The Falling Bottom Line
by Gerald Celente
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Children are
taught it and adults repeat it. In the Western world, religion
is the knee-jerk response as to why wars in the distant past were
fought. Its any easy way to explain away complex issues. By
drawing God into conflicts that are entirely man made, initiators
of the violence absolve themselves of all responsibility.
Though the
uprisings in the Middle East were initially, and correctly, attributed
to high unemployment, widespread poverty, lack of opportunity, rising
prices and rampant corruption, it would not take long for the script
to change from implicating politics and economics to implicating
God.
Shortly following
the downfall of Hosni Mubarak, western politicians, the media and
analysts sounded the alarm: Beware, here comes the Muslim
Brotherhood. Yet, two months later, polls showed only 10 percent
of Egyptians would vote for the leader of the Brotherhood as president.
And if the
Brotherhood wasnt a frightening enough group to use as a pretext
to blame religion for the troubles, there was always an endless
supply of faceless, nameless, Islamic extremists lurking in the
shadows, waiting for the opportunity to set up Sharia Law and threaten
governments around the world.
But it was
not religion that sparked the conflagrations. As the good
book has it, money is the root of all evil. (1
Timothy 6:10)
It was neither
God nor Allah that would take the world into The 1st Great
War of the 21st Century. It was the falling bottom line.
In 2011, all
across Europe, the bottom continued to fall out of the bottom line.
Like Greece and Ireland before it, the Portuguese government, after
religiously vowing never to ask for a bailout, asked for a $118
billion bailout from the European Union.
Bailouts were
not gifts, but debt traps loans at interest rates lower than
the private sector but still unmanageably high. Endlessly piling
new un-repayable debt on top of old un-repayable debt would not
solve the underlying problem, If fact, it would worsen it. By imposing
forced austerity measures and draconian spending cuts in order to
service the debt, the bailed-out nation would reduce its productive
capacity and its ability to compete in the global market.
Moreover, the
indebted nations would be required to privatize valuable resources
and industries to service the debt, with the profits going to creditors,
often in foreign countries.
In laymans
terms, bailout is a euphemism for state sponsored loan-sharking.
Precious national assets are sold at bargain basement prices to
political insiders, robbing the nation of its wealth.
How did the
bailouts of Portugal, Ireland and Greece figure into the Great War?
It was the same bottom line issue that brought on the Arab
Spring. Apart from nationalities and languages, the provocations
were the same: high unemployment, restless youth, rising prices,
etc. and, of course, corruption.
But it wasnt
the stereotypical Middle Eastern-style corruption of vulgar Arab
sheiks doing dirty deals behind closed doors with shifty business
moguls. In Europe, corruption was refined, honorable, prudent and
openly practiced. It was called banking.
Legal, state-sanctioned
European financial corruption that made more billions for billionaires
and mega-millions for multi-millionaires had crashed or crippled
many EU member countries.
Reprinted
with permission from The Daily
Reckoning.
May
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.
Copyright ©
2011 Gerald Celente
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