Difference between revisions of "The Great Reset"
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On op-ed in ''[[The Hill]]'' observed: | On op-ed in ''[[The Hill]]'' observed: | ||
{{quotebox-float|"In truth, of the world’s 195 countries only 65 have agreed to join the American sanctions regime — meaning that 130 have refused, including China, India, Brazil, Mexico, Indonesia, most of Asia, Africa and Latin America, countries that together constitute the vast majority of the world’s population. Consider also that the nations the U.S. currently targets with sanctions represent a powerful bloc strongly opposing what they regard as America’s economic [[bullying]]. A striking example of the rejection of U.S. assumptions of dominance was a recent meeting of the world’s leading financial nations — the [[G-20]] Summit — when the U.S. delegation walked out on a speech by a Russian delegate and only three of the other 19 delegations followed suit. All of this tells any objective observer that it is not Russia that is the world’s most isolated superpower but perhaps the [[United States]] itself.<ref>https://thehill.com/opinion/international/3507340-could-russia-win-a-public-relations-war-against-the-west/</ref>}} | {{quotebox-float|"In truth, of the world’s 195 countries only 65 have agreed to join the American sanctions regime — meaning that 130 have refused, including China, India, Brazil, Mexico, Indonesia, most of Asia, Africa and Latin America, countries that together constitute the vast majority of the world’s population. Consider also that the nations the U.S. currently targets with sanctions represent a powerful bloc strongly opposing what they regard as America’s economic [[bullying]]. A striking example of the rejection of U.S. assumptions of dominance was a recent meeting of the world’s leading financial nations — the [[G-20]] Summit — when the U.S. delegation walked out on a speech by a Russian delegate and only three of the other 19 delegations followed suit. All of this tells any objective observer that it is not Russia that is the world’s most isolated superpower but perhaps the [[United States]] itself.<ref>https://thehill.com/opinion/international/3507340-could-russia-win-a-public-relations-war-against-the-west/</ref>}} | ||
| + | Deputy Chairman of the Russian Security Council [[Dmitry Medvedev]] laid out a forecast for the post-Russia sanctions world which was already underway by June 2022:<ref>https://t.me/no_mainstreamW/3270</ref> | ||
| + | #- A number of global supply chains will collapse and a major logistical crisis could arise, including the collapse of foreign airlines that will be banned from flying over Russian airspace. | ||
| + | |||
| + | #- The energy crisis will deepen in countries that have imposed sanctions on Russian energy supplies, fossil fuel prices will continue to rise, and the development of the digital economy in the world will slow down. | ||
| + | |||
| + | #- There will be an international food crisis, leading to famine in some countries. | ||
| + | |||
| + | # – A monetary and financial crisis is possible in some countries or groups of countries, combined with undermining of the stability of some national currencies, runaway inflation and the destruction of the legal system protecting private property. | ||
| + | |||
| + | # – New regional military conflicts will arise where the situation has not been resolved peacefully for many years or where the important interests of major international players are ignored. | ||
| + | |||
| + | # – Terrorists, who believe that the Western authorities’ attention is now distracted by the confrontation with Russia, will become more active. | ||
| + | |||
| + | # – New epidemics will break out, caused by a lack of international cooperation on health and epidemiological issues or caused by the proven use of biological weapons. | ||
| + | |||
| + | # – International institutions, which have not proved their effectiveness in resolving the situation in Ukraine, such as the Council of Europe, will lose their importance. | ||
| + | |||
| + | # – New international alliances will be formed, based on Anglo-Saxon criteria that are pragmatic rather than ideological. | ||
| + | |||
| + | # – As a result, a new security architecture is being created which recognises: | ||
| + | (a) the weakness of Western concepts of international relations such as “rules-based order” and other meaningless Western rubbish; | ||
| + | (b) the collapse of the idea of an America-centric world; | ||
| + | (c) the existence of internationally respected interests of those countries in sharp conflict with the Western world. | ||
| + | |||
| + | |||
| + | |||
| + | |||
===Fertilizers=== | ===Fertilizers=== | ||
American and European sanctions on Russian fertilizer exports killed global food production. | American and European sanctions on Russian fertilizer exports killed global food production. | ||
Revision as of 00:08, June 13, 2022
The Great Reset is the globalist, Biden junta and Liberal Party of Canada agenda to use the destruction of the U.S. and global economies by the Chinese virus pandemic to implement the Green New Deal. It is based on the idea that a crisis is a terrible thing to waste and that capitalism can be snuffed out once and for all.[1] Klaus Schwab, who heads the World Economic Forum, began promoting a "Great Reset" throughout 2020.[2][3] Multiple world leaders also began promoting it.[4]
Liberal media are all on-board with promoting "The Great Reset" instead of protecting the American people from the details of it.[5] The important points of The Great Reset are that:
| There will be no money, no private property, no democracy. Instead, every key decision — what you do for a living, how much stuff you consume, whether you can take a vacation — will be decided for you by a remote, unaccountable elite of ‘experts’.[6] |
Contents
Russian sanctions
- See also: Russia-Ukraine war
In response to Russia's Special Military Operation to demilitarize and denazify Ukraine, corporate globalists began disemboweling themselves. Major oil companies, including Exxon, BP, and Shell, ended joint investment projects with Russian oil companies. Major retailers, including H&M, Nike, Ikea, and TJX, shut down Russian sales and closed stores. Visa, Mastercard, and American Express shut down global services in Russia… Boeing cut off support for Russian airlines and closed its offices in Moscow, while Delta ended its Russian code-sharing arrangement. FedEx and UPS shut services to Russia. Apple, Alphabet, Meta, and Microsoft all have taken significant action.[7] The Russian population, which is rich in food and energy supplies, likely will not suffer the energy and food shocks the West and the United States cut out for itself with sanctions, although Russians will be deprived of Netflix.
In response to Western sanctions, Russia banned export of fertilizers to countries going along with the U.S. sanctions scheme.
NATO member Turkiye welcomed sanctioned Russian oligarchs to do business in Turkiye.[8]
The United States Treasury seized Russian assets in the United States and refused to allow the Russian government to pay U.S. bond holders of Russian debt with dollars. The United States slapped over 9,600 sanctions against Russian officials, the state, companies, oligarchs and other entities, more restrictions against it than Iran, Syria, North Korea, Venezuela and Myanmar combined. President Putin responded, “The calculation was to quickly undermine the financial and economic situation in our country, to provoke panic in the markets, the collapse of the banking system, and a large-scale shortage of goods in stores...We can say with confidence that this policy against Russia has failed - that the strategy of the economic blitzkrieg has failed...Moreover, the sanctions were not without consequences for the initiators themselves...I am referring to the growth of inflation and unemployment, the deterioration of economic performance in the United States and the countries of Europe, the decline in the standard of living of the Western peoples and the devaluation of their savings”.[9]
On op-ed in The Hill observed:
| "In truth, of the world’s 195 countries only 65 have agreed to join the American sanctions regime — meaning that 130 have refused, including China, India, Brazil, Mexico, Indonesia, most of Asia, Africa and Latin America, countries that together constitute the vast majority of the world’s population. Consider also that the nations the U.S. currently targets with sanctions represent a powerful bloc strongly opposing what they regard as America’s economic bullying. A striking example of the rejection of U.S. assumptions of dominance was a recent meeting of the world’s leading financial nations — the G-20 Summit — when the U.S. delegation walked out on a speech by a Russian delegate and only three of the other 19 delegations followed suit. All of this tells any objective observer that it is not Russia that is the world’s most isolated superpower but perhaps the United States itself.[10] |
Deputy Chairman of the Russian Security Council Dmitry Medvedev laid out a forecast for the post-Russia sanctions world which was already underway by June 2022:[11]
- - A number of global supply chains will collapse and a major logistical crisis could arise, including the collapse of foreign airlines that will be banned from flying over Russian airspace.
- - The energy crisis will deepen in countries that have imposed sanctions on Russian energy supplies, fossil fuel prices will continue to rise, and the development of the digital economy in the world will slow down.
- - There will be an international food crisis, leading to famine in some countries.
- – A monetary and financial crisis is possible in some countries or groups of countries, combined with undermining of the stability of some national currencies, runaway inflation and the destruction of the legal system protecting private property.
- – New regional military conflicts will arise where the situation has not been resolved peacefully for many years or where the important interests of major international players are ignored.
- – Terrorists, who believe that the Western authorities’ attention is now distracted by the confrontation with Russia, will become more active.
- – New epidemics will break out, caused by a lack of international cooperation on health and epidemiological issues or caused by the proven use of biological weapons.
- – International institutions, which have not proved their effectiveness in resolving the situation in Ukraine, such as the Council of Europe, will lose their importance.
- – New international alliances will be formed, based on Anglo-Saxon criteria that are pragmatic rather than ideological.
- – As a result, a new security architecture is being created which recognises:
(a) the weakness of Western concepts of international relations such as “rules-based order” and other meaningless Western rubbish; (b) the collapse of the idea of an America-centric world; (c) the existence of internationally respected interests of those countries in sharp conflict with the Western world.
Fertilizers
American and European sanctions on Russian fertilizer exports killed global food production.
Food shortages
On March 24, 2022 Biden claimed that economic sanctions on Russia were never meant to deter a Russian incursion into Ukraine while he prepared Americans and Western NATO bloc countries for the approaching food shortages.[13]
In Ukraine, as of the spring of 2022, there was almost no large-scale planting outside of areas under Russian control.
Delivering food to the world's poorest countries became much more difficult and costly.
On May 11, 2022 reports surfaced of NATO looting Ukrainian gran reserves.[14]
India
India, the world's second largest wheat producer, banned exports on May 13, 2022 in anticipation of the global economic food crisis created by NATO and the West with Russian sanctions and NATO and the West's tampering in Ukrainian's internal affairs.[15]
Energy shortages
While the European Union’s decision to buy more liquefied natural gas (LNG) from the United States may seem to solve short-term supply energy problems on the continent, it also consolidates the EU’s fossil fuel energy infrastructure. At the same time, it weakens that of renewable energy, creates a leadership vacuum on addressing global climate change, and may well undermine how the EU implements its European Green Deal. The Kyiv region and everything east of the Dniepr River was more-or-less out of diesel as of April 2022. As was the agricultural center and west of the country where Russian forces did not advance. Russia bombed diesel storage facilities which runs not only military vehicles but tractors as well. Any new supplies would have to come from where it normally does, that is, Russia or Belarus.[16]
AFP reported on April 21, 2022 that Biden regime treasury secretary Janet Yellen told reporters a ban on Russian oil, gas, and coal could ultimately cause more harm than good.[17] This, after the Biden regime implemented such a ban, and threatened India and other countries with sanctions for not implementing such bans.[18] A European energy ban would raise global oil prices "and, counterintuitively, it could actually have very little negative impact on Russia, because although Russia might export less, its price it gets for its exports would go up."
Gas
On February 7, 2022 Michael Hudson, a research professor of Economics at University of Missouri, Kansas City, wrote:
| "The only way left for U.S. diplomats to block European purchases [of Russian gas] is to goad Russia into a military response and then claim that avenging this response outweighs any purely national economic interest. As hawkish Under-Secretary of State for Political Affairs, Victoria Nuland, explained in a State Department press briefing on January 27 [2022]: “If Russia invades Ukraine one way or another Nord Stream 2 will not move forward.” The problem is to create a suitably offensive incident and depict Russia as the aggressor.[19] |
After being kicked out of the SWIFT payment network and the petrodollar system in which global crude oil contracts are valued in dollars, Putin announced all gas contracts with “unfriendly” countries must pay for Russian gas in rubles. Since all the large Russian banks are sanctioned, buyers in "unfriendly" countries must find smaller Russian banks to work with, meaning they won’t get the best rates, and there will be other transaction costs and inconveniences. Bloomberg News, The Wall Street Journal and many thinktanks said for decades that Russia's biggest problem was eighty to a hundred billion dollars a year leaking out of the country as the rich took their profits to London, Cyprus, or Switzerland. Sanctions ended those capital outflows, and recapitalized Russia’s banking system. All the new demand for Russian currency is expected to lift the ruble above where it was when sanctions hit, literally making Russia profit from sanctions.
By mid May 2022 seventeen countries in Europe, including Germany and Italy, agreed to open accounts with Gazprombank, as Russia advised them to do and to pay for oil and gas in rubles.
Electricity
Under the sanctions, Western countries refuse to pay in dollars or euros for coal or uranium used to power electric plants in the West.
Sri Lanka
Food riots erupted in Sri Lanka in April 2022. The government fell on April 4, 2022.[22] In May 2022 rioters burnt down the homes of 38 politicians to protest inflation and food shortages.[23]
Pakistan
In March 2022 the Pakistani government fell into crisis as the Washington, D.C. establishment pressured it to take sides against Russia. Populist prime minister Imran Khan responded to 22 Western ambassadors asking him to condemn Russia: "What do you think of us? Are we your slaves...that whatever you say, we will do?"[24] On April 8, 2022 Khan was ousted by globalists.[25] Protests erupted in support of Khan and against the new puppet regime immediately.
After the change of leader, Pakistan sent air attacks against Afghanistan. Under Khan, they refused to give space to US forces for a new attack base against Afghanistan, whether the Taliban is in control or not.
Peru
On April 5, 2022 the leftist regime in Peru imposed a state of emergency after riots erupted over inflation and food shortages.[26]
Brazil
Brazil nixed Biden's Russophobic efforts to boot Russia out of international forums.
Estonia
Inflation rose 18% year-over-year in April 2022, electricity increased 119%, pipeline gas 237%, and rents 34%.
CCP global pandemic
- See also: CCP global pandemic
Impact on civil rights
- See also: Coronavirus civil rights
COVID-19 Coronavirus has impacted civil rights with respect to several issues, including the constitutional rights to assembly and travel.
The CDC attempted to prohibit gatherings of 50 or more people, which implicates the First Amendment right to peacefully assemble (including religious services, the impediment of which also constitutes a violation of freedom of religion).
Curfews, beginning as early as 8 p.m. in New Jersey, implicate that same right and also the right to travel.
Mandatory quarantines implicate multiple First Amendment and Fourteenth Amendment rights.
Supply chains
President Donald Trump said that the coronavirus outbreak highlighted the importance of bringing back to the United States previously offshore supply chains for medicine and gear that are needed to fight the spread of the outbreak. Steps have already taken to mitigate the risk to public health because of the country's reliance on other countries for key medication and equipment. The outbreak showed the importance of bringing manufacturing back to America so that we can produce at home the medicines and equipment and everything needed to protect the public's health.
Rosemary Gibson, senior advisor at the Hastings Center, a bioethics research institute, said that the reliance on foreign countries for life-saving medicines made the United States vulnerable. Gibson provided details of the depletion of America's pharmaceutical industrial base. The US can no longer make penicillin; the last U.S. penicillin fermentation plant closed in 2004. Industry data reveal Chinese companies formed a cartel and colluded to sell the product on the global market a below market price and drove all US, European, and Indian producers out of business. Once they gained the dominant global market share, prices increased.
America's pharmaceutical supply chain is a devastating indictment of pre-Trump national security and public health policy. A nation heavily reliant on vital medicines and their ingredients from an increasingly hostile and secretive China is a devastating indictment of pre-Trump national security and public health policy.
Shortages
A critical shortage of masks occurred within the first month. American hospitals were overly dependent on Chinese made medical supplies. Hospitals in the US were already having to ration their inventory amid one of the worst flu seasons in decades. Masks were only available in departments such as intensive care units, divisions involved with infection, prevention and emergency departments in some hospitals.
White House Manufacturing and Trade Advisor Peter Navarro advocated for a return to U.S. production of medical products as a matter of national security. In his first three years President Trump positioned the U.S. to withstand supply chain disruption better than most countries. Starting from a position that the U.S. was too dependent on Chinese products, Trump pressured companies to return to the U.S. or find alternate suppliers outside China. During the two-year tariff battle many companies did exactly that. As a result, those companies are less dependent on Chinese component goods. A proactive position is now helping many U.S. companies avoid the China economic meltdown.
Procter & Gamble warned that the company's 17,600 products use 9,000 materials that come from 387 factories / suppliers across China, and that all of them may be disrupted by the coronavirus pandemic.[27]
Further reading
- The Great Reset: Deep State Globalists Taking Over the World and You! The New American. January 4, 2021.
- Pushing the Great Reset. The New American. March 22, 2021.
See also
References
- ↑ Global Elites Announce ‘Great Reset’ Plan—And It’s Even More Radical Than the Green New Deal
- ↑ Now is the time for a 'great reset'
- ↑ World Leaders’ ‘Great Reset’ Plan for Global Economy Is the Green New Deal on Steroids
- ↑ Multiple references:
- Kent, Simon (January 12, 2021). No Going Back: U.N. Chief Guterres Promises ‘Rebuilt’ World in Coronavirus Wake. Breitbart News. Retrieved July 24, 2021.
- Murphy, James (November 16, 2021). Canada’s Justin Trudeau Ties COVID-19 Recovery to “Reset” and UN Agenda 2030. The New American. Retrieved July 24, 2021.
- Neill, Steven (November 20, 2021). Justin Trudeau, the Great Reset, the MSM, and the Big Lie. The New American. Retrieved July 24, 2021.
- ↑ The Great Reset, "TIME partnered with the World Economic Forum to ask leading thinkers to share ideas for how to transform the way we live and work."
- ↑ Delingpole: The Great Reset Is Trending. Here’s Why...
- ↑ https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/whitehead-rise-global-fascism-and-end-world-we-know-it
- ↑ https://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/russian-oligarchs-can-come-to-turkey-if-legal-minister-says-172518
- ↑ https://news.yahoo.com/wests-economic-blitzkrieg-unsuccessful-putin-153450454.html
- ↑ https://thehill.com/opinion/international/3507340-could-russia-win-a-public-relations-war-against-the-west/
- ↑ https://t.me/no_mainstreamW/3270
- ↑ https://youtu.be/Ieb22ok2INA
- ↑ https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/biden-says-russia-sanctions-werent-meant-to-deter-putin-but-his-admin-said-they-were
- ↑ https://streetloc.com/page/view-news?id=2295#
- ↑ https://www.foxbusiness.com/economy/india-bans-wheat-exports-food-security-threat
- ↑ https://consortiumnews.com/2022/05/11/ukraine-us-gas-europes-decarbonization-hit/
- ↑ https://www.rfi.fr/en/yellen-warns-european-ban-on-russian-energy-could-harm-economies
- ↑ https://tfiglobalnews.com/2022/02/27/joe-biden-commits-a-massive-strategic-blunder-by-threatening-india-with-sanctions/
- ↑ https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2022/02/michael-hudson-americas-real-adversaries-are-its-european-and-other-allies.html
- ↑ http://www.holocaustresearchproject.org/holoprelude/deruntermensch.html
- ↑ https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/fighting-russia-takes-focus-off-azov-battalions-nazi-roots-x07lkjl7r
- ↑ https://www.reuters.com/breakingviews/sri-lanka-crisis-sends-inflation-warning-worldwide-2022-04-04/
- ↑ https://news.am/eng/news/701146.html
- ↑ https://summit.news/2022/03/07/are-we-your-slaves-pakistani-prime-minister-refuses-pressure-to-condemn-russia/
- ↑ https://youtu.be/OA8am0evTgQ
- ↑ https://www.investmentwatchblog.com/state-of-emergency-in-peru/
- ↑ https://www.cips.org/en/supply-management/news/2020/february/pg-warns-17600-products-possibly-hit-by-coronavirus/
