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IPFS News Link • Economy - Economics USA

Economist Magazine Reports on Multinational Threat But Misleads on Solutions

• http://www.thedailybell.com

A giant problem  The rise of the corporate colossus threatens both competition and the legitimacy of business … DISRUPTION may be the buzzword in boardrooms, but the most striking feature of business today is not the overturning of the established order. It is the entrenchment of a group of superstar companies at the heart of the global economy. -The Economist

The Economist provides pre-eminent support to the world's growing fascist technocracy, but every now and then, apparently, it has to write an article opposed to it.

Probably more than any other publishing group, the people behind The Economist have shaped the modern world and its leadership.

This includes the multinationals the modern world is plagued with. And one can be sure that The Economist's leadership is supportive of TPP and TTIP, the "trade agreements" intended to cement global corporate leadership and place it above mere nation-states.

The world The Economist has in mind is a technocratic one. The "best and brightest" will be selected at a young age to go to specially designed schools that provide a certain outlook on the world and what is important to know.

These individuals, cocooned and cosseted, will go on to provide leadership for an interconnected group of dominant corporations spanning the world.

Their lives shall be rarified; their vision implacably internationalist; their actions bent toward the aggrandizement of the system they serve without question.

But, nonetheless, there is a lot of anger over what's going on. People can clearly make out the horizon and are aware that slavery awaits them on the other side.

In fact, The Economist has probably woken up to resistance to its horrible trade agreements and this article is a reflection of the sudden comprehension that people are aware of the fate in store for them and don't wish for it to take place.

From the Georgia Guidestones: "Maintain humanity under 500,000,000 in perpetual balance with nature."

We should pay attention to articles like these. Often they signal wider movements at top levels of the world's corporatocracy.

Those who own The Economist often use it as a megaphone to communicate globalist messages. For instance, one of its cover stories a few years ago announced the advent of social media. Nowadays social media appears to have taken over the world. Didn't take long at all.

We regularly write about this kind of occurrence. It begins with an elite meme – a statement of intent – and then gradually takes on the shape of what we called "directed history" as the meme is increasingly realized.


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