Monday, June 2, 2014

Do you want to be like them?



Tinker
The American elitist club made up with the people from the Ivy League, and Northeaster big money Manhattan New York cocktail class is very friendly with the American news media. So they can use each other for access into the television shows that everyone see every day and night on our new and often used HD Televisions, Computer, Smartphone, Electronic technology.
So the people who can work and play together really do all the time in and around the American people elitist club that you and I don't belong to.
In reality they really don't like us at all until they want something from us. Like to vote for their favorite candidate running for Government office that they want control of.
Then they entertain you with whatever it take to get your vote. Remember these people who belong to the American elitist club are not like you and me. They are the privileged and wealthy who live very different lives in American then you and I.
The social culture in America is fix politically so we the everyday American people who make up that society can't influenced the rich and wealthy people who belong to the elitist club. You can't join that group of people unless you are just like them and become them after the long walk down the elitist trail of trial and error into becoming one of them.

So if you could would you join and do you really want to be like them? The real American elitist clue just might not be the people you think they are?
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http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/11/weekinreview/11stolberg.html

U.S. Presidents: The Very Elite Club That Never Meets

Published: January 10, 2009

WASHINGTON — From the moment he became president, Dwight D. Eisenhower barely spoke to Harry Truman. Franklin Delano Roosevelt practically banned Herbert Hoover from the White House. Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter were the best of friends, but only after both left office; they bonded on a long plane flight to Cairo, when Ronald Reagan sent them to the funeral of Anwar Sadat.

And George W. Bush has telephoned Bill Clinton on a regular basis over the last several years — a discovery that might shock Americans who remember well how Mr. Bush accused Mr. Clinton of dishonoring the Oval Office. That such conversations occurred has not previously been reported, but according to one person familiar with their frequent exchanges, the two swap stories about politics and engage in “presidential small talk.”

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