The oligarchs behind the “humanitarian” regime change network now exploiting Jo Cox’s death to push for UK Labour split
Only
by masking their otherwise unpopular policies in the cloak of Jo
Cox’s tragedy, and humanity’s natural empathy for good samaritans
and the downtrodden, has this small group of powerful individuals
been able to launder disastrous wars and military adventurism as “the
right thing to do.”
by
Vanessa Beeley and Whitney Webb
Part
2 - The eBay billionaires and the Syria regime-change PR machine
As
previous reporting has detailed, the Jo Cox Fund — the posthumous
fund created soon after the late MP’s death — was formed by a
group of four individuals who have long been involved in
manufacturing consent for foreign “regime change” wars, first in
the Balkans and now in Syria, and have been aided in this effort by
massive funding from governments and elite billionaires.
Yet, of
those elite billionaires, some have promoted the Jo Cox Fund founders
— and, with them, their pet projects such as the White Helmets —
more than others.
One
billionaire in particular stands out. One of the “eBay
billionaires” who amassed a fortune as the online auction company’s
first employee, Canadian billionaire and “philanthropist” Jeffrey
Skoll not only shares past connections to the Jo Cox Four but has
continuously used his massive wealth and his “charitable”
foundation to promote them and their causes.
Indeed,
the Skoll Foundation — a partner of USAID, a NPIC-leading U.S.
government organization that has a reputation for funding
U.S.-friendly subversive forces in foreign countries — has provided
funding to the groups directly linked to Jo Cox founders, such as
Crisis Action and Global Witness.
And the
associated Skoll World Forum has promoted the cause of Western-backed
regime change in Syria — hosting the founder of the White Helmets,
James Le Mesurier; the current leader of the White Helmets, Raed
Saleh; the program director of the White Helmet parent organization
Mayday Rescue, Farouq Habib; as well as all four of the founders of
the Jo Cox Fund: Mabel van Oranje, Gemma Mortensen, Tim Dixon, and
Nick Grono.
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