Read the Beforeitsnews.com story here. Advertise at Before It's News here.
Profile image
By Deborah Dupre (Reporter)
Contributor profile | More stories
Story Views
Now:
Last hour:
Last 24 hours:
Total:

How To Survive The NWO

% of readers think this story is Fact. Add your two cents.


The 1%’s New World Order, with its undesirable objectives involving globalization that is threatening humanity, seem to have turned life upside down and made a mockery of human rights. While troves of information and misinformation exist about how to survive today and coming days, two people have released a document this weekend with a different take on how to not only survive, but to enjoy surviving.

February marks the third anniversary of the 2011 revolt in Wisconsin, the occupation of the state capital and mass protests against the attack on workers. Wisconsin was the largest of the protests at that time, but across the United States there were a series of protests against foreclosures, austerity and the unjust economy.

The Wisconsin uprising, along with Arab Spring and Indignado movements in Europe, inspired Occupy, a revolt that began on Wall Street and spread across the nation. This was a revolt against the 1%’s economic system – big finance capitalism – causing a corrupt and unfair economy; plus a revolt against a NWO government serving interests of the wealthiest before meeting needs of the people.

People often want to know what today’s movement for social and economic justice wants. Some accuse it of not knowing what it wants, while many others greatly fear it’s an undesirable undemocratic form of socialism. 

In its early days, Occupy Wall Street issued a Declaration of the Occupation of New York City, a series of grievances. In addition to knowing what the group opposed, organizers said they needed to define what they stand for.

“If we do not like NWO’s big finance capitalism, what could replace the current economy? Kevin Zeese and Margaret Flowers are onto something big that answers that question.

Kevin Zeese, JD and Margaret Flowers, MD are participants in PopularResistance.org that they co-direct, along with It’s Our Economy and co-hosts of Clearing the FOG

While organizing the occupation in Washington, DC on Freedom Plaza, Zeese, Flowers and others developed a list of 15 core crisis issues that the country is facing and outlined solutions to them. These solutions are supported by super-majorities of Americans who, polls show,  could rule better than the elites.

At the core of these solutions is the desire to put in place an economic democracy agenda, building institutions controlled by the people and benefit the communities while also protecting the planet.

“By building wealth in a way that is more equitable and democratic, the rule of money is weakened,” said national rights and justice leaders Kevin Zeese and Margaret Flowers this weekend. “A democratized economy shifts political power away from concentrated capital to the public and further empowers people by meeting their basic needs for shelter , food, education, healthcare and income.”

Zeese and Flowers say that “in many respects, we are in a conflict with big finance capitalism and seeking to birth a new economy that serves the people.”

In her book, Getting Past Capitalism: History, Vision, Hope, Cynthia Kaufman suggests we are in a variety of struggles and rather than seeking total replacement, we need to build healthy institutions while challenging those unhealthy ones we can defeat. Gar Alperovitz defines the transition as ‘evolutionary reconstruction’, a way that we gradually build a better world.

Economic Democracy

This week, Zeese and Flowers with kindred spirits re-launched It’s Our Economy, a project dedicated to reporting on and assisting the growing movement for economic democracy. They define economic democracy as:

One way to understand what makes healthy institutions that serve the people is to use a human rights framework, say Zeese and Flowers. There are five human rights principles:

  1. Universality: Human rights must be afforded to everyone, without exception.
  2. Equity: Every person is entitled to the same access to services and public goods.
  3. Accountability: Mechanisms must exist to enforce the protection of human rights.
  4. Transparency: Government institutions must be open and provide the public with information on the decision-making processes.
  5. Participation: People need to be empowered to participate in the decision-making process.

The need for a new economy based on the goal of benefitting all people, not just the wealthiest, has become more urgent as the impact of the economic collapse and its false recovery are felt. These include high rates of Americans dropping out of the labor force, the wealth divide expanding, record poverty and lowered incomes for most people.

People Are Creating the New Economy in Many Ways

Political and economic leadership continues to go in the opposite direction of what people want: cutting the social safety net and doing little to invest in re-building the economy while the costs of energy, food, healthcare and other necessities rise. 

Pie  in the sky? People across the country are already acting on their own to build an economy that will serve them. Building the new economy, sometimes called a ‘solidarity economy,’ has been developing over many years in other areas of the world such as Latin America. Reports of its success are available. 

A fundamental evidence-based belief of economic democracy is to build from the bottom up, starting locally, with local communities. 

Community Participatory Research is a democratic system of organizing with and by the people to meet their needs. It’s been used decades in some countries where it has empowered locals beyond measure.

report this week from the Institute for Self Reliance found that communities with “buy local” programs have seen local businesses grow three times as fast as communities without such programs and businesses report a 75% increase in customer traffic.

One key aspect of buying local is the food supply. The International Forum on Globalisation reports “the average plate of food eaten in western industrial food-importing nations is likely to have traveled 2,000 miles from source to plate.” Around the country, people are working to change that. Two programs in movement news this week were “Our Harvest” and “CropMobster.”

  • Our Harvest comes out of a 2009 agreement between the United Steelworkers and the Mondragon Co-op to create union co-ops. Our Harvest is a produce farm and food hub for aggregation and food processing. The goal is to re-create this model around the country to provide local foods and good jobs in union co-operatives.
  • CropMobster is a project from Petaluma, CA that seeks to redistribute food to reduce waste and to provide healthy food while growing a shared economy. CropMobster is an instant-alert service linking communities-in-need with local farmers, producers and food purveyors who have excess food to sell or donate. In one year it has spread to the greater SF Bay Area, with a dozen counties participating. Already, more than 300,000 pounds of food has been saved and over 1 million servings eaten; more than 4,000 participants and hundreds of farmers and small food businesses are joining with CropMobster.

Another issue in the news lately due to multiple environmental disasters is drinking water quality. Last month’s chemical spill in West Virginia, coal slurry spills this month, hydrofracking and pipelines bursting in multiple states, with seven major disasters within four days, are recent examples of how fresh water is now at risk. 

In addition, extracting fossil fuels and uranium are consuming tremendous amounts of water, even in areas facing droughts.

“Water will be an item on the political agenda at the state and national level,” assert Zeese and Flowers. This week in Europe, 1.66 million people were able to put the issues of the right to clean water and stopping water privatization before the European Parliament.

“At the center of so many issues – the environment, climate, water, air, jobs – is energy.  President Obama and the bi-partisans in Congress continue pushing a disastrous “all of the above” energy strategy that is leading to extreme energy extraction with terrible environmental consequences.  The corporate duopoly seems unable to challenge big oil, gas, coal and nuclear to put in place the carbon-free, nuclear-free energy economy that is needed.

UK renewably energized. US has a long way to go to catch up with the UK in regard to renewable energy.

“In the absence of national leadership, people are moving forward,” Zeese and Flowers point out. “Over 80 landowners have dedicated nearly 20,000 acres to what will become the largest wind farm in South Dakota that will increase the wind energy output in the state by 50%. As solar rapidly grows in the United States, research is now showing more people will be employed by solar than by oil and coal combined.

Big changes are also on the horizon in the labor front. There are widespread battles for raising the minimum wage to a living wage, and while many companies treat their employees as if they were disposable, in other workplaces employees are becoming owners so they can share in the wealth created by their labor. There is a growing movement for worker-owned cooperatives with national meetings in the United States and in Europe

An example in the news this week was WinCo, a growing competitor to Walmart. WinCo is now operating 93 employee-owned stores in seven states with nearly 15,000 employees.  The company has lower prices than Walmart and provides employees with a health plan that includes dental and vision as well as an Employee Stock Ownership Plan for their pension.

BiMarts have replaced Walmart in many areas of Portland, other areas of Oregon and spreading throughout the Northwast. They are owned and managed by the employees.

Zeese and Flowers also poin to other businesses that are creating a more just world by redefining corporate charters so that one of their purposes is to provide public benefits rather than profits to investors.

“In the past few years, 20 states, including the District of Columbia, have enacted legislation that allows companies to register as benefit corporations and 16 more states are considering it. Delaware, the home of half of US corporations and two-thirds of Fortune 500 companies, enacted a B Corp. law. This status protects corporations from lawsuits by shareholders for not maximizing profit, and it even gives shareholders the right to sue the corporation for failing to optimize its social mission.”

We are Creating a Renaissance

Examples above just give a taste of all the changes taking place to create new systems that replace old failing ones. For more ideas, Zeese and Flowers recommend visiting the “Create” section of PopularResistance.org or ItsOurEconomy.us.

“What is amazing is that around the world, the same ideas and values are being put forward,” they say. “People are joining together to create societies that respect life and the planet and that are more horizontal and just. We are truly in a time of transformation which is made more urgent by the many crises we face.

“There has been talk of global revolution, and in some areas, revolution – the changing of governments – is occurring. But we are not yet in a global revolution.

Presently, people are not only creating new systems, but they are also questioning stories told to maintain the status quo and recognizing many restraints are artificial. People do have the ability to rethink the premises upon which we base our assumptions and to change their views and behaviors.

“For decades we have been taught to believe in capitalism and neo-liberalism,” Zeese and Flowers say. “We have been told that there will always be poor people and we must accept that. We’ve been told that wealth trickles down and that we should all compete to achieve the “American Dream.” We’ve thought that in order to achieve that dream we must go into debt. And we’ve believed that the people in power should be trusted to make decisions for us, that we didn’t have the capacity to make them.”

All that is changing and being turned in its head, the two say.

“Awareness is growing that we can do things differently. People are actively confronting the old ways through both resistance and the creation of new approaches or the re-emergence of older methods. One area is the recognition that there are alternatives to debt-based economies.

“This is not a new idea. There were debt jubilees in ancient history.”

In the article, “Debt Refusal Essential To Rebuilding Popular Democracy,” the editor writes that “resisting debt is not only moral, it may be essential to re-envisioning a democracy built on legitimate bonds to our community.” StrikeDebt, which was organized out of Occupy Wall Street, teaches us that “working together to build greater economic democracy would mean weaving a dense, creative network where our debts are to each other, not to them (read: the big banks).”StrikeDebt created a Debt Resister’s Manual and is organizing a nationwide debt resistance movement. Their new manual is due out soon.

NWO/Globalization

Another area of renaissance is globalization, what many refer to as New World Order, (NWO).

“To date, globalization has been based on the neoliberal economic model that leaves poverty and environmental destruction in its wake,” Zeese and Flowers write. “But now that we understand these consequences , it is becoming more difficult for governments to continue on this path.

The two say the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) is a good example. It had been negotiated for years in secret and the plan was to pass it quietly through Congress using Fast Track. That effort has stalled for now. Instead, civil society groups are working together to redefine what global trade should look like and how it should be governed.

There is a call for ‘deglobalization’ which does not oppose global trade but refers to orienting trade so our communities can build local economies, to produce goods needed and become more self-reliant. (See detailed plan outlined in a blog on systemic alternatives.)

Zeese and Flowers write that deglobalization is not about opting out or withdrawing from the world economy but instead, it’s about restructuring it:

“We have an opportunity right now while trade deals are stalled to redefine global governance. Collectively, the people can confront the dominant paradigms and global power structure and rebirth a world grounded in the principles of human rights and protection of the planet.

“Resistance is not only protest. It includes acts of creation. When you get involved in your community to build democratized economies, you are part of the global transformation.”

Register for the daily news digest of Popular Resistance here.  

Kevin Zeese, JD and Margaret Flowers, MD are participants in PopularResistance.org; they co-direct It’s Our Economy and co-host Clearing the FOG. Their twitters are @KBZeese and MFlowers8. 

This article is produced by  PopularResistance.org in conjunction with AlterNet.  It is based on  PopularResistance.org’s weekly newsletter reviewing the activities of the resistance movement.

 

Related Articles

U.S. Under Attack: 7 Oil/Gas Disasters, 4 Days. BOP Failure Sent Workers Running For Lives From Out Of Control Well

Groundbreaking New Report: Silent Methane Killer Leaking Up To 75% More Than EPA Said

Bombshell: Not One W. Va. Official Under Oath Would Say Water Is Safe

As Frack Well Exploded, Some 150mi South, 100K Gallons Coal Slurry Poisoned 6-Miles W.Va. Waterways. Unforgettable Photo



Before It’s News® is a community of individuals who report on what’s going on around them, from all around the world.

Anyone can join.
Anyone can contribute.
Anyone can become informed about their world.

"United We Stand" Click Here To Create Your Personal Citizen Journalist Account Today, Be Sure To Invite Your Friends.

Please Help Support BeforeitsNews by trying our Natural Health Products below!


Order by Phone at 888-809-8385 or online at https://mitocopper.com M - F 9am to 5pm EST

Order by Phone at 866-388-7003 or online at https://www.herbanomic.com M - F 9am to 5pm EST

Order by Phone at 866-388-7003 or online at https://www.herbanomics.com M - F 9am to 5pm EST


Humic & Fulvic Trace Minerals Complex - Nature's most important supplement! Vivid Dreams again!

HNEX HydroNano EXtracellular Water - Improve immune system health and reduce inflammation.

Ultimate Clinical Potency Curcumin - Natural pain relief, reduce inflammation and so much more.

MitoCopper - Bioavailable Copper destroys pathogens and gives you more energy. (See Blood Video)

Oxy Powder - Natural Colon Cleanser!  Cleans out toxic buildup with oxygen!

Nascent Iodine - Promotes detoxification, mental focus and thyroid health.

Smart Meter Cover -  Reduces Smart Meter radiation by 96%! (See Video).

Report abuse

    Comments

    Your Comments
    Question   Razz  Sad   Evil  Exclaim  Smile  Redface  Biggrin  Surprised  Eek   Confused   Cool  LOL   Mad   Twisted  Rolleyes   Wink  Idea  Arrow  Neutral  Cry   Mr. Green

    Total 4 comments
    • paul brown

      All kiinds of useful information. Local communities that get it can benefit greatly.

      • Deborah Dupre

        Really glad to see you appreciate this, Mr. Brown. Thank you.

    • Miriams Musings

      These are both liberal and progressive ideas that buy-in to a globalist world agenda. These folks are not patriots. They are eggheaded liberals who will fight for the country that plans to enslave them.

      • paul brown

        On the contrary, they are very anti-globalist, anti-corporate, pro-local, and they oppose this country’s pro-corporate policies. These strategies are intended to take power away from the military-industrial new world order and give it back to you, me, and other people.

    MOST RECENT
    Load more ...

    SignUp

    Login

    Newsletter

    Email this story
    Email this story

    If you really want to ban this commenter, please write down the reason:

    If you really want to disable all recommended stories, click on OK button. After that, you will be redirect to your options page.