Back in Jan. 2014 Christine
Lagarde, the head of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) gave a bold, occult, Illuminati speech about numerology and satanic
magick (not magic). The "beast" Crowley was big in occult magick. Watch the video below.
In refernce to the video I think she is trying to decoy us. I think she is referring unknowingly to the Shemittah that will occur next year in 2015. Remember Shemittahs and harbingers occur every 7 years. 9-11 2001 plus 7 equals the financial meltdown in 2008. 2008 plus 7 years equals July or September 2015, not 2014. I think Lagarde is off by a year but I may be wrong. I think she may also be referring to the global currency reset.
If you have a different opinon about what Lagarde is referring to please let me know.
She clearly was wrong about July 2014. The one event in history that caught my attention was that Jerusalem was sacked and the Jewish Temple destroyed on 20 July 70 A.D. by Titus's Roman legions.
We also know that Israel wants a 7 year peace treaty with Hamas which would fulfill Daniel 9:27.
If you have a different opinon about what Lagarde is referring to please let me know.
She clearly was wrong about July 2014. The one event in history that caught my attention was that Jerusalem was sacked and the Jewish Temple destroyed on 20 July 70 A.D. by Titus's Roman legions.
We also know that Israel wants a 7 year peace treaty with Hamas which would fulfill Daniel 9:27.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QYmViPTndxw
Below is Lagarde's very important Global Currency Reset video. It seems to me the Global Currency Reset fits perfectly with the Shemittah and harbinger of 2015.
IMF chief Christine
Lagarde has been put under formal investigation by French magistrates for
alleged negligence in a political fraud affair dating from 2008 when she was
finance minister.
Lagarde
was questioned by magistrates in Paris this week for a fourth time under her
existing status as a witness in the long-running saga over allegations that
tycoon Bernard Tapie won a large arbitration payout due to his political
connections.
"After three
years of procedure, the sole surviving allegation is that through inadvertence
or inattention I may have failed to intervene to block the arbitration that
brought to an end the longstanding Tapie litigation," she said in a
statement on Wednesday. "I have instructed my lawyer to appeal this
decision, which is without merit."
Under French
law, magistrates place a person under formal investigation when they believe
there are indications of wrongdoing, but that does not always lead to a trial.
Lagarde's lawyer,
Yves Repiquet, said he would personally appeal the magistrates'
decision. That means Lagarde would not have to return to Paris in the meantime,
allowing her to continue her duties as managing director of the IMF uninterrupted.
"She is now
on her way back to Washington and will, of course, brief the (IMF) board as
soon as possible," IMF spokesman Gerry Rice said. "Until then, we
have no further comment."
The inquiry
relates to allegations that Tapie, a supporter of conservative former President
Nicolas Sarkozy, was improperly awarded 403 million euros (320 million pounds)
in an arbitration to settle a dispute with now defunct state-owned bank Credit
Lyonnais.
The inquiry has
already embroiled several of Sarkozy's cabinet members and FranceTelecom's
chief executive, Stephane Richard, who was an aide to Lagarde when she was
Sarkozy's finance minister.
In previous
rounds of questioning, Lagarde has not recognised as her own the pre-printed
signature to sign off on a document facilitating the payment, Repiquet said by telephone. However, Richard has stated that Lagarde was fully
briefed on the matter.
The offence of
negligence by a person charged with public responsibility in France carries a
maximum penalty of one year's imprisonment and a 15,000-euro fine.
Lagarde was a
star in Sarkozy's cabinet and well respected by peers, pushing through many of
the high-profile initiatives in France's presidency of the Group of 20 nations.
She has been
managing director of the IMF since 2011 after her predecessor at the global
lender, Frenchman Dominique Strauss-Kahn, resigned over sexual assault charges
that were later dropped.
The IMF's board
discussed the possible consequences of the Tapie case before deciding to select
Lagarde, the board said at the time. It has continued to support her through
various stages of the case.
The IMF is
traditionally headed by a European, and five of the last eight managing
directors have been French. But the BRICS group of large emerging markets - Brazil,
Russia, India, China and South Africa - protested the tradition during the last
selection process in 2011, saying that continued European dominance could
undermine the IMF's legitimacy.
Lagarde competed
for her post against Mexican central banker Governor Agustin Carstens.
The IMF's No. 2
official, David Lipton, an American, would likely take over as acting managing
director if Lagarde were not able to perform her duties.
Tapie, a
colourful and often controversial character in the French business and sports
world, sued the state for compensation after selling his stake in sports
company Adidas to Credit Lyonnais in 1993.
He claimed the
bank had defrauded him after it later resold his stake for a much higher sum.
Credit Lyonnais, now part of Credit Agricole, has denied wrongdoing.
Investigators
are trying to determine whether Tapie's political connections played a role in
the government's decision to resort to arbitration that won him a huge pay-out.
He has denied any wrongdoing.
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