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Arun D. Ellis
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Arun D. Ellis
Hi Aaron - the short answer is we can't.
We all know that the 1% have stolen the world, we know that the bankers actually broke the global economy beyond repair and that the politicians bailing them out with our money merely kicked the can down the road and that the debt still remains in our artificial financial system, we know the perils that we face as a result of global warming, we know about the dwindling fossil fuels yet people and businesses continue to squander them, we know about the corruption that exists in politics yet we continue to play the same old pointless game of voting, we all suspect that there was something wrong with 9/11 and the validity of the so called war on terror, we know that someone has deliberately brought about the collapse of all the stable middle eastern countries and we know that ISIS is a consequence of this, we know the refugee crisis was artificially created to allow the west to bomb Syria and on the domestic front we know that we have been deliberately dumbed down to make us more manageable....etc yet most people are too apathetic to do anything about it; they care more about who wins Xfactor than what's actually happening in the world.
Then there are those who protest, they spend months preparing, a whole day marching but what actually changes?
To effect change the people of the developed nations must rise as one against their leaders and impose a global solution that satisfies the needs of all life.
We all know that the 1% have stolen the world, we know that the bankers actually broke the global economy beyond repair and that the politicians bailing them out with our money merely kicked the can down the road and that the debt still remains in our artificial financial system, we know the perils that we face as a result of global warming, we know about the dwindling fossil fuels yet people and businesses continue to squander them, we know about the corruption that exists in politics yet we continue to play the same old pointless game of voting, we all suspect that there was something wrong with 9/11 and the validity of the so called war on terror, we know that someone has deliberately brought about the collapse of all the stable middle eastern countries and we know that ISIS is a consequence of this, we know the refugee crisis was artificially created to allow the west to bomb Syria and on the domestic front we know that we have been deliberately dumbed down to make us more manageable....etc yet most people are too apathetic to do anything about it; they care more about who wins Xfactor than what's actually happening in the world.
Then there are those who protest, they spend months preparing, a whole day marching but what actually changes?
To effect change the people of the developed nations must rise as one against their leaders and impose a global solution that satisfies the needs of all life.
Arun D. Ellis
Hi Simon, hope you enjoy the book, re your question - It seems to me that Greece is pretty much damned if she does and damned if she doesn't, if Greece leaves the EU then the EU will also suffer pain and Greece will become a poor backwater that is unless the Russians step in as a white knight, unlikely in the current climate. If Greece stays in the EU and meets the austerity requirements there will be bloody revolution as they don't have much to lose anymore. Either way her survival is seriously in question.
Personally I think there's a bigger game in play here and Greece is merely the lever to apply the pressure. To me it feels like an attack on the European Central Bank, the Euro and the structure of the union itself. I can't help feeling that the rising economic pressure on Greece is designed to force a closer economic union of the EU, a move away from the current structure of independent countries with a single currency towards a single country with a single currency, a complete United States of Europe.
The question I'm wrestling with is where would that pressure come from and who gains?
Personally I think there's a bigger game in play here and Greece is merely the lever to apply the pressure. To me it feels like an attack on the European Central Bank, the Euro and the structure of the union itself. I can't help feeling that the rising economic pressure on Greece is designed to force a closer economic union of the EU, a move away from the current structure of independent countries with a single currency towards a single country with a single currency, a complete United States of Europe.
The question I'm wrestling with is where would that pressure come from and who gains?
Arun D. Ellis
Hi Alan - nothing on different subjects to date but I do have a few ideas for when I've finished the Corpalism series.
Arun D. Ellis
Hi David - interesting question - in short - How society is run and its demise
Arun D. Ellis
Corpalism III - final title yet to be decided
Arun D. Ellis
Start writing today
Arun D. Ellis
I usually just mow the lawn or walk the dogs, the ideas soon start flooding in
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Jan 10, 2016 06:59AM · flag