Bear with me as I attempt to put together a story of a
possible future…. Forgive me, as this
will be somewhat disorganized; as I have suggested more than once, this Syria
things seems big and I am struggling with putting together many different
pieces. Perhaps I am overthinking it….
It is a story grounded in the global financial mess, brought
on by central banking and this driven to a large extent by the Federal Reserve
as keeper of the global reserve currency; a world grown tremendously tired of a
hypocritical and hyperactive super-power bully; changing geo-political
landscapes, as developing economies gain more clout and developed economies
fail to grow their way into the impossible promises made by the respective
governments; failed attempts at further consolidation toward global
centralization (call it world government, if you like).
I will build on one of my earliest
posts at this blog. In it, I presented
a scenario of a new set of alliances coming out of the wake of today’s
transitional events – transitional even before Obama’s Syrian debacle, although
this debacle seems to have brought to the fore that which previously was
whispered only discretely. In reading it
again, I remain comfortable with the possibilities presented.
The US and the west have made a fine mess of things. The obvious death of the old financial system
came in 2008, but signs of it were evident certainly in 1971 – just 25 years
after its birth – with the closing of dollar convertibility in international
markets.
Yet, the military order hasn’t missed a beat – every desired
bombing has been carried out. It is as
if the machine of regulatory democracy, put in place for the control made
possible, is going through a few final reflexive convulsions before finally
finding death.
Events this past week regarding Syria still strike me as a significant
sign of something. Start with the
simple: there are several who suggest that if Obama deserved the Nobel Peace
Prize merely for his campaign rhetoric, certainly
Putin has earned one for his work regarding Syria:
When Kathleen Trola
McFarland (sic) the familiar Fox News national security analyst who served
in national security posts in the Nixon, Ford and Reagan administrations and
was an aide to Henry Kissinger at the White House, wrote that "Vladimir
Putin is the one who really deserves the Nobel Peace Prize", she obviously
had the Syrian crisis in mind.
McFarland wrote on Tuesday,
"In one of the most deft diplomatic maneuvers of all time, Russia's
President Putin has saved the world from near-certain disaster."
With events in Syria masterfully steered by Putin, negative
views of the United States are coming to the fore:
Tehran too has taken a highly
nuanced position on the issue of Syria's chemical weapons. It has held a delicate
line that, alas, the wily Gulf Arab sheikhs trapped Obama. In an extraordinary
interview with Press TV on Wednesday, Iran's savvy Foreign Minister Mohammad
Javad Zarif said,
I think that a number of groups,
people inside the United States, and interests outside the United States,
wanted to put the president of the US - whom I believe was reluctant to start
the war - into a trap, a trap which he had unfortunately laid down for himself;
and that was to get him involved in a war in order to address a hypothetical
issue of the use of chemical weapons by the government of Syria.
This, too, is my sense about Obama – he has been acting
against type in his role as Chief Warmonger.
Do you want to see a more thorough portrayal of the world’s
market share leader in weapons of mass destruction? Try this and
get a sense of how much of the rest of the world sees the land of the free:
On my wall is the front page of
Daily Express of September 5, 1945, and the words: "I write this as a
warning to the world." So began Wilfred Burchett's
report from Hiroshima. It was the scoop of the century. For his lone, perilous
journey that defied the US occupation authorities, Burchett was pilloried, not
least by his embedded colleagues. He warned that an act of premeditated mass
murder on an epic scale had launched a new era of terror.
Almost every day now, he is
vindicated. The intrinsic criminality of the atomic bombing is borne out in the
US National Archives and by the subsequent decades of militarism camouflaged as
democracy. The Syria psychodrama exemplifies this…. The great unmentionable is that humanity's most dangerous enemy resides
in Washington. (emphasis added)
With al-Qaeda now among its allies,
and US-armed coupmasters secure in Cairo, the
US intends to crush the last independent states in the Middle East: Syria
first, then Iran. "This operation [in Syria]," said the former French
foreign minister Alexander Dumas in June, "goes way back. It was prepared,
pre-conceived and planned." (emphasis added)
The objective is to ever-expand regions under western-style
regulatory democracy, useful for shearing the sheep. But this has not gone so well for at least
the last ten years.
Whether or not Bashar al-Assad or
the "rebels" used gas in the suburbs of Damascus, it is the US, not
Syria, that is the world's most prolific user of these terrible weapons.
The author goes on to list just a minor subset of the
atrocities committed by the US government through history. He does so much more; it is a most worthwhile
read.
Pause.
Many have suggested that this fantasy of man-made global
warming was a Trojan horse for advancing world government; the climate is
global, and problems involving the globe require global structures to solve,
after all.
I have additionally speculated that the carbon tax – a story
built up over many years – was the means by which a new global currency would
be introduced. From one
of my posts that touched on this subject, regarding the failure (in the
eyes of the controllers) of the latest green summit in Rio in 2012:
For all of the justifiable concerns
of the increasing encroachment by government into the lives of individuals,
such failures should be highlighted and celebrated. This green movement, a move toward carbon
taxes all in the name of global cooling / global warming / climate change, was
intended to usher in a new global currency at just the time the financial
calamity hit.
One certain way to ensure market acceptance of a currency is
to require taxes to be paid in said currency.
The global carbon tax was intended just for that purpose, it seems to me
– ushering in the replacement for the failing dollar.
Unfortunately for the central planners, a
few emails got out into the public just when they were ready to spring
their plan – destroying all momentum that was built-up in anticipation of the
then upcoming Copenhagen summit:
The Climatic Research Unit email
controversy (also known as "Climategate") began in November 2009 with
the hacking of a server at the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) at the University
of East Anglia (UEA) by an external attacker. Several weeks before the Copenhagen Summit on
climate change, an unknown individual or group breached CRU's server and copied
thousands of emails and computer files to various locations on the Internet.
Today
we are told that the earth is cooling, just as it was in the 1970s when the
fear was a new ice age, not warming. The
possibility of using climate change, just like the continuance of the current
monetary scheme, has taken several death blows.
It may very well be dead.
I speculate that the end of global warming / climate change
was the end of an ability to globally centralize – at least for a long time. What global crisis can be invented to take
its place? Space alien invasions,
perhaps?
If the possibility of ushering in a new, global, currency has
been dashed – and with it, the path toward continued centralization – then
perhaps there is little use of the current tool (i.e. the US government) for
Anglo-elite control.
So, in my earlier post, I suggested that what might come out
of this fine mess is a new alliance – one that includes Russia, China, Germany,
Japan, and possibly Australia.
Geographically this is plausible; from a technology, commodity, labor,
and market standpoint, this is immensely reasonable; geo-politically, one of
the main desires is a check on the US position in the world – the Syrian
debacle seems to be exposing this desire in many; financially, there seems to
be no alternative prepared to stand in for the slowly failing dollar.
So why rehash my earlier posts and comments, as well as take
the all-too-easy approach of delivering numerous body blows against a failing
empire? Let’s start here:
Romantic Germany risks economic
decline as green dream spoils. Germany
is committing slow economic suicide. It has staked its future on heavy industry
and manufacturing, yet has no energy policy to back this up. Instead, the country has a ruinously
expensive green dream, priced at €700bn (£590bn) from now until the late 2030s
by environment minister Peter Altmaier if costs are slashed - and €1 trillion
if they are not.
The green energy religion is butting up against reality, as
I wrote about recently; Germany, a country dependent on exporting its
manufactured product, has dumped countless billions of Euros down the drain of
horrendously expensive and wasteful energy schemes, and has little in the way
of economically sustainable energy solutions to show for it.
America was over-rated in 2000.
Russia and Britain were over-rated in 2007. Brazil, India and a string of
mini-BRICS were over-rated in 2011. Today the country most obviously trading at
its cyclical peak is Germany, a geostrategic “short” candidate that is drawing
down its credit from past efforts.
Germany is shuttering its nuclear capability. This represents, apparently, capacity for
one-fifth of the country’s energy demand.
In its place is a plan (hope) to derive one-half of energy needs by 2035
from wind, solar, biomass and other renewables.
The results are rather predictable:
Electricity prices are twice as
high as in America. Natural gas costs are four times as high, forcing the
chemical giants of the Ruhr and the Rhine to decamp across the Atlantic. BASF
is building its new site for emulsion polymers in Texas, the latest of a €4.2bn
investment blitz in the US.
So far, publicly at least, Merkel is standing firm:
Angela Merkel says she is “more
convinced than ever” that her green gamble will pay off. “If anyone can manage
it, it’ll be the Germans. It’s not easy, but we can do it.”
Sooner or later, Germany will have to face facts: it needs
energy compatible with a technologically advanced industrial economy. This won’t come from wind turbines and solar
panels on the farmhouses of the Schwarz Wald.
What German
neighbor has plenty of energy resources?
Germany's euro break-up party –
Alternative für Deutschland (AfD) – has unveiled its foreign policy. It is pure
Bismarck.
"Germany and Europe have no
interest in a further weakening of Russia," said Alexander Gauland, AfD's
foreign affairs chief. "Germany's relations with Russia should be managed
with meticulous care."
What they say is no longer an
academic question. The party is rising fast in the polls and may break through
the 5pc barrier to take seats in the Bundestag, scrambling a close election.
A very minor party, but at least this is indicative that the
dialogue has become public.
AfD pays lip-service to the Nato
alliance, insisting that it wishes to retain the US as the anchor of the
Western security system, even it as it talks of finding a middle way between
the US and Russia. This is eyewash. You cannot pick and choose, opting in and
out of western security as takes your fancy.
But is it merely a minor party giving voice to a minority
opinion? Check recent German behavior on
the global stage:
The country refused to back its
French and British allies in the UN Security Council over Libya; it refused to
join France, Britain, Spain, and Italy in signing the G20 accord denouncing the
use of chemical weapons by the Assad regime in Syria.
It curries favour with Russia and
China at the expense of EU partners on one issue after another, undercutting
the European Commission when its own trade interests are at stake. It is a
"semi-detached" member of the European Union already, more so than
Britain these days in foreign policy.
Germany has already made overtures to the east, at the
expense of falling in line with the desires of its western occupiers.
Putin has demonstrated that the US emperor has no clothes –
both via Snowden and now regarding Syria.
The order of the world may be changing; instead of the
dreamt-for New World Order, the elite may be on the receiving end of a
China and Russia that see things differently. Of course, the elite will still find a way to
get theirs; however, it seems to me that the political leadership in China and
Russia would not be very willing to allow others to sheer the sheep that are in
their respective flocks.
Note: HT to Ed
Steer; most of the external articles cited in this post all appeared in the
September 14 edition of his daily post.
It is striking that such a story is rapidly emerging, all at this time.
Or just coincidence.
Greatly enjoying this series of articles. Your ability to connect the dots through so many different angles is fascinating. Sure , it' just speculation, but it's spect speculation of the informed, well thought-out and well-sourced variety.
ReplyDeleteI will post this up at Lionsofliberty.com later this week
Thank you, Marc.
DeleteI think we need more of this sort of speculation. Some of what is learned from such things is indirect, yet might not be learned for a very long time without the original thoughts.
ReplyDeleteThe best things Germany has are heavy industry combined with high tech. One demands a large amount of steady electricity, the other requires a very steady supply. Merkel is destroying Germany in slow motion, just as the US has been denuded of it's industry by the combination of regulatory foolishness and corporate manipulation.
The NWO crowd will not quit. They will just morph their efforts as they deem best to effectuate world wide control.
Their being thwarted in this (to them) small way is hopeful but dangerous. Some of us sort of knew what they were doing. Or, at least, some of us like to think so. It will change now. There is no way that we can anticipate all of the ways that it will. taxes
taxes, I agree with the indirect learning. This is one reason I toss this stuff out there - who knows what it might trigger in someone else's thinking, and how that might lead to a fine-tuning of insight.
DeleteWhile I can't say much for the Team USA/Team Russia notes aside from me appreciating the revelations, I can attest to the unraveling of the climate change movement.
ReplyDeleteI have the (mis)fortune of being involved in an industry that indirectly gains from the Green Religion. "Green Projects" have all but erased entirely. The bids exist, but they are few and far between. It's hit a point where particular decision makers (I might make /some/ of them sound more important than they are) aren't seeing the point in expending limited resources in green technology that hasn't been proven to be any more or less efficient than it's traditional counterparts.
It's been interesting to watch the private sector start to back away from the Green Religion.
-Tony the Tiger