Bachchanik and today I want to talk about the self-destruction of Mohammed bin Salma, the leader of Saudi Arabia.
Yesterday, unbeknownst to him, our intelligence service picked up two operatives from Saudi Arabia Who had worked for Mohammed bin Salman and had warned him of people who are anti-Saudi Arabian.
In other words, dissidents who have criticized Mohammed bin Salman.
I can criticize him because I think he has a severe case of malignant narcissism.
He's on a course of self-destruction, trying to bring his country into an initial public offering or an IPO. But more importantly, he's a ruthless thug that Saudi Arabia does not need.
Let me give you a reason what's going on.
Not only did he send Saudi operatives yesterday and today, but a year ago, he had Saudi operatives who went in, and with the permission of Jared Kushner and unfortunately our President Trump, they went in and took a man by the name of Kosoji, a Saudi Arabian dissident, and terrorized him in the Istanbul embassy in Turkey and then cut him up.
Mohammed bin Salman claimed he didn't know about it, but it was occurring under his jurisdiction.
The reality is he ordered it very clearly.
Our CIA said that, and our National Security Agency on Standard Operating Procedures, SOP, had been warning all of our Saudi dissidents to stay away from Mohammed bin Salman.
Unfortunately, this happened to Koselji.
What's happening now is the self-destruction of Mohammed bin Salma.
He has done exactly what I wanted him to do, which is to create an initial public offering of his country.
That's correct, of his country.
So he's taken Aramco, which is the main oil company in Saudi Arabia and the only representation of all the oil in Saudi Arabia, which is the only product Saudi Arabia has, and he's made it into an initial public offering.
What does that mean?
That means, in my terms, that he is on the course of self-destruction.
At the same time, he is monetizing the only resource that Saudi Arabia has oil, which we in the United States, in England, in France, and in Russia...
We can monetize it, and we can play with its price.
Now, let me give you an example.
Mohammed bin Salman is so narcissistic, so grandiose, that he needed to go on a public offering at $2 trillion.
That sounds like a lot of money, but in reality, the public offering is going to be about 80% lower than that.
It'll be around $1 trillion.
That still sounds like a lot of money.
The key aspect here is when you make A RAMCO, a public offering, and you restrict the trading on it, what you're doing is holding Saudi Arabia hostage to Mohammed bin Salman.
And at the same time, Mohammed bin Salman is held hostage to guess who?
Guys like me, who are day traders, as well as other intelligence operatives all over the world, who can bring the price of oil all the way down from $100 a barrel, which we've done in the past, to punish Putin, And bring it down to $40 a barrel.
Well, right now the price of oil is about $55 a barrel.
The minute he goes out on public and he assumes that the price of oil will be $55, we can lower it down to $40 a barrel and $30 a barrel.
How hard is it for the United States?
It's quite easy.
Why?
Because we have North Dakota and Texas, which produces a lot of oil and we can flood his markets.
There's an old expression that says, He who thinks bad thoughts will end up in bad trouble.