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Article: Crashing Towards a New World Social Order 2012

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posted on Mar, 2 2010 @ 01:13 PM
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Too long to post here but a good read that summarizes how it started, where we are, how we got here and where we're heading. From Market Oracle:

Crashing Towards a New World Social Order 2012



posted on Mar, 2 2010 @ 03:18 PM
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Good paper, worth the time, well articulated insight of the authors perspective regarding the topics.

snippet from paper www.marketoracle.co.uk...
..............................................................................................................
......."From their position of power, as the financiers of governments, the banking elite have over time perfected their methods of control. Staying always behind the scenes, they pull the strings controlling the media, the political parties, the intelligence agencies, the stock markets, and the offices of government. And perhaps their greatest lever of power is their control over currencies. By means of their central-bank scam, they engineer boom and bust cycles, and they print money from nothing and then loan it at interest to governments. The power of the banking elites is both absolute and subtle...

"Some of the biggest men in the United

States are afraid of something. They

know there is a power somewhere, so

organised, so subtle, so watchful, so

interlocked, so complete, so pervasive

that they had better not speak above

their breath when they speak in

condemnation of it."

-- President Woodrow Wilson
..............................................................................................................



posted on Mar, 2 2010 @ 04:15 PM
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That site also has various articles on the topic from different angles from the last two years in its archives. I've visited there fairly frequently but had never noticed how much attention they give it.

www.marketoracle.co.uk...

[edit on 2-3-2010 by Graybeard]



posted on Mar, 2 2010 @ 05:44 PM
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Really great article. Nothing new to me informationwise but the author puts it all together in historical context while sparing us endless metaphors and quoting of other authors.
I agree with his vision of the post-production world, we have all seen the bigshots calling for carbon credit economies and a total restructuring of our economic models (government takeover of GM by OUR gov't). The future isn't pretty and it looks really bad for anything to be done about it. With world governments in hoc to the bankers, they have us tied, bound and held to a course not of poplulist choosing. He makes a very interesting point about how our mythology will change to suit the new paradigm, telling future schoolkids how corrupt capitalism and consumerism were, how unfit average people were as parents. that driving big cars "ruined the natural world". The scary part is that it will all sound so sensible, the same as we have come to accept that monarchies were evil institutions,. etc.
Brilliant piece really, recommended reading.
Thanks Graybeard.

[edit on 2-3-2010 by Asktheanimals]



posted on Mar, 2 2010 @ 05:58 PM
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reply to post by Graybeard
 


This appears to be from the book "American Theocracy" by Kevin Phillips.

Everytime I start to read it I get sidetracked, maybe I'll try again.

His bio. the man knows his history:
www.leighbureau.com...

Best post of the day. TKS. Graybeard, I was loosing hope for ATS.



posted on Mar, 3 2010 @ 01:38 AM
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You're welcome. I don't frequent the NWO section very often but after I read this I knew I had to link to it here. It truly is one of the better reads I've seen on the subject and in my opinion it was helped by a relatively low percentage of "tin content". Sometimes these types of pieces get a little too over the top which is why some people tend to laugh them off.

I found it while browsing a trading forum and when people who take the markets and finance seriously don't scoff at it, you know it has some credibility.



posted on Mar, 3 2010 @ 02:49 AM
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It does indeed seem that at least a limited nuclear exchange will be necessary to provide the level of shock required to prepare people for the complete takeover. Anything less will just be seen as marginally connected national/regional problems. Nuclear war, however is global and nobody can ignore it. Thanks for the nightmares, both one ones people who read this will have at night, and the ones we'll soon be living in.



posted on Mar, 3 2010 @ 08:51 AM
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reply to post by 5 oClock
 


I have that book on my shelf! I hadn't met anyone else that had read it until now. I'm getting rid of many books due to moving but American Theocracy stays in the collection along with Shock Doctrine and Zinn's Peoples History of the US.



posted on Mar, 3 2010 @ 10:10 AM
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This has been my version of what 2012 is going to represent -- and will come to pass -- from the beginning.

There are many of us "2012-believers" that don't think the world will end and that the Mayan prophecies [in addition to the Bible, i-Ching, Hopi Indians, etc.] about the changing of an age are very eerily outlined in the article you linked. Ancient texts can not be taken literally -- but rather should be interpreted in the context and time in which they are written.

The story our parents told us about "walking uphill both ways to school in 8 feet of snow" isn't literal. But rather, it is a very good indication of the times they were living in -- no matter what it was doing outside, you walked. School was important. Nobody was going to carry you. You picked yourself up, you got there, and you managed your responsibilities without excuse. Just as the great flood is outlined in many texts -- the entire world wasn't covered in miles of water -- but rather the people living in affected areas felt as if it was. They certainly didn't have the internet to provide them with pictures of neighboring countries, now did they? People passed on the stories of their struggling and I'm sure they were embellished along the way. But it certainly doesn't mean that there wasn't a terrible flood that affected many people in many lands.

For me, I believe part of 2012 will be an increase in global catastrophes linked to more severe storms, earthquakes, eruptions, etc. [which in my opinion is merely a cycle of the Earth and we have by happenstance found ourselves in the midst of it] and the inability of the governments to handle them due to the recession and the crumbling of our economy.

I believe that the above will begin the process of governments "pooling their money and/or resources" in order to assist people affected since no one government will claim to be able to do it on their own.

This will be the start of a global government. In fact, just as the article suggests, it has already started in many ways. The groundwork has been laid. And it will work. People, when faced with disaster and the possibility of starvation, will not care where aid comes from....as long as it comes.

People will literally be begging the government to save them -- we have become a society totally dependent on this philosophy: That the government sucks overall but when push comes to shove, they will help us. That when all else fails, the government will keep us going.

Further evidence for this idea can be found in the threads discussing the extension of benefits. Interestingly, people no longer cared that we were broke or where the money was coming from. They cared that American people were suffering and should not be. The hell with the budget -- give them their money. The attitude being that government spends trillions of dollars needlessly and wastefully, so let them find the money. What nobody seems to realize is that the government is never going to willingly take from their coffers of defense money -- not unless we the people demand it.

Further, with the numbers of people now struggling for the first time -- despite in many cases working hard their entire lives -- will welcome the notion that "money no longer defines a person". This will be met with relief for many that feel that they have worked harder and longer but still have nothing to show for it. It will not be until the realization hits that they have found themselves trapped within their means, with no maneuverability whatsoever, that this style of governance will also come into question. Of course, it will be a few hundred years before this happens as our children and grandchildren are already being conditioned to this future. If you watch children's programming, you will see a very heavy focus on living green, "serving" Mother Earth, conserving resources, etc.

Are these ideals on their own "bad"? Not really. However, it is the ownership of these ideals and the enforcement that people adhere to them at all costs that is detrimental to democracy and freedoms.

Once again, a common sense approach [turn the water off while you brush] that has been bought by the government and will be enforced the only way they know how: [Here is how much water you get. Now you don't have enough to leave the water on while you brush.]

2012, in my opinion, is real because the NWO is real. There is no separation and the two work in conjunction with each other. One is allowing the other to progress. One is a natural cycle and the other is being conditioned to work within its means and structure itself around the times we are living in.

Is it coincidence that more people are suffering? That more people are starving? That more people are being affected by natural disasters? That seeing a 7.0 earthquake is a relief since at least it wasn't an 8.0+?

Not in my opinion. Just as different civilizations merged thousands of years ago in search of resources, expansion, etc., we too are merging. This time, on a much larger scale. Which is now possible due to the advancements in technology.

We have spent the last 20 - 30 years developing technology to allow us to have the "world at our fingertips". Well, we have it. You certainly didn't think it would stop there.



posted on Mar, 3 2010 @ 04:40 PM
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Well,I have to say I think that is quite possibly the most depressing thing I have ever read in my life.

Thanks for the nightmares



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