Monday 27 August 2012

Does Greece have a government or a protection racket?

Is 1848 about to come back around? 
It's been a while since I have posted, like most of the world it seems the month of August is simply a holiday but there are signs that everyone has gotten over the Olympic spirit and the world is once more turning.

The attitude of the oligarchs is that we masses do not want to take responsibility for our own lives, we want to be told what to do and we are happy as long as we can have someone to blame when it all goes wrong.

The Libertarian revolution is about taking responsibility back from the government and blaming no one but yourself, if things go wrong. Fortunately worldwide governments have proven themselves incapable of getting anything right whatsoever, no matter how insignificant.


The beginnings of rebellion are being felt across Europe...

On the 21st August Greek tax inspectors were driven off the island of Hydra in a scene similar to that seen on the isle of Lemnos in 2009. The coverage on Testosterone Pit points to the lack of tax compliance as being at heart of the Greek problem. But then goes on to explain that the Greek government is selectively defaulting on everything except the pensions and salaries of the Civil Servants.

The Greek government is now no better than a protection racket, stealing taxes, services and goods solely to line the pockets of their own thugs.

But it is not just in Greece.

Ireland, no stranger to rebellion, has itself been conducting a campaign of non-compliance with new taxes introduced to pay for the debts of Allied Irish Bank.

Italy has begun limiting the flight of capital from the country with increased checks at the border and the reported confiscation of silver and gold more than likely indicating that there is a great deal escaping the country.

The Bank of England has recently confirmed that the main beneficiaries of its recent quantative easing program have been the richest 5%, North Sea oil production is less than half that at its peak in 1999 and combined with the collapse of the financial sector and the increasing shakedown of British banks by US banks and regulators the future for the United Kingdom looks bleak - but they have the Channel Islands to squeeze.

There has been a very poor harvest, such as occurred in 1846 and food prices are rising faster than wages and it is a recognised fact that rebellion occurs when food costs 40% or more of wages. For us civilised Europeans it was when 70% of our earnings led to revolt and it was a continent wide experience.

England escaped an actual revolution in 1848 but this was avoided by the extension of the franchise to the urban working class, followed in 1870 by the extension to the rural working class. This tactic was used again in the 1960's to prevent the student revolts by extending it to those between 18 to 21 years.

The modern Englishman knows that the vote is about as worthless as the promise of the treasurer of the Bank of England to actually give you the gold promised.

Is our government going to follow Greece and look to pay the pensions and salaries of Civil Servants before anything else... well yes it looks that way, they are not known for original thought.

When the choice is yours will you be at the barricades or will you be on the side of those trying to clear them?

3 comments:

  1. Two generations in western Europe have almost no concept of hunger or rapidly rising food prices. Politicians have lost the understanding that existed since Roman times of the central significance of food prices and supply as instigators of mass action. It is not as though they have not been forewarned, is it?

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  2. The picture looks a bit like the Royal Square on 28 September 1769 but what will it look like on that date this year?
    Shall you be marching into Town in front of a lobby force of dozens demanding electoral reform?

    Are you knitting your jewelled banner as I write?

    See you there - you old revolutionary you eh...

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  3. I am conducting a personal campaign of Satyagraha against the tyranny of the States of Jersey, I do not believe that electoral reform will achieve anything, on the contrary only the dissolution of the States of Jersey, and of the vast majority of their statutory enactments, will achieve anything.

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