WHY DID AMERICA GIVE ITS SOLDIERS CIGARETTE RATIONS?

Every war has a hidden objective.

Big money is made through no-bid government contracts.

War-profiteers do not make money in times of peace.

So they work to prolong wars, while they betray the soldiers.

They talk of patriotism, but they sell their own countrymen.

And they are happy to sell to both sides.

This drives up government debt, so the international bankers grab even more control.

And it’s not even just about making money.

They want to destroy everything in sight—and this includes their own soldiers.

Does that explain why the federal government gave its soldiers free cigarettes, which it borrowed money to purchase?

https://famri.org/history-of-tobacco-military-rations/

Our government did this for each of the four major wars that America fought in the Twentieth Century.

They did it in the First World War.

https://tobacco.stanford.edu/cigarettes/war-aviation/world-war-ii/

They did it in the Second World War.

The did it in the War in Korea.

And they did it in Vietnam.

The government corrupted chumps that were stupid enough to sign up.

The government corrupted people who were dragged in through the draft.

And the government undermined the effectiveness of every one of its soldiers.

This is what they do to their own.

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6 thoughts on “WHY DID AMERICA GIVE ITS SOLDIERS CIGARETTE RATIONS?”

  1. Thanks, Timo.

    My older brother, my father, and two of my uncles served during peacetime. They all smoked cigarettes.

    My father quit, cold turkey, while still in uniform. He said it was a waste of his hard-earned money which he could have sent back to his wife and child, and it was a nasty, stinky habit.

    Another uncle served in Viet Nam. He was already a cigarette smoker. He came back a completely different “man,” who chain-smoked and was basically a pedophile and an extremely volatile person.

    My sister and I were in elementary school when he returned, and now we see that we got programmed by him, as he exposed us to sexual images and weird demands in our pre-pubescent years.

    Wishing you well, my friend.

    Sharine.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Dear Shari–

      I am sorry to hear you were exposed to that creep when you were a child.

      Otherwise, as you say, cigarettes are certainly a nasty habit.

      My father gave them up when I was born, switching to a pipe and later cigars.

      Your friend,

      Timo

      Liked by 1 person

  2. I had forgotten about that–the cigarette in front of the firing squad.

    The cliche is also smoking together, in bed, after sexual intercourse.

    Edward Bernays was the fellow who helped glamorize cigarettes: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_Bernays

    This scumbag, who was the nephew of Freud, the father of public relations, and the coiner of the word “propaganda,” is also the reason why the banana is America’s favorite fruit and people still think that eggs and bacon are a healthy breakfast.

    What a guy!

    Liked by 1 person

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