Friday, December 17, 2010

Looking Forward: The Next Presidential Candidate

Now that the smoke is clear from the 2010 election with the Democrats losing 61 seats, it’s time to think ahead about the direction of our country. 

We can see the desperation in voters with the uprising of the Tea Party movement.  This country had high hopes for Obama and many have claimed him to be the “Messiah” but the last election shows that millions of people have turned away from him. 

Just to clarify I stake no claim with the Republican or Democratic party.  I am a registered Independent and am fiscally conservative.  When it comes to fiscal politics, I don’t think it makes any difference which party wins.  Both are controlled by the rich. 

When you have a situation such as the Tea Party movement it’s a cry for desperation.  Millions of middle class voters want someone to save them from the financial crisis we are in.  The Tea Party is made up of mostly middle class citizens who are worried they are sliding from the middle class into a future of poverty.

The poorer people in our country aren’t really involved in the political battle going on.  The poor are smart in a sense because they know politics cannot save them from poverty which is why there usually isn’t a large turnout of poor people when it comes to voting.  They also know Obama is in trouble for trying to spread the wealth.  They also know the middle class is not interested in saving the poor anymore because the middle class are now focused on saving themselves from slipping into poverty.

What every voter regardless of economic class needs to realize is that the problem is not political, so it cannot be solved by electing new political leaders.  The biggest problem we are facing is financial.  And the biggest proponent of our financial crisis is the Federal Reserve Bank.  This is a way for the rich to control the rest of the people; through the banking system and not through politics.

Most people in this country have poor financial sense as evidenced by the amount of debt people get themselves into.  They don’t realize that the financial crisis and bank bailouts are necessary for the ultra rich, who control the central banks, to become richer and control people by fear.

Ireland recently announced a $115 billion bailout.  This shows how desperate other parts of the world are.  The European Union as well as England does not want the crisis to spread.  They know if Ireland fails so will Spain, Portugal and Italy.  If the EU fails then the US will fail since the EU is the biggest trading partner of England and the US

The citizens of
Ireland have no choice but to agree to a $115 billion bailout.  Same goes for the citizens of the US.  But since most people are not smart with their own personal finances, how can they be smart with the finances of the world?  Where does this bailout money come from?  Well the bank prints it.  Who pays the interest?  The taxpayers.  Who receives the interest?  The bankers and those that own the banks.

What we need to understand is due to our own financial ignorance, we allow the ultra rich bankers to steal our wealth right out from our own pockets.  We fear not having enough money yet we blindly allow the ultra rich to steal from us by controlling the monetary system.

The recession isn’t over, don’t believe any political leader that tells you that.  It might seem that it is over at the moment due to the holiday season and consumers are shopping.  But the recession isn’t over.

There’s really no sense in getting hyped up over the next presidential election.  Instead we need to think of what do we do if the politicians we elect cannot save the financial world?  What if they screw up?  What do we need to do to prepare for a collapse just in case?  What if the whole world slides into a global depression?  What if there is world wide hyperinflation?  Should we listen to Obama and count on hope?  In this case hope is for the hopeless especially if we the people of the United States hope the next political candidate can save us.


This post largely based on Robert Kiyosaki's Conspiracy of the Rich teachings.

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