The Robots' Rebellion: The story of the Spiritual Renaissance by David Icke

The Robots' Rebellion: The story of the Spiritual Renaissance by David Icke

Author:David Icke [Icke, David]
Language: eng
Format: epub
ISBN: 9781858600222
Google: OZ8QOAAACAAJ
Goodreads: 20669507
Published: 0101-01-01T00:00:00+00:00


The difference between the ‘haves’ and ‘have nots’ comes down to the number of pieces of paper they possess. This mostly has nothing whatsoever to do with their abilities or their desire to contribute to the well-being of society. You can be a financial ‘winner’ and earn lots of bits of paper by making some plastic claptrap that is no real use to anyone. But you can be a financial loser by dedicating your life to the care of others. What you sell is what matters, not what you contribute to humanity. As we have seen the easiest way to make money is to create it out of nothing. Values and desires become distorted by this and societies become sick and more divided.

Another implication of this annual expansion is that, as production becomes more mechanised, the investment necessary to compete gets greater and the small fall by the wayside. Big becomes beautiful and life becomes ugly. The economic power gathers in fewer and fewer hands in line with the Brotherhood plan and the major corporations and banks call the shots far more than elected politicians.

(5) The mopping up of unemployment by the expansion of ‘wants’

can only go on for so long. Through this century, and particularly since the sixties and seventies, the so-called ‘Third World’ has started to produce more finished products. The system that started with Britain exploiting its empire for ‘resources’ and selling them back the finished products has changed dramatically. The whole of Europe and

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then the United States followed and expanded what Britain had started. In the second half of this century, the Far East, Asia, Africa, and South America, were sold the Industrial Dream, often by banks who wished to invest the money that was pouring in, especially from Arab countries after the Brotherhood-engineered oil price surge of the 1970s. The World has become awash with products looking for people to buy them.

(6) At the same time there are fewer people with the money to buy those products. Once a large number of countries have the same ambition - to produce more and sell more and they pass the point where this can continue within their own borders, everyone has to compete with everyone else for sales all over the world. This becomes a battle to the economic and, for at least 100,000 people every day, the physical death. More automation is required to produce more products at a lower cost because everyone has to compete to find ways of making the same product cheaper. More automation means less employment, and less money in people’s pockets to buy the products the machines are making. The major manufacturers begin to transfer much of their production to Third World countries because the laws on exploitation there are even more lax than in the West, and you can pay people a fraction of the wages demanded in Europe and America.

(7) As a result of all this, the system is now in desperate trouble and that is precisely what the



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