Wednesday, 15 June 2016

"PRECARIAT, BILDERBERG, AND THE MICROCHIP" BY THE CONTROVERSIAL BUT ALWAYS INFORMATIVE PAUL McGUIRE FROM "NEWS WITH VIEWS"!!!

Precariat, Bilderberg and the Microchip - By Paul McGuire -http://www.newswithviews.com/McGuire/paul284.htm
 
The world's elite is at the annual Bilderberg Group meeting in Dresden, Germany. Among the top concerns of the annual gathering of world leaders, CEOs, super-billionaires, and other members of planet Earth's ruling class are the "precariat" and the middle class. "Precariat" is a term promoted by Guy Standing, a British economist, which describes a fast growing class of people who have no hope for a decent future, can only find part time or temporary jobs at minimum wage, and have to do all kinds of work for which they don't get paid. This rapidly expanding "precariat," according to Standing, is composed of a "growing class of people who feel insecure about their jobs, communities, and life in general... In addition, they are often paid in cash." They are growing in number in America, Europe, China, and many other areas. They include "grey market domestics paid in cash," those who are not technically trained, seniors who struggle with disappearing pensions, retirement funds, and savings, and soaring health care costs. It also includes single mothers who have difficulty making money and the millennial generation who were promised jobs upon graduation and often can only find part time and minimum wage jobs.
 
The "precariat" class is of great concern to the elite and Bilderberg Group because this group is angry, anxious, and alienated and is driving the rise of populist politicians like Donald Trump, Bernie Sanders, and, in Europe, right wing and nationalist candidates whom the elite cannot control. The reason the Bilderberg Group is discussing both the "precariat" and middle class is because the middle class in America and other places is shrinking, which is fueling the rise of the "precariat." Outsourcing of manufacturing, along with trade treaties and economic policies that favor the one percent have gutted significant sectors of the American Middle Class.
 
In America, Europe, China, Japan, and the many other places in the world where there was an existing or emerging middle class, the global economy, which globalists in the U.S. and the EU promised us would bring more economic prosperity, has caused the opposite through downward pressure on wages due to global competition. When the beginnings of these trends first began to emerge with events like Rockefeller going to China in the 1970s and the creation of NAFTA, GATT, and the WTO, etc., the American people were told through a corporate controlled media that this would allow Americans to prosper in the new global market place.

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