The bankster controlled elitist states around the world are collapsing. Greece is a preview. So what is happening in Greece? Anomic breakdown.
Under the headline: Struggling Greeks losing belief in the state, Paul Mason at the BBC reports:
During the autumn, Greek commentators began to speak of “anomic breakdown”, where people begin to disobey laws and social norms individually.
There are all kinds of factions developing: hard-right, extreme left, anti-German, most appear unaware that central planning is itself the problem. Most just want their central planners in power. Here’s Mason again:
The polls tell one part of the story. The Pasok party, which tried and failed to implement the first austerity bill until replaced by a technocratic coalition in October, is now down to 11%. (Epikaria poll, 16 February 2012)
New Democracy, the centre-right party that expected to form the government – it has been a two- horse race since the restoration of democracy in the 1980s – is also in trouble. Its own vote – 27.5% – is not enough to form a government. And 20 MPs just got expelled for opposing the bailout.
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“The real problem is that the masses may not be able to tell the difference between freedom and chains, and thus simply choose new shiny chains.” If the masses could tell the difference they would not have elected Hitler as Chancellor, or supported Lenin and the Bolsheviks in 1917, or Mao and his gangsters in 1949, or Obama in 2008. Whatever demagogue promises them utopia for nothing more than their votes and support will be the victor in any political contest. If the masses could tell the difference then it would be perfectly clear to them than in 2012 in America the choice is between liberty and tyranny, capitalism and socialism, freedom and dependency, growth and atrophy. No, the masses follow the demagogues, not the philosophers.