View Full Version : Dubai - illuminati playgriund
i am all i am
24-03-2007, 09:24 PM
There is some serious money going into construction in Dubai. Bin Laden Construction is involved, Haliburton, etc.
Apparently some $200,000,000,000 will be spent in the next ten years, although I'm not to sure as to the source on this.
Here's a link to some great photo shots.
http://www.leenks.com/gallery438-all.htm
And here is some others.
http://media.funlol.com/content/dubaiprojects01.jpg
http://media.funlol.com/content/dubaiprojects02.jpg
http://media.funlol.com/content/dubaiprojects03.jpg
http://media.funlol.com/content/dubaiprojects06.jpg
http://media.funlol.com/content/dubaiprojects08.jpg
http://media.funlol.com/content/dubaiprojects05.jpg
http://media.funlol.com/content/dubaiprojects11.jpg
http://media.funlol.com/content/dubaiprojects12.jpg
i am all i am
24-03-2007, 09:47 PM
Here's a view of the Palm Islands along the waterfront.
http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Newsroom/NewImages/Images/palmis_ast_2006261.jpg
It's from this site...
http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Newsroom/NewImages/images.php3?img_id=17435
It gives you an idea of how big it really is when you compare the 'world islands' picture in the above post.
With LOVE.
phoenix1
24-03-2007, 09:54 PM
Nice one Iam all I am..COOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOL:D :)
BUT........
Fuckin oil Money...Bodies for hotels ...Cash from chaos...spiritual death for them.
Guaranteed, by their own ignorance of lifes REAL riches.
i am all i am
24-03-2007, 09:56 PM
Dubai: About 30,000, or 24 per cent of the world's 125,000 construction cranes, are currently operating in Dubai, according to the organisers of the Conmex construction machinery exhibition.
Demand for construction related machinery, equipment and vehicles is expected to continue rising in the Middle East, especially in the UAE, due to the continuing construction and real estate boom.
In 2003, the UAE's market for heavy construction machinery stood at $165 million, road construction machinery at $142 million and earth moving machinery at $125 million. The size has increased by 15-20 per cent since then.
Annual market demand for used machinery in the Middle East is valued at over Dh5 billion.
As of last April, there was almost $300 billion worth of projects underway in the UAE, according to a recently published report.
Although the concentration of construction activities in the UAE is in Dubai and Abu Dhabi, the other emirates are not far behind.
"The entire GCC region, particularly the UAE, is currently attracting astronomical investments in the real estate and the construction sectors," said Saif Al Midfa, director-general of the Expo Centre Sharjah, the organisers of Conmex, the exhibition for construction machinery and equipment.
Conmex is being organised by the Expo Centre Sharjah with the support of the Sharjah Chamber of Commerce and Industry.
"Construction activity in the region is currently at its peak as a result of which the demand for related machinery, equipment and vehicles is experiencing a sharp rise.
"The indications are that there will be no let-up in this trend," he added.
Dubai, which continues to be the centre of construction activities, has experienced an increase in real estate investment from Dh11 billion in 2000 to Dh165 billion now.
Multi-billion dirham projects are also under way in Abu Dhabi. The UAE capital is expected to spend Dh47 billion on construction related activities in the next two years.
Within the northern emirates, Sharjah has been at the helm of the construction frenzy.
The emirate recently committed Dh3.5 billion towards developing its infrastructure.
http://archive.gulfnews.com/articles/06/06/18/10047703.html
With LOVE.
i am all i am
24-03-2007, 09:59 PM
Dubai, United Arab Emirates (Aug 9, 2006 09:46 EST) With 14,000 laborers toiling day and night, the first of Dubai's three palm-shaped islands is finally about to get its first residents.
The Palm Jumeirah, a 31-square-kilometer island group, is part of what's billed as the largest land-reclamation project in the world, involving the hauling of millions of tons of Gulf sand and quarried rock over five years.
On November 30, the palm will open to some 4,000 residents, said Issam Kazim, a spokesman for Dubai's state-owned developer Nakheel.
When fully complete by 2010, the Palm Jumeirah will be an offshore city, with some 60,000 residents and at least 50,000 workers in 32 hotels and dozens of shops and attractions, according to Nakheel.
Observers say they are surprised that the fledgling developer has been able to build such a complex project more or less as planned, albeit with several snags that delayed the opening from last year.
"The project has captured people's imagination," said Colin Foreman of the Middle East Economic Digest. "Nothing like it has been done anywhere else in the world."
Nakheel's four island projects, the world's largest land reclamation effort, are reshaping Dubai's stretch of the Gulf coast.
The US$14 billion project is a key part of this booming city's ambitions to rival Singapore and Hong Kong as a business hub and surpass Las Vegas as a leisure capital.
The frenetic pace of development has utterly transformed Dubai from a sleepy trading and pearl-diving village in the 1950s to a flashy metropolis of 1.5 million.
The island's construction has not all been smooth, and most buyers were supposed to get keys to their island homes a year ago.
Some of the new land sank and Nakheel needed an extra year to add more sand and pack it with vibrating land compactors, Kazim said.
Reports from those who have wandered through the island's giant homes describe them as cheaply finished and set uncomfortably close to one another. Nakheel rejected an Associated Press request to visit the island.
Overburdened roads in Dubai's Jumeirah Beach neighborhood are expected to clog further as people begin moving onto the island, accessible, for now, by a single bridge. Those moving onto the Palm Jumeirah this year will have to live with construction for another three years, and then an influx of tourists. Most of the owners are foreigners, with Britons making up the largest group, Kazim said.
Dubai's government expects the Palm Jumeirah to become a signature tourist attraction, bringing in as many as 20,000 daily visitors, Kazim said.
Meanwhile, laborers living in a cruise ship moored offshore are scrambling to finish enormous concrete houses that are crammed together on the palm island's 17 "fronds." The fronds are narrow peninsulas as long as 1.6 kilometers, attached to the island's main trunk. Nakheel will hand keys to owners of 1,350 homes by November 30, Kazim said.
Many observers believe Dubai's frenetic homebuilding will soon outstrip demand. "We've still got a shortage of properties in Dubai, but that's likely to become an excess in next six or 12 months," said Steve Brice, an economist with Standard Chartered Bank in Dubai.
http://www.underwatertimes.com/news.php?article_id=31260104897
With LOVE.
i am all i am
24-03-2007, 10:04 PM
Nice one Iam all I am..COOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOL:D :)
BUT........
Fuckin oil Money...Bodies for hotels ...Cash from chaos...spiritual death for them.
Guaranteed, by their own ignorance of lifes REAL riches.
Yeah, I'm hearing you brother. I haven't been able to get on to Humans Rights Watchgroup site. There's some dodgy stuff going on over there apparently. Although they are paying people big money to go over there. I'll see if I can find out some more about what's going on.
With LOVE.
phenylamine
24-03-2007, 10:15 PM
Disgusting waste of resources,I sincerely hope a giant Tsunami wipes it all out just after its finished,preferably at max occupancy of illuminati scum.
siliconpsychosis
24-03-2007, 10:21 PM
I totally agree Phen.
All the lizards need after all the constructions finished, is a giant forcefield shielding them from the rest of the planet.
Infact I expect they already have secret plans for this.
The new capital of the Lizard Empire.
truthsayer
24-03-2007, 11:55 PM
A friend of the family was shown round existing accommodation and informed of future accommodation in Dubai and flown round in a helicopter and offered him property whilst he was visiting on a job (He's an international press photographer).
He relayed the story in detail to us, and said he could put a word in for us if we were interested in going over there and get us more info on moving out there if we were interested.
He went on to tell us how much we could earn, how well looked after we would be, how we'd paid almost no tax, what would be done for us, our futures secured and so on. He said a lot more as he's quite the story teller, but the more he informed us about the whole set up the more uncomfortable I felt about the whole thing. Something felt very wrong about the whole thing and my instincts are very rarely wrong.
After he left I said to my brother that I had nothing but a really bad feeling about the whole thing and he conveyed he felt the same. We both just hoped he wouldn't bring it up again (and he hasn't since *phew*).
Really bad place and two of our friends have just moved out there. :(
phenylamine
25-03-2007, 12:12 AM
I'm a bit confused?,your post seems to imply that any old regular joe can just hop on over and live a life of luxury and leisure,or do you and most of your friends just have 10-20 mil. sitting around and thats why your post makes it sound accessible to us cattle.Or are you talking about someplace else?
Thanks for clearing things up for me if you can.
Peace.
Anders Lindman
25-03-2007, 12:20 AM
Cool Dubai projects! A bit artificial perhaps, but that's also an interesting aspect. If the whole world, and all cities were to be artificially created like this, then that would be boring, but for a few cities like Dubai, and Las Vegas, it is appropriate I think.
truthsayer
25-03-2007, 12:34 AM
I'm a bit confused?,your post seems to imply that any old regular joe can just hop on over and live a life of luxury and leisure,or do you and most of your friends just have 10-20 mil. sitting around and thats why your post makes it sound accessible to us cattle.Or are you talking about someplace else?
Thanks for clearing things up for me if you can.
Peace.
That would be about the size of it, but at what cost can any old Joe just pop on over there? There was something fishy about the whole thing.
No millions for me :(
phenylamine
25-03-2007, 02:01 AM
Cool Dubai projects! A bit artificial perhaps, but that's also an interesting aspect. If the whole world, and all cities were to be artificially created like this, then that would be boring, but for a few cities like Dubai, and Las Vegas, it is appropriate I think.
What is 'appropriate' about spending hundreds of billions of dollars just so the super rich can live in even more luxury than they allready do?,while billions live in squalor?
Please enlighten me.
cheeb
25-03-2007, 02:22 AM
better to spennd it on an island thn on smart bombs its not as if money is real anyhow
Anders Lindman
25-03-2007, 02:25 AM
What is 'appropriate' about spending hundreds of billions of dollars just so the super rich can live in even more luxury than they allready do?,while billions live in squalor?
Please enlighten me.
I think projects like that and other constructive manifestations help to lift humankind as a whole. This in turn, if managed correctly, will help other people around the world to lift themselves up from less than good conditions. If managed badly however, it will only create more poverty while a small but grotesquely rich elite gets even more rich. I'm optimistic. I think that things will get better for the whole of humanity.
Anders Lindman
25-03-2007, 02:35 AM
better to spennd it on an island thn on smart bombs its not as if money is real anyhow
The arms and military industry is today THE BIGGEST industry in the world. That should tell us something.
phenylamine
25-03-2007, 02:42 AM
Thanks for your point of view,I too am optimistic about the future as can be seen in the 10 yrs from now thread.However I respectfully disagree with you that projects like this can ever have a positive effect for the vast majority of the worlds citizens.
Cool looking it certainly is,but I bet that the earth blowing up would look pretty cool from the outside too,I'd pass on bolth.Shitty anology but you probably get me.
Anders Lindman
25-03-2007, 02:53 AM
Thanks for your point of view,I too am optimistic about the future as can be seen in the 10 yrs from now thread.However I respectfully disagree with you that projects like this can ever have a positive effect for the vast majority of the worlds citizens.
Cool looking it certainly is,but I bet that the earth blowing up would look pretty cool from the outside too,I'd pass on bolth.Shitty anology but you probably get me.
Not a direct effect perhaps, but indirectly such constructive endeavors are signs of progress. What would happen if the arms and military industry began to put its enormous resources and knowledge into more constructive projects. My gawd! That would create a huge shift in the right direction.
cheeb
25-03-2007, 03:05 AM
yes it tells us that at the moment the arms industry are making a lot of money by trying to find better ways of killing people if they turned this premiss on its head they could send a smart bomb through every letterbox and it would deliver food and medicine and it would cost less and promote better relations
phenylamine
25-03-2007, 03:12 AM
I can't and won't argue with that logic,thats true.Massive projects and expenditure are not inherently bad,nothing is,only how it is used,but this project is nothing more than a super-playground for the super-elite.I think it stinks to hell,thats my story and I'm sticking to it;) .
Peace
cheeb
25-03-2007, 03:27 AM
well comeon then give me a better alternative .the ralway system in this country was a massive feat of engineering the line from london to penzance hardley goes up a gradient and thats over 200 miles .These things were considered playthings for the rich in their day but isambard Kingdom brunell ,was a visionary architect, you only have to go to bristol and plymouth to see this marvellous foresight of engineering,he was like a jules verne redefining the boundaries of the age
nice chemtrails in 3rd and 4th picture.
i wonder who were the architects?
i am all i am
25-03-2007, 03:52 AM
Here's a link to some slide shows of Dubai. There's some before and after pictures as well.
Presentations and Documents tagged dubai
One of the hotels costs between $7,250 up to $18,500 per night.
You better start saving or take out a mortgage/bank loan.
And here's the one that I originally saw.
http://www.intruso.info/2007/02/06/dubai-otro-mundo/
With LOVE.
phenylamine
25-03-2007, 03:55 AM
well comeon then give me a better alternative .the ralway system in this country was a massive feat of engineering the line from london to penzance hardley goes up a gradient and thats over 200 miles .These things were considered playthings for the rich in their day but isambard Kingdom brunell ,was a visionary architect, you only have to go to bristol and plymouth to see this marvellous foresight of engineering,he was like a jules verne redefining the boundaries of the age
I hardly think there is much comparison between a railway system or any other kind of infrastucture and this project.This is a gated community for the rich and elite,just like they have here in America but on a massive scale.Its a disgusting show of wealth and power to make people believe that this is what success is,bullshit,it's all part of a colossal fuckin scam it what it is.
Peace
friendsinthesky
25-03-2007, 04:20 AM
Maybe the super rich consider it their own Atlantis or the new Atlantis as they have somewhere to hide (rule the world) when the shit hits the fan for the rest of us.
Also, it's amazing how many movie & music star's (currently) prefer to live in Europe rather than the U.S.A.
rainmaker
25-03-2007, 04:28 AM
Well, looking at the Dubai pics, it's placed in an extremely precarious environment and prone to flooding. My bet is they are preparing that so-called playground to send the ones who THINK they are priveleged, and then flood them all. :) Eh, maybe I'm just getting too cynical...?
phenylamine
25-03-2007, 04:39 AM
Not sure about that,but you do bring up a valid point,if global warming is real and sea levels are going to rise then why are they spending 100's of billions building these artificial islands that will be supposedly underwater in 20 years?
kinda curious me thinks.
notaslave
25-03-2007, 07:23 PM
Jeez it tain ye long enuff, I posted the ejaculation link weeks ago.