Community | November 11, 2011 | 17 comments

Super Globalist to Replace Italy’s Berlusconi

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Dagum
Now that Silvio Berlusconi has fallen on his sword – but not before making sure Italians suffer austerity – the globalists can make their move and insert one of their trusted minions: former EU Commissioner Mario Monti.

“Analysts are excited about the strong possibility that former EU Commissioner Mario Monti will head up a new national unity government in Italy,” reports Business Insider.

Goldman Sachs and the financial elite are pushing for “a government more amenable to reforms that encourage growth and improve governance… Markets would approve of this kind of coalition.

In other words, they are angling for the wholesale looting of the Italian economy and bankster privatization resulting in mass unemployment, wage cuts, pension thievery, and public services fire sales.

“Super Mario” Monti is a perfect choice to overlord the pillaging. He completed his graduate studies under James Tobin at Yale. Tobin was a Keynesian economist who served on the Council of Economic Advisors and the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.

It stands to reason that Goldman Sachs will lead the charge in the coming rape of Italy – Monti is Goldman’s international adviser.

He was the first chairman of Bruegel, the internationalist European think-tank that steers the globalist agenda for the EU. Monti is also the European Chairman of David Rockefeller’s Trilateral Commission and is also a leading member of the Bilderberg Group....


Continued at:

http://www.infowars.com/super-globalist-to-replace-italys-berlusconi/
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    Community,   News and Politics,   Politics,   Orwellian Nightmare,   7 more
  2. tags:
    Italy Silvio Berlusconi Mario Monti
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17 comments // Super Globalist to Replace Italy’s Berlusconi

  • RaceBannon
  • Hardytoo
    • +1
      Hardytoo  
    • Sorry, but the day I have to get my information from the likes of Alex Jones, is the day I hang up my reading glasses. Sylvio Berlusconi drove Italy into the ditch - LISTEN to the Italian people.

    • 7 months ago
  • Dagum
  • Hardytoo
    • +1
      Hardytoo  
    • Dagum:

      I honestly hear what you're saying. With the deep and terrible hole in which the Italian people find themselves, my only hope is that, when the time comes, they'll elect someone other than a "Berlusconi Clone." It's sickening how quickly the banksters move in - they're like a virus. And you're right, if this kind of faux-leader is allowed to sneak in there and get elected, we are all doomed. Italy's financial situation is very nearly hopeless, and if allowed to persist, will drag ALL of us down - this week's stock market numbers have shown that. I hope for them that they can find a legitimate candidate.

    • 7 months ago
  • Dagum
    • 0
      Dagum  
    • Hardytoo:

      It' scary because he was selected specifically for enforcing austerity and privatizing Italy's assets. The vote may have already been cast today.

      You are right Berlusconi was a bad guy. But he followed his own agenda. He was billionaire media mogul and didn't have sell out to anybody.

      Mario Monti is former Federal reserve and Goldman sachs employee. A perfect puppet to implement international finances agenda of privatization and austerity at bargain prices.

    • 7 months ago
  • Nick19
  • acarvajal
    • 0
      acarvajal  
    • Good article. The information is well researched. people have to wake up who is really running the show in Europe and elsewhere. Some researches have even suggested this European Union was not suppose to work. It will fail and then the globalist, the bankers, will come up with a 'solution'..a major economic reform, a fascist one of course. You people still wonder who run things?? Just watch what symbols are located in the US Congress room, at both sides of the Chairman chair..two fascias. The Cesar Roman Empire dictatorship symbol of power..the power of the state over man.

    • 7 months ago
  • artemis6
  • Nick19
    • 0
      Nick19  
    • The wording in any Infowar article is laughably bias. They fail to acknowledge the complexity of the economic situation in Italy by saying, blame "Globalist" and oh he's just a minion of so and so of some other banking group abroad. The Italian economy has had problems that are the result of domestic policies more than anything else. This article clearly fails to observe any of the domestic policies that contributed to Italy's current economic standing and instead wants to throw out as many names as possible from Goldman Sachs to the trilateral commission somehow. Essentially before the new Prime Minister even takes office, this article is slamming him in every negative way they can. What is known is that yes, he is a banker and that he was responsible for was Italy's integration into the Euro. So this article has an incoherent semi rant as the article criticizes him for learning economics under a NOBEL prize winning economist, Tobin, and that somehow Keynesianism is bad for some reason despite the fact that banks don't like Keynesian ideas since liberalizing an economy means Neoliberalism more than anything else...hence A REALLY BIG CONTRADICTION.

    • 7 months ago
  • Dagum
  • squarethecircle
  • JanforGore
    • +6
      JanforGore  
    • And just a couple months ago Italy voted no on a referendum to privatize their water...I suppose that will be reversed now by fiat. The people's voice isn't going to be heard now.There has also even been the idea floated around of putting a price on their historical places such as the Coliseum, the Leaning Tower, etc. So is this decline truly all real or have some parts of it been contrived deliberately to bring about these "changes?"

    • 7 months ago
  • Dagum
    • +1
      Dagum  
    • JanforGore:

      It's about power and consolidation. Anybody who believes in math could have saw this manufactured debt crisis coming. But is was intended for the crisis to reach a boiling point.

      Power hungry political actors- Elites, financial interests, hedge funds, still follow and hold in high esteem the the 19th century German philosopher Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel.

      Particularly the "The Hegelian Dialectic," Problem- Reaction- Solution -Paradigm.

      1) The government creates or exploits a problem blaming it on others
      2) The people react by asking the government for help willing to give up their rights
      3) The government offers the solution that was planned long before the crisis

      Commonsense would tell anyone that the EU and Euro were based on ridiculous premises. You can't force a new identity on separate peoples that have thousands of years of different culture, history, and language, by creating a fancy new flag, anthem, and undemocratic sham parliament. The rational solution would be for the orderly dissolution of the EU and Euro, Italy should return to the lira, Greece to the drachma national sovereignty should be preserved and call the Euro for what it was: an ambitious yet ridiculous social engineering experiment.

      But instead the answer to the crisis will be that the bankers, the ECB didn't have enough power, they need more and they weren't ambitious enough. They will privates Italy's and Greece's and other Euro countries assets to payback these phoney debts.Then they will think of the next crisis they need to cover justify their power grabs.

    • 7 months ago
  • lazloman
  • squarethecircle
    • +1
      squarethecircle  
    • lazloman:

      It won't end there, but when it does the banks that just illegally moved their Euro accounts into their US branches will be in a good position to stabilize the dollar and use it to establish one system under one currency, we though don't have to believe in any of that nonsense and they cease to be so strong. People and Planet need to rule the day.

    • 7 months ago
  • JanforGore
    • +1
      JanforGore  
    • Dagum:

      I agree, these countries should maintain their sovereignty and their currencies. It might be better for them to fail and start over. Apparently it seems to be working for Iceland. The Euro is indeed a failure propped up by greedy international investors trying to make a quick buck on short term goals at the expense of the whole, with the IMF waiting in the wings to scoop up the spoils.

    • 7 months ago
  • Dagum
    • +2
      Dagum  
    • This is why I was rooting for Silvio Berlusconi, he was corrupt be he was so corrupt the international financiers couldn't control him. So they pushed for his ouster and now they have their ultra globalist puppet in place who will fire sale Italy's assets and shove austerity down their throat's. They just put a similar ex goldman's and federal reserve puppet in place in Greece.

      The end game here is to turn the ECB into Europe's version of the federal reserve. Currently the ECB can't (legally) buy bonds from the secondary market.They are trying to take advantage of the crisis and convince the European public that the ECB must have the power to be "the lender of last resort".

      That way the ECB can back-stop the European banker's gambling debts forever.

    • 7 months ago
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