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Resistance
See other Resistance Articles

Title: Celente's current predictions
Source: CTV
URL Source: [None]
Published: Mar 6, 2011
Author: Kieron Lang
Post Date: 2011-03-06 23:52:58 by Tatarewicz
Keywords: None
Views: 111
Comments: 4

Watching events unfold in North Africa and the Middle East, you might think the uprisings there -- aimed at toppling corrupt regimes -- will peter out once democracy takes hold. But political prognosticator Gerald Celente says you're dead wrong.

The founder and publisher of the New York -based Trends Journal believes that way of thinking is so misguided, in fact, anyone who thinks that way won't see what's really coming next.

Celente, who makes a living with his forecasts of where the world is heading, trumpets the success of his predictions on everything from the brewing popularity of gourmet coffee in 1988 to this century's "Great Recession" in 2004.

More recently, Celente says he warned of the current spread of youth-inspired uprisings long before anyone else.

"We had forecast that there would be a wave of protests raging throughout the world in response to three elements: high unemployment, draconian austerity measures and corruption," Celente explains in a telephone interview.

"What you're seeing in North Africa and the Middle East is the same three elements," he insists. "It has nothing to do with autocracy or democracy."

Instead, Celente says anyone who sees the world as he does will recognize that there's actually a form of neo-feudalism at work, pitting oppressed "peasants" against a rich ruling class unwilling to share the wealth.

"You have people between the ages of 18 and 30, their hormones are raging, and they're raging mad. You've got no limits at that age, you're not afraid of anything and you have nothing to lose," he says. "The difference is, these peasants are educated, they know the deal."

'Europe is next'

In an energetic, if somewhat rambling conversation with CTV.ca, Celente explains that the recent conflicts in Tunisia and beyond are more about young people confronting their bleak economic future than it is about a push for elected representation.

"If people are fat and happy they could care less if Mickey Mouse is ruling them," he says. But given the state of the world economy, that doesn't seem an imminent prospect.

"Europe is next," Celente continued, explaining that in his view the uprisings in North Africa and the Mideast were not triggered by events in Tunisia. Instead, he believes they're the inevitable result of political, social and economic conditions shared by a vast, growing array of countries including, but not limited to Albania, Croatia, Romania, Lithuania, Hungary, Greece, Italy, Spain, Portugal, the United Kingdom and Ireland.

Soaring unemployment, cuts to pensions and benefits, rising fees for diminishing services, across-the-board value-added tax increases and declining minimum wages are all common factors to some degree, he says. Combine those with the numbers of young people who are still living with their parents, struggling to find work and not seeing much hope for the future, and Celente says you've got some powerful reasons to not only get angry over the growing gap between rich and poor, but to do something about it.

The inevitable result will be "the next great war of the 21st century," he says, offering a favourite maxim: "When the money stops flowing to Main Street, the money starts flowing on the streets."

Fascist America

So, how can the world be spared from its apparently bloody destiny?

According to Celente, certainly not in any of the ways governments have tried so far. To start, he says we have to abandon the concept that some businesses are "too-big-to-fail." Recalling the powerful robber barons of 19th century America, for example, he says the same dynamic is at work today. The difference now is, they are no longer the subject of public derision.

"Now people bow down, suck up and congratulate them on how wonderful they are," Celente scoffs, insisting that's the wrong attitude.

"We have to tax the multi-billonaires, we have to stop all of these tax rip-offs of the multinationals, and go back to when it worked better."

According to Celente, that means reinstituting laws that curb banks' abilities "to become like casinos," and generally reverting to the state of affairs before NAFTA.

"It's not free trade. It's manufacturers going to slave labour countries, getting their products made, and shipping them back at a mark-up. Let's call it what it is."

Celente offers a similarly stark view of the steps taken by world leaders to curb the recent global economic slowdown. Rather than fix the world's financial problems, Celente says policies of tax cuts, austerity measures and stimulus spending have instead served to reinflate economic bubbles that are near-bursting.

"This is not capitalism. The merger of state and corporate powers by definition -- from someone who knew a thing or two about it: Mussolini -- is facism," Celente asserts. "And fascism has come to America."

With the world headed towards a great war, and citizens of the western world living under fascism, you might think there's cause for panic. But Celente says the panic hasn't taken hold because, for most people, the facts aren't clear.

"You think they'd care about Libya if it was the Ivory Coast?," Celente asks, suggesting that the public is being misled in terms of what's really at stake. "Do you think the United States would be in Iraq if the major export was broccoli?"

Money is the prime motivator, Celente says, not freedom and liberty. "The people can't see it because they're getting misinformation, because they get caught up in the ideology of it."

War at your door?

The thought of a popular uprising erupting close to home is not totally out of the question, however, especally in light of the 70,000 who recently marched against Wisconsin Republican Gov. Scott Walker's bill aimed at stripping public workers of their collective bargaining rights.

Despite Walker's insistence the move would help slash his state's projected US$3.6-billion deficit, the proposed law raised the ire of union supporters across the U.S. who, in a sign of growing discontent among the working class, rallied in several cities including Los Angeles; Topeka, Kansas; Harrisburg, Pennsylvania; Olympia, Washington and St. Paul, Minnesota.

Indeed, Celente believes the violence will inevitably spread to our shores, as many of the same conditions are at play here in Canada and the United States -- except one.

"The people here don't have the fighting zeal. The young people here are more than mommies' boys -- they're soccer mommies' boys," he said, suggesting that should at least forestall such uprisings on our shores anytime soon.

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#1. To: All (#0) (Edited)

A couple of comments from the 100+ from:

www.ctv.ca/CTVNews/TopSto...surrection-forecast-1103x

Jim in Ottawa

Prejudice and discrimination against those who have more is no different from sexism, racism, or any other ism that you can think of--it is based on pre-conceived notions and misunderstandings about those who are somehow different from us. The fact is: the uber wealthy are really no different from you and I. They watch the same TV, listen to the same music, extract the same nutrients from the foods they eat. The one difference is that they have learned to manage their resources better than you and I and should be commended, not condemned for that, for there is much that you and I can learn from them. In addition, the uber-wealthy pay far more in taxes than you and I, create the jobs and job opportunities that you and I benefit from, and contribute far more to charities than you are I do. The uber-wealthy are the glue that keep our civilization from descending into the gutter. They must be respected and protected from harm from the angry, misguided people.

Jon in London ON said 71 24 Rich Government Unions - Poor Taxpayer. In 2009, government employees came to constitute the majority of union members for two reasons. First, private sector union membership rates fell. Unionized companies do poorly in the marketplace and lose jobs to nonunion competitors. Toyota and Honda have gained jobs as General Motors and Chrysler have lost them. Repetitions of this dynamic caused membership to fall from 20.1 % to 7.6 % between 1980 and 2008. In 2009, it fell further to 7.2 %. Competition undermines unions. Government employees face no competition as the government never goes out of business. The result, government employees organize at far higher rates. A full 37.4 % of government employees belonged to unions in 2009, up 0.6 % from 2008.Second, the private sector unions lost 834,000 members in 2009 while public-sector unions gained 64,000 members. Both factors combined to make government employees a majority of the union movement.Historians argue that unions were created to prevent profit-minded employers from exploiting workers and to win a share of business profits. However, neither of these purposes makes sense in government.

As former AFL-CIO President George Meany wrote, "It is impossible to bargain collectively with the government." Collective bargaining gives government employees the power to tell voters how to spend their tax dollars INSTEAD of the other way around. Early labor leaders rejected it as undemocratic. In 1959 the AFL-CIO Executive Council stated that "33;33;government workers have no right to collectively bargain beyond the authority to petition Congress, a right available to every citizen." In the 60s federal, state, and local governments change the law to permit government employees to collectively bargain with taxpayers. Now unions primarily represent the government—a development that has shifted the labor movement’s focus from redistributing business profits to getting more from taxpayers.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Celente says: "We had forecast that there would be a wave of protests raging throughout the world in response to three elements: high unemployment, draconian austerity measures and corruption,"

Celente is right about unemployment prompting protests but he neglects to point out the failure to remedy this is due to the obtuseness of politicians and even more to the oafishness of bureaucrats whose reliance on regulations does more to stifle wealth creation (or destroy it) than to help in creating it. Celente, like government administrators, seems unaware of the time-tested remedy for handling essentials which are in short supply: rationing. In the case of jobs this would mean rationing the employment through a shorter work week to create openings for the qualified jobless. While initially workers would take less pay the fact that more are working, producing goods and services, would bring costs down so living standards would not deteriorate. Culling the government of wealth-consuming, initiative-stifling bureaucrats, moving them into areas of wealth production, would further enhance living standards.

Tatarewicz  posted on  2011-03-07   0:00:06 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: Tatarewicz (#1)

Celente, like government administrators, seems unaware of the time-tested remedy for handling essentials which are in short supply: rationing. In the case of jobs this would mean rationing the employment through a shorter work week to create openings for the qualified jobless. While initially workers would take less pay the fact that more are working, producing goods and services, would bring costs down so living standards would not deteriorate. Culling the government of wealth-consuming, initiative-stifling bureaucrats, moving them into areas of wealth production, would further enhance living standards.

And this has worked well in France?

he who wants bread is the servant of the man that will feed him, if a man thus feeds a whole people, they are under his control.

DeaconBenjamin  posted on  2011-03-07   8:41:57 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: DeaconBenjamin (#2) (Edited)

Socialists claimed their imposition of a 35-hour week created several hundred thousand additional jobs (before Sarkozy conservatives scuttled it).

But keep in mind that even decades ago it was estimated that two percent of the workforce could meet society's needs so there's little alternative but to ration jobs:

Economists such as Robert Theobald estimate that already, if our present cybernetic capabilities were fully utilized, only 2 percent of the U.S. work force would be required to produce the gross national product, Schlain noted.

www.rkedit.com/featured-a...t-revolution-source.shtml

Tatarewicz  posted on  2011-03-08   1:22:30 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: Tatarewicz (#3) (Edited)

Economists such as Robert Theobald estimate that already, if our present cybernetic capabilities were fully utilized, only 2 percent of the U.S. work force would be required to produce the gross national product, Schlain noted.

Proving that all debt is a conjob to enslave the population of the world.

Thank you for the link.

PaulCJ  posted on  2011-03-08   1:32:02 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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