The July issue of INC magazine's front cover is entitled "HOW I DID IT". Inside are stories about how founders of companies made it (obstacles they had to overcome etc) They name founders such as Jack Ma, Bryn Mooser, Arianna Huffington, Sheryl Sandberg etc...
Couldn't believe when I turned to page 42... there is a picture of, poor picked on, James Alefantis next to another pic of the Comet Pizza shooter. The headline reads ""How customers saved me from conspiracy nuts who tried to destroy my business". James got two pages to spew his lies. Sadly, INC also starts the piece, "as told to Burt Helm" , with... "Of all the bizarre turns in the 2016 presidential race, few top Pizzagate". It goes on to accuse the alt right media of spreading the ludicrous idea that Hillary and Podesta were running a secret child-trafficking ring out of a D.C. pizza place. They go on about how terrifying this was for poor James Alefantis. Then J.A.'s BS follows.
On a side note...I couldn't help but wonder if every freakin' media outlet is owned by "them" (tptb). This shit is even in INC magazine? Seriously??? SHAME ON INC! And if James Alefantis has all of "them" behind him....what about these other "made it to the top" people we hear about? I have often looked at many celebs and others who end up in the spotlight...and just scratch my head in disbelief. I'm beginning to think everything is an effing LIE. I feel like we're in the Truman Show.
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equineluvr ago
Thanks for bringing this to our attention. It appears that the July issue isn't online yet.
Yes, ALL media outlets are owned by TPTB. AND controlled by the CIA (Operation Mockingbird, 1950s).
Nothing but wealthy Jews here. And it has a Reuters (Rothschild) connection.
Inc. was founded in Boston by Bernie Goldhirsh, and its first issue appeared in April 1979.[4] Goldhirsh was an MIT-trained engineer who worked at Polaroid and on ballistic missiles before becoming an entrepreneur and founding Sail magazine, which he sold for $10 million, using the profits to found Inc. Paul W. Kellam, who had joined Goldhirsh's company as editor of Marine Business, was tapped as the first editor.[5] Goldhirsh kept a low profile, and longtime editor George Gendron was the "public face" of the magazine for two decades.[6] Though long considered the younger upstart compared to most business publications, Inc. suffered following the dot-com era as titles like Fast Company seemed to grab more attention, but the tech crash and subsequent retrenchment saw the magazine stabilize its circulation and image.[6] In 2000, widowed and battling cancer, Goldhirsh sold the magazine to Gruner + Jahr[6] for a price reported over $200 million.[5] The magazine was purchased in 2005 by Morningstar founder, Joe Mansueto, and Inc. and its sister magazine Fast Company constitute the publishing arm of Mansueto Ventures. The magazine is now based in New York City, and its editor-in-chief is Eric Schurenberg. In December 2013, Schurenberg was appointed as President of Inc., replacing the long-tenured Bob LaPointe. In late January 2014, Inc. announced that Reuters Opinion editor James Ledbetter would take over as editor of the magazine and Web site.[7]
Goldhirsh's devotion to the principles of entrepreneurism led him to create the Goldhirsh Foundation[8] and a unique trust run by his children.[9] Founder Bernie Goldhirsh's son, Ben Goldhirsh, is the founder of Good Magazine.[5]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inc._(magazine)
birthdaysuit11 ago
morningstar?? Lucifer?