Next Big Quake for West Beaches of the 48 States?
M.T. Keshe MEGA Quake WARNING (October 17th?)
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Should we defeat ISIS? Rather than defeat, containing their activities within failed or near-failing states is the best option for the foreseeable future. The United States has no desire to build nations, and without a stable Middle East, terror groups will continue to find safe haven; if not in western Iraq or Afghanistan, then in Yemen or Somalia. The Middle East and Africa have no shortage of ungoverned or poorly governed territories. The current strategy of prolonged engagement, development and training of local militias, logistic support and air strikes against real targets may be the best solution after all.However, the instability the US claims ISIS is sustaining itself on was created by the US itself as it attempts to violently overthrow the Syrian government, intentionally dividing and destroying the country in the process.
If we establish free zones – you know, for moderate opposition forces – but also sanctuaries for refugees, that gets world opinion support rather dramatically. If Putin is going to attack that, then world opinion is definitely against him. You take this issue right off the table in terms of why he’s in Syria and if you’re doing that [attacking free zones] and contributing to the migration that’s taking place by your aggressive military actions, then world opinion will have some rather – I think – significant impact on him.One must wonder – if players among US policy circles believe Syrian refugees are pawns of potential use in turning public opinion against Russia in Syria itself, did they not also see them as pawns that could be used to flood Europe and turn public opinion in favor of waging wider and more direct war on the Syrian government itself?
Putin has begun a proxy war with the U.S. when Russian combat aircraft struck, continuously, moderate rebel forces trained by the CIA. This was no accident, targets were provided by the Syrian regime and they were accurate. How can the U.S. stand by and do nothing? U.S. military should have been given the mission to retaliate. Options likely to be considered among others: crater the Al Assad runway, establish free zones that are sanctuaries for refugees, strike Assad’s helicopter fleet that is barrel bombing, just to name a few.Similar testimony and agreement was also provided by retired US Marine Corps General and former USMC Commandant James Jones, as well as Heather Conley and Stephen Sestanovich representing a milieu of corporate-financier funded policy think-tanks.
Mac Slavo
October 12th, 2015 SHTFplan.com
The next wave of the greatest
financial crisis may soon be upon us.
When the music stops, and loans
everywhere on cheap and easy credit are called, far too many nations,
businesses and individuals will be suddenly and violently unable to repay their
debts — particularly in the developing world.
The results are likely to be
catastrophic, and the weight of the bad debts may well be enough take down the
rest of the world with it. This is no small problem, and it is not clear if
there is a solution.
London Guardian writer Will Hutton
issues a stark warning that “the world economic order is collapsing and this
time there seems no way out.”
According to the Guardian:
Europe
has seen nothing like this for 70 years – the visible expression of a world
where order is collapsing. The millions of refugees fleeing from ceaseless
Middle Eastern war […] Yet there is a parallel collapse in the economic order
that is less conspicuous: the hundreds of billions of dollars fleeing emerging
economies, from Brazil to China, don’t come with images of women and children
on capsizing boats.
Nor do banks that have lent trillions that will never be
repaid post gruesome videos…
Capital
flight and bank fragility are profound dysfunctions in the way the global
economy is now organised that will surface as real-world economic dislocation.
The
heart of the economic disorder is a world financial system that has gone rogue…
banking’s power to create money out of nothing has been taken to a whole new
level… cash generated out of nothing can be lent in countries where the
economic prospects look superficially good.
This provokes floods of credit,
rather like the movements of refugees.
The
false boom that follows seems to justify the lending.
Property prices rise.
Companies and households grow overconfident about their prospects and borrow
freely.
Economies surge well above their trend growth rates and all seems well
until something – a collapse in property or commodity prices – unravels the
whole process.
The money floods out as quickly as it flooded in, leaving bust
banks and governments desperately picking up the pieces.
It is clear enough that the whole
thing is a farce, perhaps meant to collapse. There is not one honest broker, or
one responsible guardian in the whole lot of them.
Borrowing countries used cheap
credit to offer absurd promises to their people, or cover other losses, while
bankers and other vultures have been all too happy to prey upon these
vulnerable nation-states on the way up and down of this crisis.
Interestingly, analysts break this
financial crisis into three acts, with 2008 just a prelude to the more recent
trouble in Europe — with the collapse of third world part of the spectacular
and terrible finale:
Andy
Haldane, Bank of England chief economist, describes the unfolding pattern of
events as a three-part crisis.
Act one was in 2007-08 in Britain and the US.
Buoyed for the previous decade by absurdly high inflows of globally generated
credit that created false booms, they suddenly found their overconfident banks
had wildly lent too much…
Act
two was in Europe in 2011-12, when it became obvious that the lending had been
made on the incorrect assumption that all eurozone countries were equal.
Again,
money flooded out and Europe only just held the line with extraordinary
printing of money by the European Central Bank and tough belt-tightening
measures in overborrowed countries such as Portugal, Greece and Ireland. It
might have been unfair, but it worked.
Now
act three is beginning, but in countries much less able to devise measures to
stop financial contagion and whose banks are more precarious… Turkey,
Brazil, Malaysia, China, all riding high on sky-higH commodity prices as the
China boom, itself fueled by wild lending, seemed never-ending.
It was never meant to last. The
collapse is its own bubble, feeding off of the desperate hopes of those who
furiously borrowed to bail out their other problems.
The big banks today have more wealth
and power than they did before the 2008 collapse, and the Federal Reserve has
taken extraordinary measures to enable their power grab.
The world is in shackles, just
waiting for the hammer to fall…
http://www.shtfplan.com/headline-news/the-banking-system-has-gone-rogue-world-economic-order-is-collapsing_10122015
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