The first signs of alarm and panic from filthy rich elites have begun to reach the public via the mass media – how such material slipped through editorial vetting is not known but what is known is that Rupert and his fellow media moguls are not happy.

Donald Trump
A strange brew of fear, disdain and utter loathing seems to have prompted an outburst from one of America’s richest! Ultra-right wing, laissez-faire capitalist and property tycoon, Donald Trump, has ‘lashed out’ – seven years too late -- at my hero, G W Bush, in what appears to be a feeble attempt to deflect attention and take heat off obscenely wealthy, social PARASITES such as himself. When the super-rich and real power brokers are threatened it seems the heads of ventriloquists’ dummies are expendable! Exposure to mobs and angry throngs has always terrified the rich, as history so graphically records!
In times of social turmoil or extreme stress, the hyper-wealthy tend to panic, guilt! The first signs of unease are usually manifest as blame-laying or ‘shuttle’ accusations. Living in open society has always been fraught with the danger of marauding hordes. So, it’s finger-pointing time in Caviar Park! The public must be appeased and who better to offer for sacrifice than the idiot President and his handler, soon to be dickless, Dick Cheney!
With full knowledge that the patient – Capitalism – is dead and is only kept twitching by life support and artificial stimuli, frantic manoeuvres are underway to shift focus, lay blame and save some very frightened executive arses – but alas, as history dictates it will all be in vain, the guilty will tumble like so many tenpins.
Global capitalism is haemorrhaging like a severed jugular; a previous post warned of the dangers of hyper-concentrations of wealth in too few hands. The increased speed at which those concentrations must ‘work/move’ in order to retain and INCREASE ‘value’ overwhelms. A point is reached where value can no longer be sustained due to the inability of the few to efficiently disperse wealth throughout large economies – money MUST work/move or it becomes valueless or “disappears,” as it has no inherent value. PRODUCTION and the economic cycle create value – not shuffling paper and manipulative tricks!
In the distributed wealth model everyone is forced to either spend or save; growth and production are guaranteed, as the creativity required to invent/stimulate production occurs spontaneously and at RANDOM in any given population, hence the need for distributed wealth to foster opportunity and GROWTH. FREE education based on merit and achievement is imperative.
The equitable distribution of wealth – a traditional responsibility of government – engenders conditions and environments that enhance creativity! Credit stressed societies are characterised by self-destructive, escapist behaviour, as is evident today!
In the concentrated wealth model, money is appropriated by thieves, manipulators and cheats who lack the talents to stimulate social production and foster a more equitable, healthy and creative society, as is also evident today! The destruction wrought on the world by the bastion of deregulated, laissez-faire capitalism is horrendous and stands as the poisonous hallmark of a failed American/western system!
We do not oppose you on ideological grounds but on the basis that capitalism translates to wealth for the few and deregulated capitalism to obscene wealth for the very few. That model engenders division, violence and needless suffering, as recent history bears out.
I leave you to your well-deserved fate but do not doubt for a minute that I would hesitate – you know to what I refer and to whom I speak! However, my love of natural justice and my knowledge of REAL REMEDIES prohibit me divulging more to the criminals in power.
Justice will be served and the people will soon have their day!
WE are ONE
[China’s economic problem is also the concentration of wealth in too few hands. The myth of America as somehow necessary for the global economy in the form of super consumer is ridiculous! Compare the population of America as consumer, 300 million, to China, 1.6 billion and realise that distributing wealth locally provides for steady growth. If the combined populations of BRIC are included, the superiority of the distributed wealth model is clearly seen.
America is ‘dead wood’ and will remain so for a long time. Its REAL debt is too terrifying for even their lying economists to divulge; nevertheless, in time all becomes known. Distribute wealth evenly if you would soften the impact of America’s and the EU’s criminal vandalism on the global economy.]
See:
http://cleaves.zapto.org/news/story-1170.html
http://cleaves.zapto.org/news/story-1197.html
http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2008/10/16/1223750191362.html
by Julie Gregson via krill 2008-10-17 07:13:08
A fair specializing in luxury goods for the extremely wealthy opens in Munich on Thursday amid a raging financial crisis and anger at growing inequality. Social groups will be out on the streets to protest the event.
It's tough being rich these days. Not only are the well-heeled seeing their assets plunge in value in the global financial crisis, now even small highlights on the social calendar, such as the "Millionaire Fair" in Munich, are at risk of being spoiled by a noisy group of social activists.
Among the protest actions planned for the opening day of the exclusive life style event is a symbolic slave market that aims to turn the spotlight on wage dumping in Germany and around the world.
"Our aim is not to pillory people, but to attack existing social conditions," said Walter Listl from the city's Social Forum. "Riches are the cause of poverty."
Just a few meters away from the entrance to the venue on Thursday, Oct. 16, demonstrators will be auctioning off cheap labor, singing anti-capitalist songs and staging sketches lampooning the bank bailout. Inside, visitors will be admiring private jets, high-end cars, lavish jewelry and haute couture.
This is the first time that the Millionaire Fair, first held in 2002, has taken place in Germany. Previous venues have included Shanghai, Moscow and Amsterdam. The affluent southern German city of Munich in the country's richest state, Bavaria, is an obvious choice. It also played host to the Luxury Fair earlier in the year.
Playground for the rich and famous
Fair organizers expect the event to attract some 20,000 people, including the rich and famous, top business people, luxury goods retailers, bon viveurs and just the plain curious.
At 39 euros ($52) for an entrance ticket, you don't need to be a millionaire to get in. And who knows who you might rub shoulders with. Film stars like Joan Collins and Elizabeth Hurley and singer Bryan Ferry were among the guests at previous Millionaire Fairs.
For four days, some 100 firms will be setting out their stalls across 16,000 square meters of exhibition space. According to the official Web site, "the creme de la créme of luxury goods industry will be presenting their most beautiful one-off creations, the most exclusive products and unusual services to the event's discerning visitors."
Or as one supplier's press release puts it, the fair will offer "a cornucopia of all the most beautiful and luxurious things the world has to offer."
"Obscene display of perverse wealth"
In Walter Listl's eyes, it represents "an obscene display of perverse wealth."
"According to UN statistics, a child dies every five seconds of malnutrition or from easily treatable diseases," Listl added. "They’re showcasing mobile phones studded with precious gems. We can’t just sit back and ignore that."
Germany's first Millionaire Fair is prompting Munich's Social Forum to break new ground. The network of some 40 local groups -- all with a decidedly anticapitalist bent, according to Walter Listl -- has not targeted specific events like this before.
"It's the first time that we have staged something a bit spectacular aimed at a particular event of this kind," Listl said. "We are doing it for very topical and acute reasons."
The gap between rich and poor in Germany is widening
The timing of the Millionaire Fair and the global financial crisis as well as the growing gap between rich and poor in a country whose express goal has been "prosperity for all" has got the social activists out on the streets. The motto of the demonstration: "Your wealth makes us sick."
"We're not planning to approach or talk to the millionaires or the wannabe millionaires," said Listl. "We want to bring public attention to the degree of poverty that exists in this country -- and elsewhere."
It remains to be seen how the two worlds will react to one another, or even to what extent they will even meet. There will be a police cordon around the venue. The organizers were unavailable for comment.
© 2008 Deutsche Welle
http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,2144,3712009,00.html