Thursday, May 18, 2017

Why the globalist establishment is doomed to failure

It's easy to get Discouraged the current political situation. The
progressive elite globalist seem to be firmly anchored in their positions
of power. Even the election of Trump hasn t moved the needle much. But the
impression of being in control is a ruse. The end of the neoliberal order
and globalist elites is inevitable.
The elite want to appear invincible

The great Chinese military strategist Sun Tzu tells us that "all warfare is
based on deception. "Such deception is for an army to give the appearance
of great strength, although its real strength is much less. A castle can
not be sufficiently manned to mount a good defense, but the invaders will
think twice whether to attack the fortress itself seems unassailable.
The elite use similar tactics. They represent only about 1% of the
population so that they are aware that they must keep 99% if they are
soothed to maintain lock on wealth and power. They do this in several ways:
the welfare guard SATISFY lower class, Hollywood and sports distract the
middle class from reality, and state management keeps the brightest vying
for the best-paying jobs . From the time we enter kindergarten until we
university graduates, we learn that the neo-liberal system is the best
system to make people happy and prosperous, and that all other systems
would not be back.
The system seems solid ... but it's not.

The reason why the elite are trying so hard to keep you from asking
questions because the neoliberal system crunches. The point of sale system
of the neoliberal's all it was supposed to create wealth: There would be
more to go around for everyone. But actual results are different from what
we have been sold. Last week, the Washington Post published study results
that determined that if the elite get richer, the middle class is not:
America is becoming richer every year. The American worker is not.
Far from it: On average, workers born in 1942 earned as much or more about
their careers than workers born in a year since, according to new research
- and the workers on the job today should not expect to catch up with their
predecessors in their remaining years of employment.
profit or decline are stagnant put pressure on the WORKING and households
of the middle class. The trend has also widened the gap between the rich
and everyone that, overall, the economy continued to grow in all but the
bulk of these gains have ended up in the pockets of the rich.
It is not only the average class Americans who are suffering under the
neoliberal order & # 8212; a brilliant article in the City Journal
describes how globalization has affected France:
A process [called] metropolisation cut French society in two. In 16 dynamic
urban areas (Paris, Lyon, Marseille, Aix-en-Provence, Toulouse, Lille,
Bordeaux, Nice, Nantes, Strasbourg, Grenoble, Rennes, Rouen, Toulon,
Douai-Lens and Montpellier), global resources have proved additional cost
to those in France. These urban areas are home to all educational and
financial institutions of the country, and almost all of its companies and
the many well-paying jobs that go with ... cheap labor, franchise in
consumer goods rights and new markets for billions of people have made
globalization a boon for these prosperous places. But globalization has
been no galvanizing effect on the rest of France. Cities that have been
animated for hundreds of years-Tarbes, Agen, Albi, Beziers
now ... "desertified," haunted by the empty storefronts and ramshackle
shops downtowns Rust Belt as Americans know well.
But globalization is doing more than enrich some cities while impoverishing
others. It also forces the middle class to leave the cities that built
their ancestors:
[There is no space] in the new economy of France for workers as we have
always understood them. Paris offers the most striking case. As he
prospered, the City of Light has laminate, like, in this regard, London and
US cities like New York and San Francisco. There is a place for
millionaires, immigrants, tourists and young people without a place for the
average French. Paris is now pushing people once considered synonymous with
the city.
All these rich people need services, but these service jobs are not going
to the original French workers, rather France imports a third world
underclass in the necessary work. These workers are held in public housing
at taxpayer expense:
Public housing is now primarily used to confine French workers do not
originate, as was the case before, but immigrants and their descendants and
# 8230; In the northern suburb of Aubervilliers rough, for example,
three-quarters of young people from immigrant backgrounds. Again, the
future of Paris seems visible in contemporary London. Between 2001 and
2011, the population of white Londoners fell by 600,000, even as the city
grew by 1 million people: 58 percent white British at the turn of the
century, London is now 45 percent white.
If it was only a matter of a few economic winners and many losers economic,
which alone could be enough to trigger a revolution. But globalization has
also created diversity at levels not seen in history outside military
invasions, and creates its own problems. New immigrants feel more
solidarity with the members of their country of origin rather than their
new country. Each ethnic group is allowed to will the good of his own
tribe, except for Native Americans or Europeans. The animosity between
ethnic groups ferments just below the surface where the indigenous
population is in contact with new immigrants. This can be seen in French
social housing:
[Public housing] is disputed tribally. An ethnic French moving in a housing
project strongly North African finds himself in danger property that
members consider "the community" as their own. Guilluy speaks of a "battle
of the eyes" fought in the lobbies of buildings across France every day,
where a person or the other, the French ethnic or immigrant's son will drop
its opposite to the first floor.
Elites do not reflect the evidence

There were many signs that the natives of Europe and the United States are
fed globalization. In the UK, the vote took Brexit all forecasters by
surprise. The victory Trump in the US and victory near Le Pen in France
tell us that the indigenous peoples of these countries are very unhappy.
You don not need to be a divinely inspired prophet to see that this is a
power keg.
Yet despite these clear signals, most elites are fully invested in the
opposition even minor democratic reforms. Emmanuel Macron, the winner of
the French presidential election, rejected the rise of French nationalists
by saying, "There is no such thing as French culture. There is the culture
in France and it is diversified. "The British leaders are dragging their
feet in implementing Brexit. And in the United States, Congress controlled
by Republicans 'conservative' has managed to fund abortions Planned
Parenthood, but not the wall of the border with Mexico.
Certainly, there are some of the richest elite who realize their precarious
situation and take measures to protect themselves. Bosses like Larry
Ellison, Peter Thiel and Steve Huffman buy islands or large compounds in
New Zealand they can escape the possibility of a revolution.
Conclusion
Nothing lasts eternally. Egyptian, Greek and Roman civilizations came to an
end. The current neoliberal order is no exception. It became unbearable so
we can t be sure when the dismantling of the globalist order start, we can
be sure that his days are numbered.
Read more: 12 American Methods used to make France a globalist Nightmare

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