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Australian
paper proclaims: A New World Order as U.S. prosperity falls
Old-Thinker News | April 11, 2008
By Daniel Taylor
Amidst the ongoing economic
crisis, The Australian newspaper published an article late
last week headlined "A
new world order as US sinks". Marcus Walker, James
Hookway and James T. Areddy write that a "new world order" is
emerging as companies in Germany and Switzerland diversify away from
the United States while,
"Resource-rich countries -
including Russia, Brazil and Australia - are poised to keep
prospering. Vast appetites for raw materials in China, India and
elsewhere give commodity producers alternatives to the US
market, and have lessened the chance of a commodities crash."
Concern has grown
that already existing globalist plans for
regional currencies and new
world monetary structures will be put into place as the current
economic crisis unfolds.
Former National
Security Advisor and staunch globalist Zbigniew Brzezinski
admitted in his book,
Between Two Ages: America's Role in the Technetronic Era that
the formation of the new world monetary structure would require
"sacrifices" on part of Americans that will harm America's favorable
position in the world. He writes,
"The
nation-state is gradually yielding its sovereignty… Further
progress will require greater American sacrifices. More
intensive efforts to shape a new world monetary structure will
have to be undertaken, with some consequent risk to the present
relatively favorable American position."
Continuing with The Australian
article, comments are also made regarding the declining U.S.
currency,
"European consumer goods
companies are also feeling the pinch. Emerging economies churn
out their own simple products more cheaply, while a declining US
dollar has made Italian clothes, French wine and German cars
more expensive for Americans."
While the dollar
reaches a new record low
today ahead of the G-7 meeting, it is important to reflect on the
actions of the establishment regarding the U.S. currency. In March of 2007,
Reuters reported that the
International Monetary Fund was in fact encouraging the decline of
the U.S. dollar. It was reported that the IMF desired further
depreciation of the dollar in order to "correct global imbalances".
Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan
also encouraged Gulf states
to drop the U.S. dollar.
John Perkins, a former "economic
hitman" who worked for an international consulting firm
has exposed the fact that the
IMF and World Bank have engaged in predatory globalization in
developing countries around the world by using debt accumulated by
IMF and World bank loans as leverage.
During the January 2008 Davos
meeting in Switzerland, the theme of declining U.S. influence and
the rise of a new order was present. Writing in the evening
standard,
Anthony Hilton states
regarding the Davos meeting,
"Henry Kissinger picked up on
the political implications. The challenge to the world, he said,
was handling the structural changes taking place - the transfer
of economic power from America to the Pacific, the shortages of
water and energy and the threat of climate change, which require
global not national solutions."
The United States is undoubtedly
facing extremely difficult economic times as foreclosures spread and
the dollar declines to record lows with the endorsement of the
establishment. A new world order is rising.
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