'GLOBALISATION: DEMISE OF THE AUSTRALIAN NATION',
by Graham Strachan
Globalization
was never what the major media and politicians told you - just another
name for free trade worldwide. Globalisation was and is an attempt to completely
reorganise the word, to shift economic
ownership and political control out of the hands of national governments
and into the hands of global corporations and investors, presided over by institutions of global governance - world government.
The instruments of economic ownership are the huge transnational corporations (TNCs), which operate in many countries but show allegiance to none, and pay minimal tax in the country of operation. The institutions of global economic control include the World Bank, International Monetary Fund, the World Trade Organisation and so on, all of which are now dictating economic policy to national governments. The instruments of global social and political control are the United Nations and its bureaucracies, the emerging World Government.
Globalisation means the end of the independent self-governing nation state, and the end of effective democracy at national level. Nations have had to surrender - by signing of 'treaties' and agreements at global level - their economic and political sovereignty, and become 'inter-dependent' member states of a single globalised 'new world order'. It is no conspiracy theory, it is unfolding step by step right before your eyes.
'Globalisation: Demise of the Australian Nation' covers the economic globalisation of Australia - the engineering of the transfer of the nation's major economic assets out of Australian hands into global hands, and the integration of the national economy into a single global economy. It explains the real purpose of 'deregulation' and the so-called 'National Competition Policy' - forcing nationally-owned industries to compete with transnationals to their certain destruction or takeover; the sale of the people's assets to global buyers under the name 'privatisation'; the use of 'free trade' to destroy the family farm in favour of trans-national corporate agriculture; the privatisation of health services, and much much more.
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