

Visualize Glenn Beck
First, Sarah Palin took the podium with John McCain just one year ago. The shock, hostility, hysteria and denial among the defenders of the conventional seemed almost akin to that of the Native Americans when they first looked over the Atlantic and saw Columbus’s Tall Ships on the horizon. Then there was "Twilight" and a whole brand-new generation of arrogantly noble and great-looking vampires and their like 30 million swooning 13-year-old girls who had never even heard of Bob Dylan. (WTF?) And their 30 million boyfriends. Then there was Ron Paul. Then there was Mark Sanford, who first refused a federal bailout with the ridiculous claim that his boat wasn’t sinking. Then the April tea parties and Rick Perry and Ted ("Cat Scratch Fever") Nugent. Then those town hall disturbances; those blue-haired mavens packing Glocks.
And there’s more just ahead. Get ready. Visualize the Congress without Chris Dodd and with libertarian gold bug Peter Schiff in his place. Visualize California without Barbara Boxer and with Carly Fiorina in her place. Visualize John Oxendine, a 10th Amendment sovereigntist, as governor of Georgia. Visualize the movie "2012," which opens Friday the 13th, November, 2009. Visualize the end of the world. Visualize Glenn Beck.
Visualize this: Gerald Celente, author of Trends 2000 and Trend Tracking, writes in Trends Research Institute’s newsletter that the tax revolts, tax rallies, tea parties and healthcare reform protests have already begun a “Second American Revolution.”
Though in its early stages, the “Second American Revolution” is under way. Yet what we forecast will become the most profound political trend of the century — the trend that will change the world — is still invisible to the same experts, authorities and pundits who didn’t see the financial crisis coming until the bottom fell out of the economy.
Trend forecast: Conditions will continue to deteriorate. The global economy is terminally ill. The recession is in a brief remission, not the early stages of recovery. Cheap money, easy credit and unrestrained borrowing brought on an economic crisis that cannot be cured by monetary and fiscal policies that promote more cheap money, easy credit and unrestrained borrowing.
A false flag attempt, a genuine crisis or a declaration of war may slow the momentum of the “Second American Revolution,” says Celente, but nothing will stop it.
Visit Mr. Quigley's website at http://quigleyblog.blogspot.com.










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