The most important announcement to come out of the recent G20 Summit was not still more economic and business voodoo. Thank God.
The big message from Osaka was Russian President Vladimir Putin's declaration that "liberalism is dead." The proclamation stunned half the world and raised applause from the other half, which is a reminder that there are two sides to every story. Here's a short take on Mr. Putin's diagnosis, and a prescription for the liberal world order to swallow.
At
ThinkProgress, author Casey Michel is calling anybody who hates what the liberal hegemony has done to the world "fascist." For the liberal maniacs and globalist bankster henchmen of this world, anybody who is not on their side is either a Jew-hating Anti-Semite, Pat Buchanan, or some other form of Nazi.
And this sort of ludicrous name calling is a big indicator of the massive divide that grips the world today. Michel cites
Financial Times writer Martin Wolf, who exemplifies the worst of ultra-liberalism with this:
"Liberalism is not a utopian project, it is a work in perpetual progress. It is an approach to living together that starts from the primacy of human agency. But that is only the starting point. Making that approach work requires constant adaptation and adjustment."
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