Sunday, 8 February 2009

Civil Unrest Makes EU Governments Nervous

And so it damn well should. I'm just a little disappointed only a handful of people in Britain are waking up to the fact they have been screwed by their financial masters yet. But give it time.



(Images: From the World Economic Forum protests, Zurich, 2009. Above Below)


A continent-wide sense of injustice leaves Europe vulnerable to an explosion of unrest

ONE MILLION workers on the streets of France, wildcat strikes in Britain, rioting in Greece and the Baltic republics and sit-in protests by glass workers in Waterford: social unrest is spreading throughout Europe and no one knows where it is all going to end.

Last week the worst economic recession in at least 30 years claimed its first political victim in Europe when on Monday Iceland’s beleaguered prime minister Geir Haarde tendered his resignation following weeks of street protests. The collapse of the country’s banking system, which has shredded the value of the krona, driven interest rates to 18 per cent and unemployment to 8 per cent, put paid to his Conservative-led coalition.

The only problem is, the blame for the crisis is still put on the free market. On the surface this seems valid; you could blame 'irresponsible' traders. BUT the main responsibility lies with the central banks, Rothschild-operated, who deliberately engineered this crisis by increasing the money supply and rewarding malinvestment with government funding, all of which is borrowed from them with interest attached.
(Image: US Riot Police outside the 2008 Republican National Convention. Methinks if they knew how the Federal Reserve works, they would have tear-gassed and plasticuffed them instead of wasting time with the populace.)

And if all that sounds like I have had some 'space cake', I suggest you watch The Money Masters.

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