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  1. #1
    Senior Member bigtex's Avatar
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    Austerity Fascism Is Coming And It Will Be Brutal

    Austerity Fascism Is Coming And It Will Be Brutal

    Welcome to the age of rage – riots and revolutions will be the reaction to the next stage of the new world order




    Paul Joseph Watson
    Prison Planet.com
    Tuesday, June 8, 2010

    Top historians, social and financial analysts are warning that the draconian austerity measures currently being prepared by governments in the west will cause riots and even revolutions as people react with fury in response to their jobs, savings, basic public services, pensions and welfare money being seized by the financial terrorists who caused the economic collapse in the first place.

    British historian Simon Schama is a creature of the establishment and he makes it clear whose side he is on at the end of his recent column for the Bilderberg-controlled Financial Times entitled, The World Teeters on the Brink of a New Age of Rage. However, the fact that he is an elitist at heart only makes Schama’s predications all the more alarming. This is someone on the inside who is painfully aware of the fact that the imminent attempt on behalf of the globalists to enforce so-called “austerity measuresâ€
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  2. #2
    Senior Member magyart's Avatar
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    'I won't pay' movement spreads across Greece

    'I won't pay' movement spreads across Greece

    In light of austerity measures, citizens ignore tolls, transit ticket costs, even bills for healthcare

    Thanassis Stavrakis / AP
    By ELENA BECATOROS
    The Associated Press

    ATHENS, Greece — They blockade highway toll booths to give drivers free passage. They cover subway ticket machines with plastic bags so commuters can't pay. Even doctors are joining in, preventing patients from paying fees at state hospitals.

    Some call it civil disobedience. Others a freeloading spirit. Either way, Greece's "I Won't Pay" movement has sparked heated debate in a nation reeling from a debt crisis that's forced the government to take drastic austerity measures — including higher taxes, wage and pension cuts, and price spikes in public services.

    What started as a small pressure group of residents outside Athens angered by higher highway tolls has grown into a movement affecting ever more sectors of society — one that many say is being hijacked by left-wing parties keen to ride popular discontent.

    A rash of political scandals in recent years, including a dubious land swap deal with a rich monastery and alleged bribes in state contracts — has fueled the rebellious mood.

    At dawn last Friday, about 100 bleary-eyed activists from a Communist Party-backed labor union covered ticket machines with plastic bags at Athens metro stations, preventing passengers from paying their fares, to protest public transport ticket price hikes.

    Other activists have taped up ticket machines on buses and trams. And thousands of people simply don't bother validating their public transport tickets when they take the subway or the bus.

    "The people have paid already through their taxes, so they should be able to travel for free," said Konstantinos Thimianos, 36, an activist standing at the metro picket line in central Syntagma Square.

    In one of their frequent occupations of the toll booths on the northern outskirts of Athens recently, protesters wore brightly colored vests with "total disobedience" emblazoned across their backs, and chanted: "We won't pay for their crisis!"

    The tactic has cropped up in the health sector, with some state hospital doctors staging a blockade in front of pay counters to prevent patients from paying their €5 flat fee for consultations.

    Critics deride the protests as yet another example of a freeloading mentality that helped lead the country into its financial mess.

    Advertise | AdChoices"The course from initial lawlessness to final wanton irresponsibility is like a spreading cancer," Dionysis Gousetis said in a recent column in the respected daily broadsheet Kathimerini.

    "Now, with the crisis as an alibi ... the freeloaders don't hide. They appear publicly and proudly and act like heroes of civil disobedience. Something like Rosa Parks or Mahatma Gandhi," Gousetis wrote. "They're not satisfied with not paying themselves. They are forcing others to follow them."

    Many accuse left-wing parties and labor unions of usurping a grassroots movement with legitimate grievances for their own political ends.

    "You think that lawlessness is something revolutionary, which helps the Greek people," Prime Minister George Papandreou said recently, lashing out in Parliament at Coalition of the Left party head Alexis Tsipras. "It is the lawlessness which we have in our country that the Greek people are paying for today."

    But there is something about the "I Won't Pay" movement that speaks to something deeper within Greek society: a propensity to bend the rules, to rebel against authority, particularly that of the state.

    It is so ingrained that many Greeks barely notice the myriad small, daily transgressions — the motorcycle driving on the sidewalk, the car running the red light, the blatant disregard of yet another government attempt to ban smoking in restaurants and bars.

    Less innocuous is persistent and widespread tax avoidance despite increasingly desperate government measures.

    "There is a general culture of lawlessness, starting from the most basic thing, tax evasion or tax avoidance, which is something that Greeks have been exercising since their state was created," said social commentator Nikos Dimou.

    But many see the "I Won't Pay" movement as something much simpler: the people's refusal to pay for the mistakes of a series of governments accused of squandering the nation's future through corruption and cronyism.

    "I don't think it's part of the Greek character. Greeks, when they see that the law is being applied in general, they will implement it too," said Nikos Louvros, the 55-year-old chain-smoking owner of an Athens bar that openly flouts the smoking ban.

    "But when it isn't being applied to some, such as when there are ministers who have been stealing, ... Well, if the laws aren't implemented at the top, others won't implement them."

    READS LIKE SOMETING GLENN BECK HAS BEEN WARNING US ABOUT !
    http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/41723432/ns ... _business/

  3. #3
    Senior Member AirborneSapper7's Avatar
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    People have been warning ya for a very long time .. It will be brutal and if you don't prepare for the worst case scenario ... I just don't know what to say to help you at this point
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  4. #4
    Senior Member stevetheroofer's Avatar
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    "Beck says the left is truly baffled that we aren't falling for any of these tricks and rising up in protest, and that they're going to clamp down even tighter to get us to break!" Clamp down too tight, and the clamp will break!
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  5. #5
    Senior Member moptop's Avatar
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    can you say revolt I'm an american and would gladly give my life for the freedom of my fellow countrymen and I'm willing to bet I'm not the only one! REal americans don't well when being apressed pick up any history books start reading around the late 1700's

  6. #6
    Senior Member forest's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by stevetheroofer
    "Beck says the left is truly baffled that we aren't falling for any of these tricks and rising up in protest, and that they're going to clamp down even tighter to get us to break!" Clamp down too tight, and the clamp will break!
    Yep... guess it's a good thing I've put on some pounds lately... Looks like I'm going to need 'em..!
    As Aristotle said, “Tolerance and apathy are the first virtue of a dying civilization.â€

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