VENEZUELA — RUMORS OF WAR https://t.me/ZetaTalk_Followers/80304

ZetaTalk: Sudden Silence: https://zetatalk.com/transfor/t165.htm

Just in time for the Pole Shift—Trump Cutting Federal Income Tax by 2027.

ZetaTalk emphasizes that the most profound effects of the coming Earth changes will be sociological, not just physical. According to the Zetas, widespread unrest, rebellion, and shifts in human organization will dominate as food shortages, crop failures, and awareness of the Pole Shift ripple through society.

🌍 Key Points from ZetaTalk on Sociological Changes

  • Riots and Rebellion: The Zetas predict that as food shortages worsen, riots and civil unrest will become increasingly common. People will realize the scale of disruption the Pole Shift will bring, leading to rebellion against authorities and institutions.

  • 2002 as a Turning Point: In earlier communications, the Zetas noted that while crop shortages were already increasing, the most noticeable effect for humanity would be sociological changes — meaning shifts in behavior, organization, and collective psychology.

  • 8 of 10 Scenarios: ZetaTalk describes the "8 of 10" stage (a precursor to the Final Weeks, the 9 of 10, and Pole Shift, the 10 pf 10) as being dominated by sociological upheaval. This includes breakdowns in governance, rising distrust of elites, and grassroots survival movements.

  • Transformation Context: In their broader framework of "Transformation," the Zetas link sociological changes to spiritual orientation. They argue that mixed groups (self-serving vs. service-to-others) will begin to separate, elites will lose control, and ordinary people will form new cooperative structures.

🔑 Implications According to ZetaTalk

  • Collapse of Old Systems: Traditional power structures (governments, corporations, elites) will weaken as they fail to provide stability. This leads to what ZetaTalk calls an “elite bunker mentality” — where the powerful retreat rather than help.

  • Rise of Community Survival: Ordinary people, especially those oriented toward service-to-others, will band together in cooperative groups. These grassroots networks are seen as the seeds of a new social order after the Pole Shift.

  • Psychological Stress: Awareness of impending disaster will cause widespread anxiety, denial, and rebellion. ZetaTalk suggests that the sociological impact will be more visible than the physical changes themselves in the years leading up to the shift.

✨ Summary

ZetaTalk frames sociological changes as the defining feature of humanity’s response to Earth’s upheavals. Rather than just focusing on earthquakes or floods, the Zetas highlight riots, rebellion, collapse of authority, and the rise of survival communities as the real markers of the transition. In their view, this is part of a larger Transformation where humanity reorganizes itself spiritually and socially in preparation for the Aftertime.

Sources: www.ZetaTalk.com and www.Poleshift.ning.com

Views: 96061

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Comment by Chris on November 29, 2013 at 1:03am
Comment by J Ph on November 26, 2013 at 9:46am

http://qz.com/151141/philippines-government-limits-coastal-rebuildi...

Philippines President Benigno Aquino will restrict construction on some of the country’s coastline after Typhoon Haiyan destroyed half a million homes and killed thousands, a move that could dramatically improve the country’s resilience to the next major storm. “Part of the President’s orders is to establish a ‘no-build zone’ along coastlines to ensure the safety of those living in resettlement areas,”  Herminio B. Coloma, the President’s communications operations secretary, said in a radio interview on Sunday.

Comment by Chris on November 25, 2013 at 8:05pm

Thai PM declares emergency law to help quell largest protests in years
http://www.presstv.ir/detail/2013/11/25/336616/thailand-pm-declares...
Thailand Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra has declared a special emergency law for Bangkok after riot police and anti-government protesters scuffled in the capital city.

Shinawatra's government invoked special security law in and around Bangkok after protesters seized the compounds of two ministries.

Police and anti-government protesters have scuffled in the capital Bangkok, after demonstrators tried to break up a police barricade near the Government House.

The demonstrators stormed the Foreign Ministry and Finance Ministry compounds as part of their protest.

“Go up to every floor, go into every room, but do not destroy anything,” Suthep Thaugsuban, a former deputy prime minister and opposition lawmaker, told the crowd before he entered the ministries, adding, “Make them see this is people’s power!”

This is the second day of rallies seen as the biggest in years.

Comment by Gerard Zwaan on November 25, 2013 at 11:16am
Comment by SongStar101 on November 1, 2013 at 8:50am

Clashes between police and activists in Rome

http://gma.yahoo.com/photos/clashes-between-police-and-activists-in...

Clashes between police and activists broke out in Rome on Thursday during a demonstration by protesters demanding rights to have a home. Violence broke out once police prevented the marchers from reaching a location where a meeting between representatives from the government was taking place to discuss housing policies. (AP)

 

Comment by SongStar101 on October 20, 2013 at 5:48am

Thousands protest against austerity in Italy, Portugal

Image Source  October 19, 2013

http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/afp/131019/thousands-protes...

Tens of thousands of people protested against austerity in Italy and Portugal on Saturday, with clashes between riot police and dozens of activists outside the finance ministry in Rome.

"We are laying siege to the city!" a group of students chanted as they marched through Rome, while others waved rainbow peace flags and held up banners from a variety of leftist movements.

"We are protesting a one-way austerity that is bringing the country to its knees," said Piero Bernocchi from Italy's Cobas trade union group.

"And it hasn't achieved what it was meant to by bringing down debt," he said, adding: "Meanwhile politicians continue with their privileges."

Italy is struggling to shake off a two-year recession that has pushed unemployment to record levels, shut down thousands of businesses and forced many young Italians to leave the country.

Several people were seen being detained during the protest in Rome after around 100 militants threw rocks at police guarding the finance ministry, who charged and chased them into side streets.

The window of a branch of UniCredit bank, Italy's biggest lender, was also smashed in by protesters and the hacker group Anonymous took down several institutional websites to coincide with the rally.

Organisers said 70,000 people were taking part, while police put the number at around 50,000.

Police had seized potential weapons including chains, helmets, clubs and cobblestones and detained 14 people ahead of the protest.

Between 3,000 and 4,000 police officers have been deployed for security, local media reports said.

Meanwhile in Lisbon thousands of protesters boarded around 400 buses rented especially to get around an interior ministry ban on marching on foot across the city's famous April 25 bridge.

"Government out!" and "Liars, liars, we want new elections!" they shouted, voicing exasperation over an austerity programme in place in Portugal for over two years as part of its bailout deal.

In Porto, the capital of the northern part of the country, organisers said "between 50,000 and 60,000 people" were taking part in a protest there, but police put the number at 25,000.

"This is a great day of struggle," said Armenio Carlos, secretary general of the CGTP, a trade union confederation close to the Communist party.

This was the first major street mobilization seen in Portugal since the government unveiled its budget plans on Tuesday, which will hit public servants and pensioners in their pocketbooks.

One of the most contested measures is a plan to cut civil service salaries by between 2.5 percent and 12.0 percent, as well as reducing pensions for former civil servants by 10 percent.

The cuts would not apply for salaries or pension payments below 600 euros ($820) gross a month.

The demonstration in Rome brought together various groups including migrant rights advocates, campaigners for affordable housing and protesters against a new high-speed rail link in the Alps.

Some of the protesters had camped out overnight on Piazza San Giovanni square following a trade union demonstration and transport strike on Friday.

They were planning another unsanctioned protest camp on Saturday night close to the infrastructure and transport ministry which they blame for failing to build affordable housing and wasting money on large-scale construction projects.

Many shops in that area of the Italian capital have remained shuttered for the protest in a bid to minimize potential damage to property.

Comment by Gerard Zwaan on October 18, 2013 at 6:18pm
Comment by Gerard Zwaan on October 18, 2013 at 3:31pm
Comment by Ryan Giorgis on October 3, 2013 at 2:02am
Comment by SongStar101 on August 16, 2013 at 2:23pm

Egypt braces for More Violence

http://news.yahoo.com/crisis-deepens-egypt-braces-more-violence-070...

CAIRO (AP) — Egypt is bracing for more violence after the Muslim Brotherhood called for nationwide marches after Friday prayers and a "day of rage" to denounce this week's unprecedented bloodshed in the security forces' assault on the supporters of the country's ousted Islamist president that left more than 600 dead.

The government has authorized the use of deadly force against protesters targeting police and state institutions while the international community has urged both sides to show restraint and end the turmoil engulfing the nation.

At least 638 people were confirmed killed and nearly 4,000 wounded in Wednesday's violence, sparked when riot police backed by armored vehicles, snipers and bulldozers smashed the two sit-ins in Cairo where ousted President Mohammed Morsi's supporters had been camped out for six weeks to demand his reinstatement.

It was the deadliest day by far since the 2011 popular uprising that overthrew autocratic ruler Hosni Mubarak and plunged the country into more than two years of instability.

The Health Ministry said that 288 of those killed were in the largest protest camp in Cairo's Nasr City district, while 90 others were slain in a smaller encampment in Giza, near Cairo University. Others died in clashes that broke out between Morsi's supporters and security forces or anti-Morsi protesters elsewhere in the Egyptian capital and other cities.

Violence spread on Thursday, with government buildings set afire, policemen gunned down and scores of Christian churches attacked. An angry crowd stormed the governor's office in Giza, the city next to Cairo that is home to the pyramids. State TV blamed Morsi's supporters for the arson and broadcast footage showing firefighters evacuating employees from the larger building of Giza's government offices.

As turmoil spread, the Interior Ministry authorized the use of deadly force against protesters targeting police and state institutions. Egypt's military-backed government also pledged to confront "terrorist actions and sabotage" allegedly carried out by Muslim Brotherhood members.

The Brotherhood, trying to regroup after the assault on its encampments and the arrest of many of its leaders, called for a mass rally Friday in a challenge to the government's declaration of a monthlong state of emergency and a dusk-to-dawn curfew.

Also Thursday, the U.N. Security Council urged both the Egyptian government and the Muslim Brotherhood to exercise "maximum restraint" and work toward national reconciliation.

In Cairo, weeping relatives filled the mosque-turned-morgue near the gutted pro-Morsi protest camp in Nasr City, spilled into the courtyard and the streets. Inside, the names of the dead were scribbled on white sheets covering the bodies, some of them charred, and a list with 265 names was plastered on the wall. Heat made the stench from the corpses almost unbearable as the ice brought in to chill the bodies melted and household fans offered little relief.

Many people complained that authorities were preventing them from obtaining permits to bury their dead, although the Muslim Brotherhood announced that several funerals had been held Thursday.

A woman cradled the head of a slain man in her lap, fanning it with a paper fan. Nearby, an anguished man shouted, "God take revenge on you el-Sissi!" a reference to the powerful military chief, Gen. Abdel-Fatah el-Sissi.

Slumped over the body of his brother, Ihab el-Sayyed said the 24-year-old was getting ready for his wedding next week. "Last time I heard his voice was an hour or two before I heard of his death," he said, choking back tears.

Elsewhere on Thursday, a mass funeral was held in Cairo for some of the 43 security troops authorities said were killed in Wednesday's clashes. Interior Minister Mohammed Ibrahim, who is in charge of the police, led the mourners. A police band played solemn music as fire engines bore the coffins draped in white, red and black Egyptian flags in a funeral procession.

Wednesday's deadly crackdown drew widespread condemnation from the Muslim world and the West.

President Barack Obama canceled joint U.S.-Egypt military exercises scheduled for next month, although he gave no indication that the U.S. planned to cut off its $1.3 billion in annual military aid to the country. The U.S. administration has avoided declaring Morsi's ouster a coup, which would force it to suspend the military aid.

"While we want to sustain our relationship with Egypt, our traditional cooperation cannot continue as usual when civilians are being killed in the streets and rights are being rolled back," Obama said, speaking from his weeklong vacation in Massachusetts.

Egypt's interim government issued a late night statement saying the country is facing "terrorist actions targeting government and vital institutions" by "violent militant groups." The statement expressed "sadness" for the killings of Egyptians and pledged to work on restoring law and order.

The statement also warned that Obama's position "while it's not based on facts can empower the violent militant groups and encourage them in its anti-stability discourse."

The biennial Bright Star maneuvers, long a centerpiece of the deep ties between the U.S. and Egyptian militaries, have not been held since 2009, as Egypt grappled with the fallout from the revolution that ousted Mubarak. Morsi, a member of the Brotherhood, was elected president in 2012 during Egypt's first democratic elections.

Attackers also set fire to churches and police stations across the country for a second day Thursday.

In the country's second-largest city of Alexandria, Islamist protesters exchanged gunfire with an anti-Morsi rally, leaving scores injured, witnesses and security officials said. Attempts to storm police stations in the southern city of Assiut and northern Sinai city of el-Arish left at least six policemen dead and others injured.

Ishaq Ibrahim of the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights said his group had documented at least 39 cases of violence against churches, monasteries, Coptic schools and shops in different parts of the country on Wednesday.

Fearful of more violence Friday, some main streets were closed and people in many neighborhoods set up cement blocks and metal barricades. Residents checked IDs in scenes reminiscent of the 2011 revolution when vigilante-style groups set up neighborhood watches to prevent looting and other attacks.

The turmoil is the latest chapter in a bitter standoff between Morsi's supporters and the interim leadership that took over the Arab world's most populous country following a July 3 coup. The military ouster came after millions of Egyptians took to the streets to demand Morsi step down, accusing him of giving the Brotherhood undue influence and failing to implement vital reforms or bolster the ailing economy.

Morsi has been held at an undisclosed location ever since. Other Brotherhood leaders, including several arrested Wednesday, have been charged with inciting violence or conspiring in the killing of protesters.

The Brotherhood has spent most of its 85 years as an outlawed group or enduring crackdowns by successive governments. The latest developments could prompt the authorities to once again declare it an illegal group and force it to go underground.

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