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Large Sarge
29th March 2013, 03:04 AM
First it was “BRICS”, Now it’s “BRIIICS”…






20130328-074413.jpg

This is MAJOR NEWS FOLKS IT'S THE BEGINNING OF THE NEW FINANCIAL SYSTEM



First it was BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa), now it’s BRIIICS (plus Iran and Indonesia).

Here’s a quote.


“Much more important, however, is the BRICS decision to set up a new development bank for long-term infrastructure. This is intended to rival, indeed, outclass, the Western-backed institutions. The underlying rationale is simple: the BRICS are determined to challenge Western political and economic dominance and, in particular, to break the dominance of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank, which have not served the development needs of poor countries and have generally served only to put them into ever-increasing, un-repayable debt.

The BRICS are raising the flag of independence and are telling the West that its abuse of others has gone so far that the others are going to make their own way in life. And that will really matter because more and more Non-Aligned Movement nations will be joining the BRICS in various ways which will particularly include regional, economic, financial, military and technological agreements. An example is that China and Brazil have signed a currency swap deal under which they will be using their own currencies for half of their mutual trade i.e., the US dollar will not be involved. For a while the US dollar can be expected to remain the main trading currency – until suddenly it isn’t.”

Thu Mar 28, 2013 3:40AM GMT




By Prof. Rodney Shakespeare


The importance of the BRICS summit cannot be overestimated partly because it represents new countries beginning to take power and partly because it heralds a new world coming into being.”


Yes, BRIIICS, with three “I”s. That’s because to the countries of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa (which have just held a summit in Durban, South Africa) will soon be added Iran and Indonesia.

Iran is a stalwart moral and political leader. It stands up against Zionism. It has huge natural resources. It is making extraordinary technological progress. It will soon be a BRIIICS member.

And so will Indonesia, which has the world’s fourth largest population, a fast developing economy (around 7% per year) and, again, huge natural resources.

Already, the present BRICS have 40% of the world’s population, 30% of its land mass, and 25% of its GDP with the latter being a sharply rising figure. Other countries, like Venezuela, Turkey, Egypt, Pakistan and Malaysia, are certain to join in.

Much more important, however, is the BRICS decision to set up a new development bank for long-term infrastructure. This is intended to rival, indeed, outclass, the Western-backed institutions. The underlying rationale is simple: the BRICS are determined to challenge Western political and economic dominance and, in particular, to break the dominance of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank, which have not served the development needs of poor countries and have generally served only to put them into ever-increasing, un-repayable debt.

All of which is excellent news. The West has exploited emerging and poor countries and everywhere has been financially and militarily aggressive. Put simply, other countries are fed-up with the West: they have had enough.

The new bank, however, has more purposes than just being a development bank. American aggression, for example, is ultimately dependent upon the US dollar being the world’s reserve and main trading currency. The BRICS are going to end that by establishing a new reserve and trading currency.

Indeed, the situation can be put even more clearly. The West has long exploited and oppressed everybody that it could but now the boot, in the traditional metaphor, is on the other foot. Political power is shifting away from the West; economic power is shifting away from the West and its moral authority has almost completely disappeared (torture, assassinations, the creeping genocide of the Palestinians and the deliberate furtherance of a vicious sectarianism have seen to that).

Significantly, the BRICS are objecting to sanctions and war threats against Iran and are strongly opposed to Zionist Israel. It will not be long they declare that Israel is a pariah state.

Perhaps the most significant outcome of the BRICS summit is the proposed creation of an optic fibre cable linking all five states (with relatively easy extensions to Iran and Indonesia). Indeed, it could be that the BRICS are constructing an independent global optic fibre internet system or at least an extensive one over which they will have complete control. The BRICS are intensely aware that the USA, denying the evidence of its own sixteen intelligence agencies, is pursuing a Zionist agenda against Iran which includes excluding Iran from the SWIFT international banking system and other banking transactions. The new cable should put an end to that.

The BRICS are raising the flag of independence and are telling the West that its abuse of others has gone so far that the others are going to make their own way in life. And that will really matter because more and more Non-Aligned Movement nations will be joining the BRICS in various ways which will particularly include regional, economic, financial, military and technological agreements. An example is that China and Brazil have signed a currency swap deal under which they will be using their own currencies for half of their mutual trade i.e., the US dollar will not be involved. For a while the US dollar can be expected to remain the main trading currency – until suddenly it isn’t.

Furthermore, Africa, for example, long exploited solely for its minerals and resources with no concern for the lives of the inhabitants, is simply going to turn to those who can provide the one big thing that Africa needs – industrialisation.

The importance of the BRICS summit cannot be overestimated partly because it represents new countries beginning to take power and partly because it heralds a new world coming into being.

However, a new world is not necessarily a better world and the BRICS, becoming the BRIIICS and much more, must be careful not to incorporate, without realising, assumptions and practices stemming from corrupt old Western institutions, thinking and practices. Chief of these is thinking that it does not matter if there is huge rich-poor division. This is at the heart of corrupt Western ‘trickle-down’ economics and is a complete breach of fundamental market principle, which says that producers and consumers must be the same people i.e., real productive (and therefore consuming) power must be spread to everyone in society.

Another corrupt assumption is that interest is necessary for the spreading of real productive capacity. Interest is not necessary: it is an unnecessary tax imposed by the global financial elite merely for its own benefit. The BRIIICS must ensure that the commercial banks are controlled so that they can only lend their own money (which they can then waste, if they want to, or charge interest on it). But the main money supply, for the spreading of the real economy, must stem, interest-free, from the national bank (although it may be administered by the commercial banks making only a fair administration charge).

Jalal (making a comment on the Press TV website) writes: “This is the best thing that could happen to the world. A new power that will not let the ex-colonials have the big cake to themselves as usual. This could also be the right path to finally new world order that will contribute to free human being and lead mankind towards a more balanced and harmonious world.”

Celtic Rogue
29th March 2013, 04:08 AM
This could also be the right path to finally new world order that will contribute to free human being and lead mankind towards a more balanced and harmonious world

Yea for who?

Cebu_4_2
29th March 2013, 04:23 AM
Yea for who?

Everyone except the western zionists.

EE_
29th March 2013, 06:26 AM
The BRICS are going to end that by establishing a new reserve and trading currency.

So many fiat currencies, which one to choose? Oh wait...there's a universal currency with no counter party risk, gold!

gunDriller
29th March 2013, 10:00 AM
any time an article talks about the search for a "new reserve currency", without mentioning Gold - you know it's published with the approval of the Banksters.

it's like looking for your glasses when they're in your shirt pocket.

Horn
29th March 2013, 10:22 AM
any time an article talks about the search for a "new reserve currency", without mentioning Gold - you know it's published with the approval of the Banksters.

it's like looking for your glasses when they're in your shirt pocket.

Which reminds me where is the link to this article?

LS normally only provides a link & nothing else, but here there is the story & no link.

Maybe he's been BRIIIC'd?

vacuum
29th March 2013, 12:05 PM
Perhaps the most significant outcome of the BRICS summit is the proposed creation of an optic fibre cable linking all five states (with relatively easy extensions to Iran and Indonesia). Indeed, it could be that the BRICS are constructing an independent global optic fibre internet system or at least an extensive one over which they will have complete control. The BRICS are intensely aware that the USA, denying the evidence of its own sixteen intelligence agencies, is pursuing a Zionist agenda against Iran which includes excluding Iran from the SWIFT international banking system and other banking transactions. The new cable should put an end to that.

communications = money

Spectrism
29th March 2013, 03:58 PM
Everyone except the western zionists.

Yeah right... BS.

Islam will be the dominant political power in that arrangement. It is just bringing in another gange of thugs more ugly than the first gang. This world is a shit hole.

Horn
29th March 2013, 04:05 PM
This world is a shit hole.

Zen up Spectro, call it the Land of Click Clak.

Spectrism
29th March 2013, 06:45 PM
The world would not be so bad if there never were any people in it.

(is that zen enough for the zen club?)


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ezAJeaCySV4

steyr_m
29th March 2013, 07:16 PM
Islam will be the dominant political power in that arrangement.

Sorry, i don't see it. Indonesia is the most populous moslem country in the world, but an alliance with India which is very Hindoo [and an opponent of moslem Pakistan] doesn't make sense. China is the fastest growing Christian country. Russia is Christian already.

Tell me what I don't know.

Spectrism
30th March 2013, 04:28 AM
Sorry, i don't see it. Indonesia is the most populous moslem country in the world, but an alliance with India which is very Hindoo [and an opponent of moslem Pakistan] doesn't make sense. China is the fastest growing Christian country. Russia is Christian already.

Tell me what I don't know.

Huh? I have no idea how you "know" these things, because they ain't zactly true. How do you define "christian"?
Not jew, islam or hindu?

Christianity is not not-something else.

Horn
30th March 2013, 09:54 AM
Millions all over China convert to Christianity


BEIJING — Chinese are embracing Christianity in a social revolution that is spreading through town and countryside to the point where Christians already may outnumber members of the Communist Party of China.

Visits to villages in backward rural provinces or to urban churches in Beijing, where even on weekdays the young and middle-aged gather to proclaim their faith, confirm the ease with which conversions can be won.

“City people have real problems, and mental pain, that they can’t resolve on their own. So it’s easy for us to convert these people to Christianity,” said Xun Jinzhen, who preaches to customers at a beauty salon in Beijing.
“In the countryside, people are richer than before, but they still have problems with their health and in family relationships. Then it’s also very easy to bring them to Christianity.”

State-sanctioned Protestant and Catholic churches in China count up to 35 million followers, making Christianity the third most practiced religion in the country after Buddhism and Taoism. Islam ranks fourth.
Even more significant is a steadily growing network of underground or “house” churches, which are said to have up to 100 million members.

That compares with an official total of 70 million members of the Communist Party, many of whom have lost faith as the party has moved away from strict ideological principles toward increasing acceptance of free markets.
Among the known converts are at least a few of the most prominent figures from the 1989 Tiananmen Square pro-democracy demonstrations, most of whom are now living in exile.

These include Zhang Boli and Xiong Yan, both of whom were on a list of the 21 most-wanted student leaders that was published shortly after the Beijing massacre, and both of whom have been ordained as priests.
Another is Han Dongfang , who converted through the U.S.-Chinese church movement. He arrived in the United States in 1993 after being released from prison on medical grounds; he had contracted tuberculosis in a Chinese jail and nearly died.
“I think human beings need something at a spiritual level,” he said in Hong Kong, where he discusses labor issues for Radio Free Asia. “We don’t want to believe we are coming from nowhere, going nowhere.”

As a teenager, he was a passionate Marxist but, as an army recruit, became disillusioned over the luxuries enjoyed by the officer class.

“When communism became this corrupted thing, which failed everybody, people still needed a belief. I think that’s the reason for Christianity in China,” he said.

One of the driving forces of Christianity’s growth in China has been its association with healing powers, particularly in rural areas where basic health services are lacking.

One woman last month told a gathering of hundreds at Kuanjie, the official Protestant church in Beijing: “My brother’s daughter had a virus, which doctors had never seen before.

“She was on a ventilator and everyone had lost hope. But I prayed for her, and she recovered. Now her family follows Christ, too.”
The woman, 33, came from Anhui, a poor province of central China. In her village, she said, the house church had grown from five or six worshippers to 100 in five years.

Mr. Xun, the beauty parlor operator, sees the growth of religion as a response to the increased materialism that accompanied the economic reforms put into place by Deng Xiaoping.

“We have very few people who believe in communism as a faith, so there’s an emptiness in their hearts,” said Mr. Xun, 37. His mother also is a Christian, and his father, a retired county-level Communist Party secretary, is a sympathetic onlooker.
China’s rulers are said to be ambivalent about Christianity’s growth. Some see its emphasis on personal morality as a force for stability. House churches, which accept the authority of official organizations, are often left alone.

But many reject the party’s control over Christian practice and doctrine, and these are seen as a threat. Overseas groups such as the London-based Christian Solidarity Worldwide say Christians are beaten regularly and one was killed in police custody.


Read more: http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2005/aug/2/20050802-115449-8165r/#ixzz2P2iya2HB

Spectrism
30th March 2013, 10:09 AM
Millions of christians in China (more than US) does not make China a christian nation. I have known for many years that there were more christians in China than US. It is still a very small percentage. The law of the land is nothing like christianity... in fact, the government fears christianity and its liberty.

Horn
30th March 2013, 10:29 AM
Millions of christians in China (more than US) does not make China a christian nation.

You were hoping for some sort of Theocracy?

Spectrism
30th March 2013, 10:40 AM
You were hoping for some sort of Theocracy?


Must you be an obtuse ass?

The comment was made that China was a christian nation. duh.

Horn
30th March 2013, 11:52 AM
Must you be an obtuse ass?

The comment was made that China was a christian nation. duh.

Why respond to your own comment?

You're mixing your Russia and China like some globalist might.

Horn
30th March 2013, 12:12 PM
I think you should be more grateful that your mission is making inroads through millions of the slanted eye goyim, Spectro.

Its quite plausible with that sort of bulk humanity they could redefine Christianity entirely with revised testament & perspective awakening.

gunDriller
30th March 2013, 01:31 PM
BEIJING — Chinese are embracing Christianity

are they embracing Christianity - or Zio-Christianity ?

there's a big difference.

steyr_m
30th March 2013, 03:59 PM
Huh? I have no idea how you "know" these things, because they ain't zactly true. How do you define "christian"?
Not jew, islam or hindu?

Christianity is not not-something else.

I'm kind of thinking -- there is no real Christian Country. The West is pagan to the core, and becoming more so. Go to a church and look at those gentrifying pews. Just as planned.

Spectrism
30th March 2013, 06:30 PM
I'm kind of thinking -- there is no real Christian Country. The West is pagan to the core, and becoming more so. Go to a church and look at those gentrifying pews. Just as planned.

What do you think I have been saying for a while now? All governments are corrupt and owned by the devil.
America was founded on christian principles, but chucked those off a few turns back.

Horn
30th March 2013, 06:59 PM
What do you think I have been saying for a while now? All governments are corrupt and owned by the devil.
America was founded on christian principles, but chucked those off a few turns back.

You should come to Costa Rica, Spectro.

If Catholic you could have full State sponsored support, then you could look down your nose at all the Evangelists.

Or if Evangelist you could consider yourself the Rebel, clean and superior by right.

Spectrism
31st March 2013, 05:22 AM
You should come to Costa Rica, Spectro.

If Catholic you could have full State sponsored support, then you could look down your nose at all the Evangelists.

Or if Evangelist you could consider yourself the Rebel, clean and superior by right.

You only verify to me that you have no clues on the subject.

Horn
31st March 2013, 08:09 AM
You only verify to me that you have no clues on the subject.

The "shithole" world you live in full of Islamic control? No.

Jewboo
31st March 2013, 10:57 AM
America was founded on christian principles...



https://www.nytimes.com/images/2010/11/01/timestopics/slave3/slave3-sfSpan.jpg

https://i.chzbgr.com/maxW500/6463883520/h4C406623/

Spectrism
31st March 2013, 12:20 PM
Non-stop trolls here. One cannot tell the difference between the founding of our nation and slavery, while the other throws words around without having an ounce of understanding. Birds of a feather.

As for manifest destiny sloboo.... where are you living? If in Amerika, you had best give what you have "back" to the injuns or you are just another stupid hypocrite. BTW- who did the injuns take the land from? You don't have historical records so you presume it did not happen. "Anti-manifest destiny" in the current context means you have no right to exist where anyone else has been.

Horn
31st March 2013, 12:29 PM
Is it just that you don't feel Christian enough unless you throw some Zionist piss & vinegar douche around the room, a devout menstruation?

This seems to be a reoccurring theme every 3 months.

And what example is such devotion that it leads to a view of the world as a shithole?

Spectrism
1st April 2013, 09:53 AM
Is it just that you don't feel Christian enough unless you throw some Zionist piss & vinegar douche around the room, a devout menstruation?

This seems to be a reoccurring theme every 3 months.

And what example is such devotion that it leads to a view of the world as a shithole?


No... I just tire of you morons playing the "I hate Joos" theme card with every topic. If you want to talk about bodily functions, why must you dump them here all the time?

The shithole world is only so because of moronic people who refuse wisdom and despise understanding. As I said, other than people here, this place would be pretty nice.

Horn
1st April 2013, 10:04 AM
The shithole world is only so because of moronic people who refuse wisdom and despise understanding. As I said, other than people here, this place would be pretty nice.

You're part of the problem.

And I'm not suggesting that it might be corrected, as is quite obvious it cannot.

Jewboo
8th April 2013, 05:20 PM
No... I just tire of you morons playing the "I hate Joos" theme card with every topic...As I said, other than people here, this place would be pretty nice.



https://lh3.ggpht.com/-Enj27ZrFxBw/TeAreZo6UwI/AAAAAAAAAv0/kQRXrtjOkBc/s1600/Photo0880.jpg

Must be very disappointing for "Spectrism" when his specialness is ignored by us ignorant goyim.

http://smileys.emoticonsonly.com/emoticons/b/bow_down_before_you-960.gif

ximmy
8th April 2013, 06:18 PM
http://www.zerohedge.com/sites/default/files/images/user3303/imageroot/2012/12/20121219_relig1.png

No wonder it stinks here...Israel and the U.S. are Home to More Than Four-Fifths of the World’s Jewshttp://www.pewforum.org/Jewish/Israel-and-the-US-are-Home-to-More-Than-FourFifths-of-the-Worlds-Jews.aspx