In These New Times

“In these new times, in spite of the dangers, the most brutal force, the most fearful night, we are engaged in the fight to survive.” No Novo Tempo-Ivan Lins, Vitor Martins

Archive for January, 2011

Leaks throw dirt on Hariri’s coffin

Posted by seumasach on January 23, 2011

Sami Moubayed

Asia Times

21st January, 2011
DAMASCUS – The year kicked off on a very rough note for Lebanese prime minister Saad al-Hariri. First, 11 ministers walked out on his government, embarrassingly ejecting him from office while Hariri was at the White House meeting with President Barack Obama.

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Posted in Drive to Global War | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

Tea party group decries SmartMeters

Posted by seumasach on January 23, 2011

PG&E’s SmartMeter program took a beating at a tea party gathering in Cotati on Wednesday, with speakers calling the technology a threat to public health, personal privacy and consumers’ budgets.

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Posted in Ecological and Public Health Crisis | 1 Comment »

Wireless technologies- appeal to Obama

Posted by seumasach on January 23, 2011

The Prove-it Initiative

We the people of the United States of America respectfully ask the President to immediately issue an executive order staying the deployments of all new public wireless technologies, including:

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Posted in Ecological and Public Health Crisis | Tagged: | 2 Comments »

Protesters in Berlin call for an end to factory farming

Posted by seumasach on January 23, 2011

Meanwhile, back in animal farm, mass population reduction advocate, Sir John Beddington, calls for more GM crops.

Deutsche-Welle

22nd January, 2011

Several thousand people in Berlin on Saturday demonstrated for change in the agriculture industry, calling for non-toxic and environmentally friendly arable and animal farming, less industrial agriculture and more consumer protection.

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Ralph Nader & Ron Paul Interviewed Together!

Posted by smeddum on January 20, 2011

Posted in Drive to Global War | 1 Comment »

Tommy and Gail Sheridan set to sue cops over arrest treatment

Posted by smeddum on January 20, 2011

Daily Record

21st January, 2011

TOMMY and Gail Sheridan plan to sue police over the way they were treated as officers probed perjury charges.

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Merkel vows not to abandon the euro

Posted by smeddum on January 19, 2011

German Chancellor Angela Merkel yesterday ruled out a return to the deutschmark.

January 20, 2011

Gulf press

Berlin: German Chancellor Angela Merkel yesterday ruled out a return to the deutschmark amid a debt crisis that has led to calls in some quarters for Europe’s top economy to ditch the euro.

“There will be no return to the D-Mark,” Merkel said in an interview with Stern magazine due to appear yesterday.

She reiterated that Germany was committed to the European currency and “would do everything necessary to guarantee a stable euro”. Read the rest of this entry »

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De-globalization is on the way

Posted by seumasach on January 18, 2011

New Europe

16th January, 2011

World public opinion, to the extent that such a thing exists, and an increasing number of players in developing markets seem to have now turned against globalization. Governments are forcefully bowing to the strong negative attitude of the public in their countries, vis-à-vis the “laissez passer” legislation concerning the movements of capital in and out of their economies.

New York and London commentators, for a number of years, have been  taking for granted that the financial agents staged in those two mega cities should have a free hand and uninterrupted access to all and every capital, money or commodity market all over the world. This is obviously the ideological outcome of thirty years of deregulation and policies favoring globalization followed by all the major countries of the world, a process that started in the 1980s, took momentum in the 1990s and became standard, just around the turn of the Millennium.

What followed however were two major financial crises and a number of regional capital market melt downs, like the ones in South East Asia and Argentina. The most ferocious of the two crisis was the real estate one of 2007-2008, that destroyed all the major banks in the US and Britain, and threatened to demolish the real economy of the entire world along with the banking sector in the rest of the major economies. The taxpayers’ money and the central bank zero cost loans that were used to save the western financial system from a total collapse have now led to severe public spending cuts, which affect greatly the average man in the street all over the western world. It was a lesson that all these people learned about banks.

Our political leaders refuse, however, to acknowledge this reality about the big financial firms which, after losing all their bets in the real estate market, have turned their newly acquired capital from taxpayers and central banks into the oil and basic food stuff markets, trying to create new values for themselves and make the rest of world pay for this. All that would have not being possible without a thirty year deregulation all around the world and the arrival of the globalization era.

Good things do not last forever though and this perfect set up for the big banking and investment firms, including the various forms of capital formations like the private equity or the state owned funds, is to come to an end. Major developing economies like Brazil and South Korea are now protecting themselves from the uncontrollable inflows and outflows of capital, by starting to impose increased taxes on those movements. The 6% levy imposed on inflow of foreign capital into Brazil may be the beginning of more restrictive policies. The aim will be to protect their internal financial markets from the abrupt in and out flows of New York capital, being it to a large degree just newly printed paper by the Fed. It is also a warning to the traditional western financial centers, that their ability to conquer the rest of the world just with printed paper is over. In the medium future, if the west wants to expand to those economies it would be obliged to finance real economy investments with long term capital, as some decades ago. The terms however will not be the same as in the 1950s and the 60s.

The real message is that the west will no longer have a free access to economies like Brazil and South East Asia. China and India have already set their own terms in financial relations with the west. It seems certain that the world financial markets are soon to be much more regulated. The European Union will end up in the middle, between the unregulated US and increasingly regulated emergent states..

 

Posted in Multipolar world | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

The Hariri assassination: the role Of Israel?

Posted by seumasach on January 18, 2011

Rannie Amiri

Global Research

23rd July, 2010

A crackdown on Israeli spy rings operating in Lebanon has resulted in more than 70 arrests over the past 18 months. Included among them are four high-ranking Lebanese Army and General Security officers—one having spied for the Mossad since 1984.

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Posted in Drive to Global War | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

Russia may buy EFSF bonds – finance minister

Posted by seumasach on January 18, 2011

Russia may buy bonds isssued by the European Financial Stability Fund (EFSF), set up last year to prop up economies of troubled European Union states, Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin said on Tuesday.

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Germany and Europe must defy political trends

Posted by seumasach on January 18, 2011

Christoph Schennicke

Spiegel

18th January, 2011

Part 2- part 1 here

Why is Germany, the supposedly fallen superstar, in such good shape in the biggest economic crisis of the postwar era? Because it has maintained a more resilient industrial mix and prepared itself more effectively for the future than the Anglo-Saxon model, which had established the fashion trends of the last 30 years and had looked down on Germany with a mixture of pity and arrogance. Because smokestacks continue to belch smoke and assembly lines continue to run in Germany, and because Germany makes real products instead of packaging financial products until they are no longer recognizable.

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