By Gerald Celente: The
spectacular showing by Beppe Grillo’s Movimento 5 Stelle, which just
won more votes in Italy’s general election than any other single party,
represents a brand new, powerful, double-barreled trend that will
reshape the way political campaigns are run and, in so doing, will
reshape the future.
Free At Last
The
unanticipated results sent a shock wave across Italy and rattled world
equity markets. Taking 180 of Parliament’s 630 seats, Grillo’s party
amassed enough votes to not only deny front runner Pier Luigi Bersani
the clear majority needed to form a working government, it also sent an
even louder message to the entire eurozone: Adesso basta – enough is enough!
Faced
with the prospect of still-higher taxes and more German-inspired
austerity-as-usual, the Five Star Movement’s
anti-establishment/anti-austerity populist showing far exceeded the
predictions of the media, pollsters and politicians.
The
resurgence of the embattled and disgraced media tycoon Silvio
Berlusconi was also unanticipated. But his strong showing was less a
sign of popular support than the consequence of the mogul’s overt
multi-media-vote-buying campaign, promising amnesty for tax evaders and a
$5 billion tax refund to property owners.
Trend 1: Media Doesn’t Matter Beppe
Grillo, unlike all the other candidates, spurned Italian TV and instead
built his personal presence and party strength via a 73-stop
barnstorming tour and a brilliantly orchestrated Internet campaign. Nine
months ago he was polling only 5 percent nationally. With the largest
social media following of any politician in Europe, Grillo’s “head on
the Internet, feet on the ground” rise to prominence was generated
through his one million Facebook and Twitter friends and followers.
It is also a new millenium megatrend Gerald Celente forecast in detail in the December 1999 Trends Journal.
Moreover, in terms of presence, platform and personality, it is as
though Beppe Grillo had been invented for the role of the Italian
version of the “Internet Candidate” Celente predicted:
The Internet Candidate
Starting
in 1999, the opening salvos will be fired in the battle against the
hegemony of America’s two-party political system. A combination of
technological advances and seething public opinion has set the stage for
the Internet candidate – a political newcomer beholden to no one and
able to reach everyone.
Free At Last
No
longer bound by conventional political rules of engagement, freed from
the necessity to raise mega-millions to wage campaigns and no longer
solely reliant on media approval for coverage, the Internet candidate
will be a new-millennium voice speaking a new-millennium language that
appeals to the politically disenchanted and disgusted.
Just
as the advent of television changed political campaign strategies
forever, so the Internet will shortly revolutionize the entire political
process.
The potential Internet candidacy awaits its real-life Internet candidates…. (The Trends Journal, Winter 1999)
Moreover, while The New York Times
(and the rest of the mainstream media) now maintain that “Few experts
anticipated the depth of anger displayed by Italian voters over the
austerity” measures imposed by the Technocrat Monti, the fact is that
nearly a year before the election Gerald Celente not only anticipated
the “anger,” he singled out Beppe Grillo as the man who would give voice
to it and transform that anger into a coherent force. (Gerald Celente on CJAD, Montreal Canada, 29 May
2012)
Trend 2: Throw the Bums Out The
dire political conditions that made it possible for Grillo’s ascendance
in Italy also prevail in countries big and small around the world. The
“politically disenchanted and disgusted” citizenry Celente postulated as
a pre-condition for the trend he predicted all those years ago, has
essentially become the norm: polls report that 88 percent of Italians
distrust political parties, as do 80 percent of the British, while 85
percent of Americans distrust their government … and so on around the
world.
Standard,
entrenched political systems everywhere – ostensibly democratic,
autocratic, left-wing, right-wing or monarchical – are ripe for
revolution, non-violent or otherwise. The Internet Candidate is an “idea
whose time has come.” Adesso basta, the message from Italy is being heard around the austerity-ravaged world.
Perhaps
it is no more than coincidence, but Italy, where the European
Renaissance first took root and flourished, may be the breeding ground
for Renaissance 2.0.
Sincerely,
Gerald Celente
P.S. We understand that many people are experiencing difficulty making ends meet during these tough economic times. If you cannot afford the full subscription price of the Trends Journal please let us know, and we will do our best to accommodate your situation. (Click here to inquire about a discounted rate)
Trend 3: What’s Next? The
Italian elections barely made the broadcast news in America and were
mostly relegated to the inside pages of the mainstream and financial
press while the momentous implications of Beppe Grillo’s performance
went unrecognized.
However, if your subscription was still current
last Spring, you may recall reading our “No One Saw it Coming”
political analysis describing Beppe Grillo’s 5 Star Movement. We
predicted he would rise in prominence and that his Movement was a
harbinger of a rapidly growing “Throw the Bums Out” euro-anger trend
that would soon sweep austerity ravaged nations and change the face of
the future.
If you didn’t read it in The Trends Journal, you wouldn’t have read it anywhere. If you want to read “History Before It Happens,” you’ll want to renew your subscription now!
Sincerely,
Gerald Celente
P.S. We understand that many people are experiencing difficulty making ends meet during these tough economic times. If you cannot afford the full subscription price of the Trends Journal please let us know, and we will do our best to accommodate your situation. (Click here to inquire about a discounted rate)
No comments:
Post a Comment