Now you'r asking for those of the Right to not be reactionary. I'm all for what you are saying, but I don't think it's in the way conservatives are put together.
Far, far too reactionary for that. It should change.
Have you heard of HUNGARIAN GOLD TRAIN MYSTERY?
Until now, it never crossed my mind to link Soros to that mystery.
Speculation: Because he was present when some of it was snatched from the Jewish owners, Soros could be able to recognize the loot once it reached U.S. shores after WWII. Perhaps his seed money was in fact a hush money. Perhaps he followed the golden pot and found a rainbow.
There is also another WWII gold mystery that can be used as an excercise in lateral thinking.
In April 1941 Yugoslav government fled from invading Nazis and Italian fascists in several airplanes from Niksic, Montenegro to London and Cairo. They were not able to carry the bulk of gold from National Bank vaults.
In total, there were close to 20,000 lbs of gold (166 crates of bullion, 38 crates of gold bars). Governemt took only 19 crates with them. The rest was hidden in Montenegro mountains.
Italians captured one part of the stash, the rest dissapeared for good. However, after the WWII, one of the Italian soldiers who was stationed in the area became all of a sudden filthy rich. His name was Lucio Gelli. From there, news reports read like a Ludlum novel.
Quote:
"Lucio Gelli was the Grandmaster of the P2 Masonic Lodge, which ultimately became known as Propaganda Due Masonic Lodge. Gelli was a close associate of Calvis, and just as was the case with Carboni, he had been gifted with almost $200 million in cash from Calvis bank. Without too much hesitation, Gelli was indicted in the Banco Ambrosiano matter as a money launderer for some of the most famous names in Italy. For his efforts, he was sentenced to 12 years in jail...Rather than go to jail, Gelli fled to the French Rivera resort of Cannes, where he was eventually nabbed by French police. He was put into a jail hospital, where he tried to kill himself with his glasses. When police went to Gellis home in Cannes, they found 630 pounds of gold bars valued at $1.7 million hidden in flowerpots. Gellis wife had an interesting explanation for the gold-filled pots, saying, "the gold being magnetically charged aids substantially in plant growth, and her husband was a first class botanist," she told the police.
As I said, this is only an excercise in lateral thinking. But it can give some of the Freepers a valuable hint to connect the dots.