endlessvista
05-04-2009, 02:10 PM
there is an article in todays Irish Sunday Independent (owned by Kissenger's pal Sir Tony O'Reilly) which is a masterpiece in Common Purpose NLP techniques. Unnamed sources demanding riots and the headline of the article completely diffrent to what is in the body text. Which is what most people are not looking for riots!
This is just further proof that the elites want people to riot and are using the media to whip them up so they can implement further draconian controls.
I think the journalist who wrote this is either a Common Purpose graduate or lacks basic IQ levels of information processing. Or maybe like most journalists is a patheitc drunk waffling in a string of barstool drink talk yet again.
Majority braced for civil unrest in wake of toughest Budget ever
By JEROME REILLY
Sunday April 05 2009
A majority of people are bracing themselves for civil unrest in the wake of the toughest Budget ever, a Sunday Independent poll has found.
In all, 55 per cent of voters fear the economic crisis and Tuesday's attempt to save the economy from potential bankruptcy will mean people taking to the streets.
The poll found widespread anger in the face of the crisis with some respondents suggesting the policies pursued by the government during the boom years had exacerbated our current problems.
"We'll see what happens at Budget time. But things are really spiralling out of control. I have a feeling that the powder keg might explode," was one voter's fear.
"All it will take is one more Medical Card fiasco and we could have total anarchy," a female respondent believes.
A minority, 45 per cent, of those polled did not see any prospect of civil unrest believing that Irish people are not disposed to radical protest. Others felt that the economic situation does not warrant mass protests.
But another poll finding that will cause deep anxiety is that a large minority of 41 per cent admit they feel like taking to the streets themselves.
One respondent summed up the sense of anger throughout the country among ordinary workers. "I'll be out, no doubt about it. We need a revolution in this country to break up the elites, the bankers, the politicians and the rest of them," he said.
The poll found a majority, 59 per cent, of respondents don't feel like taking to the streets themselves, mainly because they feel it will only make matters worse.
"No I won't. We can't just take to the streets because things have gone wrong. We are the ones to blame, we are the ones who voted for the Government and their policies. We should put up or shut up," one voter said.
Last month, political commentator Noel Whelan said civil unrest could follow a period of political turbulence.
poll chart pAGE 29
"I think the sheer intensity of the demands that are going to be upon the Government and that are going to be upon the political system generally are such that we may get to a stage where, because the Government does not have a majority to get that Budget passed, or because of the level of civil unrest some of the measures in the Budget give rise to, the clearest way to clear the decks and get a hold of the financial crisis may be an election," Mr Whelan said.
And in an interview published in the Sunday Independent today, aviation tycoon Ulick McEvaddy also warned that social unrest could "certainly lead to an election".
Mr McEvaddy says: "A series of budgets could lead to social unrest. We can't rule that out. It happened in Iceland. They were not due an election for another two years and they ended up having one."
The poll was conducted by Quantum Research using questions compiled by the Sunday Independent editorial team.
See Ulick McEvaddy, Page 4
- JEROME REILLY
This is just further proof that the elites want people to riot and are using the media to whip them up so they can implement further draconian controls.
I think the journalist who wrote this is either a Common Purpose graduate or lacks basic IQ levels of information processing. Or maybe like most journalists is a patheitc drunk waffling in a string of barstool drink talk yet again.
Majority braced for civil unrest in wake of toughest Budget ever
By JEROME REILLY
Sunday April 05 2009
A majority of people are bracing themselves for civil unrest in the wake of the toughest Budget ever, a Sunday Independent poll has found.
In all, 55 per cent of voters fear the economic crisis and Tuesday's attempt to save the economy from potential bankruptcy will mean people taking to the streets.
The poll found widespread anger in the face of the crisis with some respondents suggesting the policies pursued by the government during the boom years had exacerbated our current problems.
"We'll see what happens at Budget time. But things are really spiralling out of control. I have a feeling that the powder keg might explode," was one voter's fear.
"All it will take is one more Medical Card fiasco and we could have total anarchy," a female respondent believes.
A minority, 45 per cent, of those polled did not see any prospect of civil unrest believing that Irish people are not disposed to radical protest. Others felt that the economic situation does not warrant mass protests.
But another poll finding that will cause deep anxiety is that a large minority of 41 per cent admit they feel like taking to the streets themselves.
One respondent summed up the sense of anger throughout the country among ordinary workers. "I'll be out, no doubt about it. We need a revolution in this country to break up the elites, the bankers, the politicians and the rest of them," he said.
The poll found a majority, 59 per cent, of respondents don't feel like taking to the streets themselves, mainly because they feel it will only make matters worse.
"No I won't. We can't just take to the streets because things have gone wrong. We are the ones to blame, we are the ones who voted for the Government and their policies. We should put up or shut up," one voter said.
Last month, political commentator Noel Whelan said civil unrest could follow a period of political turbulence.
poll chart pAGE 29
"I think the sheer intensity of the demands that are going to be upon the Government and that are going to be upon the political system generally are such that we may get to a stage where, because the Government does not have a majority to get that Budget passed, or because of the level of civil unrest some of the measures in the Budget give rise to, the clearest way to clear the decks and get a hold of the financial crisis may be an election," Mr Whelan said.
And in an interview published in the Sunday Independent today, aviation tycoon Ulick McEvaddy also warned that social unrest could "certainly lead to an election".
Mr McEvaddy says: "A series of budgets could lead to social unrest. We can't rule that out. It happened in Iceland. They were not due an election for another two years and they ended up having one."
The poll was conducted by Quantum Research using questions compiled by the Sunday Independent editorial team.
See Ulick McEvaddy, Page 4
- JEROME REILLY