launch a multi-million
dollar, taxpayer-funded program to promote female entrepreneurship
overseas. Many female entrepreneurs had lost their companies and jobs to
globalism while Ivanka grifted off the taxpayer to promote her brand as
a champion of women entrepreneurs, like herself.
Reaffirming her true globalist leanings, Ivanka joined Chobani yogurt founder Hamdi Ulukaya to deliver food to people in need as part of a Farmers to Families food box program. She did not dip into the millions of dollars in profits she had made through her own businesses to feed the hungry. Rather, she tapped into church-government contracting programs through the Department of Agriculture to provide food banks and community organizations with surplus produce.
Launched in 2020, Ivanka’s $6 billion Farmers to Families Box Program (USDA) provided fresh produce to families affected by the coronavirus pandemic, a program that was discontinued over “alleged mismanagement” and reports of redirecting public funds for private gain. While the ordinary person saw a dramatic increase in their grocery bills, Ivanka virtue signaled while distributing free groceries with by a letter signed by President Donald Trump.
The
effort tapped into a collaborative network of churches that engaged in
charity “in the name of Jesus,” even though Ivanka is Jewish. As of
January 4, 2021, the Secretary of Agriculture was seeking an additional
$1.5 billion worth of food for a Farmers to Families Food Box program
while the price ordinary Americans were paying for food skyrocketed.
According to a press release, over 3.3 billion meals were distributed –
or 10 boxes per American citizen. How many American citizens actually
received them? “During these unprecedented times, this Administration
will continue to fight for American families and will always put them
first,” Ivanka said.
While farmers were being ordered to slaughter their own livestock and stores were suffering supply chain issues brought on by the pandemic, the USDA “purchased combination boxes to ensure all involved recipient organizations have access to fresh produce, dairy products, fluid milk, and meat products, and seafood products will also be included in this round.”
Who
were the recipients? Why were efforts not made to address the problems
of American homelessness, due in part to the outlandish cost of real
estate brought on by the predatory, self-serving policies of banks while
firms, like the Carlyle Group and BlackRock, and real estate investors,
like Ivanka’s husband, Jared
Kushner, have made obscene levels of profits through government grift?
Instead, the government and its corporate allies created conditions of
desperation and then injected themselves into the problem to solve it,
with taxpayer funds and allotments going to politically-connected
contractors – not to people the Americans may have wanted to receive
support, like neighbors, but, potentially to refugees and a steady
stream of desperate immigrants.
A
hint to who these beneficiaries were lies in the name of the “Dream
Centers.” The Farmers to Families Food Box program is part of the
Coronavirus Food Assistance Program (CFAP), which was developed as part
of the federal government’s response
to the COVID-19 pandemic, with advice on offer from such Hamilton
Project board members as former Google CEO Eric Schmidt and Carlyle
Group founder David Rubenstein.
Ivanka’s partner in his humanitarian effort was Chobani yogurt founder Hamdi Ulukaya, a self-made billionaire and Turkish immigrant whose company has “proudly resettled refugees from Iraq, Afghanistan, Turkey, and other countries to work in its factories in upstate New York and Idaho,” the Mercury News reported. Info Wars chieftain Alex Jones accused the yogurt company of “importing migrants” while Steve Bannon said the company was fueling a “Muslim refugee crisis.” Ulukaya even spoke out against Trump’s temporary Muslim travel ban on grounds that “this is very personal for me.”
Upon closer inspection, Ivanka’s charitable efforts reflect government grifting and pandering to globalism. Christianity Today reported, for example, that the Dream Center was a “model of faith-based organizations,” which essentially built upon the partnerships Bush and Obama had established with churches to project the government’s arm into congregations to ensure that government and churches were aligned in purpose. The Dream Center was described as a “shelter for “human trafficking victims” while George W. Bush described it in 1998 as a “model for faith-based organizations,” an endorsement that should raise questions about the true intent behind such efforts.
The Dream Center is globalist by design – it has 84 centers in 29 states and 11 different countries, raising questions of why this effort is being funded by American taxpayers. Ulukaya attended the World Economic Forum in Davos, which is advancing the Great Reset, a project geared at consolidating the world’s wealth and power under the Vatican and Rothschilds. Add to this that Ivanka was identified as a “Young Global Leader” by the World Economic Forum in 2015.
Ulukaya has reportedly teamed with corporate leaders and foreign governments to help resettle refugees. While his intentions on behalf of victimized people is noble, the Vatican has weaponized immigration against the West. Rather than promoting self-determination, national sovereignty, peace and prosperity among nations to curb the need for refugee programs, people are being displaced and relocated into foreign countries, like the United States, through endless wars that are being waged at the expense of ordinary people to advance the cause of globalism.
Ulukaya
has reportedly pledged $2 million to the United Nations High
Commissioner of Refugees; signed The Giving Pledge, a philanthropic
initiative by billionaires Warren Buffett and Bill Gates; served as
Obama’s Presidential Ambassador for Global Entrepreneurship; and been a
member of the Upstate Regional Advisory Board of the Federal Reserve
Bank of New York, reflecting interests aligned with the corporate,
political, and financial elite whose self-serving, unprincipled actions
have created the very refugee crisis upon which Ivanka was burnishing
the Trump brand.
For an Administration that campaigned on an American First agenda at a time when U.S. citizens were suffering, losing their homes, and falling into destitution Ivanka’s charitable efforts exposed the hypocrisy and self-serving nature of the Trump clan who owed their wealth, power, and privilege to government grift and globalism.
Susan Bradford is the Author of The End of Globalism: How the Rothschilds Used Donald Trump as a Trojan Horse to Deceive Patriots; Perpetuate Color-of-Law Governments and Central Banks; and Rig Elections to Keep the Failing Plan for World Tyranny and Global Pillaging on Track. You can connect to Susan and her books through www.susanbradford.org.
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