There is a lot being said about context recently. It is vitally important, and some are always learning the hard way. There is something else that’s equally important too, and that’s content. The article “Is this Finally the Economic Collapse,” written by Keith R. McCullough in Fortune Magazine supplies enough evidence to answer the question affirmatively. Yes, this is it. When the Federal Reserve begins to buy Treasury dept it signals the end of the American economy. It’s the monster turning on itself. It’s cannibalizing from which there is no return. It’s collapse.
It is the collapse of the dollar as a currency along with the necessity to replace it. And this is where Obamites get their wish come true.
Specifically, its’ the catch in transferring to the new stable world currency: a new exchange board with particular dials and knobs. All assets will be reevaluated along political lines and those are the red lines of communism. Requirements are set to be put in place which will limit the quantity of certain assets that can be legally held in private ownership.
That’s right. It’s how redistribution of wealth will finally be accomplished, and it’s being engineered by people in our own government. Everyone is about to become a slave to the state, and put on tight community rations.
The new Exchange Czar will also have authority to mandate severe public service requirements for all citizens on pretense of working through the catastrophe. We can see that coming as easy as we can see that cities are no longer able to pay for basic services. The term ‘taking out the garbage’ is about to take on a whole new meaning.
With the stroke of his pen, Americans immediately become surfs, and as peasants under economic feudalism they will also be required to grow a large proportion of their own food. In this way they can be kept busy and not allowed time to think, or to organize.
They will need to verify agrarianism in order to continue to qualify for government issued grocery passes that must be presented at point of sale in supermarkets to buy food. Little or no beef will be allowed to most of the newly created peasants in order to keep them docile. That will be justified by the Obamacare law where new federal guidelines will be tweaked for our health.
It will be the watershed that forces the religion of global warming onto everyone to further control them, and the sustainites will be dancing in the streets and openly worshiping Gore and Obama as the earth’s high priests.
And this is only step one into the collapse that’s been planned and is being implemented. The next steps require the application of Bible prophecies to see them clearly. This first step, however, doesn’t seem to require a pound of spiritual discernment to make it out, but people are capable of bringing their own fog with them when groping for the shoreline.
This is precisely the reason why people like Andrew Leonard at Salon.com make light of this economic development, and disintegrates into correct attribution of quotes. They are standing outside with their thumb in the air checking for wind direction when they don’t realize the water is up to their chin and they are about to drown.
In his article, McCullough quoted Alexis De Tocqueville to have observed: “The American Republic will endure until the day Congress discovers that it can bribe the public with the public’s money.”
Leonard, on the basis of showing that it could not be found as worded to come from De Tocqueville, dismissed McCullough’s warning as conservatism criticizing the White House. Let’s for the moment say that the quote was scribbled on the bathroom wall, what about the substance of the observation? It’s proved to be completely true. So will McCullough’s waring.
There is still a debate as to whether Benjamin Franklin said: “When the people find they can vote themselves money, that will herald the end of the republic.” The reason maxims like these survive despite a cloud over their authorship is due to the accuracy of their contents. The reason people fail to heed their warnings or take them seriously is they don’t understand that content matters.