lunes, 4 de junio de 2012

American Independence vs. Global Government: Are We Losing the Struggle?

 

In 1933, H.G. Wells, by then nearing the end of an illustrious career as a novelist, social scientist, and encyclopedist,  wrote The Shape of Things to Come, a counter-factual history of the world from 1933 to the year 2106. Ever the utopian, Wells spun out a tale of all-consuming world wars, territorial ambition, and general chaos which would end in a 100-year tyranny followed finally by the establishment of the Modern World State – the prototype for global government.

The book is a chilling portrait, not so much of the world as it might one day exist (it was too static a read for that), but rather of the mind of an early 20th Century utopian who seemed to have no qualms suggesting that the massacre of millions, the forcible eradication of religious, practice and the sequestration of all private property would be necessary for the establishment of a world paradise. The utopian, globalist agenda – justifying any means to achieve a progressive end – today casts a pall over the reputations of the socialists who conceived it.
The globalist dream did not end with H.G. Wells nor those of his generation. In fact, the movement he and the other Fabian romantics spawned was really just beginning.
Today, although few advocates talk about a world government in which a single political entity would govern all humanity, a sophisticated and extremely well financed movement to advance global governance has taken root in most western countries. Insisting on the UN as a conduit for enacting international protocols and regulations, almost all of which would override national legislation, globalists use international environmental accords, humanitarian law and international treaties as their vehicles to advance an agenda that is becoming increasingly aggressive and unwilling to brook opposition.
This well-financed campaign designed to strip sovereign governments of their ability to regulate and monitor human rights and environmental protection, has naturally put the globalist agenda on a collision course with constitutional democracy. Put simply, transnationalists in the UN and the European Union, but more importantly among America’s elites, are using the demands for a global rule of law to make American constitutional law subservient to a global authority. And in many respects they are succeeding.
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Easier Credit, New Models Keep US Auto Sales Solid

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DETROIT June 1, 2012, 05:16 pm ET
DETROIT (AP) — Easier credit, hot new cars and falling gas prices kept Americans buying cars at a solid pace in May despite bad economic news.
But sales could stumble in June as people weigh troubling headlines, like Friday's report that U.S. unemployment rose for the first time in 11 months.
Car sales usually hew closely to the performance of the stock market and to consumer confidence numbers. But in May, they were strong, even though confidence was wobbly and the stock market had its worst month in two years.
"We should have had a disastrous new vehicle sales month, but consumers are still interested in the new products," said Jesse Toprak, vice president of market intelligence for the car buying site TrueCar.com. "This was an anomaly."
Toprak expects sales to slow somewhat this summer before picking up again at the end of the year as the economy improves and the presidential election ends political uncertainty.
May sales totaled 1.3 million cars and trucks, up 26 percent from the same month a year earlier. It was the best May for the industry since 2008.
Toyota led sales increases with an 87 percent rise from a year earlier, while Honda saw a 48-percent jump. In May 2011, both companies ran short of cars and trucks after the earthquake in Japan crippled their factories. But their showrooms are full again, and they're rapidly gaining back the market share that they lost to competitors such as Hyundai and GM.
Sales of the Toyota Prius hybrid tripled from a year ago, while Honda Civic sales were up 80 percent.
Chrysler reported a 30 percent increase, followed by Volkswagen at 28 percent and Nissan at 21 percent. Ford and Hyundai both saw gains of 13 percent. General Motors Co. was up 11 percent.
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Ecopetrol sube en 'top' de petroleras con mayores ingresos

 

La compañía colombiana se encuentra entre las dos únicas destacadas en América Latina en un ranking de 'losdatos.com'. Actualmente ocupa el puesto 21.

La mayor producción, el hecho de que las energías alternativas no sean aún relevantes y los altos precios del crudo, entre otros factores, ubican a Ecopetrol en las primeras posiciones de los rankings empresariales.
Un análisis de los balances entregados por las empresas a sus accionistas, y que están inscritas en bolsa, indica que la primera en ingresos fue la norteamericana ExxonMobil, con 486.429 millones de dólares, seguida muy de cerca por la holandesa Shell, con 484.489 millones y la china Sinopec, con 397.401 millones de dólares.
En cuarto lugar del ranking -elaborado por www.losdatos.com-, se ubicó BP que perdió un puesto frente al 2010, y, en quinto puesto, está Petrochina.
Las únicas empresas latinoamericanas fueron la brasileña Petrobras, en el puesto 12, y la colombiana Ecopetrol en el 21, con ingresos por 36.941 millones de dólares.
La petrolera nacional ascendió además dos escalones. En el ranking también se ubicaron seis empresas norteamericanas, cinco rusas, tres chinas y tres canadienses. Con una, están Brasil, Colombia, España, Reino Unido, Noruega, Italia, Holanda y Francia. Las 25 mayores petroleras tuvieron ingresos en el 2011 por 3,75 billones de dólares, con un crecimiento de 12,5 por ciento frente al 2010.
Mientras tanro las utilidades netas alcanzaron 353.000 millones de dólares con un crecimiento del 39,7 por ciento frente al 2010. La rentabilidad patrimonial de las compañías del sector alcanzó el 18 por ciento y el margen neto, el 8,8 por ciento. READ MORE

Envie DINERO de COLOMBIA a USA


 

 

 
 

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