The Story Behind Planet Aid and the Clothing Bin Cult – Strange But True

The bin on your block

Despite Tvind’s global character, residents of Europe and North America may have unwittingly seen or contributed to the assets of Petersen and the Teachers Group (TG) without even leaving their neighborhoods. From Colorado to Copenhagen, the network has been very busy in recent years planting new points-of-entry in city after city. The entry points are the clothing donation boxes mentioned above — those colorful metal bins silently soliciting your surplus.

The bins make it easy for First World consumers to hand over free goods to the cult’s front groups (Humana, People-to-People, Planet Aid, Gaia or Gaia Movement, USAgain, Angel Bins, DAPP, California Campus, et al.). Most donations are swiftly dumped overseas for a profit, where they will dominate and undermine the very local economies Tvind’s fake charities claim to be saving, in the process generating revenue that ultimately flows into TG-connected offshore accounts.

According to Rick Ross of the Cult Education Institute, “Amdi Pedersen [sic] has control with a small group of leaders at the top and they control everything. All of the charities, all of the people, all of the cash flow.”

Amazingly, in addition to the bins, Tvind’s charities have also been getting direct infusions of taxpayer money for years through federal foreign aid programs. The USDA, for instance, has generously funded Planet Aid’s ostensible food and development assistance programs in Africa, to the tune of millions of dollars. Twelve years of repeated warnings and complaints haven’t daunted the government’s aid jockeys a bit — even damning reports by their own investigator.

Perhaps relatedly, Planet Aid’s main power broker in Washington, Marie Lichtenberg, is reported to work closely with the government officials, and to stay well-connected to the right people via Washington pay-to-play trading posts like the Clinton Foundation.

What does it all mean?

Every rich globalist leaves a bloody trail of destruction in his or her wake. And so Petersen does, like a pro. He lives the high-roller’s life, having spent decades accumulating wealth by robbing the poor, the rich and the state alike to fund sumptuous yachts, elite villas, fine food and drink – and perhaps elaborate ‘religious’ rituals at his creepy compound by the sea.

The tragicomic thing about this mega-scam is that it’s been repeatedly exposed by investigative journalists and major media organizations, both in the U.S. and abroad. Steadfast charity watchdog Tvind Alert has been compiling publicly accessible information on the Teachers Group for nearly two decades. Many former workers have come forward and shared stories of money laundering, wage theft, and psychological abuse. The relevant police files have been shared with the relevant authorities.

Yet no prosecutions have taken place. In fact, the bins have been labeled \“constitutionally protected free speech\” by U.S. courts, saving them from retaliatory municipal bans. In Washington, the bureaucrats say they will take no further action.

Glitch in the matrix

Today, tens of thousands of donation bins still pockmark the U.S., drawing a weird combination of local ire, well-meaning generosity, and funky trash. Thousands of tons of free goods are surrendered to the crypto-cult every week. You can even donate and deduct the value of the contributions from your taxes.

The bins are like a glitch in the matrix: an unlikely public spectacle of private greed and government corruption, impunity, elitism, globalized crime and local parasitism, all hidden in plain sight. Truly, they bespeak a cruel logic of our decadent society: not only do nice guys finish last, but totally fake nice guys apparently finish first. Sad!

You can learn more about the Clothing Bin Cult from reputable sources herehere and here.

Article Appeared @https://curiosityaroused.com/skeptism/story-behind-planet-aid-clothing-bin-cult/

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *