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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Dr. Voodoo who wrote (37493)7/22/2008 9:27:08 PM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 217656
 
told Nokia Siemens: want contract in Euro. They told me to have it in Brazilian Real.



To: Dr. Voodoo who wrote (37493)7/23/2008 7:34:31 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 217656
 
Industry is being destroyed as finance becomes the place where the money is.

Thus industry was sent abroad and OECD countries concentrated on finance.

China and the emerging markets gained traction and have been taking on manufacturing for 3 decades.

Now the € is getting very expensive, competition is forcing industry to scramble to buy wherever they can get cheaper compoentsn and parts.

Finance of OECD countries will not stop there. They will move like locusts eating all the crops wherever they find them. We had been in the receving end for at least 5 decades.
Never able to rise sicne the locusts would come and "harvest".



To: Dr. Voodoo who wrote (37493)7/26/2008 11:45:37 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 217656
 
The Next American Nation: The New Nationalism and the Fourth American Revolution

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The Next American Nation: The New Nationalism and the Fourth American Revolution (ISBN 0-684-82503-1) is a 1995 book by journalist and historian Michael Lind, published by Free Press.

Lind's book focuses on criticism of two trends. The first, multiculturalism, he characterizes as an "unmitigated calamity" and a "a repellent and failed regime". Thus, Lind opposes affirmative action and racial quotas, and identifies the elimination of them as a "nonnegotiable demand". The second is a series of compromises struck by what Lind calls the white "plutocracy", "overclass", or "oligarchy". In the "first American Republic", he says, this "Anglo-American nation," the compromise was between North and South to keep blacks in bondage. "The Second American Republic", what Mr. Lind calls "Euro-America," saw the bargain struck between the oligarcy and the white working class to keep blacks out[1].

Lind further writes that multiculturalism is the basis for another such compromise, in which the "white ruling class" has, in fact, used racial quotas to appease blacks and other minority groups by promoting token numbers among them, but leaving the majority unhelped. This, Lind argues, has led not to Balkanization but "Brazilianization", a toponym which he defines as "a high-tech feudal anarchy, featuring an archipelago of privileged whites in an ocean of white, black and brown poverty."

"Brazilianization", Lind writes, is characterized by the "increasing withdrawal of the White American overclass into its... world of private neighborhoods, private schools, private police, private health care, and even private roads, walled off from the spreading squalor beyond. Like a Latin American oligarchy, the rich and well-connected members of the overclass can flourish in a decadent America with Third World levels of inequality and crime."[2]