KTFA, Currency365, X22 and More Sunday Night.....10-27-19
KTFA:
Samson: 41% of the world's population is under 24 and most are angry
27th October, 2019
A series of large-scale street protests around the world, from Chile and Hong Kong to Lebanon and Barcelona, have highlighted the need to seek common ground and collective issues behind these protests. Whether or not India's anger over the price of onions can be linked to pro-democracy demonstrations in Russia?
The protests of each country vary in detail, but the recent unrest seems to share one major factor: youth. In most cases, young people take center stage in demonstrations demanding change. The uprising that toppled the old regime in Sudan this year was made up of young people.
According to the British newspaper The Guardian, this is not surprising, as the English poet William Wordsworth praised the eternal youth's desire to rebel in the poem “The Prelude” praising the French Revolution. “Life was bliss at that dawn, but paradise was in Young".
While young people of any age are usually ready to overthrow the existing regime, severe demographic, social and political imbalances intensify the pressures of our modern world, as if the pollution and unprecedented environmental changes we are witnessing today are accompanied by similar exceptional tension in human society.
Young people aged 24 and under reached 41 percent of the world's 7.7 billion people, the largest in history.
In Africa, 41% of the population is under 15, and in Asia and Latin America, where 65% of the world's population lives, only 25% are young. Developed countries tend to the other way, with only 16% of Europeans aged 15 or under, while the proportion of elderly over 65 is about 18%, double the global average.
Most of these young people have reached or are coming of age in a world that has been traumatized by the economic meltdown of 2008, where economic stagnation, low living standards and austerity programs imposed by the political elite have shaped their life experience. Therefore, many of the current protests are rooted in common grievances about economic inequality and unemployment.
In Tunisia, the failed “Arab Spring” of 2011, and in neighboring Algeria recently, unemployed youths and students angry at price and tax increases led street protests, protesting against empty reform promises, as did Chile and Iraq last week.
This global phenomenon of youth disappointment is a political time bomb. Every month in India, a million people are 18 and can vote. In the Middle East and North Africa, an estimated 27 million young people will enter the labor market in the next five years, and any government, elected or unelected, unable to provide decent jobs, wages and housing, will face a major problem.
Regardless of their numbers, contemporary young generations have something else that the elderly lacked: they are connected. Education is greater than ever, they are healthier, less adhered to social traditions and religion, and they know what is happening around them and expect a lot.
Thanks to social networking sites, the spread of English as a common language, and the globalization and information added by the Internet, young people from all backgrounds and places have become more open to alternative life choices, more in line with “universal” rights and norms such as freedom of expression and fair wages, and less willing to accept their lack of access.
The political turmoil resulting from this rapid social development is spreading all over the world, and the Lebanese WhatsApp revolution is the best example of this, yet there are publicly politically motivated protests such as those in Hong Kong and Catalonia.
Hong Kong's youth face familiar problems such as unemployment and rising rents, but by turning against the Chinese authoritarian regime, China's young people have taken the lead in the fight against authoritarian rulers everywhere, and their campaign has had an international resonance, which President Xi Jinping fears.
It is difficult to see what is happening in other parts of the world without linking events such as the efforts of Kashmir youth to overthrow Prime Minister Narendra Modi in India, and the struggle of Palestinian youth against the Israeli army with flags and stones is part of the same global struggle for democratic self-determination, fundamental freedoms and human rights. Adopted by young Muscovites who oppose Vladimir Putin's harsh rule.
Another factor that plays a major role in the outburst of protests is the spread of the idea of democratically elected governments, particularly in the United States and Europe, lying, manipulating, and misleading. Lack of confidence in politicians and the resulting investigation of the general public is a common factor that brings together the yellow vest In France, the Czech anti-corruption marches, the environmental “rebellion on extinction” movement.
As historian William Hazlett put it, “Denial has become the new spirit of the times.” LINK
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Samson: The Lebanese judiciary prohibits taking dollars out of the country
27th October, 2019
The Lebanese judiciary has banned the removal of dollars from portfolios outside the country with ordinary permits approved by the Banque du Liban, in light of the continuing demands to drop all protections against the lords of corruption and looting.
Discriminatory Attorney General Ghassan Oweidat issued a court order banning cash payments at once in the bags of money changers and merchants through Beirut International Airport and border crossings so that looters could not be smuggled out. He said: "The operations of the transfer of funds were carried out with a normal authorization approved by the Lebanese customs, and was coordinated with the Governor of the Banque du Liban Riad Salama so that the Customs Directorate will subject the transfer of funds to the regulations of the Central Bank of Lebanon to determine."
For his part, the Secretary-General of the Popular Organization of Nasserist MP Osama Saad in a tweet on "Twitter": "Young revolutionaries are knocking on the doors of the modern state ... Voices resounding in the fields Change is coming, coming ... Down all protections to the emperors of corruption and looting ... Organization The Nazarene people remain, they remain in the squares and squares."
Protests continue for the eleventh day in Lebanon, and the scene is still similar to the first day, despite the decrease in demonstrations in most parts of the country due to talk of an army plan to open the roads. LINK
TNT:
RVALready: Wow. Baghdadi dead, GOI possibly disbanding, CBI close to RV, reforms to go forward, replacement government. This could be good for everybody.
RVAlready: Maybe the replacements will represent the citizens, and not part of the corruption
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Courtesy of Dinar Guru:
Frank26 ...THE GOI AND CBI ARE TWO COMPLETELY DIFFERENT ENTITIES ...THE GOI HAS AN AGENDA SELFISHLY FOR THEMSELVES. AS THE CBI ALSO HAS ITS OWN AGENDA! NEITHER ONE STOPS THEIR GOALS DUE TO THE OTHER. IMO ALAQ AND THE CBI'S RI IS MARCHING... EVEN AS THE CITZ MARCH AGAINST THE GOI. AND IMO ...THE GOI CONTINUES TO STEAL THE CITZ'S MONEY AS THE CBI CONTINUES TO TRY TO BRING BACK THE CITZ'S THEIR MONEY...
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