Global Government: The Shape of Things to Come

June 6, 2007
Before stating the shape of the future global government, it is instructive to know where we have been and where we are now. So I'll give a very short, high level and simplistic view of the past and present before moving on. I won't discuss here in
any detail how this is being brought about (see prior post on
The Globalists for more)
The Past
In the recent past, we saw independent nation states based on capitalism, socialism and communism with a wide variation in the degree of economic, political and personal freedom. Some were politically democratic and others totalitarian. Powerful nations representing different models competed for global influence and dominance. The Cold War between the West, the Soviet Union and China epitomize this struggle.
In the course of this struggle it became obvious that capitalist economies with democratic governments were vastly superior in terms of economic output. It was also obvious that communist/totalitarian governments were better at controlling their populations.
Now, its worth noting that democracy as we have been taught is an illusion. Democracy does not in any way mean the people have a say in the political process of the country. Rather, democracy is in fact a plutocracy or oligarchy controlled by a small group of elite. Both dominant competing parties are controlled by the elite and enact similar policies that advance the interests of the elite despite their rhetoric at election time. So democracy is, and has always been, rule by the elite. The advantage
of democracy is that it creates the illusion in the population that they have a
say in government and keeps them effectively pascified.
The Present: Transition
Currently, based on past experiences of various economic/political models, what we are seeing is a transition period where capitalism and communism are being merged together. If you are a member of the elite, it represents the best of all worlds - economically productive (capitalist), run by a small elite (democratic) and controlled (totalitarian).
Capitalist Countries
All capitalist countries have been or are in the process of being transformed into states with large federal governments with large entitlement programs (health, welfare, employment, old age pension etc.) where dependence on and the supremacy of the state is taught and encouraged. Further, the laws and regulations are ever expanding and becoming more restrictive. The result is a dramatic reduction in personal freedom and privacy. "Democracy"/plutocracy and capitalist economies are being maintained. UK, Sweden and Finland are good examples.
Communist Countries
Currently, we see considerable effort being made to bring former communist countries and their vassal states are being transformed into capitalist economies with democratically elected governments. Russia, India, China are examples (China remains an exception but after its economic rise will likely have a democratic government as well - remember a democratic government is really a plutocratic government controlled by the elite).
Developing Nations
With over 50 years of interference by the IMF and World Bank, most, but not all,
developing nations have already been transitioned into the preferred economic and
political system. Capitalist/corporate economies, political rule by an elite and
totalitarian.
Rogue States
Now, as a necessary prerequisite to bring about the first truly global government
is that all nations are part of the same system. However, there are currently a
number of independent nations who are not under the control of the global elite.
Countries like the oil rich nations of Iraq, Iran and Venezuela come to mind along
with dictatorships like North Korea, Syria, and Libya. These "rogue" states must
be brought into the fold by any means necessary. This could be covert overthrow,
corruption of their elite, or as we are increasingly seeing outright war. The current
world geopolitic when viewed from this perspective is easy to understand.
The Future
In the future, we will see the completion of the merger of capitalism and communism. The new system will have the following characteristics:
1. Economically Capitalist
Through IMF, World Bank or direct overthrow, all nations will be transformed into
capitalist economies controlled and dominated by multinational corporations. Further,
the global nature of economic competition will result in the removal of the middle
class across the globe.
2. Politically "Democratic"
Modeled after the current western democracies, we will see the establishment of
democratic/elite control established systematically across the globe.
3. Governmentally Socialist and Totalitarian
The role of government and the state will continue to expand, laws and regulations
will increase, taxes will increase, and personal freedoms and privacy will be eroded
slowly to the point where we are all living under totalitarian control.
4. Regional Power Blocs
National sovereignty will end and authority over legal, economic, security, military,
political, transportation, water, energy and other systems will be merged with other
countries and ultimately be given to regional power blocs similar to the European
Union. These regional governments will be unelected and appointed by the corporate
and political elite of each nation.
5. United Nations control over it all
Each regional bloc will have appointed representatives as part of the global government
but all will be ultimately subservient to the UN.
6. High-tech Surveillance Grid
Using a wide array of technologies, implemented over time, we will see the establishment
of a high tech surveillance society. CCTV cameras on every corner, telecommunications
and internet monitoring and censorship, corporate control over the internet, and
implanted microchips will become normal.
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This future will likely unfold in a combination of two ways.
First, through slow changes over the next 2 or 3 decades, it will happen in such
way that the public are convinced each step in necessary and will happily agree
to it knowing their government is doing everything they can to represent their best
interests. An example of this is the acceptance of an implanted RFID chip or a cashless
society to facilitate security or economic convenience.
Second, changes will be brought about by a series of disruptive stages. What I mean
is that a particularly dramatic change will be enacted after a shock event. This
could be a US monetary crisis to bring about the North American Union or a series
of government sponsored terrorist events to make the public agree to a national ID card.
Regardless, each transformative step will be presented to the public as necessary
and/or beneficial. In this manner, you will convinced to accept you own enslavement
under a one world elitist government, unelected, unaccountable and free to impose
its will upon us all.