Trends expert
Gerald Celente sits down with RT to discuss his trend predictions
for 2011, including Wake Up Call, Journalism 2.0, Youth of the World
Unite, and Cyber Wars.
In 2011, every
citizen will realize were in the Greatest Depression, Celente
argues. With the private Federal Reserve exposed giving away trillions
of dollars to foreign central banks and large corporations, he believes
the establishment is running out of schemes that will allow them
to continue printing trillions of dollars.
Celente forecasts
authorities will be cracking down on liberty and extracting more
funds from the little people in 2011. He predicts the youth of the
world will unite, but the Revolution will be slower in the US. The
youth of the world, particularly in the United States, have mountains
of debt to climb and no way to get to the top, comments Celente.
He forecasts Journalism 2.0 will unite the youth in a worldwide
Revolution.
Cyber wars
will become a new form of warfare, Celente says. Every major
computer-connected industry or service is a potential target for
cyber war. He predicts cyber sleuth jobs will be in demand.
As the cyber wars increase, government control over the Internet
will increase as well, along with Journalism 2.0.
The
greatest fears that governments have are freedom of speech and
exposing the corruptness, the ineptitude, and the double dealing
going on that they dont want the public knowing about.
Celente predicts
that cyber wars and the war on terror will be used as excuses to
take more Internet freedom away from the people. For good trends,
he notes that new forms of alternative energy could become a big
game changer. Also, growing food, buying local, and the organic
food movement will become a more popular trend as more recalls from
tainted foods come out.
Reprinted
with permission from Bull
Source. You can subscribe to Bull Source posts for free here.
January
14, 2011
Gerald Celente
is founder and director of The Trends Research Institute, author
of Trends
2000 and Trend
Tracking (Warner Books), and publisher of The Trends
Journal. He has been forecasting trends since 1980, and recently
called The Collapse of ’09.