America's
demonization next step in New World Order?
Old-Thinker News |
August 24, 2008
By Daniel Taylor
Update -
August 27, 2008:
The Guardian -
Georgia is the graveyard of
America's unipolar world
"Why that should be so isn't hard
to understand. It's not only that the US and its camp followers
have trampled on international law and the UN to bring death and
destruction to the Middle East, Afghanistan and Pakistan.
...
For the rest of us, a new
assertiveness by Russia and other rising powers doesn't just
offer some restraint on the unbridled exercise of global
imperial power, it should also increase the pressure for a
revival of a rules-based system of international relations."
Related:
Australian
paper proclaims: A New World Order as U.S. prosperity falls
After the recent Georgian
incursion into South Ossetia, discussion has been rampant regarding
America's influence and dominance on the world scene. Some are
proclaiming that Russia has
laid to rest aspirations for a
so called New World Order. From one angle this may appear to be the
case, but there is a bigger picture needs to be examined.
The United States is going to -
and to a degree already is - be held up as an example of why "global
mechanisms" and a "world structure" need to be in place to prevent
such actions as the invasion of Iraq and U.S. support of Georgian
forces in the invasion of South Ossetia. We've been presented with a
problem, now globalist think tanks and organizations like the
Council on Foreign Relations will provide us with a solution.
National sovereignty has no place in this era, so we're told. We
must "share power".
Former President of the Soviet
Union, Mikhail Gorbachev,
has stated that he sees the
U.S. led Iraq war as an example of the need for a "new world order" to manage
the globe.
"Look at the US in Iraq, everybody
was opposed, even their allies, but they did not listen and what
happened? They do not know how to get out of it now. Now we
understand that... we are all linked to the US and if it falls apart
it would be a real collapse. We have to help them to get out of
there. That means that cooperation is needed, a new world order is
necessary and global mechanisms to manage it."
Turkish President Abdullah Gul has
made similar statements recently in response to the Georgia-Russia
conflict.
As the AFP reports,
"Turkish President Abdullah
Gul predicted "a new world order" of joint international action,
in an interview published in the U.K. on Saturday.
He added that the conflict in
Georgia shows the U.S. can no longer shape global politics on
its own, and that it should start sharing power with other
nations."
The 2008 election gives us an idea of
the current trends underway and provides a window into the
establishment's long term game-plan. Both Barack Obama and John McCain
have openly indicated that globalist policy will be pursued if either of
them are elected president.
John McCain
discussed his proposed "League of Democracies"
at the Hoover institution in May of 2007. McCain stated in part,
"This League of Democracies
would not supplant the United Nations or other international
organizations. It would complement them. But it would be the one
organization where the world's democracies could come together
to discuss problems and solutions on the basis of shared
principles and a common vision of the future. If I am elected
president, I will call a summit of the world's democracies in my
first year to seek the views of my democratic counterparts and
begin exploring the practical steps necessary to realize this
vision."
Barack Obama
made his globalist stance known
during his highly publicized speech in Berlin on July 24th. He said,
"Yes, there
have been differences between America and Europe. No doubt,
there will be differences in the future. But the burdens of
global citizenship continue to bind us together. A change of
leadership in Washington will not lift this burden. In this new
century, Americans and Europeans alike will be required to do
more -- not less. Partnership and cooperation among nations is
not a choice; it is the one way, the only way, to protect our
common security and advance our common humanity."
"In this
new world, such dangerous currents have swept along faster than
our efforts to contain them. That is why we cannot afford to be
divided. No one nation, no matter how large or powerful, can
defeat such challenges alone."
The more sophisticated branch of
globalist elites who see the route to power through slower, deliberate
and incremental steps are now making their move. The aggressive Neocons have served their
purpose and are making the establishment nervous with further
provocative actions. The corruption and wars that have tarnished the
American people's name will now be used to further the aims of the
global elite. America's demonization, and in turn its use as
an example of the necessity of global governance, may very well be the
next stage of the establishment's plan for world government.
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